ЭЛЕКТРОННАЯ БИБЛИОТЕКА КОАПП
Сборники Художественной, Технической, Справочной, Английской, Нормативной, Исторической, и др. литературы.



Dragon Zine N 1-8 (fancy)





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--   DargonZine Volume 1, Issue 1        11/04/88          Cir 687    --
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--                            Contents                                --
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  DAG                        Dafydd                 Editorial
  Unlikely Partners, Pt 2    Max Khaytsus           12-16 Naia, 1013
  Runaway                    Michelle Brothers      29 Seber, 1012, and
                                                    16 Naia, 1013
  Steel Souls                John Sullivan          10-11 Yule, 1013
  Inquiries                  John Doucette          29 Yuli-7 Sy, 1013
  Trial by Fire, Prologue    M. Wendy Henniquin     6 Sy, 1013
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1                          Dafydd's Amber Glow

        Hello,  readers!  Here   it  is,  the  first   issue  of  the
    'replacement' - or  rather, continuation - of FSFNet.  As the new
    Editor,  I hope  that DargonZine  serves you  all as  well as  my
    predecesor's magazine did.
        DargonZine  is  not  really  a replacement  for  FSFNet,  but
    rather  a vehicle  for the  continuation of  the Dargon  Project,
    which  made up  a substantial  part  of the  material in  FSFNet.
    DargonZine  will not  be publishing  anything non-Dargon,  but R.
    Allen  Jervis  (C78KCK@IRISHMVS) has  consented  to  take up  the
    slack and  publish any non-Dargon  SF or Fantasy that  anyone out
    there would like to write and/or read.
        This first  issue contains  five stories, three  from authors
    new to the project. The first is from Max Khaytsus, and continues
    his  "Unlikely Partners"  story, Part  1 of which  was in  FSFNET
    Vol11N2.  The second story, "Runaway", is by our first new author
    Michelle  Brothers.   The first part of  the story provides  some
    background to the rest  of the story, and the  second part, which
    happens some  9 months later,  happens shortly after  Max's story
    ends - in fact, they cross to a minor extent.
        The third  story is from  another new author,  John Sullivan.
    "Steel Souls"  gives us  a little insight  into the  character of
    Ittosai.  It takes  place between  "Worthy of  the Title"  and "A
    Visit to Connall",  which appeared in FSFNet  Vol10N5 and Vol11N3
    respectively, before Ittosai has become the Castellan of Connall.
        The fourth story  is by John Doucette (our  third new author)
    and  is   titled  "Inquiries",  which  introduces   some  foreign
    intrigue.  And last  is the  beginning of  an exciting  new story
    line  by  M. Wendy  Henniquin  called  "Trial  by Fire".  A  well
    packed issue  for the initial issue  of DargonZine - I  hope that
    you readers will enjoy it.
              Dafydd, Editor DargonZine
                (m.k.a. John L White)
                (b.c.k.a. WHITE@DUVM.bitnet)

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1                           Unlikely Partners
                                Part 2
                            by Max Khaytsus
              (b.c.k.a khaytsus%tramp@boulder.colorado.edu)

    Terell poured  together the  last of the  solutions. If  his books
and  speculations were  right,  he would  be able  to  keep the  virus
alive for  days. Finding  a cure  would be  profitable, but  how often
would a  cure for lycanthropy be  needed in a civilized  land? To turn
a profit he  would have to have  a disease to cure. If  only there was
a  way to  make people  get the  disease...and of  course in  sight of
profit, there is always a way!
    Deep in thought  Terell started his walk home. The  first thing he
needed was a constant source of the virus, then a place to spread it.

    By the  time Kera came  downstairs to breakfast, Rien  was already
up, waiting for her.  To her it seemed he invested  far too much trust
into  a common  street  thief.  At least  more  than  she would.  Most
people don't  just pick  up thieves  off the street  and hope  for the
best. It's  not like  she had  any plans to  stab him  in the  back or
anything, but he was still far too trusting.
    "I  didn't  grow  any  new  body  hair  last  night,"  Kera  said,
slumping down in a chair across from Rien.
    "Good morning,"  he answered. "I  take it you're late  because you
stopped to check?"
    "I'm used to  getting up late, since  I do most of my  work in the
late afternoon and evening."
    "Warriors  get up  with the  chickens," Rien  said, motioning  for
the innkeep to serve breakfast.
    "I was  wondering about your  sleeping habits," Kera  grinned. "So
what do you want me to do first?"
    "After  breakfast we  need  to get  your equipment  and  I want  a
wizard to check you over. Then we will worry about your training."
    "Sorry,  I don't  do wizards,"  Kera said,  looking over  what the
bar maid placed before her.
    "If you want  to be apprenticed, you  will have to do  what I say,
especially if it is to save your life."
    Kera's eyes narrowed. "Why?"
    "I  don't take  apprentices so  that they  foam at  the mouth  and
howl at the moon," Rien answered calmly.
    "Why  didn't you  just leave  me? Or  kill me?  I stole  from you,
hurt you! For God's sake, I wanted to kill you!"
    "That's not  my way," Rien continued  in his calm tone.  "I do not
kill for pleasure  or sport. Life is  a right I can  neither grant to,
nor revoke from an individual."
    "Even in defense of yourself?"
    "Defense is different. Yesterday and the day before were different."
    "Your eyes changed color yesterday!" Kera remembered.
    Rien's  voice became  even quieter.  "A  gypsy once  told me  that
what you saw happened derives from another duality within me."
    "Like what?"  Kera leaned  forward, not  quite realizing  that she
was also beginning to whisper.
    "It's nothing that  should concern you at the  moment," Rien said.
The rest of the meal passed without a word.

    "Where is  she, old  bat?" Cril screamed,  throwing the  old woman
to the ground.
    "I don't know. She never came back..." was the weak response.
    "You're lying!"
    This time there was no answer.
     "Put her in the blocks," Cril breathed his anger to the guards.
    Kera had  become very  important to Liriss two days ago,  when she
made the  biggest theft  since she started.  Apparently that  was also
enough  to have  two  of  Liriss' men  arrested  and  two more  beaten
beyond  recognition. Whomever  that purse  belonged to,  was seemingly
mad about the whole affair. For that matter, so was Liriss.
    Cril stepped  back to allow the  guards to drag out  the old maid.
"Be  you  damned!"  she  hissed  as they  half  carried  her  out.  He
restrained himself from the urge to break her neck.
    Cril  took  the  time  to  dress in  medium  armor  before  before
presenting his  information to Liriss.  There was no reason  to expose
one's self  to unnecessary  danger. His  boss has  been known  to kill
people  for  as  little  as saying  "good  morning".  Naturally  those
mornings were  in no way good.  This was another morning  that did not
seem good  to Cril. All  he was  able to learn  was that the  girl was
last  seen leaving  the alley  with a  tall, blond  man. Odds  are she
never even  made it  inside the  building. That  was more  than reason
enough to  believe the old  chamber maid and  believe her he  did, but
she was  going to drown just  for a show  of force, for the  memory of
all those  before her  and all  those yet to  come...and most  of all,
for these who may  have known the answer to  his question and withheld
information.
    Cril knocked on  a door and entered.  On the far side  of the room
stood  Liriss, holding  a  nearly  full wine  glass,  staring out  the
window in deep thought.
    "Sir!" Cril began, but was abruptly interrupted.
    "Spare me your excuses. I heard what you did."
    Cril took a single step back in fear.
    "The  maid is  too  old  to serve  properly,  but  should you  lay
another hand  on any of  my staff, no  matter how decrepit,  you shall
be joining them in their fate."
    Cril  drew  in a  breath  of  relief. Refraining  from  punishment
would not be hard.
    Placing the  glass on the  window sill, Liriss turned  around. His
harsh  features expressed  anger.  "If you  do not  locate  Kera in  a
week, don't bother coming back."

    "Grandfather!"  yelled the young girl.  "Some big guy wants to see
you!"
    Rien  smiled  in  spite  of  his serious  visit.  There  was  some
innocent, naive quality in children that always produced this reaction.
    "Oh, I'm  coming!" he  heard the  wizard's voice.  "Doesn't anyone
know I  work at this time?"  His soft expression changed  at the sight
of Rien and  Kera. "I don't want  you here and I  certainly don't want
her here. Go."
    Rien blocked  the closing door  with his  foot. "You have  to help
me. You are the only expert on this in town."
    "No," the wizard  insisted. "What I know is only  history. I am no
alchemist.  There are  plenty of  others  who are  better equipped  to
help you. Please, go now."
    There was no arguing  with the man and Rien was  not about to try.
He  could  always  challenge  a  fighter or  a  thief,  but  uninvited
pesterance of  a mage could  be costly.  "Just one thing,"  he finally
asked. "Tell me if she has the disease."
    Unwillingly Taishent  pulled out the  white orb and taking  a step
towards   Kera,  uttered   the   incantation.  A   faint  green   glow
illuminated his hand.
    Rien  looked  at the  glow  with  a  feeling of  helplessness.  No
explanations  needed to  be  given, but  at least  now  the truth  was
clearly available.  "Thank you,"  he said quietly  and taking  Kera by
her arm, lead her away from the door.
    "Wait!" Taishent  called out. "If you  are unable to find  help in
the  city, I  hear there  is an  old woman  living deep  in the  woods
south of Dargon. She may be able to help."
    Rien wanted to  turn around to thank the man  again, but something
inside of him urged him to keep going.

    In  the morning  of  the  following day,  Rien  returned to  visit
Terell, who he had  not seen since the day of  his initial visit. Many
changes had taken place in the alchemist's mind since then.
    "I can't have  you running around all the time!"  Terell yelled at
Rien. "I  need you  to provide  me samples  when I  need them,  not at
your leisure!"
    "I came  here to get a  cure, not to  be bled into a  glass. There
is only so much blood I can provide for you."
    Terell  paced his  lab, glancing  at filled  and empty  glassware.
"How can  you expect me  to find you a  cure if I  have no samples  to
study?"
    Rien shrugged. "How can  I expect to be cured if  there is no life
fluid in me?"
    Grabbing a  vial off the shelf,  Terell thrust it to  Rien. "Drink
this. It will relieve your fatigue."
    And indeed  it did  so. With  a single sip  Rien collapsed  to the
floor,  spilling  the potion  and  breaking  the  vial. The  sound  of
breaking glass filled his ears even after darkness filled his eyes.

    Kera  searched out  the  scribe's  cart at  the  market place  and
carefully approached,  searching the crowd for  familiar faces. Public
appearances like this could be dangerous now.
    "Ellis, do  you have the  book I asked  for?" she inquired  of the
shifty man watching the cart.
    He glanced  around and motioned her  to follow him to  the side of
an  enclosed booth.  Shielded  by the  wall, he  produced  a book  and
handed it to Kera.
    "The Realities of  Myths" read the silver lettering  on the cover.
Kera flipped it open  to reveal the seal of Dargon  on the inside. The
book immediately snapped shut.
    "You stole this from the Duke's library?" she almost exclaimed.
    "You said you only wanted to borrow it for a few days..."
    "And Rish Vogel just handed it to you?"
    "Well, no...it's kind of on a secretive loan."
    Hiding the  book in the  folds of  her cloak, Kera  thanked Ellis.
"I'll have it back to you in a few days," she promised.
    "No hurry. No one knows what happened to it. Keep it."
    Kera smiled and turned to leave.
    "Wait," Ellis  stopped her. "There are  a lot of people  out there
who want  to see you  dead. Be careful. I  heard some men  are looking
for  you. I  am sure  if you  come  back now  and tell  them you  were
detained, they won't punish you."
    Pulling  the hood  of  her  cloak up,  Kera  disappeared into  the
crowd. The decision she was about to make would be very final.

    The  ringing  continued  in  Rien's  ears  even  after  his  sight
returned. With great  effort he focused his eyes  on his surroundings.
He was  sitting upright, in some  laboratory, with his back  against a
wall. A heavy  wool blanket was draped over him.  Someone was spilling
some liquid down his chin.
    "Stop dribbling  and drink it,"  he heard Kera's voice  and turned
his head.   His detached thoughts registered a liquid splashing on the
blanket.
    'The  potion!' he  thought, trying  to avoid  the glass,  but only
succeeded in spilling some more of it.
    "It's only water," he heard Kera's voice again. "Drink it."
    He did.  A minute  passed as  Rien tried  to compose  himself. For
some reason  his body still  did not  follow the instructions  he gave
it. 'What was that damn potion?'
    "Terell..." Rien tried to voice his thoughts.
    "He's  not here,"  Kera's voice  sounded again  and he  again felt
the glass at his mouth and swallowed.
    "My  clothes..." Rien  struggled,  realizing the  blanket was  the
only thing he had on.
    "Bring me  his clothes!" Kera  ordered and Rien struggled  to look
up. A  vague shape  and running  footsteps were  the only  evidence of
another presence.
    "You didn't  have any when I  found you," Kera told  Rien and gave
him another sip of the water.
    Rien's head  was beginning to  clear and  the ringing in  his ears
subsided.  Again  he  looked  around  the  lab.  The  most  noticeable
feature was a body in a pool of blood.
    "Who was that?" Rien asked.
    "An assistant, I  guess," Kera answered. "He tried to  stop me, so
I jabbed him a few times."
    Rien tried not to look disapproving. "How long was I here?"
    "Today is the 15th of Naia; it's past sunset."
    "Almost two  days..." Rien murmured.  "What did that  damned idiot
do to me?"
    "There  are a  lot  of scratches  on your  right  arm," Kera  said
cautious not to  disclose that her examination had  been more thorough
than that.
    Rien pulled his  arm from under the blanket.  It barely responded.
On it were  three deep incisions that still produced  traces of blood.
"He bled me. Damned idiot!"
    Running footsteps again  filled the room and a  young boy appeared
with  a bundle  of  clothes.  He carefully  handed  them  to Kera  and
backed off.
    "Are you strong enough to get up?" Kera asked Rien.
    He nodded and stood up, clutching the blanket.
    "I  assume you  want me  to  turn around,"  Kera grinned,  handing
Rien his clothes.
    "Up to you," he answered and let the blanket drop.
    Kera instantly  spun about to  face the wall.  "I see you  have no
problems with modesty."
    "Do you?" Rien asked, starting to dress.
    "I  might not  have had  a great  childhood, but  I did  have some
social values implanted in me."
    "Oh,  those..." Rien  said.  "Modesty  was not  a  very big  thing
where I grew up."
    "This  might come out  a bit foolish, but just  where did you grow
up?"
    "East of here, a very long distance away."
    "Past the mountain range?" Kera insisted.
    "Past the  mountains," Rien agreed.  "In the  forest on the  other
side."
    "I've never even been outside of Dargon," Kera sighed.
    "You  may get  your  chance soon.  I  just lost  all  my trust  of
Terell. Tell me what happened in the last two days."
    Kera leaned  against a table,  still facing  the wall. "I  went to
see a friend yesterday morning, asking about that book you wanted..."
    "Did you get it?" Rien interrupted her.
    "It should  be on that big  table with straps," Kera  answered and
continued  her  story. "He  told  me  to come  back  in  a day,  so  I
returned to the  inn to wait for  you. I began getting  worried by the
time it  got dark, but decided  to wait until morning.  In the morning
I picked  up your book  and went back  to the inn  to see if  you were
back, but  only found that  my room  had been ransacked.  Yours wasn't
touched, so I  had all of our  stuff moved to an inn  down the street.
I don't think anything was taken.
    "It was late afternoon  by the time I decided to  go look for you.
You mentioned  Terell before you  left yesterday, so this  shop seemed
like a good  start. Terell wasn't here, but his  apprentices were. The
big  one  didn't  want  to  let  me see  the  work  area,  so  I  grew
suspicious and  started a fight  with him.  I guess all  bookworms are
weak by nature."
    Kera  paused, having  finished  her story.  She  waited a  moment,
then asked. "Are you done yet?"
    "One way to find out," Rien answered.
    Kera  cautiously turned  around. Rien  sat on  the large  table in
the middle  of the room,  legs crossed  under him, examining  the book
she had brought. He was dressed.
    "This book belongs to the Duke of Dargon," Rien accused.
    "Uh-huh," Kera  said carefully. "You  said it was  very important,
so I spared no effort."
    "Doesn't matter  either way,"  Rien said.  "We'll be  dead, should
we  fail. Liriss  is after  you, Terell  has it  in for  me, the  town
guard  is probably  after  us  both and  with  lycanthropy  on top  of
this...seems pretty grim, doesn't it?"
    Kera simply nodded.
    "Let's go  get our stuff.  We'll meet  Terell here in  the morning
and be out of town by night fall."

    Kera  moved about  the room  in the  bulky field  plate. "This  is
very heavy,"  she complained to Rien.  "How do you expect  me to fight
in it?"
    "You'll get  used to it," he  said, checking to make  sure nothing
was  left  behind.  "A  horse  saddled for  the  first  time  is  also
uncomfortable, but it gets used to carrying both gear and rider."
    "A saddle is probably more comfortable than this," Kera continued.
    "This is  only for your  protection," Rien said. "You'll  get used
to wearing  it and fighting  in it or you  won't live very  long. Grab
your pack and let's go."
    The innkeeper  was the  only one up  downstairs. He  lazily looked
at  Rien and  Kera  clanking their  way  down the  stairs.  A look  of
surprise spread on his face.  "Leaving so early, sir?"  he inquired of
Rien.
    "One has to get up early to go hunting," Rien responded.
    "Looks like you're ready to hunt a dragon," the innkeep laughed.
    "A small  one," Rien said  and placed  some money on  the counter.
"A deposit for the room," he said. "We will return."
    "Do  you  require  assistance   with  your  horses?"  the  innkeep
hurried to ask, placing the coins in his pocket.
    "Thank you, but no," Rien answered.
    "Then good luck on your hunt!"
    "You intend to come back?" Kera asked Rien once outside the inn.
    "No, but if  we are traced this far, the  innkeep's belief that we
will return may  delay pursuit," Rien answered. "I  believe in dealing
with only one problem at a time."
    "Do you think Liriss will follow us?"
    "Might.  I'd  rather expect  the  worst  and  be faced  with  only
pleasant surprises." He stopped near Kera's horse. "Get on."
    "How!?"
    "Place your left leg in..."
    "In armor?" Kera interrupted him.
    "Unless you have other means of protection, yes."
    "It looks  like it's going to rain," Kera  said.  "The armor might
rust."
    "Well  maintained armor  will  not rust  from  getting wet,"  Rien
answered. "Get on."
    Kera looked at  the horse apprehensively, then  grabbing the sides
of  the saddle  and placing  her left  foot in  the stirrup,  tried to
pull herself up. The horse shifted uncomfortably.
    "Don't pull," Rien  instructed. "Jump up and swing  your leg over,
just like you do without armor."
    "Yeah, right!"  Kera exclaimed and  after a moment  of preparation
did so, landing in the saddle with a grunt. "That hurts!"
    "Be glad it  wasn't full plate," Rien answered,  swinging into the
saddle of his own horse.
    "Does that hurt men too?" Kera asked mockingly.
    "Only if they don't know what they are doing," Rien answered.
    The  two made  it  down to  Terell's  laboratory-shop by  sunrise.
Using  the key  they took  from  the store  a few  hours before,  they
unlocked  the  door and  walked  in.  The  boy,  who they  locked  in,
hurried to the back of the room in fear.
    "Give him  some food and  have him stay  in the other  room," Rien
instructed Kera, relocking the door behind them.
    After  Kera left,  he started  looking over  the vials  located on
the shelves. Things  useful on quests were often found  in places like
this and  while not having a  lot of experience with  magic, Rien felt
he  could lay  a little  claim to  knowledge of  herb lore  and simple
alchemy...especially  if  labels  were  available. By  the  time  Kera
returned, four of the vials stood separately on the table.
    "What's this?" she asked, taking a seat across from the door.
    "Three of them  save lives, the other takes  them," Rien continued
rummaging through  the shelves. "It's going  to be a long  journey. We
may need them all."
    Kera nodded slightly. "What are you going to do about Terell?"
    "Listen to him. He may have a good reason for what he did."
    "What if he does?"
    "Let him continue his work."
    "And if he doesn't?"
    Rien faced  Kera. "A reason that  I do not find  satisfactory does
not necessarily  have to  be bad.  When he  provides his  reason, I'll
make my judgement."
    "And the boy?" Kera asked.
    "The child  is only an apprentice.  He did only what  he was told;
I can't blame him for that."
    "Sometimes I wish things were simpler," Kera sighed.
    "The  simpler your  life, the  harder you  would have  to work  to
keep it  that way," Rien  answered, finally giving  up on the  rest of
Terell's potions. He sat down, looking at Kera, who turned to face him.
    "A maid in Liriss'  chambers told me to be careful  of what I wish
for. Someday someone may grant it..."
    "And  you  won't  like  the results,"  Rien  finished  the  famous
proverb. "I don't believe that's true."
    "What  do you  mean  not  true?   Do you  think it's  not true for
everything?"
    "I don't  think any of  it is true. It  depends on who  hears your
wishes, not what the wishes are."
    Kera opened  her mouth to  speak, but the  sound of a  key turning
in the  door lock forced  both her and Rien  to take cover  behind the
furniture in the shop.
    A moment later the door opened and someone walked in.
    "Kapatil? Baska?" Terell's voice sounded as the door slammed shut.
    Rien permitted the  footsteps to get past him,  before getting out
from behind his  cover. Terell spun around and tried  to back out, but
the door to the laboratory was locked.
    "I will give you  one chance only to explain  your actions,"  Rien
stated.
    Terell's  response  was  drawing  a dagger.  "Damn  half-breed!  I
should have killed you two days ago."
    Rien's eyes flared as he drew his sword.
    "Damn  bastard half-breed!"  Terell muttered  again, swinging  his
dagger. It impacted  against Rien's chest plate, doing  no more damage
than a light scratch.
    Rien  thrust   his  sword  forward,  flawlessly   penetrating  the
alchemist's upper chest.  He looked on as his victim  slid down to the
ground,  letting out  his  final  breath. With  it  the  truth of  the
events of the last two days fled forever.
    Kera's hand clamped down on Rien's shoulder. "Half-breed?"
    He shook his head. "An old, evil man."
    Kera looked  at the slain body  against the wall for  a moment. "I
guess we're finished here. Let's leave before the town guard finds us."
    "We're not  leaving just yet," Rien  walked over to the  main door
and relocked it. "Right now we need to get some rest."
    "We can't stay  here!" Kera protested. "We'll  be discovered! With
him!"  She thrust  her hand  out,  pointing to  Terell's body,  grimly
staring at the arguing pair.
    "I  will put  up  a sign  that  will announce  the  shop as  being
closed for the day  and at nightfall we will leave  town. One day will
not steer anyone's suspicion and we need the rest. At least you do."
    "I have  been up  for almost  two days  now," Kera  admitted. "But
being in your shoes does not seem like an appealing alternative."
    Rien smiled. "Be ready to leave at dusk."

    Cril and  three of  his men stepped  out of the  latest inn  to be
checked. Doing  the work himself made  him feel better, since  a found
trail  was  quickly  lost  the  day before,  due  to  a  subordinate's
negligence. This last  visit uncovered a lot more than  Cril had hoped
to learn. Kera  and her new companion  left early in the  morning on a
hunting trip.
    There were two  clear alternatives--follow them or  wait. The wait
could be extremely  long. Their rooms were paid for  a week in advance
and Cril  had now  well under that  for a deadline.  He looked  up and
down the  street in deep  thought. There was  no need to  test Liriss'
threat by  waiting around.  To follow  would give  a better  chance of
success. That was the only thing he had left to do.
    "Spread out,"  Cril told his  men. "Two armored  individuals can't
be hard to find. Ask everyone!"
    The guards proceeded in different directions.

    Shortly  before  dusk  Rien  sat   down  to  speak  with  Terell's
remaining  assistant. The  boy sat  quietly  in a  corner, fearing  to
even bring his eyes up to look at Rien.
    "You are afraid of me. Why?"
    The boy  did his best  to regain his posture.  "You killed  Master
Terell..."
    "And you are afraid of my companion as well?"
    "I saw her kill Kapatil..." the boy whispered.
    "Do you think we will kill you?" Rien inquired.
    "Yes," came the barely audible response.
    "If you  promise to  do something  for us, I  promise we  will let
you go..."
    "You do?" the boy looked up.
    Rien nodded.  "You must promise not  to tell anybody that  we were
here or what we did and you will be free to go."
    "Really?" the youngster's eyes looked hopeful.
    "But you  must promise!  And keep that  promise...or we  will come
back and  find you." Rien's  expression was  hard. "You will  say that
some  men came  and killed everyone and  that you were scared  and ran
away."
    The boy nodded silently, dropping to his knees. "I swear it, Sir!"
    Rien  waited  patiently to  stress  the  moment. "You  will  leave
after we do." He quickly got up and exited the laboratory.
    "What happened?" Kera asked him in the other room.
    "I wish  I didn't have  to scare him  like I did,"  Rien admitted.
"He looks no older than ten years."
    "Did he agree to keep quiet?"
    "I  said we'll  come back  and find  him is  he tells  anyone... I
haven't seen anyone that scared in along time."
    "Will we?"
    "If  anyone learns  of what  we've done  here tonight,  I fear  we
will no  longer have to  worry about that  issue," Rien said.  "Do you
need help with your armor?" he tried to change the topic.
    "Just a little," Kera said. "My arms don't bend backwards."
    At dusk they  unlocked all of the  doors and set on  their way out
of Dargon in a strong downpour.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

1                               Runaway
                               Part  1
                         by Michelle Brothers
                    (b.c.k.a. brothers@tramp.uucp)

    "What the  hell do  you mean  she's disappeared?"  bellowed Teran,
slamming his  flagon onto  the table, slopping  liquid over  the brim.
"Damn it,  Apollo, you  were supposed  to be keeping  an eye  on her!"
Blue eyes flashed dangerously in the man's fair face.
    Apollo  toyed  with the  idea  of  beating  a hasty  retreat,  but
decided against  it. The fact  that Teran  would probably beat  him to
the door was  almost as daunting as  what would happen to  him when he
was caught.
    "I followed her  into the market, just like you  told me to," said
Apollo, keeping  his voice steady.  "She shopped around a  bit, bought
a few things, then the next thing I knew, she was gone."
    Teran's  glare  darkened.  Apollo  forced himself  not  to  cringe
under the man's penetrating gaze.
    "You're  one of  the  best  people I've  got  and  you lost  her."
Teran's voice  was quieter than  his glare  and sounding all  the more
dangerous for it.  His fingers drummed rhythmically on  the table top,
near his double edged eating dagger. He stood up slowly.
    "I have the twins looking for her..." Apollo said desperately.
    "That doesn't excuse-"
    The  door to  the  room slammed  open,  effectively cutting  Teran
OFF.  A  PAIR OF  IDENTICAL BROWN  HAIRED  BOYS  STOOD, FRAMED  IN THE
doorway.
    Apollo  whirled at  the  sound. "Well?"  he  snapped, masking  his
relief at the interruption in anger.
    "She's not in  the city anymore," said one of  the pair, fingering
the  cheap  copper medallion  around  his  neck.  "She wasn't  in  the
market or the area around it."
    "I checked  the docks," said  the other  twin. He looked  from one
glaring man  to the other.  "According to...someone I know  there, she
got passage on  the Dolphin's Anchor. It's headed for  the mainland. A
city by the name of Foroni."
    Apollo paled  and Teran let  loose an explosive string  of curses.
The  twins looked  at  each other,  then slipped  back  out the  door.
Their  hastily retreating  footsteps  could be  heard  over the  blond
man's muttering. Apollo turned back to Teran, who had sat down again.
    "Have to  get her back  here," he murmured, oblivious  to Apollo's
presence. "Can't make a damn move without her."
    "Why?"
    "What?" Teran's  head snapped  up, realizing  that he  hadn't been
left alone by  the twins exit. He smoothed the  obvious anger from his
face and forced himself to relax back into the chair.
    "Why  can't  we  make  a  move  without  Eliowy?  Why  is  she  so
important?"  Apollo  leaned against  the  wall  and folded  his  arms,
looking  more  confident than  he  actually  felt. Steady  black  eyes
studied Teran from across the room.
    "She  has  to  lead  the  attack  from  the  castle,"  said  Teran
frankly. "You know that."
    "There are  other people  far more capable  to lead  that attack,"
snapped  Apollo, pushing  himself  off the  wall.  Black hair  flopped
into his eyes. "Why her? Why not you or Vargis or even me?"
    Teran was silent.
    "Does it  have something to do  with that little trip  she went on
last year?"  pressed Apollo, advancing  a little closer to  the table.
"Something  she  found  along the  way to  make her  more  formidable,
perhaps?"
    Teran was still silent, but his bright blue eyes glittered.
    "A  new power,  perhaps?"  Apollo advanced  another step.  "Magic,
maybe? IS THERE magic involved?"
    "No!"  Teran didn't  specify which  question the  violent negative
was appended to.
    "Then what the hell is it? Why is Eliowy so gods-damned important?"
    Teran  rose  slowly  to  his  full,  nearly  seven  foot,  height,
glaring down  at his  black haired companion.  Apollo held  his ground
stubbornly.   "That  is   quite   enough,"   said  Teran,   expression
completely neutral. "I  want you to find the  Anchor's destination and
make  arrangements for  me to  follow.  Don't argue!"  he snapped,  as
Apollo opened  his mouth. "You  will go now and  do as I've  told you.
I'll have the bribe money ready as soon as you find me a ship."
    There  was  a  brief  stare-off then  Apollo  nodded  sharply  and
headed for  the door. He  looked back.  "I'll find out,  Teran. Sooner
OR LATER."  HE LOCKED GAZES WITH  TERAN, THEN  LEFT, LEAVING  THE DOOR
open.
    Teran  sat down  once  more. "Hopefully  later,"  he said  softly.
"Hopefully much later."

    By the time  Eliowy arrived in the town of  Dargon, it was pouring
rain. Water  dripped down her hood,  into her eyes and  down her neck,
chilling  her. Her  well worn  boots were  covered with  mud and  they
squished with each  step. Her small pack, which  contained little more
than a change  of clothes, a few personal belongings  and a hand harp,
had become  almost unbearably heavy  during the last hour  of walking.
The sword banging at her hip was like a dead weight, dragging her down.
    Eliowy stared  down the road leading  into the center of  town. It
was  deserted except  for a  few heavily  cloaked figures  hurrying to
their various  destinations amid the  clusters of houses. None  of the
people  seemed  like  the  type  to  give  directions.  Eliowy  sighed
deeply,  pulled  her  hood  further down  over  her  head,  scattering
droplets against  the rain  and resumed  her trek  into the  city, her
way dimly lit by an occasional heavy shielded street lantern.
    A few of  the buildings along the  way were lit, but  none of them
were  an  inn;  not  that  she  had the  money  to  pay  for  a  room.
Three...no,  four  coppers would  barely  get  her an  indecent  meal,
never mind alone a dry place to sleep.
    "Damn," mumbled  Eliowy. "Maybe  I can play  for my  supper. Maybe
they'll let  me spend  the night  too. Maybe  they'll like  my playing
enough  to  hire me."  Lightning  flashed  directly overhead,  closely
followed  by thunder.  The rain  abruptly increased.  "Maybe I  should
worry about  finding an inn  first.," decided Eliowy  glumly. "Nothing
like a dose of cold, wet reality to ruin a perfectly good fantasy."
    She resumed  walking, keeping  her head lowered  to keep  the rain
out of her  eyes. She had walked  about a block when a  glimmer in the
mud  caught her  eye. A  silver  piece lay  in the  road, rain  having
washed the  mud from  it. Lightning  constantly flickering  from cloud
to cloud,  caused the coin to  flash dimly. Eliowy waited  for another
burst of  lightning before bending down  to pick it up.  What a stroke
of luck!
    "What have you found, youngster?" someone asked.
    Eliowy jerked  back in surprise,  tripping over her cloak,  as she
tried to  stand. She  found herself  staring up at  a trio  of hooded,
armored men.  A lantern made  it impossible for  her to get much  more
detailed.
    The  foremost  figure  moved  a  step  closer  and  lantern  light
glinted off the long wood and metal sheath at his side.

    Lieutenant Kalen  Darklen stared down  at the young  woman sitting
on  the  ground  before  him.  Rain ran  down  her  face  like  tears,
plastering  her hair  to the  cheeks  and soaking  her tunic.  Lantern
light glinted  off cloak clasp  and weapon hilt  and gave her  eyes an
odd amber shine.
    "You all  right, miss?"  Kalen asked, taking  a step  forward when
the  girl didn't  get  up. Her  fall  hadn't been  hard  enough to  do
damage, so  there was  no reason  for her to  continue sitting  in the
mud. He reached down to give a hand up.

    Eliowy scrambled back  as the foremost figure  reached out towards
her, not  hearing the  man's concerned question.  She stumbled  to her
feet, putting muddy  foot prints on the hem of  her cloak and tangling
her scabbard  in its folds.  She stared at Kalen  as he drew  his hand
back.  The  pair eyed  one  another  for  a  few moments.  Kalen  with
curiosity. Eliowy with rapidly growing panic.
    "They  must have  heard,"  she thought  wildly.  "Town guards  are
always talking with each other..." She stepped back.
    A puzzled  frown crossed  Kalen's face. "What  is the  matter with
you?" he  stepped forward decisively, to  get the girl's face  back in
to the light.
    THAT  SETTLED THE  MATTER FOR  ELIOWY, WHO  PROMPTLY  PANICKED AND
BOLTED.
    With  a started  shout Kalen  and  company chased  after her,  the
bouncing lantern  making the  shadows dance  crazily along  the walls.
People  were not  in the  habit  of running  from the  guard, even  in
Dargon and Kalen's curiosity, not to mention his concern, was aroused.
    Eliowy dodged  down the  first side street  she could  find, cloak
flapping behind her.  "They know!" the thought pounded  through her at
the same  speed as  the racing  of her  heart and  the pumping  of her
feet.  "They must  have  heard bout  Tench!"  Another junction  loomed
ahead of her and she skidded into a right turn.
    Eliowy had  arrived in Tench  after several long months  of travel
and all  she had cared about  was finding an inexpensive  inn and some
food. Instead  of this, she  ran across  three men who  took exception
to her  having a weapon much  finer than their own.  Eliowy's fight to
keep  her most  valued possession  ended  with one  man dead,  another
injured and the third running for his life.
    Terrified that the  last man would call the town  guard after her,
Eliowy fled  the city,  not realizing  that he  and his  fellows would
not admit to having been beaten by a lone girl.
    The  footsteps grew  closer  and she  slipped  into another  alley
filled  with crates,  trying to  use her  size to  her advantage.  The
fading  sounds of  cursing behind  her was  testament to  her success.
She paused, took several deep breaths, then resumed running.
    Eliowy  rounded  yet another  corner  and  was  back on  the  main
street  into  and out  of  the  city.  Without thinking,  she  started
across the  street towards the waiting  shadows of a nearby  alley and
was almost trampled by two armored figures on horseback.
    In her  mad scramble  to get  out of the  way, Eliowy  slipped and
once again landed full length in the mud.
    "Are you  all right?"  demanded one of  the riders,  swinging down
from his mount.
    "Leave  her,  Rien. We  haven't  the  time,"  the other  rider,  a
female, shifted uneasily.
    "We have  enough time to  be certain  she's all right,"  said Rien
calmly. He  reached down and  helped Eliowy  to her feet.  "Be careful
where you're going next time. You might have gotten hurt."
    "Sorry," gulped  Eliowy. Her  eyes scanned  the area  behind Rien.
"I've got to go now!" She turned, shook off Rien's helping hand and ran.
    Rien returned  to his  horse. "Hey!"  he heard  and turned  to see
the  lieutenant of  the guard  charging towards  him. "Did  you see  a
young girl come  this way?" panted Kalen. Rien pointed  in the general
direction Eliowy had run in. "Thanks!"
    Rien remounted  his horse  as Kalen trotted  away. "Let's  go. And
you don't have to tell me that was the city guard."
    His partner simply smiled and looked smug.

    Eliowy leaned against  the wall of a  building, breathing heavily.
It looked  like she had finally  shaken her pursuers. Now  all she had
to do was find her way back out of the city and she'd be home free.
    Shouldering  her pack  with  a  sigh, Eliowy  moved  out into  the
street again, right into the arms of Kalen Darklen.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

1                              Steel Souls
                           by John Sullivan
                       (b.c.k.a. JSULLIV@VTVM1)

    From  the seawall  I watch  as the  sun flows  down to  the ocean,
bleeding  red into  the  water. The  wind  from the  sea  is cool  and
vigorous. It blows my  hair in a black cloud around  my head and whips
the heavy fabric of  my clothing until it snaps like  the sails on the
ship that brought  me here. I come here whenever  I can, and sometimes
I work  my way down the  rocks to the  water's edge to dip  my fingers
in the  sea. It is  my friend,  the sea. I  am stranded on  this alien
soil, but I can touch the sea. And the sea touches Bichu.
    The wind turns  colder as the evening deepens. The  sun has almost
completely set  now and the  dockmen slowly  filter away to  homes, to
taverns,  to wherever  they go.  Some look  at me  as they  walk away,
noticing   my  different   clothes,  my   face.  They   are  peasants,
uneducated and  of no status, but  they belong here, and  they can see
that I do  not. They look at me  with distaste as they pass  and I try
to ignore them and  look at the remaining spot of  the sun. Sages have
told me  that when  the sun sets  on Dargon, it  rises over  Bichu. If
that is  true, then my  father is waking  now, and remembering  that I
am gone.  It has been  a year  since I left  Bichu in disgrace.  For a
year my  family has  been shamed,  my father without  an heir.  I fled
from  honor, and  my life  becomes  more intertwined  with this  place
every day.  So my  father awakes  and begins a  second year  of sorrow
and shame. His shame  feeds on my own and feeds it in  turn. How can I
ever go home?

    The tavern is  called Grey Talka's. It is an  ugly place, near the
warehouses and the  docks, noisy and full of smoke,  smelling of vomit
and  cheap ale.  I sit  alone  at a  table  in the  corner, my  swords
beside me  for the people  here are not to  be trusted. A  maid brings
me a  tankard of  ale and  I examine it  for a  moment, then  dump the
contents on  the floor, carefully clean  it with my sleeve  and return
it  to  her. "Another,"  I  say,  "this  mug."  She says  nothing  but
returns with  it to  the long table  where the keeper  has set  up his
barrels.  In  Bichu  a  hosteler  so  insulted  would  either  seek  a
champion to defend  his reputation or close his tavern.  Here, so long
as I pay for the slop, I may pour it wherever I wish.
    The barmaid  returns with my  ale and collects her  copper, saying
nothing.  The ale  is bitter  and  poor. I  drink it  in large  gulps,
shaking my head to fight it, and order another. Time passes.
    "Mo iti do itte!"
    The  barmaid does  not  come,  and the  men  at  the other  tables
glance  at me,  their eyes  nervous behind  their dullness.  I realize
that I have  spoken in Bichanese. "Bring me another!"  I lean forward,
resting my elbows  on the table; my head  is heavy so I rest  it in my
hands. I'm  weary of this  land, its coarseness and  barbarism. Decent
men  are so  rare here  that when  they discover  one they  murder him
from a  place of concealment with  crossbows. Their honor is  blood in
the table linens.
    The  barmaid must  be frightened  of  me, for  the keeper  himself
brings  my ale.  He doesn't  set it  down, but  demands three  coppers
instead of  one, hoping I will  leave. Several men have  gathered in a
nervous  group near  the  kegs,  waiting. His  ale  isn't worth  three
coppers,  but neither  is it  worth one,  and I  have no  intention of
being intimidated  by these  peasants. I take  a Bichanese  crown from
my pouch and let it glitter on the table.
    "You'll bring  me as much as I ask  for and leave me alone,  won't
you?"
    He looks at the  flash of gold for a moment, then  snaps it up and
sets down  the tankard with  a muttered  "Of course, milord."  He goes
back to his kegs and argues quietly with the others.
    After  that word  circulates  that I'm  not  the street  character
they took me for;  I have money. A few even consider  taking me. I see
them sizing me  up, trying to appear dangerous. Meeting  their gaze is
enough to send them slinking back to their tables like rats.
    Crude beasts in  a land of animals!  I stand on the  seawall to be
upwind of them.

    When  I can  stand the  tavern  smell no  longer I  flee into  the
darkness of  the streets, but  the streets  stink as well.  The entire
filthy  city  stinks,  like  the  unwashed  people,  their  disgusting
rotted meat,  their uncivilized habits.  Even the ones who  attempt to
be  civil  cannot  overlook  their delusions  of  superiority.  "We'll
teach you  to dance in our  fashion, Lord Ichiya," with  the slightest
nuance of mockery  on the honorific. "I've learned  your language from
reading  your  poets,"  he  says,   speaking  like  an  addled  child,
disappointed  when I  do not  fall at  his feet  in gratitude.  I hate
Dargon.
    I've  admitted it  and the  hatred  flows through  that crack  and
washes over  me like a  flood. Even  drunkenness here is  low. Instead
of  freeing  the spirit,  it  drags  me down  into  the  filth in  the
gutters.  I walk  rapidly  through streets  unfamiliar  in the  night,
trying to  find some clean  place but there is  none here, not  in the
street, or in  the dishonor of the people. "Bastard  dogs!" I shout at
the  dark,  crumbling  buildings   in  Bichanese,  then  "Zyatai  an!"
lapsing  into  Bichoi,  the  lower   class  dialect  of  peasants  and
beggars. Perhaps they will understand this.
    "Koshaddan!  Tokodoshi esuna  ko!" The  hoarse cry  echoes in  the
abandoned street  and I  laugh. I  can imagine  my mother  hearing me,
learning that I  know such language. I  can see the look  on her face,
as if I had greeted guests by pissing in their teacups.
    It has been a  year since I saw my mother  and thieves prowl these
streets.  I  had  scarcely  left  the ship  when  they  began  hurling
themselves at  me clumsily  from the dark.  With Roissart  and Luthias
they came and  countless other times, as if this  land itself feels my
alienness  and reacts  with  all the  violence it  spawns.  But I  can
resist Dargon for there is violence within me as well.
    Around me,  in the darkest  corners of the alleys,  furtive shapes
move  when they  think  I don't  notice. No  one  moves through  these
reaches of the  city unobserved at night. But these  see my swords and
move with  caution. I realize that  I have ceased my  shouting and the
fire  moves  in  my blood  with  more  than  the  ale. I  sense  their
brutality, ebbing and  flowing like the tides and I  find some part of
me that needs it.
    I  begin to  call to  the inky  shapes like  a lover.  I sing  old
Bichanese drinking  songs, anything  at all.  I weave  in my  steps as
the drunkenness  crests within  me. For  a block  they shadow  me, and
more.  "Why are  you waiting?"  I cry  in Bichoi,  "I am  foolish with
drink and my purse is heavy." Come to me now, now.
    They come,  two figures,  weaving toward  me, running  from behind
me,  one at  each  quarter.  They hold  their  swords reversed,  their
bodies  curled around  them. From  that  grip they  will slash  upward
from their  left then  thrust down.  I step, step,  one more  then one
leg wavers  under my weight  and I stagger.  Then, as my  katana feels
the  fire as  well and  leaps into  my hand  with a  metallic singing,
time expands  into the montage  of battle. There  is the sharp  cry of
the duellist and  the right foot planted behind for  the spin. The tip
of a  sword nicks my clothing  as I spin away  from it and I  can feel
my blade moving  like a part of  myself. The clatter of a  parry and I
continue my spin. Even drunk I can take these fools apart.
    I luxuriate  in the  force of my  body's motion,  the kinesthetics
of the  sword. A dark  form before  me as I  complete the turn  and my
left  hand completes  its following  arc and  slaps against  the lower
menuki,  fingers  wrapping around  the  base  of  the hilt.  The  hand
shifts the  balance of  the sword  and I hold  my breath,  feeling the
descent.  And then  the bite  of  the steel.  The ecstasy  of it!  The
bite, oh, the bite.

    Dim light  brings the morning  and the wind  is chilling. I  am on
the floor  of my rooms,  drenched in  sweat. I have  committed murder.
The watchmen  who came soon  after, drawn  by the commotion,  saw dead
thieves and an  acquaintance of Lord Dargon, and did  not hold me. But
I  know the  truth.  There is  no  honor in  inviting  attack from  an
inferior  fighter  to   justify  a  killing.  There   is  only  shame,
cowardice, weakness.
    It's strange  how little a  moment of  shame leaves of  life. Once
there was  family, honor. Now  there are only disjoint  snippings from
time, not  unlike the way of  a battle. The trunk  with my belongings,
opened  less frequently  every  day. The  remaining  length of  unused
rice paper tucked  under one arm, flashes of street  life around me as
I walk  toward the harbor. Fishsellers,  marketwomen, apprenticed boys
running on  the errands of their  masters as if nothing  has happened.
Near  the docks  I  discover a  bowl  of  fish stew  in  my hand,  the
stewmonger expecting payment. I give him my purse.
    Then there  is only myself,  the sun  rising behind me,  the wind,
the seawall  and the  nervous tossing  of the sea.  There is  only one
way to  remove a  stain such as  this. I wonder  if my  parents across
the ocean will feel the sting of the blade.
    I  kneel on  the  seawall, the  end of  the  ricepaper beneath  my
knees to  keep it  from blowing  away in the  wind. My  katana weights
the other  end. I watch my  hands wrap a  length of cloth cut  from my
sleeve around the  blade of the shorter wakizashi,  once, twice, three
and then  four times. Then  I hold the blade,  one hand ginger  on the
cloth wrapping,  the other butted  against the  hilt. When I  was born
my father expected  only that I would  carry the name of  our family a
step  or two  forward and  not  do it  dishonor. I  have done  nothing
else.  I  have fled  from  a  challenge to  the  family  name to  this
forsaken place,  and I cannot  even uphold  the basic tenets  of honor
here, in  a place  without honor.  Oh father, how  I have  shamed you,
how I've shamed myself!
    There is  only one  way to undo  the violence I  have done  to the
reputation of  clan Ichiya. Enough  stalling, enough wallowing  in the
magnitude of my  shame. A flash of courage to  cleanse it. A stillness
comes over  me. Honor welcomes the  intention to restore it  and helps
quiet the  fear. The  sounds of  the town  around me  fade away  and I
breathe  shallowly,  in  time  with  the rhythmic  beat  of  the  surf
against  the  seawall. With  the  next  wave,  the surge  of  strength
through my arms,  and then peace. It comes. The  water climbs, foaming
white, the pitch  of it rising, and then it  crashes with a tremendous
booming sound  against the seawall.  The muscles of my  arms tense and
move.
    And in  the next  instant I  fall sideways,  knocked over  by some
impact. There  is pain, and  grating of  flesh against stone.  For the
briefest  moment I  am confused,  like one  just waking  from a  vivid
dream. Then  I see  a body, on  hands and knees  over my  legs, having
dived into  me from the  right. Rage  floods through me  instantly, as
if  it has  always been  there. The  ignorant brutes  can't even  keep
from interfering  in my most  private moments!  I kick his  chest with
both legs,  knocking him  away so  that he  rolls back  until he  is a
pace away  from me and  seated in a clumsy  sprawl. As quickly  I roll
forward  to my  knees and  move  after him.  The wakizashi's  wrapping
begins to unwind and  trail behind the blade like the  tail of a comet
as I raise  it sideways, holding it  over my head for  the quick slash
downward.  As  I  loom  over  the man  he  moves  forward,  pride  and
ferocity in  his bearing. He snaps  his head back to  expose the vital
areas of the throat and barks "Ko choro an!"
    "Do what you must."
    The  ritual  words stop  me  as  if  paralyzed, frozen  in  attack
posture, the  wakizashi still held  overhead. The cloth  still hanging
from  the  blade waves  in  the  wind. I  recognize  the  face of  the
stewmonger, eyes  locked into my  own. He  is frightened, but  he does
not move.  There is  an instant  to wonder  how he  comes to  know our
customs so well.  Then he says the words again,  softly this time and,
unlike that  damned fool of a  chronicler perfectly, with no  trace of
accent. "Do what you must."
    He is  right. I have murdered;  I cannot expunge their  blood with
my own.  In death there is  escape, but the situation  remains behind.
It is only  an escape, the apotheosis of self-pity.  There is no honor
in  death  to  avoid   responsibility.  The  realization  is  painful.
Something  I have  been  taught  since childhood  is  a  lie, but  the
stewseller  is right!  Honor  requires the  facing of  responsibility,
living with it, dealing with it. I will do what I must. I will go on.
    There is  a clatter as  the wakizashi  falls from limp  fingers to
the stone.  I fall forward,  sobbing like a child  and he draws  me in
and holds me  silently. It's a hard thing; nothing  has seemed to take
on such scope before. Life had always seemed so brief a thing.
    When we  rise to  our feet  there is  blood, soaking  my clothing,
dripping  into the  crumpled length  of rice  paper. The  blade of  my
wakizashi has slashed  my side during the aborted thrust  and my fall.
Working quickly and  efficiently the stew seller bandages  it with the
cloth from  the blade.  He is  a man  of many  talents, my  rescuer. I
wonder why he contents himself selling fish stew on the docks.
    From a  pocket he takes  my coin pouch and  returns it to  me. "If
my  stew is  so bad,  I  shouldn't charge  so  much for  it." A  light
comment, denying  the seriousness  of the incident.  He is  telling me
that the matter is  closed. I bow deeply and he  returns the bow, then
turns and walks back toward his cart.
    I  retrieve my  swords and  return them  to their  place. Suddenly
freed, the bloody length  of rice paper whips away in  the wind. It is
carried  over the  harbor  for perhaps  the length  of  a ship  before
fluttering down to  float on the surface of the  water. My blood soaks
into the water, and the outgoing tide carries it toward distant Bichu.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

1                             Inquiries
                         by John Doucette
                     (b.c.k.a JDOUCETTE@UPEI)

    The  guards  at  the  end  of  the  hall  immediately  snapped  to
attention upon  noticing the black-robed figure  approaching. Although
the robes  the individual  wore hid  all distinguishing  features, the
guards recognized  who it was without  so much as a  second glance. It
was fear,  and a little common  sense, that dictated their  gesture of
respect.  Unpleasant  things happened  to  those  who displeased  this
man. The  fact that their  lord held  this dark figure's  abilities in
high regard also warranted some display.
    He stopped  at the  doors to  Lord Myros'  study and  waited, arms
clasped within  the sleeves of  his velvet-soft  robes, as one  of the
guards  entered  the  study  to  inform  his  master  of  his  guest's
arrival. A  moment later, the guard  exited the study. "My  Lord Myros
will see you  now," he announced in  a deep voice. Without  so much as
a gesture of acknowledgement, the visitor entered.
    It was  a moderately  sized study,  but it more  than made  up for
its lack  of space with  the quality of  the collection of  books Lord
Myros had acquired  over the years. There were first  editions of some
of the finest books  dealing with the art of war,  and second or third
editions  of  books dealing  with  such  varied topics  as  governing,
economics, and literature.
    In the  center of  the room sat  a round oak  table of  the finest
quality  and  around  this  were  placed  five  exquisite  high-backed
chairs  upholstered in  dark purple  velvet.  A fireplace  set in  the
wall opposite  the entrance  to the  study was  happily alight  with a
fire that  was just  now beginning  to burn down.  The candles  in the
candelabras  were extinguished,  thus  casting the  room into  dancing
shadows made by the firelight.
    Lord Myros sat  in a sixth finely crafted chair  by the fireplace,
sipping  brandy. He  made  sure that  he and  his  visitor were  alone
before  speaking.   "Well,  Celeste,"   he  said,  staring   into  the
fireplace, "are the rumors true?"
    Celeste  regarded Myros  for  a moment  before  answering. In  his
early  forties, Myros  looked like  a man  ten years  his junior.  His
trim,  fit body  bore the  scars of  a lifetime  of battle.  Myros had
long since lost  count of the skirmishes and petty  wars he had fought
in.  His blond  hair was  cut close  in the  military style.  His blue
eyes could be  alive with emotion one  moment, and as cold  as ice the
next. He was  known for his ruthlessness towards his  enemies, and his
generosity towards his  friends. A valuable ally,  Celeste thought. Or
a dangerous enemy.
    "I don't have all night," he said sharply.
    "Yes, my lord,"  she replied. "I was merely  sorting out pertinent
facts. To answer  thy question, my lord, Baranur is  rife with talk of
an  impending  Bichanese invasion.  The  general  consensus among  the
king's  advisors is  that  Baranur should  attack  Bichu first  before
Bichu's forces  are concentrated. King  Haralan hath been  giving this
line of reasoning serious thought--"
    Myros  laughed uproariously.  "The  fool! The  Bichanese will  cut
him to pieces!"
    "If I  may continue,  my lord,"  she said  icily. Celeste  was not
fond of  interruptions. "There are  two in Baranur who  advise against
attacking  Bichu.  The  first  is   Duke  Clifton  Dargon.  His  Grace
believeth most strongly  that Bichu would never attack  Baranur in the
face of  that nation's powerful navy.  He also hath an  earnest desire
to avoid  war. The  second is Haralan's  Knight Commander,  Sir Edward
Sothos.  Sir Edward  thinks it  ludicrous to  attack Bichu  for purely
military reasons,  not the least  of which  is the unenviable  task of
supplying an army so far from home."
    "The  combined efforts  of both  of these  powerful and  respected
men, particularly Duke Dargon, hath thus far prevented any conflict."
    "So Edward  is Haralan's Knight Commander, eh?"  Myros muttered to
himself.
    "You said something, my lord?"
    "Nothing of  importance. What of  Bichu? What are  they planning?"
he asked.
    "Regretfully, my lord,  my scrying powers cannot reach  such a far
off land. Only the Bichanese know what they are planning."
    Myros  rose  and  began  pacing,  pondering  possible  courses  of
action. After several  minutes of this, he set his  brandy down on the
table and turned to  face Celeste. "I think it's time  we paid a visit
to Baranur. I'd like  to see how my dear friend  Edward is faring. You
will come as well, of course."
    "Of course, my  lord," she said. Both knew that  the price Celeste
would ask would be high.

    Baroness Elaine  Myros strolled the  battlements in the  warm Yuli
breeze. She  paused in  her wanderings  to take in  the beauty  of the
sunset. The cloudless  sky was crimson red. Elaine had  never seen the
sky this color. What does it portend? she thought.
    "There you are, my dear," Baron Myros said.
    She whirled  around, a startled  look on her  face. "Corneilious!"
she said. "You frightened me!"
    "I apologize,  Elaine. I didn't mean  to. I didn't realize  you so
deeply in thought. What's troubling you?"
    "Nothing, Corneilious."
    "Are you sure?" he asked dubiously.
    "Yes," she  replied. "Really  darling, there  is nothing  wrong. I
was just enjoying the beauty of the sunset."
    "Ah. Well now that that's cleared up, I have a surprise for you."
    "Oh? What is it?" she asked expectantly.
    "We're going on a trip to Baranur."
    "Baranur? I've never heard of it."
    "Not many  in the Empire have.  It's a country about  three months
journey away.  I have friends  there, and I'd  like to visit  them. We
haven't seen each other in almost six years."
    "When are we leaving?"
    "In about a week. It will take that long to organize things."
    "That should give  me plenty of time to get  ready," she said. "Do
you know much about Baranur?" she asked her husband.
    "Some," he said. "Why  don't we go to the study and  I'll see if I
have any books dealing with it?"
    "You should,"  she said  with a  smile. "You have  a book  on just
about everything."
    Myros  laughed.   "Shall  we?"  As   the  sun  dipped   below  the
mountains, Myros  and his  wife descended the  steps to  the courtyard
arm in arm.

    Others were  discussing Myros' planned  visit to Baranur.  An hour
previously, Celeste  had finished  gathering the spell  components she
needed. Now she  stood in front of a body  length mirror. The mirror's
surface  was  a  swirling,  impenetrable  grey  mist.   Celeste waited
patiently.
    After several minutes,  the mist gradually began to  calm and then
faded entirely.  The figure  reflected in the  mirror could  have been
Celeste  but for  the fact  that  it was  a man.  "Cho dakh,  Primus,"
Celeste said in greeting.
    "Cho dakh, Celeste,"  he replied in a voice that  was barely above
a whisper. "You have something to report?"
    "Yes, Primus,"  she answered.  "Myros plans  to journey  to Magnus
on the seventh of Sy."
    "Magnus?" he said,  a faintly surprised look on his  face. "A long
journey. What dost Baron Myros wish to accomplish there?" he inquired.
    "He claims  he wishes  to visit a  friend residing  there, Primus.
From his  tone, this friend  is more likely  an enemy. I  suspect that
Myros has  other motives  than simple revenge,  Primus. Unfortunately,
I know'st not what they are."
    The  man  in  the  mirror  paused,  considering  options.  Celeste
waited   in  respectful   silence.  Finally   after  ten   minutes  of
pondering, he  spoke. "There is only  one reason that I  can determine
that would be  sufficient to cause Myros to undertake  such an arduous
trip. He  is undoubtedly  scheming some method  of turning  the strife
between  Baranur  and  Bichu  to   his  advantage.  Perhaps  he  seeks
allies." He nodded  his head as if agreeing with  himself. "Our Master
must know of this. Thee hath done well, Celeste."
    "I  thank  thee for  thy  praise,  Primus," Celeste  said  humbly.
"What are your instructions?"
    A ghost of a  smile crossed his lips. "Thee will  go with Myros as
thee hath  no doubt  already agreed.  Thee may  even keep  his money."
His smile disappeared. "Remember where thy loyalties lie, Celeste."
    The  mist reappeared  and quickly  faded. Celeste  now gazed  upon
her own reflection.  Icy fingers of fear gripped her  heart. He knows!
she thought.  How could  I have  been so  careless? She  began shaking
violently at  the thought of  what the Primus would  do to her  if she
transgressed again.
    I must  remain calm. "Control,"  she repeated to herself  over and
over again. Within  a few minutes, to all  outward appearances Celeste
radiated  complete control  and  competence. Inwardly,  she was  still
terrified. She  went to the table  and mixed a potion  that would help
her sleep,  and more importantly,  would cause  her not to  dream. She
drank her concoction and was asleep in moments.

    The  day dawned  bright  and  clear. Myros  stood  on the  balcony
overlooking the  courtyard. Preparations were almost  complete. Myros'
bodyguard of  fifty men were  mounted and  ready to move  out. Celeste
had arrived two  hours ago. Myros and his advisors  had been ready one
hour  ago.  Elaine said  she  would  be  ready soon.  "Elaine,"  Myros
called. "We're ready to leave. Would you care to join us?"
    "Just a few more minutes, Corneilious."
    Myros was  ready to  scream. He  was just  about to  pack Elaine's
things  for  her  when  he  was  distracted  by  a  commotion  in  the
courtyard  below. A  messenger had  just ridden  through the  gate and
was demanding to  see Baron Myros immediately. Myros'  aide was trying
to explain  that he could see  the baron when His  Lordship was ready.
Myros let the  argument continue until it came to  the point when blow
were about to be exchanged.
    "Jordaan," he called, "what is the problem?"
    "A messenger to  see you, my lord. He seems  most anxious to speak
with you."
    "So  I  gathered.   Who have you  come from?"  he inquired  of the
messenger.
    "I have  come from  His Imperial Majesty.  I have  instructions to
deliver this message to you personally, Your Lordship."
    "Jordaan, show our guest to my study. I shall be there shortly."
    "Yes, my  lord. This way,  please." Myros entered his  quarters as
the messenger was being shown to the study.
    "A messenger has arrived from the Emperor," he told Elaine.
    "The Emperor? What could His Majesty want?"
    "I have  no idea.  I'd best  go and see  him. Keep  packing, dear.
This shouldn't  take long." Myros  did have  an idea of  the message's
content. He hoped he was wrong.
    He entered  the study, his  manner brisk. The messenger  came over
to  greet him,  but Myros  dispensed  with pleasantries.  "Let me  see
it."  The messenger  handed him  the message  without comment.  Myros'
worst  fears were  true.  The  Emperor had  learned  of his  impending
departure for Baranur  and had decided to appoint  Myros as Ambassador
to Baranur.  His Imperial Majesty  commanded Myros to  determine which
country should be supported in the upcoming war: Bichu or Baranur.
    "I  was instructed  to wait  for your  reply, Your  Lordship," the
messenger said.
    "Inform the Emperor  I most humbly accept."  The messenger nodded,
then left Myros alone with his thoughts.
    How did he  find out? No one  but my advisors and  Celeste knew of
this.  She  would not  betray  me;  she has  no  reason  to. The  cold
realization hit  him that  one of  those in his  inner circle  of most
trusted advisors had to have betrayed him.
    He quickly  ruled out Jordaan. He  is absolutely loyal to  me. But
so are  the others. Who  is it? Celeste. She  can find out.  I'll have
her  use her  magic.  I have  three  months before  I  get to  Magnus.
Plenty of time. Slowly, he turned from the table and exited the room.
    When  Myros  entered  the  courtyard,  Jordaan  noticed  something
different  about his  liege. His  eyes were  like ice  and his  face a
stone mask. The  only time I have  seen him this way was  when we were
in battle, he thought. What was in that dispatch?
    Jordaan  rode over  to where  Myros  was mounting  his horse.  "Is
everything all right, my lord?"
    "Fine, Jordaan. Fine. Why do you ask?"
    "No reason, my lord," he replied carefully.
    "Then let us be off."
    "Yes, my  lord." He turned  in his  saddle and ordered  the column
to move  out. Flanked by  the escort, Myros'  party rode out  the gate
and began the long journey to Baranur.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

1                           Trial by Fire
                             Prologue
                       by M. Wendy Henniquin
                  (b.c.k.a. HENNEQUI_WEM@CTSTATEU)

    Roisart Connall watched  silently as his cousin,  Clifton, Duke of
Dargon,  donned elaborate  Bichanese armor  with the  adept assistance
of  Ittosai Michiya.  The Castellan  of Connall  already was  prepared
for  the impending  battle. Roisart's  twin brother,  Luthias, armored
like  a hero  of old,  stood nearby,  his sword  already in  his hand.
Coolly, Roisart  cast an appraising  eye on his cousin's  armor. "It's
really beautifully-made," Roisart concluded.
    "It is  Bichu's finest,"  Castellan Ittosai announced  proudly. He
finished armoring  the Duke,  then put  on his own  stout helm.  "I am
ready for whatever comes," the castellan said.
    Luthias  nodded  respectfully  to  his  castellan,  warned,  "We'd
better go,"  and cast a  nervous look over  his shoulder at  the white
wall.  Despite   the  concern   flooding  his  face,   Luthias  looked
brilliant, brave,  like a  knight in  a legend.  He wore  his father's
battle-scarred  armor  and  bore  his family's  crest  into  war.  His
weapon, a fine steel  sword, was worthy of a king.  He gripped it more
firmly, ready for whatever fighting would come.
    "You  are right,  Luthias-san," Ittosai  concurred. He  hefted his
katana. "This will not be an easy battle."
    Nodding,  Clifton reached  out to  his young  cousin, Roisart  and
grasped his  shoulder. "Get  the defenses ready.  You'll be  safe here
in  Dargon Keep,  but  they may  attack  the  city any  day  now ."  A
sorrowful look swept Clifton's features. "And take care of Lauren."
    I  didn't   know  Roisart  knew  Lauren,   Luthias  thought,  then
wondered at  his own idea.  How could  Roisart not know  Lauren, their
cousin's wife, the  Duchess of Dargon? Roisart was at  the wedding. He
must have been.
    Roisart  gripped Clifton's  arm.  "Be  careful, Clifton."  Roisart
released the Duke, then turned to his brother, his twin.
    "Luthias..."  Roisart  paused  awkwardly. Of  the  twins,  Roisart
usually  had an  easier  time with  words,  with expressing  feelings.
Finally, he  said, "Don't worry,  twin. Everything will be  well. I'll
take care  of the Duchy, and  Sable's quite capable of  taking care of
our  barony--and herself."  Again  Roisart paused,  but  this time  he
shook  his head  sadly. "You  should have  married her.  The Baron  of
Shipbrook wants  to marry her  to Oleran  now. You shouldn't  have let
him have the chance; you should have married Sable yourself."
    Upset that Roisart  should throw this in his face,  and angry that
there  was nothing  he could  do about  the situation  anyway, Luthias
closed his  eyes briefly. The  sword trembled  in his grip.  "She's in
love with someone else."  Fury tainted Luthias' words.  "And she won't
say--"
    "Come on,  manling," Clifton  ordered suddenly. Luthias  knew that
Clifton was trying  to sound light-hearted, but the  words were rough,
impatient,  angry.  Luthias  let  the 'manling'  go,  nodded  a  final
farewell  to  his  twin  and  joined his  cousin  and  his  castellan.
Together, the three threw open the gates of Dargon Keep.
    Surrounding the walls were a hundred thousand men--the King's army.
    Ittosai vanished,  as if he had  been merely a figure  in a dream.
A knife  suddenly flashed  past Luthias' eyes  and embedded  itself in
Clifton's  gut.  The  Duke  of Dargon  fled  desperately,  pursued  by
countless,  faceless   soldiers.  For  a  moment,   Luthias  froze  so
completely  that he  knew  it  couldn't be  natural;  in that  moment,
strong,  bodiless  arms secured  his  limbs,  threw  him to  the  hard
ground, and  held him  fast. He  watched them;  they were  ripping his
chest  plate with  knives.  Soon,  blood covered  his  armor, and  his
kinsman Clifton sprinted past, his belly wound belching blood.
    Luthias  tried to  move  to  help his  cousin,  but  the hold  was
iron-strong.  And there  was  a  pain, an  annoyance,  a torture.  The
butchers were hacking at his chest.
    "Luthias, help me!" Clifton yelled, frantic.
    Luthias could see  him bleeding, his life soaking  into the earth.
Anguished, Luthias cried, "I can't!"
    "Help me! HELP ME!"
    Luthias almost  wept; he  couldn't move, he  couldn't help  as the
King's  guards caught  his cousin  and threw  him to  the ground.  But
Clifton rose again and sprinted.
    And  there was  pain again,  horrid  pain. Luthias  looked at  his
chest.  It was  open,  and the  butchers no  longer  used knives,  but
their own,  dirty hands.  With bloodied, muddy  fingers, they  tore at
his ribs.
    And there was no one to help but--
    "Roisart!" Luthias called. "Help me! I need you!"
    Somewhere  above  him,  in  the castle  window,  Luthias  saw  his
brother,  no   longer  a   healthy  young  man,   but  a   specter  of
death--gray-faced, two black  bolts sticking from his  side and chest.
The specter  shook his head sadly.  "I can't help you  anymore, twin,"
Luthias  heard his  brother say  regretfully, and  then, Roisart,  too
was gone.
    "Roisart!" Luthias  cried out  in horror.  The apparition  did not
return. His  physical pain increased  when his anguish did;  both were
now  sharp.  Luthias saw  chunks  of  red fly  past  his  eyes as  the
butchers clawed at him.
    And  Clifton  went  past  Luthias again,  running  for  his  life.
Desperately,  Luthias   struggled,  but  the  grip   was  too  strong.
"Clifton, run!"
    "Luthias, help me HELP ME!"
    "I can't reach you!" Luthias almost sobbed. "Run!"
    A wave of  pain claimed Luthias then, strong as  thunder, sharp as
lightning. For  a moment,  the world before  his eyes  blackened. From
above,  Luthias  saw  himself,  his  chest  opened  like  a  poisonous
flower, and the  butchers' hands were tugging on his  aorta. The veins
around his heart were stretching--THE PAIN!
    The pain returned  him to his body. Blood, his  own blood, spurted
in his eyes. He could scarcely breathe.
    "Luthias, where  are you?"  his cousin  called from  somewhere. "I
need you!"
    Luthias tried to scream.  The pain was  incredible.   He  couldn't
breathe.
    "Help me!"
    "THEY'RE TEARING MY HEART OUT!"
    Then the  pain vanished,  and the butchers  faded as  Ittosai had.
Luthias found  himself looking at Sable.  Her hands held his  heart in
place. Luthias closed his eyes, tried to regain his strength.
    "You're  mine  now,  woman!"  and  the  pain  returned  with  that
declaration,  made by  a vaguely  familiar voice.  Luthias opened  his
eyes.  Baron Oleran--that  son  of a  --was  holding Sable,  viciously
ripping  her gown  off, hitting  her.  She cried  out. Blood  geysered
from  her temple,  spilled  into her  hair: on  a  field sable,  blood
gules. Oleran hit her again and laughed at her pain.
    "Luthias!" she cried, trying to reach him.
    Luthias tried  to move, tried to  help her, but the  butchers were
back,  playing  catch  with   his  disembodied  heart.  They  laughed,
throwing it to  each other, as it pumped Luthias'  life blood onto the
dusty ground.
    And then  he saw  Clifton, dead, his  body being  dissected before
the King  of Baranur.  Someone was binding  Ittosai's arms  behind his
back. Marcellon  tried to cast  a spell, tried  to help them  all, but
the  magic was  gone; nothing  happened.  Not far  from Luthias'  own,
stone body,  Oleran beat and raped  Sable. Oleran held a  sword, moved
to kill her--
    "Sable!" Luthias screamed, bolting to a sitting position. "SABLE!"

    And  Luthias  awoke, sitting,  gasping  in  reality. Frantic,  his
hand felt  at his chest;  it was smooth,  intact, and the  heart still
within it beat wildly.
    It was  a dream, he realized,  only a dream. There  was no battle;
he was in the  bedroom of his keep. Clifton was alive  and well in his
own keep,  two hours' ride away.  Sable slept unharmed not  forty feet
down the corridor.  Ittosai, free and safe, dreamed  peacefully in the
castellan's  rooms downstairs.  And Roisart--Roisart  lay dead  in the
crypts far below.
    Only a dream,  and nothing had changed. Roisart  was dead, Luthias
was Baron of Connall, and he was alone.
    No,  not alone.  The  door  to his  bedchamber  slammed open,  and
someone  bearing  a  pole  weapon was  standing,  battle-ready,in  the
doorway.  Behind the intruder were  two others, equally alert, bearing
swords.
    Automatically, Luthias  tensed with  the reactions of  a long-time
warrior. As  his eyes  adjusted, his  hand began  to creep  toward the
blade kept beside his bed.
    Then he recognized the closer visitor: Sable.
    Luthias  tried vainly  to slow  his breathing.  To the  guards, he
said,  "I'm all  right,  men. Bad  dream. Return  to  your posts,  and
thank  you." The  guards  exchanged a  shrug,  nodded respectfully  to
their lord, and left.
    Still panting,  Luthias tried to  laugh at the armed  woman before
him. "Here you are, taking care of the Baron again."
    The Baron  of Connall  again tried  to slow  his breathing  as his
seneschal came forward  and sat on the  bed. She looked as  if she had
been on her  way to bed; her  hair was partially unbound,  and she was
clad in  nothing but a  gauzy nightdress made to  be worn in  the kind
of raging  heat that  had been  eclipsing Dargon of  late. As  she set
her weapon against  the bedpost, Luthias looked intently  at her face.
She glanced around the room, as if confused.
    "I thought  you  were  being attacked,"  Sable  said.   "You  were
screaming--"
    Luthias  scowled: pole  weapon! It  was  a naginata,  a weapon  of
Bichanese  origin, a  gift from  Ittosai Michiya  to Myrande,  and the
castellan had been  instructing the seneschal in its  use. Michiya had
told Luthias  just yesterday that  she was becoming quite  a she-demon
with it.  Oh, he understood,  and it angered  him. Sable had  not come
only  to take  care of  him, but  to defend  him, with  her life.  The
Baron  scowled again.  What  the  hell did  she  think  they paid  the
guards for?
    Finally,   Luthias   sighed,  half-amused,   half-despairing.   He
touched her hair, almost laughed. "Are you my bodyguard now, too?"
    "I was  closer than the  guards," Myrande explained.  "You sounded
like you were in trouble."
    "Quit  babying  me,"  Luthias  snapped  defensively.  "I'm  strong
enough to defend myself; I don't need a woman to do it for me."
    "I am  your friend," Myrande  returned angrily. "You would  do the
same  for me.  And  don't give  me  that stupidity  about  my being  a
woman.  Macdougalls says  I'm a  better shot  than half  your archers,
and with this--"  she indicated the naginata-- "I  could destroy seven
men together before they even got a shot at me."
    Unfortunately,   she  was   right:   Macdougalls,  the   assistant
castellan,  had praised  Myrande's  archery, and  Ittosai Michiya  had
told  him already  about her  skill with  the naginata.  He shook  his
head and  looked at her in  the moonlight: a dark,  disheveled, fierce
woman,  clothed in  an almost  indecent nightgown  that clung  in some
places  to her  sweaty  skin...Luthias  felt his  body  tense, but  he
smiled,  wondering if  there were  any woman  more attractive  in  the
Kingdom--
    And then the  dream returned, and the young Baron  groaned and put
his head  in his hands. Sable  put her hand  on his hair; it  was damp
with sweat  from the horrid  heat of reality,  from the hot  horror of
the dream.  Gently, she stroked his  head. "Do you want  to talk about
it?" she asked softly.
    Censoring  selected episodes,  such  as Roisart's  advice and  the
later rape, he related what he could remember of the nightmare.
    "Those  letters  really bothered  you,  didn't  they?" she  asked,
concerned. "More than you wanted to admit."
    Luthias attempted to smile.  "Sable, you could  always see through
me."
    "That isn't  true," Sable  claimed, moving back  a little  to look
at him. "And it isn't an answer, either."
    The  young   Baron's  expression   changed  from  one   of  bitter
amusement to one  of grim anger. "You're damn right  they bothered me.
First, I'm  informed by the  Justices that  I am now  Duke's Advocate.
Now,  I've  got  to  be  in Dargon  City  half  my  time,  prosecuting
criminals  before  the Tribunal--and  I'm  not  skilled at  law.  Now,
besides court time  and traveling, I've got to do  more reading. As if
I didn't have enough to do!"
    "Don't  yell  at   me,"  Sable  protested.  "I'm   on  your  side,
remember? If anyone knows how hard you work, I do, Luthias."
    Luthias  smiled.  She  worked  as hard--harder--than  he  did.  "I
know,  Sable, and  I'm sorry.  But I'm  overloaded as  it is,  and now
this aggravation--"
    "Speaking  of  which,"  Sable  prompted, thinking  of  the  second
missive that  had arrived that day,  "no one is better  at aggravation
than my uncle."
    "Yes, your stupid  uncle, who never showed  the slightest interest
in  you   now  wants  to   arrange  your  marriage."   Luthias'  mouth
tightened.  "That's bad  in  itself--I  don't trust  a  man who  would
throw his brother out of his barony for no reason."
    "There was a  reason," Myrande corrected. "He threw  my father out
because he  married my  mother before  my uncle  got the  chance." She
shrugged. "Doesn't matter.  My father was happier  being Castellan for
your father and knight to the late Duke."
    "Well,  he threw  your father  out, pretended  he and  your mother
and you  never existed,  and now,  he wants  to want  to marry  you to
Oleran--do you know what kind of man he is?"
    Myrande  nodded.   "I've  heard  the  rumors."   There  were  many
rumors--nothing  concrete--about   Oleran,  an  older  Baron   from  a
neighboring  Duchy. It  was  said  almost universally  that  he was  a
brute,  a killer,  that  he  enjoyed others'  pain,  and tortured  his
first  wife until  she died.  Sable  shuddered. "You  know I  wouldn't
marry him to save my life."
    "Yes, I know,"  Luthias confirmed, and his voice left  no room for
argument. "I forbid it."
    Sable chuckled. "You forbid, Luthias?"
    "I'm your  guardian until you  become twenty-one in Deber,  and by
law and  by God,  I forbid  it!" Luthias  snapped. "I'd  rather murder
Oleran and  be imprisoned  in the Keep  for the rest  of my  life than
have you marry that monster."
    "Don't  worry," Sable  advised him.  She reached  out and  stroked
his  forearm.  "I  won't  marry  Oleran,  or  anyone  else,  for  that
matter--" She stopped, pulled her hand away.
    "I really should  arrange a marriage for you,"  Luthias sighed, as
if  he regretted  the situation.  "Your  uncle is  right about  that."
Impulsively,  he grasped  her small  hands. "Sable,  tell me  who this
man is that you  love. You might as well marry  someone you care for."
He squeezed her  hands imploringly and peered at her  dark face in the
dimness. "Please...your  uncle threatened  to wrest  your guardianship
from me."
    Sable shook  her head.  "No. If  he comes around  on his  own, all
will be well, but  I won't beg him to love me or  be forced on him, as
you seem to want, or sold to him like a horse, as my uncle prefers."
    "You're  too  proud  for  your  own  good,"  Luthias  accused  her
angrily. "You should just tell him--"
    "And  gain  his  pity?  No," Myrande  answered  firmly,  her  chin
stubborn. "I don't  want your pity." She paused, as  if finished, then
added, "Or--his."
    "He'd be crazy  if he pitied you," Luthias  returned hotly. "Crazy
if he didn't accept you and marry you--"
    For a  wild, brief moment, it  seemed like Roisart was  there, and
Luthias heard  his words  of the nightmare:  "You should  have married
her  yourself."  Luthias sighed.  The  thought  had crossed  his  mind
before. He  cared for  Sable, and  she for him;  they got  along well,
and  she would  be an  excellent Baroness.  Looking at  her again,  in
that  sheer nightgown,  Luthias found  the idea  appealing beyond  its
practical aspects.
    But she would  never accept him. Sable had always  been proud, and
Luthias  knew she  would never  accept his  proposal, which  she would
think was made  out of pity. Luthias grimaced. He  didn't pity her; he
loved  her--she was  his best  friend--and he  only wanted  her to  be
happy. And so would the man she loved. Or else.
    If he could ever find out who he was!
    Oh,  she was  impossible! Luthias  sighed and  decided to  end the
argument. Not  tonight, his head ached  to much to argue  with someone
as iron-headed  as Sable. He forced  himself to laugh, then  he hugged
his seneschal. "Sable, what am I ever going to do with you?"
    Sable withdrew  a little  from his  impulsive embrace.  "I'll stay
here and be your seneschal, Luthias, same as always."
    "You deserve better  than to be toiling like a  slave for the rest
of your life."
    "So do  you," Sable  countered, "but it  seems the  Tribunal won't
to let you get  away with it." She drew a deep  breath. "You should be
going back to sleep, Baron."
    "Back  to sleep?"  Luthias  echoed incredulously.  "In this  heat?
After that dream?"  The Baron of Connall shook his  head. "No, thanks,
Sable." He swung his legs over the side of the bed.
    "Going to read in the study?"
    "No, that would probably put me back to sleep," Luthias quipped.
He stretched his arms above his head. He looked at her and decided
not to look at her again until morning. He needed to move. "I'm
going to go out and beat up the pell--can't do it during the day in
this heat." He stood, looked back at Myrande's dark eyes; yes, that
was safe enough. "And tomorrow, we'll go see Clifton."

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  D     D A  A R  R G    O  O N N N     Z   I N N N E     || Volume 2
-=========================================================+|)
  D    D  AAAA RRR  G GG O  O N N N   Z     I N N N E     || Issue 1
  DDDDD   A  A R  R GGGG OOOO N  NN  ZZZZZZ I N  NN EEEE  ||
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--   DargonZine Volume 2, Issue 1        03/17/89          Cir 882    --
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--                            Contents                                --
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  DAG                        Dafydd                 Editorial
  A Night in the Town        Carlo N. Samson        28 Naia, 1013
  Trial by Fire, Part 1      M. Wendy Henniquin     7-12 Sy, 1013
  The Game Begins            John Doucette          13-14 Sy, 1013
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                          Dafydd's Amber Glow

       This will  be brief, as  this issue is  going to be  very long.
   First, please don't  be alarmed by the fact that  this is Volume 2:
   yes, there was only  one issue in Volume 1. I  have decided to make
   each volume cover a Calendar year and, as Volume 1 went out in 1988
   and it is now 1989, this issue must be in the second volume.
       Second,   I   would  like   to   announce   that  Rich   Jervis
   (voyager@irishmvs.bitnet)  is handling  orders  for the  DargonZine
   tshirt. He needs a few more  promissory orders before he can get an
   estimate from the printer.
       The shirt will  bear a design based on the  the DargonZine logo
   in either  silver on blue or  black on blue. Current  estimates for
   price are  around eight dollars but  a large response to  this will
   cut   the  price   accordingly.  Please   contact  Rich   for  more
   information. No profits are expected as  he will no doubt go in the
   hole from shipping costs.
       Lastly, the next issue of Volume 2 will be out within the month
   - I  have enough stories right  now to make this  issue about three
   times the  size it is,  so you won't have  to wait almost  5 months
   before reading more about Dargon.
       Thank you and good reading,
                Dafydd, Editor DargonZine
                  (m.k.a. John L White)
                  (b.c.k.a. WHITE@DUVM.bitnet)

------------------------------------------------------------------------

1                         A Night in the Town
                          by Carlo N. Samson
                     (b.c.k.a U9862@uicvm.bitnet)

    The sun was setting as Cydric  Araesto arrived in the coastal town
of Sharks' Cove.  He rode through the gates and  onto the main street,
seeking a  place to rest after  his journey up from  Magnus, the Crown
City of Baranur.  After a short while,  he decided to stop  at a place
called "The  Hawk & Dragon Inn",  as it looked a  bit more respectable
than the other taverns he had passed.
    Cydric snorted at the thought that  anything in this rat- bag of a
town could be respectable; all manner of thieves, smugglers, murderers
and whores infested Sharks' Cove, so  he had heard. Some even said the
local guard were afraid to venture onto the streets at night.
    Cydric entered the common room of the Inn and sat down at a corner
table. An odd feeling  came over him; it seemed like  he had done this
before. And indeed, he had.  His thoughts traveled back several months
and several  hundred leagues, to the  northern town of Dargon.  He had
come into a  tavern just like this one,  met a girl who took  him to a
Sage, who took him on a  strange adventure into a realm beyond dreams.
But that time, he had been searching for an answer; this time, he just
wanted to get away.
    At the  bar, a group  of revelers sang and  drank, led by  a young
girl  strumming skillfully  on a  mandolin.  Her voice  was light  and
pleasing, yet Cydric didn't think she was a bard.
    He  called a  serving  girl  over and  ordered  a  drink. When  it
arrived, he took  a sip and stared into the  brown liquid, remembering
the whole Dargon episode as if it had happened yesterday.

    It had all started with  a strange, recurring vision, which always
ended with the name "Corambis the Sage" and a map showing the location
of Dargon. He told  no one about it, since it wouldn't  do for the son
of King  Haralan's Royal Treasurer to  be thought insane. After  a few
months, though,  he decided to  follow up on  the vision. He  left the
castle  in the  middle of  the  night, leaving  only a  letter to  his
fiancee Lysanda, King Haralan's niece.
    He arrived  in Dargon and met  Corambis, who also had  been having
visions. It turned  out that their visions were being  sent to them by
an Elder, trapped in another realm of existence, who needed Cydric and
the Sage to  free him. They entered the realm  through a portal opened
by the  Elder, but  when they  found him they  discovered that  he was
really a sorcerer called Nephros, who  needed them as part of a ritual
to free a powerful demon from the  Nether Realms. But with the help of
Corambis'  patron  goddess  they  managed to  escape,  battling  giant
lizards and crystal skeletons along the way.

    Cydric smiled and took another sip.  It had been a rather exciting
experience,  even  though  they  could have  been  killed  on  several
occasions.  Then his  expression  sobered as  he  remembered what  had
happened after they returned to their own realm.

    A  royal messenger  had arrived  at the  house of  Corambis, where
Cydric had been staying, and informed the young noble that Lysanda was
expecting a child, and had been for three months. Cydric had no choice
but to  return to  the capital  and marry her  immediately to  avoid a
scandal.  Unfortunately,  rumors  of Lysanda's  pre-marital  pregnancy
began circulating, and were confirmed when the child was born only six
months later. The High Church of Magnus was extremely shocked, but the
Master Priest made no official comment  after being taken aside by the
King himself. Still,  the public knew, and soon it  got so that Cydric
1and  Lysanda couldn't  even go  into town  without people  giving them
looks and quietly  whispering about "heathen fornication".  This put a
strain on  their marriage, and  a month later  they had a  fight which
ended  with Lysanda  taking  the  baby and  moving  back  in with  her
parents.  She then  petitioned the  Church  for a  dissolution of  the
marriage, and when  it was granted she and her  parents moved far away
from the  capital. Cydric fell  into disfavor  around the court,  so a
month after  Lysanda left  he decided  to leave as  well, much  to the
relief of the courtiers and to the sorrow of his parents and friends.

    The sound of  cheering interrupted Cydric's thoughts.  The girl at
the  bar bowed  with  a  flourish, her  song  apparently over.  Cydric
returned to  his drink.  "Sharks' Cove," he  silently mused.  "Not the
best place  in the world  to end  up in." He  shook his head.  "But at
least no  one knows  me here. Time  to make a  new start.  Hopefully I
won't make such a mess of my life this time around."
    "Hello there," a voice at his elbow said. Cydric looked up and saw
the mandolin  girl standing next  to him. "The tavern's  full tonight,
isn't it? Hardly any place to sit. Would you mind if I sat with you? I
noticed you  came in here alone.  But if you're meeting  someone I can
just go somewhere else, but if you're  not, I'd like to join you, if I
may. Well?"
    "Uh, be my guest," said Cydric,  after taking a moment to decipher
what she had said.
    "Many thanks." The girl carefully placed her instrument on a chair
and plopped her slender figure onto  the table, dangling her legs over
the edge. She was dressed explorer- style: billowy white shirt, maroon
velvet   vest,  cotton   breeches,  and   deerskin  knee   boots.  Her
tawny-auburn hair, short and curly, was quite unlike the long, braided
style  currently in  fashion among  the young  ladies of  the kingdom.
Cydric guessed  that she was just  a bit younger than  him, perhaps no
more than 19 or 20.
    "You're dusty," she said. "Have you just ridden into town?"
    Cydric self-consciously ran  a hand through his  short brown hair.
"Yes, as a matter of fact. I've been traveling."
    "You also  sound tired. Is that  the reason you didn't  applaud my
playing?"
    Cydric shrugged. "I suppose so."
    "Sorry," she said, laying her hand on his arm. "I don't mean to be
so forward, especially with a  stranger." She leaned over. "So, what's
your name?"
    He introduced  himself as Cydric Artovan.  "Very pleased, Cydric,"
she said,  extending her  hand. Cydric  went to  press it  against his
cheek, in the usual  manner of greeting; but after he  had done so she
gripped his forearm warrior-style. "My name's Amanda Lynn."
    "A mandolin?" Cydric said.
    She  laughed. "That's  what everyone  says the  first time  I tell
them. Just call me Mandi."
    "Very pleased, Mandi." Cydric sloshed the drink around in his mug.
    "Well, Cydric,  now that we're  no longer strangers--at  least not
_total_ strangers--tell me, what strange  force compelled you to visit
this town?"
    "Just passing through," Cydric replied.
    "Passing through?" She chuckled, then gathered her legs under her.
"Most people go out of their way to avoid the Cove."
    "Actually, I may  have to stay for  a few days. I'm  low on money.
Would  you   happen  to  know   if  there  are  any,   um,  employment
opportunities available around here?"
    "That depends." She peered over the  edge of the table at Cydric's
lap. "Hmmm, very nice."
1    "I beg your pardon?"
    "Your sword and dagger, I meant. How well can you use them?"
    "Well enough to defend myself."
    "That's  not   quite  good   enough  for  a   mercenary  position.
Although...."
    "Yes?"
    "Is your codpiece in working order?"
    Cydric grinned uncertainly. "Ah, why would you want to know that?"
    Mandi cocked her  head and winked at him.  "Prostitutes aren't all
women, you know."
    Cydric coughed. "Ah, I'm also able  to read and write. Do you know
of any children that need tutoring?"
    A scruffy-looking man  from the next table leaned  over and looked
at them.  "Why sure, son," he  called. "Take my partner  here--all 'is
talk's  babble, it  is. Thinks  you could  teaches 'im  to grunt  some
words, eh son?" He and his companions laughed uproariously.
    "Your  mother  eats flies,  dung-breath!"  Mandi  called back.  To
Cydric she said, "Ignore those fools."
    "Yeah, you just  be sure and show  the old son there  a good time,
pretty missy," the man replied, leering. He turned back to his table.
    "I take  it the whole town  needs tutoring," Cydric said  in a low
voice.
    "You've got  that right,"  Mandi replied.  "Anyway, have  you ever
been on  a ship  before? A  friend of mine  is looking  for additional
crewmembers."
    Cydric's heart  quickened. While  in Dargon  he had  met a  man, a
former ship's captain turned stew-seller,  who told him about his life
and experiences at  sea. After hearing his stories  of action, danger,
and romance, Cydric  had decided to give the seagoing  life a try. His
marriage to  Lysanda, however, put an  end to that ambition;  but now,
things were different.
    "What does  your friend do?"  Cydric asked.  "Is he a  merchant, a
fisherman?"
    "A slave trader," Mandi replied. She giggled at Cydric's surprised
expression. "No, he's really a  shipping merchant, as you guessed. Are
you interested?"
    "Well yes, but I've never actually been on ship before."
    "Oh, that's  all right. You'd get  used to it eventually.  But are
you really sure you want to join up?"
    Cydric was silent for a few  moments. "Yes," he finally said. "Why
not? It'll keep me off the streets for a while."
    "Oh goody," Mandi said, sliding off  the table. "I think he's over
at the Abyssment  tonight. Do you want  to meet him now,  or would you
rather get cleaned up first?"
    "Give me a few minutes," Cydric said.

    After Cydric had checked his  belongings into an upstairs room and
washed up, he and Mandi set out on foot into the darkening streets.
    "On second thought,  maybe we should do this  tomorrow. I've heard
that this town isn't safe after dark," Cydric said.
    "Oh  really, Cydric,  this place  isn't as  bad as  you've heard,"
Mandi said.
    "Are you sure?"
    "Of course I am." She leaned close to his ear and whispered, "It's
worse."
    "I hope you're jesting."
    Mandi laughed and  put her hand on Cydric's  shoulder. "Don't look
so  worried. The  Abyssment's not  far. Besides,  my friend's  leaving
tomorrow morning, as  he only needs a  few men to replace  the ones he
lost overboard on his last run."
1    "Lost overboard?"
    "Storm at sea.  Really, don't worry, they didn't die  of plague or
anything. He's a damn good captain, Thorne is."
    The sound of their footsteps  echoed on the cobblestone streets as
they walked along.
    "What is this Abyssment place,  anyway?" asked Cydric. "It doesn't
sound very wholesome."
    "It's  only the  best  tavern this  side of  the  Darst Range!  My
favorite night spot in all of Shark's Cove."
    "So why don't you work there, instead of at the Hawk and Dragon?"
    "Well, The Abyssment has it's  own musicians, and alas! they don't
need another one right now. But they  do let me perform with them once
in a while."
    "I don't see why they won't  hire you permanently. You're the best
mandolin player I've ever heard."
    "Oh! Do you really think so? Or are you just flattering me?"
    "No, I mean it. Who taught you?"
    "My father. Oh, now he really deserves to be called best mandolin.
He  gave me  my  name, you  know.  Said it  was a  charm  to pass  his
abilities onto me."
    "It seems to have worked," Cydric said.
    Mandi smiled and laughed. "Oh Cydric, you're the one with charm!"

    A short while later they arrived  at the establishment know as The
Abyssment.  The  sign   above  the  door  spelled  out   the  name  in
black-trimmed red letters, and  the words "Gaius Caligula, Proprietor"
appeared beneath.
    "Here we are," said Mandi.
    As soon as they entered, Cydric  saw that it was unlike any tavern
he had  ever seen. The tables,  booths, and bar were  arranged so that
there was  a clear space in  the center of  the room where a  crowd of
people, most of them around Cydric and Mandi's age, danced to the fast
and lively music  being played by the trio of  musicians near the bar.
Glowing spheres set in the rafters sent out rays of rainbow light into
the smoky air.  The aromas of tobacco, ale, perfume,  and food all hit
Cydric at once.
    Mandi began moving her body to the beat of the music. "Wait for me
at the bar," she said. "I'll try to find Captain Thorne." She vanished
into the crowd.
    Cydric decided that whatever the people in the room were doing, it
certainly wasn't dancing. They were  swaying and gyrating their bodies
to the driving beat  of the drums; he found it hard  to tell if anyone
had  a  partner,  since  none  of  them  were  holding  hands  in  the
traditional manner.
    As he made his  way to the bar he passed a table  at which a group
of young persons were sharing a pipe.
    "Excuse me," Cydric  said to the boy who currently  held the pipe,
"but  what sort  of tobacco  are you  using?" The  boy looked  up with
glazed eyes and said, "Beezorg, yo-man,  beezorg." He gave the pipe to
the girl across from him, smiled dreamily, then slumped headfirst onto
the table.
    "Ah. I see. Thank you very much," Cydric said. He continued on his
way,  unsure of  whether  the boy's  statement was  an  answer to  his
question or just an incoherent mumble.
    "What'll you have, squire?" asked the bartender as Cydric made for
an empty stool.
    "A Lederian, please. In a clean mug, if you don't mind."
    "A clean mug, if I don't  mind?" the bartender echoed. "Well, what
if I did mind? What would you do about it?"
    "Please,  just get  me the  drink," Cydric  said, trying  to sound
1rugged.
    "Very well, squire. But supposing I  brought it to you in a really
filthy, really disgusting mug? What would you do then?"
    Cydric started  to reply,  then noticed that  the people  near him
were watching the exchange with interest.
    "Well, I'd...." Cydric hesitated.
    "You'd what?"
    "I'd...be sick."
    The bartender gave a hearty  laugh. "This one's all right, folks!"
he declared. From behind the bar he took a mug, wiped the inside clean
with a  rag, filled it  with the requested  drink, then set  it before
Cydric. "On the house."
    Cydric thanked  him. The bartender  grinned, then went to  tend to
another customer.
    Looking around the room, Cydric saw that the majority of the young
patrons  bore little  resemblance  to  the youths  that  lived in  the
capital and other civilized areas. Many of the girls wore short skirts
that exposed their knees, and had short hair like Mandi's; most of the
boys wore leather jerkins decorated with strange symbols, and some had
hair that reached past their shoulders.
    The person to Cydric's right got up and left, and a moment later a
thin  girl dressed  in a  black-striped red  chemise sat  down in  the
vacant seat. "Are you alone?" she asked.
    "Ah, actually, I'm waiting for someone," Cydric replied. "You?"
    "How about a dance?" She pushed back a lock of her straight blonde
hair.
    A glint of light on the girl's face caught Cydric's eye. He looked
closer, and saw that she had a small gold ring in the left side of her
nose.
    "Back off, missy, he's with me," Mandi said, approaching them. The
blonde girl gave Mandi a disdainful look, tossed her head, then left.
    "Did you see that? She had a ring in her nose," said Cydric.
    "Must have been  a queenie," Mandi replied.  "Anyway, Thorne'll be
here later. He's got some other business to take care of."
    "How much later?" Cydric asked. "I don't want to stay too late."
    "Don't worry, he'll show up. Come on."
    "Where to now?"
    "I thought we might dance a little."
    "Dance? But--"
    "You don't  know how? I'll teach  you." Mandi pulled him  onto the
floor just as the musicians started another number.
    "The King doesn't dance like this," Cydric said.
    Mandi giggled  and bumped  him with  her hip.  "What does  he know
about dancing? Look, it's easy. Just do what I do."
    "This looks extremely sinful, Mandi."
    "Why Cydric, that's  why it's so fun! Come on!"  She put her hands
in the air and began shaking her shoulders.
    Cydric watched her for a few moments, shrugged, then began shaking
as well.

    After a while, the musicians decided to take a break. As the crowd
broke up, Cydric and Mandi quickly occupied the nearest table.
    "Whew! Wasn't  that the most  fun you've  ever had in  your life?"
Mandi asked breathlessly as they collapsed into the chairs.
    "I'm exhausted," Cydric said, wiping the sweat from his brow.
    "Oh now, you enjoyed it, didn't you? You're a natural born dervish
dancer if I ever saw one!"
    "Is that  what it's called?"  Cydric said, grinning  faintly. "How
appropriate. But--yes, I did rather enjoy  it." He sat up a little and
scanned the  faces at the bar  and the other tables.  "Has the captain
1arrived yet?"
    "Relax, Cydric," Mandi said. "I told you, he'll be here."
    "If you say so," Cydric answered.
    "Yes, I do." Mandi felt her stomach, then said, "Why don't we have
something to  eat while we're waiting?  I haven't had a  single morsel
since midday and I'm positively _starving_. How about you? You've been
traveling all day, right? You must be completely _famished!_"
    "Now that you mention it, I could use a light meal."
    Mandi signalled to a serving  boy. She whispered something to him,
and he nodded and left.
    "What did you say?" asked Cydric.
    "I just told him to bring  us some specialties of the house," said
Mandi.
    The serving boy returned a short  time later and placed two wooden
bowls before them.
    "Right then  Cydric, have a  taste of  this one." She  indicated a
bowl  that  contained  several  small white  objects  covered  with  a
brownish gravy.
    "What is it?" Cydric said, eyeing the dish suspiciously.
    "Try it and find out." Mandi spooned  up a portion and held it out
to him.
    "Well, all right...."  Cydric let her feed him.  The white objects
were crunchy, but with a soft chewy interior.
    "Interesting. There's  a touch of wine  in the sauce, but  I can't
place anything else. What is it?"
    "It's   called   'kavaliculi',   but    it's   better   known   as
snails-in-sauce."
    Cydric made a choking sound. "_What_ in sauce?"
    "Snails. Don't worry, they're fully cooked." She dipped her finger
into  the bowl  and licked  up  a bit  of  the wine  gravy. "Isn't  it
delicious?"
    Cydric swallowed hard. "Quite a, uh, unique dish," he said, trying
not to think about what he had just eaten.
    "Now try  this," said Mandi,  pushing the other bowl  towards him.
Cydric saw  that it  was full  of what  appeared to  be bits  of dried
twigs.
    "Ladies first," he said.
    "Silly, it's only a dessert," she said, scooping up a small amount
and stuffing it into her mouth.
    "A dessert?  Well, why didn't  you say  so." Cydric ate  some. The
bits were crispy and coated with a sweet substance.
    "What do you think?" Mandi asked.
    "Hmmm. Very tasty."
    "I knew you'd like it! Do you want to know what these are called?"
    "I have a feeling you'd tell me anyway."
    "'Lyr-filas', or 'leaf-wrigglers dipped in honey'."
    Cydric smiled  bravely as  he felt  the last  bits slide  down his
throat. He  firmly resolved not to  eject the contents of  his stomach
onto the table--at least not in  front of Mandi. "How, ah, delicious,"
he  said.  "I never  knew  insects  could be  made  to  taste so,  um,
flavorful."
    "They  are  good,  aren't  they? Well,  let's  finish  the  snails
first--they're best eaten while warm." She handed Cydric a spoon.
    "Tell me something, Mandi," he said as he watched her dip into the
bowl,  "what  do you  have  for  breakfast?  Glazed  fly larvae  on  a
biscuit?"
    "Only during Melrin," she said, grinning.

    Cydric had  downed three mugs of  water by the time  they finished
their unusual meal.
1    "It's getting late,  Mandi. I think I'll go back  to the inn now,"
Cydric said.
    "Oh, can't you wait just a few minutes longer? I'm sure he'll show
up."
    "That's all right. I'll just look  for a job tomorrow. I shouldn't
have any trouble finding unschooled children in this town."
    "Don't  you want  to join  a ship's  crew and  have adventure  and
excitement on the high seas?" Mandi  asked. "Or would you rather teach
some runny-faced urchin how to spell 'cur'?
    "What do you suppose is keeping him, then?"
    "I don't know. Be patient, I'm--"
    "--sure he'll  be here," Cydric  finished. "Thank you  anyway." He
got up to leave.
    "Well--you're right. I'm sorry I kept  you so late. But aren't you
at least going to walk me home?"
    "Certainly, if you'd like."
    "I certainly would. We're going the same way."
    "We are? Oh--you live at the Inn, don't you?"
    Mandi smiled merrily. "It's where I hang my mandolin!"

    Dim yellow  light from street lanterns  provided pale illumination
as Cydric  and Mandi stepped  out into the  cool night air  and headed
back toward the Hawk & Dragon.
    "So,  Cydric, what  did  you  think of  your  first  night at  the
Abyssment?" Mandi asked.
    "Well," he  replied, "if  suggestive dancing,  open drug  use, and
brazen  prostitution becomes  socially acceptable,  it'll be  the most
popular tavern on Makdiar!"
    "Does that mean you liked it?"
    Cydric  chuckled  and made  no  reply.  Looking  up at  the  black
star-strewn sky, he  saw that there was no moon.  He remembered an old
childhood  warning about  thieves  and nightshades  preying on  people
foolish enough to be out on  moonless nights. He'd long since lost his
belief  in nightshades,  but thieves,  he knew,  were a  grim reality.
Turning to Mandi he said, "We'd better hurry back."
    "What for?" said Mandi, giving  a little skip. "It's a magnificent
night, absolutely beautiful. We should enjoy it."
    "I don't fancy having my throat slit by a brigand."
    "Oh Cydric,  there's really  nothing to  worry about.  I've walked
home at night many times and as you can see, I'm still alive."
    "That may change one day."
    As they  made their  way through the  silent streets,  Cydric kept
glancing at every shadow, down every  alley, any place that might hide
a potential attacker. Once or twice he thought he heard bootsteps.
    "My  heart's on  fire for  you, hmm  hmm hmm  hmmmmmm hmmm,"  said
Mandi.
    "Beg your pardon?" Cydric said.
    "Oh, that's just a song I'm composing. Would you like to hear it?"
    "Maybe later. We shouldn't call attention to ourselves."
    "And what's  wrong with  a little attention?  I want  everybody to
hear this song. I want everybody to  know my name!" She flung her arms
wide and twirled in mid-step.
    "Mandi, please!"  Cydric hissed. "I  have the feeling  we're being
followed."
    "Really? How many people?"
    "Shhhh." Cydric  stopped and listened  intently. He heard  a faint
scuffling, then silence.
    "Well?" whispered Mandi.
    "I'm not sure.  Two, maybe three. They've probably  been behind us
ever since we left the Abyssment."
1    "Oh good, an audience. Let me sing for them."
    "It'll be the last thing you ever do. Come on." He started walking
rapidly, pulling Mandi along.
    "You  don't  have to  act  like  a  warrior  for my  benefit.  I'm
perfectly able to take care of myself," she said.
    "Are you any good with a blade?'
    "Well, no. But I can outrun anything on two legs."
    "Your own legs?"
    "Of course my own legs."
    "And  I'm sure  they're very  nice legs.  Now move  them a  little
faster."
    Their  shadowers soon  abandoned all  attempts at  stealth. Cydric
looked back  down the street  and saw two figures  silhouetted against
the lantern  light. The  sound of their  footfalls echoed  through the
still night.
    "Damn," muttered Cydric.
    "What?" asked Mandi.
    "Don't look behind you, but they're starting to close in on us."
    Mandi looked  anyway. "What do  you think  we should do?  Are they
going to hurt us?"
    "Well, they're certainly not going to  ask to hear your song! Now,
when I say run, run."
    "Okay," replied Mandi. "Last one back to the Inn is a dead man!"
    Literally, thought Cydric. He counted to five, then shouted: "Run,
Mandi!"
    They shot away  down the street. Cydric heard  faint laughter over
the clatter of bootsteps. Suddenly Mandi screamed.
    A dark-skinned man armed with a  large curved sword stood in their
path. They stopped in their tracks.
    Cydric looked back and saw  one of their pursuers advancing toward
them. The other one was nowhere to be seen.
    The man indicated a nearby alley. "In there," he said in a thickly
accented  voice. Cydric  and Mandi  raised their  hands and  walked to
where he pointed. When  they came to the wall at the  end of the alley
the man ordered them to turn around.
    "Your money," he said simply.
    As Mandi handed  over her purse, Cydric recognized the  sword as a
shivash,  a blade  used  by the  warriors of  the  Lashkir Desert.  He
wondered what this particular Lashkirian was doing so far from home.
    "Now  yours."  The Lashkirian  waved  his  blade threateningly  at
Cydric.
    "Look, just leave us alone and  we won't give you any trouble," he
replied.
    The man  pressed the point  of the shivash against  Cydric's neck.
"You will give it now, you blistered son of a jantral!"
    "Better do as he says," said Mandi.
    Cydric slowly reached for his belt  pouch but found it missing. He
patted himself  all over, with  the same negative result.  "Sorry," he
said. "I seem to have lost it all somewhere."
    The desert  warrior let  loose a  string of  curses in  his native
tongue.
    "Easy, friend," said another voice.  Cydric saw another man, their
initial pursuer, appear at the mouth of the alley.
    "He says he has no money," said the Lashkirian.
    "He said that, did he?" the  other man replied, coming up to them.
He scratched his stubbly brown beard. "What do you think, Scarabin, is
he lying?"
    "Like a dog-skin rug," answered  the Lashkirian. "Let us kill them
both, master Kayne."
    "Well, not before  I get to know the girl  a little better," Kayne
1replied. He moved  closer to Mandi, who delivered a  solid kick to his
shin.
    "Ouch! Spunky little  wench, isn't she?" said Kayne  as he hobbled
back several paces.
    "Don't you try to take advantage of me!" said Mandi.
    "Be silent, girl!" Scarabin ordered.
    "And don't _you_ tell me what to do, lizard man!"
    The desert warrior growled. Cydric realized that she had delivered
a dreadful insult to the Lashkirian.
    "I  shall cut  your throat  out!" Scarabin  shouted. He  lunged at
Mandi.
    "Temper, temper," said Kayne, catching Scarabin's arm. In a flash,
Cydric  kicked the  shivash out  of the  Lashkirian's grip,  delivered
another kick  to Kayne's stomach, then  dropped back and drew  his own
sword. He was about to aim a  sharp slash at Kayne's face when he felt
Mandi grab his sword arm.
    "Let go, for gods' sake!" yelled Cydric.
    Instantly, Kayne came up and wrested the sword from Cydric's hand.
He shoved the  young man against the wall. Cydric  drove his knee into
Kayne's groin and  shoved back. As Kayne staggered,  Scarabin swung at
Cydric's face. He stopped the blow  with a left-arm rising block, then
punched the Lashkirian  in the chest. Scarabin fell  back, then leaped
forward, catching Cydric's  head in his hands.  Cydric felt Scarabin's
thumb jab a  spot behind his right ear, then  suddenly he felt himself
go weak. His knees buckled, then he collapsed to the ground.
    "You better not  have killed him!" he heard Mandi  say. She rolled
him over, then sighed with relief as he dazedly shook his head.
    "Oh  Cydric, you're  all right,  aren't you?"  she asked,  concern
edging her voice.
    "Fine,  just...fine,"  he  replied,  struggling up  to  a  sitting
position. He  saw Kayne  and Scarabin standing  over them.  "If you're
going to kill us, why don't you get it over with!" he said fiercely.
    "Relax, Cydric,"  Mandi said, smoothing  his hair. She  turned and
glowered at Scarabin. "Did you have to do that to him?"
    "My apologies, mistress Mandi. It was done out of instinct."
    "You  know these  people?" Cydric  asked Mandi.  "What's going  on
here?"
    "I suppose  it's time we told  you," said a female  voice from the
mouth of the alley. Cydric looked  up and saw a tall dark-haired woman
striding towards them. She was clad in black and silver, and carried a
lantern. As she helped  him to his feet she said,  "I hope they didn't
hurt you, Cydric. I told them to not to be too rough."
    "He's fine, all right, but what about  me? I won't be able to make
love for a  month!" Kayne said, rubbing at the  place where Cydric had
kneed him.
    "What do you mean?" Cydric asked  the woman. "Who are you? And how
do you know my name?"
    "One question  at a time,  please. First let me  introduce myself.
I'm Brynna Thorne,  captain of the trading  vessel _Vanguard Voyager_.
You've already met  my crew, I think. Tyrus Kayne,  my First Mate, and
Scarabin, my best warrior."
    "You're  Captain Thorne?  But Mandi  said--I mean,  I thought  you
were--"
    "Thought I was what?"
    "Well, a man."
    "Is that  what you  told him?" Brynna  asked, glancing  sharply at
Mandi.
    The young lady grinned sheepishly. "Well...."
    "I can't wait to hear your explanation for this one," said Brynna.
    "Well, you see, everyone I  asked seemed interested in joining the
1crew. But  when I  told them about  your being a  woman, they  sort of
laughed and left."
    "I see."
    "Well, what else could I do?"
    "We'll speak about  it later," Brynna said. She  turned to Cydric.
"Now then,  I suppose  you're wondering  why I didn't  show up  at the
Abyssment tonight?"
    "The question had crossed my mind."
    "Well, when  Mandi told me  you wanted to  become a member  of the
crew but hadn't had any experience  on a ship before, my first thought
was to dismiss you outright. But she told me that you were desperately
poor and in need of employment, so  I decided to conduct a little test
to see  if you  were suitable. I  had her take  you to  the Abyssment,
where I observed you for the whole night."
    "But how did Mandi contact you? I was with her all the time."
    "Not always," Mandi said. "Brynna was  in the gaming parlor of the
Hawk & Dragon. I spoke to her  while you were checking your stuff into
your room."
    Cydric nodded in understanding, then said to Brynna, "And you were
at the Abyssment the whole time?"
    "I was  indeed. And  I must say,  I was impressed  by the  way you
handled  yourself  in  the  various situations  you  encountered.  For
instance, most people would have pulled  a knife on that bartender, or
simply  left.  You  also  seemed open-minded  enough  to  try  dervish
dancing, even  though it's  been officially banned  by the  Church for
ages.  And  you  are one  of  the  few  people  I've seen  who  hasn't
immediately  become sick  after trying  snails and  wrigglers for  the
first time.
    "What this  all means, Cydric,  is that you  seem like you'd  be a
good addition to our crew. I need people who are level-headed, and not
afraid to  experience new things. So,  if you want to  join us, you're
most welcome. The decision is yours."
    "This attack was also part of my test, I gather."
    "Yes, it was. I was looking to  see if your combat skills were any
good, and from what I saw, yours appear to be above average."
    "Exactly what sort  of trading do you do, though?  I mean, there's
not  much need  for  a fighting  crew unless  you  travel outside  the
patrolled sea lanes."
    "That's  quite true,"  Brynna replied.  "The nature  of our  trade
takes us outside the normal routes,  and consequently we run a greater
risk of pirate  attacks. You see, there's a great  demand nowadays for
unusual and  exotic goods;  we travel  to the  lesser known  places of
Makdiar in  search of these  things. We've collected  heavenspice from
Bichu, fire crystals from Karmitan, orchids from Sanctus Island...."
    "Not to mention relics from  the temples at Yaltark, and sea-snail
shells from the Wild Coast," added Kayne.
    "But  understand, Cydric,  that shipboard  life will  sometimes be
hard, and  there may come  times when  you'll wish you'd  never signed
aboard.  And there  often may  be  times where  our lives  will be  in
danger--not just  from pirates,  but from things  unknown even  to the
most worldly wizard. Are you still interested?"
    "I'm willing to  give it a try. And I'm  not worried about death,"
answered Cydric.
    "Bravely spoken,"  Brynna said.  "One more  thing, though;  do you
mind the fact that  I'm the captain? That is, do  you object to taking
orders from a woman?"
    Cydric paused, then said: "Not when she has a right to give them."
    "Wise answer, Cydric," remarked Kayne.
    "Does  this  mean  you've  accepted  him?"  Mandi  asked,  looking
hopefully at Brynna.
1    "It does indeed. Welcome aboard,  Cydric," she said, extending her
hand.
    "Oh goody!"  exclaimed Mandi,  as Cydric smilingly  thanked Brynna
and  gripped  forearms  with  her. Kayne  repeated  the  welcome,  and
Scarabin bowed politely. Mandi smiled broadly and gave the young man a
hug.
    "We'll discuss  terms and duties  later," Brynna said.  "But right
now we  should all go  back to the Inn  before some real  thieves show
up."
    As the  group filed out of  the alley, Mandi walked  between Kayne
and Scarabin.  "Great acting,  you two!" she  said. "Sorry  about that
'lizard man' thing, Scar. I wasn't thinking."
    "I am not  offended, mistress Mandi. I know your  intention was to
make the attack seem real to the lad," the Lashkirian replied.
    "But  _you_!"  she said,  whirling  on  Kayne,  "If you  ever  try
anything with me again, acting or  not--I'll personally see to it that
you're _never_ able to make love again."
    "Ouch," said Kayne, chuckling in amusement.
    While the three were thus conversing, Brynna took Cydric aside and
whispered, "Since you've no previous shipboard experience, your duties
will be simple at first. But there's one thing that I'll expect you to
do, above all else."
    "Yes?"
    "Keep  Mandi  out  of  trouble.  My young  cousin  seems  to  have
developed a talent for it, ever since she stowed away and persuaded me
to let her be part of the crew."
    "I'll do my best, my lady--er, captain."
    "I can tell you right now, though, it won't be easy."
    "That's right, it won't!" Mandi said, popping up between them. She
slipped her arm around Cydric. "You and I are going to have such fun."
    "I can hardly  wait," Cydric replied, grinning.  Mandi pinched his
cheek as they walked off into the night.

                           The End

------------------------------------------------------------------------

1                            Trial by Fire
                                Part I
                               Accused!
                        by M. Wendy Henniquin
                   (b.c.k.a. HENNEQUI_WEM@CTSTATEU)

    As Luthias  opened the door,  the Duke of Dargon  whooped, scooped
his pretty  wife into his  arms, and twirled  her in the  air. Lauren,
clad in a  sunshiny yellow gown, clung to the  Duke's neck and laughed
gaily as a debutante. Luthias paused, unsure of the situation and what
to do about it. He looked at Myrande for guidance. She shrugged.
    Above the laughter, Luthias called  irritably, "Well, I'm glad you
two have something to be happy about."
    Clifton set his wife gently on  the floor and sprang across to the
room to his cousin. "Luthias!" he  greeted him. "You're going to be an
uncle!"
    At this, Luthias  blinked. "What? You're joking!  Roisart went out
and got some girl pregnant before  he died?" A smile seeped across the
young Baron's lips. "That wasn't Roisart's style at all."
    Myrande swatted  him. "You  dullard," she  groaned. She  looked at
Lauren. "When, your grace?"
    "The seventeenth of Feber," Lauren stated confidently.
    "Lauren,  you  can't  know  that  accurately,"  Clifton  protested
affectionately.
    Lauren nodded with assurance. "I just know."
    "I didn't  think you'd start  having children this  soon," Luthias
commented, collapsing into a chair. "Don't  you want to be alone for a
while?"
    "Oh, we'll  find time  enough to be  alone, don't  worry," Clifton
assured his cousin.
    "Sure, cousin, and make more babies," Luthias finished irritably.
    "Married people have a tendency to  do that sort of thing," Lauren
teased her  kinsman. "Of course,"  she continued, eyes  twinkling, "it
isn't exclusive to marriage, eh, Luthias?"
    Luthias glared at the Duke. "You told her! I don't believe this!"
    Clifton opened his mouth to reply,  but his wife silenced him with
a quick gesture. "Wait. Does Myrande know about this?"
    "What, about his wenching days?"  Myrande asked. She smiled, waved
Lauren's concern away. "Certainly. I'm  the seneschal. I'm the one who
holds the keys and lets arrant  knaves in when they've been wenching."
Luthias scowled at her teasing  grin. "However," Myrande defended him,
"he always  made certain that there  were no babies involved."  He had
almost been  fanatic about it, as  Sable recalled. Then she  looked at
the young  Baron. "You  haven't done  anything like  that in  over two
years, though."
    "That's  because my  father  started hearing  about it,"  grumbled
Luthias. He glared at his seneschal.
    "It  wasn't me!"  she  protested. "Don't  you  think that  Roisart
noticed your coming in late all the time?"
    "Besides, your  father wasn't  easily fooled,"  Clifton concluded.
Seeing Luthias' discomfort,  he moved behind his desk  and changed the
subject. What was past was past, after all. "So, Luthias, I gather you
aren't having the  best of days." The Duke scanned  his cousin's face.
"You don't look well."
    "Oh,  I'm well  enough," Luthias  assured him  sarcastically. "I'm
just losing  my mind." He  flung one of  the letters across  the desk.
"Take a look at that."
    Clifton opened  the folded  parchment and  skimmed it.  "The legal
elections? I've  already been  informed," he  said, handing  the paper
back to Luthias. "So?"
1    "Clifton, I'm going mad just trying  to run the barony. I can't be
Duke's Advocate,  too. The mere traveling  takes up so much  time, and
the preparation...besides,  I know nothing of  law. Even if I  had the
time to dedicate to this, I wouldn't be a good Advocate."
    "As I understand  it," Lauren interposed, "you  wouldn't be trying
many cases, Luthias. You'd only be involved in cases where a member of
the nobility were being tried, and then only for major crimes, such as
murder or treason."
    "Right,"  Clifton  confirmed.  "That  doesn't  happen  too  often,
manling. You should do well enough."
    "Can't you get  someone else?" Luthias requested.  "I really don't
need the extra responsibility."
    "It's not my  decision," the Duke reminded him.  "By royal decree,
the members  of the  Tribunal and  the Duke's  Advocate are  chosen by
election. Sorry." The  Duke leaned back in his chair.  "I hope you two
are going to stay the week.  The Tournament's only five days away, and
besides, it's cooler here than in Connall."
    Luthias wiped the back of his  hand against his sweaty forehead. A
few grains  of grit from the  road scraped annoyingly across  the scar
above his  right eye. It  didn't help; nothing  did. Not even  the sea
breezes sweeping the  air of Dargon brought much relief  from the heat
and humidity. "I don't know," Luthias said. "There's so much to do..."
    "You mean  you aren't  entered in  the Tournament?"  Clifton asked
incredulously. "You almost won last year!"
    Luthias  smiled, almost  sheepish.  "I don't  have  much time  for
games. I've got too many responsibilities at home."
    "That's what Michiya  said, too, and you told him  to go ahead and
enter," Myrande  pointed out. "Besides,  what duties will you  have at
Connall? Most of the  people of the barony are coming  to the city for
the Tournament!"
    "True," Luthias sighed. "Michiya's fighting, Macdougalls is a sure
bet to take the archery--"
    "Again," Clifton interjected.
    "And God  only knows how  many men  you'll have fighting  for you,
Sable," Luthias finished tiredly. "And not one of them asks for you."
    "Someone has, haven't they?" Lauren asked, looking at her husband.
"I  recall  you saying  something  to  me a  day  or  so ago  about  a
letter..."
    "I had wanted to forget it,"  Clifton almost snapped. He opened up
his desk drawer abruptly and pulled  out a folded piece of fine velum.
"I think you'd better see this, cousin."
    Luthias' mouth twisted angrily when  he recognized the seal of the
Baron of  Shipbrook, and a  red cloud of rage  covered his face  as he
read it. "That son of a  bitch!" Luthias exploded furiously. "How dare
he!"
    Frantically,  Myrande  snatched  the  letter  from  the  Baron  of
Connall. "I don't believe this,"  she murmured. "He threatened this in
his letter to you, but this was sent before yours."
    "What did  you tell  him, Clifton?"  Luthias asked,  only slightly
calmer than he had been. "Are you going to take Myrande's guardianship
from me and give it to him?"
    "Are you mad?"  Clifton demanded. "Do you think I'd  let any woman
of this  Duchy marry Baron Oleran?  I've already written him  and told
him to mind his own barony."
    Luthias took the  letter from Myrande, read it  again. "He's right
that I should have found a marriage for her..."
    "No, he isn't," Clifton argued. "I know why your father refused to
marry her off, and I agree with his reasons."
    Myrande stared at  the Duke. "Uncle Fionn told  you!" she accused,
incredulous.
1    "Only because he wanted my advice," the Duke explained.
    "He wanted your advice?" Luthias echoed.
    "Well, I am the Duke."
    "Yes," Luthias  agreed, "but you're  twenty years younger  than he
was!"
    "Actually, my age made me closer to  the man she was in love with,
and your  father wanted  to know  whether or  not I  thought something
would  develop," Clifton  explained casually.  He leaned  back in  his
chair.
    Luthias glared at his seneschal. "Does everyone in the whole Duchy
but me know who you're in love  with? I'm the only one who can arrange
your marriage, and--"
    Clifton grinned,  amused. "Luthias,  I don't  think you'd  want to
handle this one."
    "I agree," Lauren advised quietly. "You're much too close--"
    "And  you know  too?!" Luthias  cried, enraged.  He turned  toward
Myrande  and shoved  her  slightly.  "Thanks a  lot  for trusting  me,
Sable."
    Myrande blinked once, then turned  and silently left the room. The
door closed quietly behind her.
    "Now you've gone and done it," Clifton grumbled. "And you said you
had 'the touch' with women."
    "She doesn't  keep it from you  out of spite or  distrust," Lauren
said quietly, carefully keeping anger and accusation out of her voice.
"Her reasons are just."
    Luthias  sat  again. "I  don't  mean  to  yell  or hurt  her,"  he
confessed. "I want to see her happy, and she won't let me arrange it!"
He slammed  his fist into his  open palm to emphasize  the point. "She
won't even tell me about it."
    "Never mind," Lauren soothed. "I'll  go make sure she's all right.
Excuse  me." She  touched  Luthias' shoulder  reassuringly, smiled  at
Clifton, and left his office.
    Clifton sighed  and shook his head  at his cousin. "The  hell with
all of this nonsense, Luthias. Go marry her yourself."
    "I'm  getting that  advice  from  all over."  The  young Baron  of
Connall smiled ruefully. "Roisart said the same thing in my dream last
night."
    "Well,  he's  right," the  Duke  continued.  "It would  stop  your
constant  arguing and  get Shipbrook  off your  back." Luthias  looked
reluctant. "What's  wrong? I thought  you liked Sable. Would  you mind
marrying her?"
    "Not  at  all,  if  it  were me  she  wanted,"  Luthias  admitted,
shrugged. "Or if she didn't care who she married. But I refuse to have
her resent  me because I kept  her from whoever she  loves." Suddenly,
the Baron  smiled with irony  on his lips.  "I'll tell you  one thing,
though, Clifton: if she ever steps before me again in nothing but that
nightgown, I'm not responsible."
    Clifton lifted his eyebrows. "Responsible? Why? Was it that ugly?"
    Wickedly smiling, Luthias shook his head. "No. Nearly invisible."
    "Ah,"  the Duke  said knowingly,  relaxing in  his chair.  "One of
those nightgowns." He  smiled, thinking of his bride.  Then he teased,
"Why didn't you do something about  it, manling? Then we wouldn't have
to worry about marrying her off."
    "I wouldn't so dishonor her," Luthias protested, dignified.
    "Dishonor? I don't think any dishonor is involved."
    "Nor I,  but she'd see it  that way," Luthias sighed.  "She's been
saving  herself, and  I wouldn't  deny her  that privilege."  A shadow
crossed his eyes.  "My father once...screamed at me when  he thought I
was fooling with  Sable. He said..." What  had he said? It  was a long
time ago, and it still shamed him.  "He said if I toyed with her body,
1I'd be toying with her heart, that I'd do nothing but hurt her."
    "Sable's a big  girl now," Clifton commented. "I  also don't think
any  man--including  you--would  be  able to  touch  her  without  her
allowing --and wanting--it. Still, manling, you should have tried."
    "No,  Clifton, I'm  not going  to try  to force  her to  marry me.
That's how  she'd see it," Luthias  added, seeing an objection  on his
cousin's  face. Then,  suddenly,  the young  Baron  of Connall  smiled
wickedly. "Of course, if I see her  like that again, I just might lose
control  of myself."  The  Duke  grinned. This  sounded  like the  old
Luthias, or rather, the young one.
    The young Baron of Connall  looked over his shoulder. "Speaking of
Sable,  I suppose  I ought  to go  apologize to  her. "See  you later,
Clifton."
    The  Duke reached  for some  of  his paperwork.  "Staying for  the
tournament?"
    "Might as well," sighed the Baron.  "Put me on the lists." He shut
the door quietly.
    The  Duke  pushed  the  parchment  away,  mused  silently  at  the
situation. "I  give up,"  Clifton muttered finally,  pulling paperwork
toward him.

    Luthias found Myrande standing in front of three tall portraits in
Clifton's gallery. The  long, white hall ran almost the  length of the
keep, and in it were hung paintings of the Dargon family, Luthias' and
Clifton's  ancestors.  Myrande  was  standing before  the  three  most
recent.
    To her  left was a  grand gentleman,  in grand armor,  holding his
helmet beneath his arm  and his sword in the other  hand. He was tall,
dignified, solemn; his brown eyes  were Clifton's eyes, Luthias' eyes.
This was the Duke of Dargon, Clifton's father, Luthias' uncle, the man
who had  given Myrande's father  his knighthood. The Baron  of Connall
gazed at the painting with respect. He had always admired his uncle.
    To Myrande's  right, and  Luthias', was  the newest  portrait, not
more than seven years old. The young  man in it stood, like his father
to  Myrande's  right, with  a  dignified  posture,  but this  man  was
surrounded by books,  papers, and musical instruments as  well as war.
Luthias smiled  at Clifton's image  and thought, this is  what Roisart
might have been like, had he gone to the university.
    The center portrait held Myrande's  dark eyes, however. The man in
the center  of the painting, a  man in his thirties,  perhaps, had the
looks of both the Dukes of Dargon.  He was seated before a desk spread
with  papers,  and  although  he  looked  as  if  he  were  trying  to
concentrate, his  lips were twisting  into a  quiet smile. He  was not
alone; behind the  desk, a nine-year-old boy challenged  a lion's head
with a sword, and  seated on the floor by the  man's chair was another
boy, a twin of the first, reading a book of fairy tales.
    "I hate that picture," Luthias remarked.
    "I know it," Sable returned laconically.
    "You're angry with me."
    "You're perceptive," she returned coolly.
    Luthias grimaced angrily. "I came to apologize," he snapped.
    "You should," Myrande returned in kind. "You know I trust you."
    "Then why don't you just tell  me?" Luthias demanded. "I'm the one
who can do something about it! Just tell me who this man is!"
    "No."
    "Why, Sable?" Luthias growled, taking her shoulders. Her onyx eyes
glared at him. "Give me one reason why. One good reason."
    "I've given you my reasons," Sable reminded him coldly.
    "Not good enough. Tell me!"
    "I can't!"  Myrande spat between  her teeth. She  squirmed beneath
1his hold. "I  tell you, I can't.  If you knew, you'd  understand why I
can't tell you!"
    "But I *don't* know," Luthias  shouted, "and I *don't* understand!
Don't you  think I  want to  help you? And  you don't  even give  me a
chance!" He released her in disgust. Scornfully, he added, "I'll wager
you haven't given him a chance, either, whoever he is."
    Myrande turned  her back coldly to  him, as if she  didn't want to
hear or see  him. "By God, Myrande," Luthias exploded,  "it's your own
fault! You don't want him to love you--you'd rather languish on like a
simpering heroine  in one of  Roisart's romances  than give the  man a
chance to accept you!"
    "Why bother?" she asked. "I don't want his pity. Why should I tell
him and watch him reject me when I already know he doesn't love me?"
    "How do you know? Has he told you this?" Sable was silent. Luthias
wrenched her shoulders  again so that she was forced  to face him. She
struggled, but  the Baron held  her fast, and  while she was  the more
determined, Luthias'  arms were stronger.  He shook her once.  "Has he
told you?"
    Myrande opened her mouth, but only glared at him furiously.
    "No, I  thought not." He released  her again. For a  wild, furious
moment, he  wanted to strike  her with all  his strength. He  began to
speak, but fell silent  as his eyes met her hard  stare. His eyes lost
the anger  and suddenly all  Luthias felt was hurt--that  she couldn't
tell him, and that she was hurting. "Sable, damn it, if you can't tell
me, at least tell  him. He'd be crazy if he didn't  love you. Give the
man a chance."
    The sorrow  in the young  Baron's eyes  and voice pierced  the icy
wall  behind Sable's  black  eyes.  "I can't,"  she  said tiredly.  "I
can't."
    "Why?" Luthias coaxed softly, reaching for her hand.
    "For the same reason I can't  tell you," she whispered. She paused
and raised her eyes. Luthias felt  strangely, as if she were searching
for something in his face. "Luthias, I would tell you--oh, God, I want
you to know--" Luthias heard her voice break, and she averted her eyes
and turned away as  she tried to regain control. She  would not cry in
front of him, Luthias  knew, not if she could help  it. Her hands flew
to cover her  face. "It's the same as always!"  she cried out. Luthias
reached to touch her, but for some reason, unknown to him, he withdrew
his hand. "I don't have the courage," she finally choked.
    "Oh, Sable."  Luthias put his  arms around her waist  and shoulder
and pulled her  close. She shook once beneath his  arms, a silent sob.
"Don't cry," he whispered.
    "I'm not crying," she insisted thickly.
    "Sable, let me do something."
    Beneath his hand, her head shook negatively.
    Luthias felt tired.  "Then do something yourself. I  don't want to
fight you...I've got  enough to fight...but I want you  to be happy. I
can't stand seeing you like this."
    "There's nothing you can do," she  said sadly, her chin resting on
his arm. "There's nothing anyone can do."
    No, Luthias  denied it. There  was something  he could do,  and by
God,  he would  do it.  Luthias  slowly, gently,  tightened his  grip.
Myrande's body snuggled  against him, her form and  her warmth welcome
even in  the obscene  heat. Luthias  bent toward  her ear,  received a
wonderful  view, and  buried  his  head in  her  rose-scented hair  to
concentrate.  "Forget   him,  Sable,"  the  young   Baron  of  Connall
whispered. "If he's hurting you, he isn't worth it. Forget him, and--"
    "Luthias!" The Baron  of Connall gave an inward,  violent curse as
he heard  his cousin call him.  He turned to see  Clifton, Lauren, his
castellan  Ittosai  Michiya,  and two  visitors  approaching.  Luthias
1silently swore again and reluctantly,  he released Myrande. Before she
stepped slightly away, the Baron saw unshed tears shining in her eyes.
She  blinked once,  but  did not  cry.  Luthias put  his  hand on  her
shoulder and gently squeezed it.
    "We'll talk later," he promised softly  as the Duke and Duchess of
Dargon,  the  Castellan of  Connall,  and  the visitors  came  closer.
Luthias recognized one  of the men: Baron Richard Vladon,  a member of
the  Tribunal and  an old  friend  of his  father's. Luthias  politely
offered his hand. "Good day, Baron Vladon."
    Vladon, a  serious-looking, gray-haired man in  his sixties, shook
Luthias  hand  firmly.  "Good  day, Lord  Luthias--forgive  me,  Baron
Connall." Luthias smiled. He preferred the first title.
    "Luthias," the  Duke of  Dargon interrupted,  "this is  Sir Edward
Sothos, Knight Commander  of the Royal Armies. He's come  to judge the
tournament. Your excellency," Clifton  continued politely, "my cousin,
the Baron of Connall."
    Luthias bowed slightly to  dark-haired Knight Commander, over whom
Luthias towered slightly. He had met  Sir Edward once, five years ago,
when he was sixteen and Edward  had come to visit Sir Lucan Shipbrook,
Myrande's father, a few weeks before Sir Lucan fell ill and died. As a
youth he  had stood in  awe of the stern,  reserved man with  the scar
across his face. But Luthias grew,  learned to bear his own scars like
a  warrior,  and  learned  to admire  the  strong,  black-clad  Knight
Commander.
    Luthias  extended his  hand. "How  do you  do, your  Excellency. A
pleasure to meet you."
    "How  do you  do, Baron,"  Sir  Edward returned  gravely, but  not
unpleasantly. His grip on Luthias' hand was firm and hard, the hold of
one warrior to another. "An honor and a pleasure, sir. Ah," the Knight
Commander continued,  smiling as Myrande  turned toward him.  He bowed
low and pressed her small palm to  his cheek. "How do you do, my lady.
I believe I have the pleasure of addressing the Baroness of Connall?"
    Clifton glanced sharply at Myrande. She paled as she heard Sothos'
words. Luthias seemed caught between smiling and frowning, but did not
lose any  composure. "Unfortunately,  your excellency,"  Luthias rued,
"it is  not the  case. My  friend, ward,  and seneschal,  Lady Myrande
Shipbrook."
    Sir Edward straightened. "Oh, yes, Sir Lucan's daughter! How could
I  forget a  face like  that?  You are  the  image of  your mother.  A
pleasure, my  lady." He  smiled by  way of  apology. "Forgive  my rude
assumption. I saw  you in the arms of Baron  Connall, and naturally, I
thought--" The knight faltered and smiled sheepishly. "Things are very
different in Dargon than they are in the capital."
    "There's  no  need to  apologize,"  Myrande  said. Luthias'  mouth
twitched; somehow her voice sounded strange. He wanted to put his arms
around her again; she felt too good to let go of.
    After a lame moment of  silence, Lady Lauren suggested, "Come, Sir
Edward. My father  will be pleased to  see you again. He  should be in
the  library  now." Sir  Edward  bowed  to  Myrande again,  nodded  to
Luthias, and left  with the Duke, the Duchess and  his cousin. Ittosai
lingered.
    "I  hear  you  are   entering  the  lists,  Luthias-san,"  Michiya
commented, smiling. "I am eager to meet you."
    "Any  objection  to  practicing  now?  The  servants  should  have
returned by now with my armor and weapons."
    "You want  to impress Sir Edward,  don't you?" Myrande asked  in a
low voice.
    Luthias smiled. "Of course. He's the greatest knight in the land."
For a moment, the young Baron was wistful. "I always wanted to be just
like him and Sir Lucan. He's the greatest Knight in the Kingdom." Then
1he clapped his seneschale's back. "Come  join us, Sable. I want to see
how good you really are with this naginata."
    "You may regret  it," Myrande warned. Ittosai,  her tutor, smiled.
"But I'll join you later."
    "Let us go then," Michiya suggested. He bowed in the Bichurian way
to the lady and left with the Baron.

    The  atmosphere had  not  cooled  by the  day  of the  tournament.
Luthias had barely slept fourteen hours between the time he arrived in
Dargon and  the day  of the  tournament; it  was too  hot, and  he was
plagued by bad dreams. But the little vacation from the barony and the
concentration of fighting had done him good; he had been more relaxed,
and he was ready for the fight when it came.
    The fact that  Sir Edward was judging the tournament  had made him
nervous, though.  The greatest  Knight in  the Kingdom,  watching him,
watching  Ittosai, watching  all  the  men, young  and  old, who  were
entering the tournament. Sir Edward himself, the Knight Commander. And
with war coming--
    That was  nonsense. He and  Sir Edward  had discussed it  over the
dinner table at  Clifton's home days before. The  Knight Commander and
Ittosai Michiya  had agreed with  him that Bichu and  Baranur fighting
was  close to  impossible. Bichu's  navy, primitive  as it  was, could
hardly reach Baranurian  shores, and were there  ever a confrontation,
the encumbered Baranurians would never be able to withstand the light,
quick  weapons  born  by  the Bichanese.  But  still  the  rumors--and
Luthias'  nightmares of  horror  and war--continued.  The young  Baron
didn't like it.
    Despite the pressures and the ugly rumors, Luthias had enjoyed the
tournament,  which  had  taken  place earlier.  Macdougalls  took  the
archery,  bow  down, and  no  one  was surprised.  Carrying  Myrande's
colors--and  the  struggle  Luthias  endured  to  win  that  privilege
surpassed  the  tournament  fighting--the  Baron of  Connall  won  the
tournament by defeating his castellan in the final round.
    Luthias glanced  around the  ballroom, slightly  uncomfortable. He
had always  hated balls, hated dancing,  and now he hated  wearing the
baldric of the  Duchy champion. He didn't deserve it,  and he knew it.
Ittosai had allowed  him to win. Oh, Luthias didn't  realize it at the
time, but as  soon as he struck  the final blow, he  knew that Ittosai
had  allowed it.  He  understood  Michiya's reason  for  doing it,  so
Luthias said nothing  to his castellan, but Ittosai  knew that Luthias
understood.
    He made his  way through the crowds, searching  for his seneschal.
He supposed  he should  dance with  her. She was  clumsy, but  she did
dance well, and she looked stunning tonight in a gown of ruby silk. He
caught sight of her, dancing with the Knight Commander, so he moved to
the side of the dance floor and watched.
    "Luthias!" someone  called. Luthias  frowned, trying to  place the
slightly familiar voice, and turned. Facing  him was a thin young man,
shorter  than Luthias  and  slighter, blond,  and  hazel-eyed. He  was
dressed in the  fashionable clothes of Magnus, as was  Sir Edward, and
this man's clothes  were also black. He bore  himself confidently, and
however serious his face was, he moved as a fighter.
    Luthias peered at him as he  came forward. Then he recognized him:
"Warin!" Luthias smiled. Warin Shipbrook, like his brother Tylane, had
been good  friends with the  Connall twins  and Sable since  they were
small. It certainly wasn't their  fault their father was crazed. "When
did  you get  back?"  Luthias  asked, clasping  his  friend's arm.  "I
thought you were still at the University in Magnus!"
    "I've graduated," the  scholar admitted proudly, "and  I came home
with Sir Edward. I've got to learn  to rule, now that I've studied all
1the laws."  Warin smiled, then  sighed. "Roisart would have  loved the
library." He paused,  tried to smile again. "And it  seems I'm not the
only one learning to rule."
    Luthias shrugged,  looking away. It  had been months, but  part of
him still grieved for his father and brother. "I do what I have to."
    "If you need help, you know where I am."
    Luthias almost laughed. "As if your  father would let me near you.
He hates me."
    A cross expression  triumphed over Warin's face. He  kept his deep
voice low.  "My father and  his notion of family  honor. As if  he had
any, throwing Uncle  Lucan out of the family! And  marrying Myrande to
Oleran!" Warin looked Luthias in the  eye. "Damn it, Luthias, give her
to me, if there's  no one else. I could bear living  with her. She's a
sweet girl--"
    "Whom you haven't  seen for five years,"  Luthias chuckled. "She's
grown into  quite a  hellcat." He  lost his  good humor.  "A stubborn,
proud hellcat,  in love  with a  man who  doesn't love  her--she won't
accept anyone else." The young Baron threw his hands out in confusion.
"It's not for lack of anyone to marry her to--*I'd* marry her. She and
I would get along excellently. But she won't do it!"
    Warin smiled.  "Just like her mother.  No one but Uncle  Lucan for
her!"
    "Sir Lucan loved her back."
    "True," Warin agreed.
    "Well, when I  get my hands on the fiend,  I'll kill him," Luthias
vowed. "She's been hurt enough in her life."
    "Luthias-san," Ittosai Michiya announced  himself. He bowed to the
Baron, then to the Baron's friend.  "How do you do," he said carefully
to Warin, using  Baranurian manners. "I am  Ittosai Michiya, Castellan
to the Baron of Connall."
    "Lord Warin  Shipbrook," he introduced  himself, and bowed  in the
Baranurian fashion.
    Ittosai continued, "There  was a Bichanese merchant  at the market
with katanas.  I am in need  of a new one,  and I thought that  you as
well would like to have one." He held out a supremely crafted katana.
    Luthias smiled. "Thank you, Michiya. You didn't have to do that."
    "You  well  earned  it  today  on  the  field,  Luthias-san,"  the
castellan cut  him off.  Ittosai smiled.  "We shall  practice together
tomorrow."
    Small hands suddenly appeared before Warin's eyes. Luthias smiled,
recognizing them.  Warin removed the  hands and turned.  "Myrande!" he
greeted his cousin, kissing her warmly  on the cheek. He stepped back,
inspected her. "You've grown no taller."
    "Nor have you," she teased testily.
    "But at least you're bonnier," Warin offered.
    "Bonnier? I'm falling apart, and he says I'm bonnier." But Myrande
was smiling.
    "I must  go," Ittosai interrupted,  "for I have promised  to dance
with the Duchess. But these are  for you, Myrande," he stated quickly,
pushing two  ivory sticks,  tipped in silver,  which were  carved with
Bichanese characters on the blunt end.
    "Thank you," Myrande said politely. She looked confused though.
    "They are  chop sticks," Michiya  explained. "In my  country, they
are used for eating, but the ladies also wear them in their hair. Like
this," he explained. He took the ivory sticks and slipped them, silver
pointed end  first, into  the pile  of hair at  the back  of Myrande's
head. Michiya took  a step back and admired the  effect of the crossed
sticks.  "There. You  are perfect,  except your  eyes are  too round."
Myrande laughed. "Excuse me, prease,"  he concluded, hearing the music
paus. He  bowed to his  lord and his company.  "I must dance  with the
1Duchess."
    Luthias took  him aside as he  was leaving. "Let me  know how much
the katana cost," Luthias asked quietly.
    Ittosai smiled.  "I have  more than enough,  Luthias-san. It  is a
gift; besides,  you give me too  much gold for my  services." He bowed
toward the Baron slightly. "I shall see you on the later, my friend."
    Luthias turned back to his ward and his old friend Warin, who were
trying to catch up  on four years of one another's  lives in less than
an hour. "Do you want to dance, Sable?" the Baron of Connall asked.
    She smiled  shyly. "I already  promised Warin." Shy? Why  does she
look shy? It wasn't as if he had never asked to dance with her before.
    Come to think of it, he hadn't.
    "Go ahead," young Shipbrook offered easily.
    "No, I'll dance with you  later," Luthias insisted. "I see Clifton
wants to see me." He nodded to his friends and left.
    "Now," said Warin, taking his younger cousin's arm, "we shall have
to see if your dancing has improved."
    Myrande laughed. "Improved? You must  be joking." She stepped with
him, and they began to dance. "Are you glad to be home, Warin?"
    The  scholar considered.  "I  am, and  I'm not.  I'm  glad to  see
everyone again,  Tylane and  you, Luthias,  the Duke...but  still, I'm
having a hard time getting along with my father--"
    "You're not alone."
    "I  realize   this.  Has  he   really  tried  to   supersede  your
guardianship  from  Luthias?"  Myrande   nodded.  "I  wonder  if  he's
insane--belittling the Baron of Connall  and trying to marry his niece
to Oleran. And the way he treats Tylane..."
    "What's he doing  to Tylane?" Myrande asked quickly.  She was fond
of  Tylane, her  cousin, and  had  been very  happy for  him when  his
engagement to  Danza Coranabo,  who had been  offered to  Luthias, had
been announced several weeks ago. "Is he disinheriting him?"
    "Worse.  Whenever Tylane  does so  much as  disagree with  him, he
threatens to refuse Danza."
    "How can he do that? The  banns have been announced, and the dowry
paid."
    "Tylane's only nineteen, Myrande, and  my father legally can still
speak for him," Warin explained, as if he didn't really like the fact.
"And disinheriting him isn't a threat; Tylane will be one of the heirs
to Coranabo when he marries Danza.  No, disinheritance is what he uses
against me."
    "For what?"
    "For anything. For  disagreeing with him. He  wants total control,
Myrande; he wants his  family to think of him as  King and God." Warin
made a sound  of disgust and turned away. Neither  mentioned the Baron
of Shipbrook again; neither wanted to think about him.

    Luthias  approached his  cousin,  the Duke,  and  Sir Edward.  The
Knight Commander smiled. He and Luthias  had spoken much over the last
few days. "Come into the study," the Knight Commander invited. Luthias
nodded  and  walked  with  his  cousin and  the  Knight  Commander  to
Clifton's office.
    "Baron!"
    Luthias turned  his head  and grimaced  when he  saw the  Baron of
Shipbrook.  Unlike  his  two  congenial  sons,  the  Baron  was  tall,
dark-haired, and bore himself arrogantly.  Luthias didn't like him and
had never  liked him.  He found  it difficult  to tolerate  people who
insisted that their will govern the world.
    "What do you want, Baron?" Luthias asked, trying to keep his voice
low, steady,  and polite.  He motioned to  his oncoming  manservant to
wait a moment.
1    "A word with you, nothing else."
    Luthias' mouth quirked  with annoyance. He didn't  exactly wish to
speak with this man,  now or ever. But he was  the Baron of Connall...
He looked at the Duke, who nodded. "Come to the study, and speak."
    "I wish to discuss my niece's marriage to Baron Oleran," the Baron
of Shipbrook announced as soon as the door closed.
    Curse him! Tactless brute, bringing this up at a ball, in front of
the Knight Commander! Luthias' eyes  caught the metal of the Bichanese
katana at his side. It was  an excellent weapon, quick and sharp, just
the thing to remove this cretin's head.
    Fine thing, for the Duke's Advocate to be tried for murder...
    "We  have  arranged  for  the   ceremony  to  take  place  on  the
twenty-fourth of Seber."
    "There will be no marriage,"  Luthias contradicted, his voice firm
and low. His hands began to curl into fists.
    "You have no right to  deny her this," Shipbrook stated guardedly.
"I am her kinsman, and I know best for her. If you have your will, you
will keep her as your slave for the rest of her life, but she deserves
better--a home and title of her own."
    "I  am her  guardian,  and I  have every  right  to protect  her,"
Luthias replied carefully. "I will not have her wed to Oleran."
    "She is of my blood. I have more right to her--"
    "You have NO  right," Luthias seethed, his  words slipping tightly
between his teeth. "You gave up any  rights to her and her family when
you cast Sir Lucan out! Myrande is my ward, and it is I, sir, not you,
who holds sway over her life."
    "Lucan  left her  to  your  father, boy,  not  to you,"  Shipbrook
argued. "You have neither the wisdom, nor the--"
    "Sir Lucan left her guardianship to the Baron of Connall; I am the
Baron  of Connall,  Shipbrook,  and I  shall judge  what  is best  for
Myrande." Luthias  wondered fleetingly how  his cousin and  the Knight
Commander would react  if he began to strangle the  Baron of Shipbrook
before their eyes.
    "She was left to Fionn Connall--"
    "She  was  left  to  the *Baron*  of  Connall,"  Luthias  repeated
angrily. "I  have seen the words,  sir. Now leave!" The  young Baron's
hands were at  his side, clenched so tightly that  the entire fist was
white. His eyes were wild and dangerous.
    "You want her dishonored, an old maid to be mocked!"
    "I want  her alive and happy!"  Luthias shouted. He wished  he had
more--or less--control. "You  want her miserable, or dead.  Get out of
here, Shipbrook!"
    Shipbrook  took a  step back,  seeing the  fury in  Luthias' eyes.
Silently, he left. Luthias cursed him  mentally. He shook his head, as
if  to clear  it,  and bowed  his  head  when he  saw  Sir Edward.  "I
apologize, sir, for my outburst."
    "Think nothing of it, Luthias," the Knight Commander said gently.
    "Excuse me," the Duke said, and he brushed past Luthias on his way
out.
    "Not a discreet man, this Baron of Shipbrook."
    "No, Sir Edward."
    "Not at all like his brother,"  Sothos continued. "Sir Lucan was a
good man. Is it all that hard to find a suitor for his daughter?"
    Luthias smiled, and  his fists loosened. "Not at  all, Sir Edward.
Her cousin, Warin  Shipbrook, has offered, and I would  marry her, but
she doesn't want either of us."
    "Proud?"
    "And   stubborn,"   Luthias   agreed.   "But   I'll   get   around
it...eventually." He didn't add that  he hoped that Shipbrook would do
nothing  stupid before  he, Luthias,  could figure  out how  to handle
1Myrande.
    "Good luck to you, then, Luthias," laughed the knight. "However, I
called you here for something of a different nature."
    Luthias sat. "What?"
    The Knight Commander  perched himself on the edge of  the desk. "I
know--just as you and your Castellan say--that war with Bichu would be
ludicrous. But I  still sense war coming; from whence,  I know not. Do
you have any opinions?"
    "The countries to  the east are too small; would  Benison risk it?
They've waged wars without warning before."
    "True, but I doubt they would be  so stupid as to attack us. We're
too evenly matched with them."
    "Of course," Luthias said.
    "No matter  what, the army  needs preparations. Did you  know that
your father had asked that you train beneath me?"
    Luthias blinked. "What? No--he never told me..."
    "Yes, the Duke  tells me he was killed before  he had the chance."
Edward smiled.  "I wanted him to  tell you this part,  but your father
had intended for you to come to Magnus and become a knight beneath me.
Your brother, I'm told, was to have gone to the University."
    "I knew Father was planning to tell Roisart that on our birthday."
    "I see.  But he didn't  live that  long." Luthias nodded.  "In any
case, Baron Connall, I would ask that you return to Magnus with me, to
become a officer in the Royal Army."
    Luthias  leaned back  in the  chair and  considered. "Am  I to  be
Knighted, then?"
    Sir Edward smiled.  "I would think so, but not  yet. You're a fine
fighter, Luthias,  as far as  that goes, one  of the finest  I've ever
seen. But there's more to Knighthood than fighting. Honor." Sir Edward
frowned. "Were you aware that your  Castellan threw away his chance to
win the tournament?" Luthias nodded. "Why did you allow it?"
    "Because I understood why he did it," Luthias explained.
    "Knighthood involves truth, Luthias.  You won dishonestly, and you
accepted the prize and honor for that victory without a word."
    "I  would  think that  discretion  is  also a  knightly  quality,"
Luthias argued  easily. "There are  rumors of a Bichanese  attack, Sir
Edward. If  Lord Ittosai won the  tournament, the panic would  rise. A
Bichanese man  better than  every fighter in  Dargon, better  than the
Duke's cousin? The people would go  mad. How long do you think Ittosai
would have  lived, if he had  won? I would rather  sacrifice the truth
than my friend's life," Luthias  concluded firmly, his jaw tight. Ever
since he was a tot training under  Sir Lucan, Luthias had wanted to be
like him--a  great fighter,  a great  Knight. But  if wanting  to keep
Ittosai alive was a fault to Knights, then he wouldn't be one.
    Sir Edward sighed. "You are right, Lord Baron Connall." He smiled.
"I would be pleased if you would  join me in Magnus. I think you would
be Knighted by spring."
    Wild hope rushed inside Luthias.  Go to Magnus--become a Knight in
the spring. Go to Magnus... "My lands," he murmured. "Myrande."
    "What?"
    "I'll have to wait and see,  Sir Edward," Luthias replied. "I have
no one to govern  my lands, and the way Baron Shipbrook  is, I doubt I
should leave Lady Myrande."
    "Bring her with you."
    "You said things were different there. They wouldn't understand my
friendship with her."
    "People  aren't very  tolerant  of...that sort  of thing,"  Sothos
agreed.  "The Princess'  marriage was  dissolved due  to that  lack of
tolerance. But you said you wanted to marry her."
    "She won't let me," Luthias rued,  but he smiled slightly. "I will
1think on it, Sir Edward."
    A knock sounded. "Come," Sir Edward invited.
    Baron  Vladon entered  the room.  Behind  him stood  the Baron  of
Winthrop and the  Baron of Coranabo. "Please  excuse our interruption,
your excellency,"  Baron Coranabo apologized. "We  must speak urgently
with the Duke's Advocate."
    Sir Edward glanced at the Baron of Connall. "Should I leave?"
    "No, stay, Edward," Vladon advised his cousin. "It is well that we
should have a Royal Official as a witness."
    Witness? "What is it?" Luthias asked, wary.
    "We have evidence," Coranabo began slowly, as if it were difficult
for  him.  Yet  his  eyes  were  cold,  not  at  all  as  if  he  were
uncomfortable. "That there is a conspiracy to start a war with Bichu."
    "I  know  there was,"  Luthias  replied  gravely. "My  father  and
brother died because of it."
    Baron  Winthrop,  obviously  unsettled,   coughed.  "My  boy,"  he
addressed the Lord Baron of Connall, "this is gravely serious."
    Luthias grimaced. "Tell me."
    "There are  witnesses," Coranabo continued slowly,  "that say that
some people of this area are plotting with Bichu against the Kingdom."
    "Who?" Luthias demanded.
    "Your Castellan," Coranabo told him, "Ittosai Michiya."

------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                            The Game Begins
                           by John Doucette
                       (b.c.k.a JDOUCETTE@UPEI)

    A man dressed  in plain grey clothing entered  the bed-chamber and
went to the figure sleeping  peacefully in the elegant four-poster. He
bent down and  gently shook the slumbering figure  awake. "Primus," he
said with great respect tinged with fear. "Wake up, my lord."
    The figure  turned over. "I  told thee I  was not to  be disturbed
under any circumstances," he said in a whispering voice.
    "Y-Yes, Primus," the servant stammered. "B-But--"
    "ANY  circumstances, Lothan.  If  thee cannot  carry  out my  most
trivial commands, then I must search for another man-servant."
    Lothan trembled  in the  darkness. He knew  what the  Primus meant
when he  said he would  have to  search for another  man-servant. None
save those who were  part of The Order could know  the identity of the
Primus.  Lothan  swallowed  hard.  "F-Forgive  me,  my  lord.  Dra'nak
Valthorn has returned."
    At the  mention of  Valthorn, the  Primus sat  upright in  bed and
fixed  Lothan with  a  piercing stare,  even though  the  room was  in
near-total darkness. "If  this is a contrivance to  save thyself, thee
art a dead man, Lothan," he said without emotion.
    "No, Primus!  I swear it!  The Dra'nak stepped through  the portal
only ten minutes ago!" For long  seconds, Lothan could feel the unseen
gaze of his master upon him.
    "Inform the Dra'nak that I will see him in my study in one quarter
of an hour," the Primus said to his terrified servant.
    "Y-Yes, Primus,"  Lothan said, the  relief plain in his  voice. He
bowed once and fled the room.

    Dressed  in  velvet-soft black  robes,  the  Primus of  The  Order
entered his private study accompanied by his ever-present guards, also
members of The Order. Waiting for him was Dra'nak Valthorn, one of The
Order's enforcers,  the most feared  men, next  to the Primus,  in The
Order. Of the four Dra'naks, Valthorn was the most powerful, second in
ability only to the Primus himself.
    The  study  was  large,  almost a  laboratory.  There  were  books
everywhere, as well as three  large tables for conducting experiments.
The  portion  of the  library  closest  the  entrance was  devoted  to
leisure.  A small  table surrounded  by six  chairs sat  in a  corner.
Behind   the  table   were   book  shelves   containing  hundreds   of
midnight-black bound tomes  of magic. One could almost  feel the magic
emanating from them.
    Seated at  the table  was a  man wearing the  same clothes  as the
Primus and  his guards wore. In  fact, all two hundred  members of The
Order wore black robes. Their  servants, those that had servants, wore
grey.
    Valthorn rose and  bowed to the Primus from the  waist. His robes'
cowl  was  pushed back,  revealing  the  face of  a  man  in his  late
thirties. "Cho dakh, Primus," he said in a deep voice.
    "Cho dakh, Valthorn," the Primus replied. "What news?"
    "I hath  succeeded in  tracking down one  of the  cabal's members,
Primus. I was not able to  determine the identity of his confederates.
However, I was able to extract some information as to their purpose."
    "And it is?"
    "They intend treason,  Primus. I am not certain  whether they wish
to secede, or whether they wish to take our Master's throne."
    "Hath thee uncovered any mention of Baron Myros?" the Primus asked
intently.
    "Nay, Primus,"  Valthorn replied.  "Hath some event  occurred that
1would suggest otherwise?"
    "Myros hath journeyed to Magnus."
    "Baranur?" Valthorn said incredulously.
    "Yes.  Baranur.  Celeste  hath  reported to  me  that  Myros  doth
undertake this journey to visit an 'old friend'. She suspects Myros of
having ulterior motives.  Our Master decided to  make Myros Ambassador
to Baranur,  in order  that we  may more readily  observe him.  I hath
given Celeste the task."
    "Celeste? Dost thou trust her?"
    "Trust, Valthorn? Nay, I do not trust her. But she knows what will
happen to her if she betrays me," he said with the faintest trace of a
smile.
    "What dost thou wish me to do regarding the cabal, Primus?"
    "Summon  the   Conclave,"  the   Primus  said  after   a  moment's
consideration. "This decision must not be taken lightly."
    "At once, Primus."

    The  chamber  where  the  Conclave   met  was  hundreds  of  miles
underground. It was a circular chamber, sixty feet in diameter. It was
unlit except  for an  area in  the center of  the chamber  twenty feet
across.  Illumination  was provided  by  a  brilliant globe  of  light
suspended thirty feet above the floor.
    Contrasting sharply with the polished  white marble from which the
chamber was hollowed out, seven  large, black stone chairs were spaced
evenly about the periphery of the lighted area, facing inwards. Seated
in one of these was the Primus. He was dressed, as was custom when the
Conclave  was in  session, in  his  formal robes  of office.  Midnight
black, they were inscribed with runes that glowed a silvery radiance.
    The cowl, normally drawn  over his head so as to  hide most of his
features,  rested on  his shoulders,  revealing a  man whose  face was
marked by the passage of countless years. He kept his snowy-white hair
shoulder length,  for longer hair  was difficult to conceal  under his
robes' cowl. He  had been Primus for  so long that his  given name was
but a dim  memory. The Primus sat  back in his chair,  waiting for the
other six members of the Conclave to arrive. His thoughts were on days
long since fled. Days when Galicia was young.
    Five  hundred  years  ago,  the  final  victor  emerged  from  the
Consolidation  Wars and  proclaimed  himself Emperor  of Galicia.  Two
hundred years of bloody warfare had  finally resulted in a lasting, if
forced,  confederation  between  the  Galician  city-states.  The  new
Emperor, realizing  that not  all of his  new subjects  were overjoyed
with their new ruler, called together  all the mages that he knew were
absolutely loyal to  him, and created The Order of  Galicia, now known
as The Order.
    No one but the Emperor and his most trusted advisors even knew The
Order  existed. To  head The  Order he  chose the  one man  he trusted
completely, his personal  magist. This mage, known as  the Primus, was
tasked  with  protecting  the  Emperor's  person  and  with  gathering
intelligence concerning the Emperor's enemies. To accomplish this, the
Primus could  call on the resources  of two hundred of  Galicia's best
mages.
    A fortress  was constructed to  house The Order, a  fortress whose
location was kept from the Emperor. Only those of The Order knew where
it was. The fortress was warded by powerful spells; the only way in or
out was by way of a teleport chamber. Other spells prevented anyone on
the outside from using their art  to view the happenings inside. Still
other  spells   existed  that   would  activate  only   under  certain
circumstances, such as combat.
    The  Primus at  the time,  the  very same  man who  was Primus  at
present, formed  a council  to help  him run The  Order, a  council he
1called the  Conclave. Realizing the  need for a secure  meeting place,
both from physical  and magical attack, he began to  work on a chamber
deep underground.
    It  took him  two  months to  hollow out  space  for the  chamber.
Another month was  spent on applying various spells to  the chamber to
proof it against  magic. Among those spells was a  spell that formed a
column of force that trapped the light emanating from the light sphere
in the central area. The  column also prevented individuals inside the
lighted area from seeing out, and those outside from seeing in. Within
the column  itself, a permanent dispel  magic spell was in  effect, so
that none of  the Conclave members could use magic  on each other. The
only way to  reach the chamber was by teleportation,  and then only if
the mage in question was a powerful one; not every mage could teleport
himself the distance required to reach the chamber.
    The Primus  was brought out of  his reverie by the  arrival of the
first member of the Conclave. Valthorn stepped through the force-wall,
turned  to face  the  Primus, and  bowed from  the  waist. "Cho  dakh,
Primus."
    "Cho dakh, Valthorn."
    Valthorn  took his  seat, the  second from  the Primus'  left, and
waited.  He did  not wait  long. Within  the space  of the  next three
minutes,  the other  five members  of  the Conclave  stepped into  the
lighted area, greeted the Primus, and took their seats.
    "Thee  art aware,"  the Primus  began, "of  the recent  happenings
regarding the  discovery of a  cabal working against our  Master. What
thee art unaware of, with the exception of the Sehrvat Primus, is that
Dra'nak Valthorn hath discovered the  identity of, and interrogated, a
member of this  cabal. Unfortunately, this individual did  not see fit
to impart  to the Dra'nak a  great deal of information.  He did reveal
the cabal's intentions, however. They  intend to commit treason. We do
not know whether they  wish to secede, or whether they  wish to try to
oust our Master."
    "Therefore, this assembly hath two decisions to arrive at: whether
or not  our Master should be  informed at this early  juncture, and we
must decide what action we shall  take with regards to the cabal. What
say thee, Xavier?"
    Xavier, Lokhmahst  of The Order,  turned in  his seat to  face the
Primus. "We must inform our Master of this at once, Primus," the sixty
year-old mage said. The Primus had been afraid of this. The Lokhmahst,
or loremaster, commanded great respect within The Order.
    "Were  circumstances different,  Xavier, I  would say  aye to  thy
suggestion. However, the  information gathered thus far  is not worthy
of our Master's attention."
    "How so?  We hath uncovered a  plot to commit treason  against our
Master. Whether  this treason  is against his  person, or  against the
state, he must be informed."
    "What  of the  rest  of thee?"  the Primus  asked.  "What art  thy
opinions?"
    "What  Lokhmahst Xavier  hath said  hath value,  Primus," Valthorn
said. "However,  I agree with you.  There is not enough  hard evidence
against the cabal. If we were to inform our Master, the members of the
cabal might  get wind of  our discoveries and conceal  themselves even
better than they now are."
    "I side  with you also,  Primus," said Derek, the  Sehrvat Primus.
The position  of First Servant  originally entailed being head  of the
Primus'  household  and in  charge  of  acquiring servants  for  those
members of The Order that wished to have servants. Over the years, the
duties  and  responsibilities  of  First Servant  evolved  to  include
overseeing the hiring of mercenaries for tasks that were unworthy of a
member's participation,  or tasks  in which The  Order could  not risk
1direct involvement.
    "What of thee?" the Primus  asked the three remaining Dra'naks who
had not voiced an opinion.
    "I support you, Primus," Dra'nak Anton replied.
    "Xavier," Teng answered.
    "You, Primus," Lenore stated.
    "It is  decided," the Primus  said. "Rest assured, Xavier,  that I
shall impart knowledge of the cabal  to our Master the instant we hath
better information."
    Xavier  nodded slightly,  acknowledging  defeat gracefully.  "What
then, is to be our course of action?"
    The Primus considered  for a moment. "This matter  is too delicate
for direct involvement." He turned  slightly to face Derek. "Dost thou
hath someone that could be relied upon?"
    Derek thought for a moment.  "I believe," said the Sehrvat Primus,
"I know of three that could be useful."
    "Excellent.  Thou  shalt  seek  these  three  out  and  hire  them
forthwith."
    "Yes, Primus."
    "Our business is  concluded. The Conclave is  disbanded. Cha loth,
Ull."
    One by one, the Conclave bowed to the Primus, bidding him farewell
in the  ancient Galician  all members  of The  Order were  required to
learn. Valthorn was  the last to depart. "Cha loth,  Primus," he said.
The chamber  echoed with the sound  of chanting as the  members of the
Conclave teleported to the fortress.

    "This is all your fault, Tarn!" Justin said as he parried a thrust
from his grey-clad attacker.
    "Me? What  did I  do?" the  little thief  asked plaintively  as he
knocked another arrow.
    Justin caught his  attacker's slash on his shield  and delivered a
vicious kick to his opponent's knee, sending the luckless man crashing
down the  hill. He whirled on  Tarn. "You just couldn't  resist, could
you? You simply had to let  your natural tendencies run away with you,
didn't you? Didn't you!?"
    "I didn't steal anything! Honest! I wanted to, but I didn't!"
    "THEN WHY ARE THEY TRYING TO KILL US, YOU LITTLE--" Justin stopped
short at the sight of Tarn  aiming his bow in Justin's direction. "Now
wait a  minute, Tarn. There's  no need--" Before Justin  could finish,
Tarn let  his arrow fly. Justin  cringed as Tarn's arrow  whizzed past
his ear and  struck something behind him. Justin turned  around to see
one  of their  assailants  staring blankly  up at  the  sky, an  arrow
embedded in his chest.
    "Would                                                         you
two..(parry)..mind..(parry)..rejoining..(parry-riposte)..this
debacle?" Julia asked somewhat heatedly.
    Just  as  Justin  was  about  to  re-enter  the  fray,  the  enemy
retreated,  leaving  six of  their  comrades  behind. "Now  it's  only
fourteen-to-three," Justin commented.
    "You're  just full  of cheery  pronouncements today,  aren't you?"
Julia asked.
    "Look," Justin said, turning to face Julia, "this wasn't MY idea!"
    "You're the  one who suggested we  take the southern route  in the
first place!"
    "I'm not the one that got the town guards upset!"
    "This isn't the time or place!"
    "I hate to interrupt," Tarn said, "but we seem to have a visitor."
    Justin and Julia forgot their argument and looked in the direction
Tarn was pointing. A man dressed  in black robes was walking calmly up
1the hill. "Damn," Julia said. "They've brought up a wizard."
    Tarn aimed his  bow at the approaching mage.  "Wait, Tarn," Justin
said.  "If he  wanted to,  he probably  could have  killed us  without
showing himself. Let's  see what he wants."  Reluctantly, Tarn lowered
his bow.
    The mage stopped twenty feet from the crest. "I wish to speak with
thee," he called out. "May I approach?"
    Justin looked  to Julia  for confirmation. "Not  much else  we can
do," she said.
    "You may."
    The mage travelled the remaining  distance between himself and the
group on the hill-crest unhurriedly. He coldly regarded the corpses of
the six slain  attackers. "Fools," he said. "I must  apologize for the
actions of my retainers," he said  to the three companions. "They were
over-zealous in their pursuit of my wishes."
    "And just what are your wishes?" Justin asked suspiciously.
    "I hath a task I wish thee to perform for my Master."
    "And just who is your master?" Julia asked.
    The mage reached  inside his robes and pulled out  a chain with an
amulet on it. He handed it to Justin without saying a word.
    "She asked you who your master is," Justin said, trying to control
his mounting anger. "What sort of answer is this?" he demanded.
    "Look at the amulet."
    Justin looked  down at the amulet  in his hand. "By  the gods," he
said softly.
    "You're  as white  as a  ghost, Justin,"  Julia said,  the concern
plain in her voice. "What is it?"
    Justin held  up the amulet  for her and Tarn  to see. It  bore the
relief of an eagle with a  crown upon its head. "The Emperor's crest!"
Julia breathed.
    "Here's where the fun begins," Tarn said.

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1                                                             /
  DDDDD                              ZZZZZZ                //
  D    D  AAAA RRR  GGGG OOOO NN  N      Z  I NN  N EEEE  ||
  D     D A  A R  R G    O  O N N N     Z   I N N N E     ||Volume 2
-=========================================================+|)
  D    D  AAAA RRR  G GG O  O N N N   Z     I N N N E     || Issue 2
  DDDDD   A  A R  R GGGG OOOO N  NN  ZZZZZZ I N  NN EEEE  ||
                                                           \\
                                                             \
------------------------------------------------------------------------
--   DargonZine Volume 2, Issue 2        05/06/89          Cir 801    --
------------------------------------------------------------------------
--                            Contents                                --
------------------------------------------------------------------------
  DAG                        Dafydd                 Editorial
  Backtrail                  Michelle               17 Naia, 1013
  Dragon Hunt, Part 1        Max Khaytsus           19-23 Naia, 1013
  Dragon Hunt, Part 2        Max Khaytsus           20-23 Naia, 1013
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                          Dafydd's Amber Glow

     First, I  would like to  reassure those  of you who  might actually
look at the subscription numbers on  the masthead: we did not loose over
70  readers  since  last  issue  - I  cannot  add.  Sorry.  The  present
circulation number is correct.
     Second, as  I have a  little more time and  space, I would  like to
explain  the dates  that  appear next  to  each story  in  the Table  of
Contents. When I took  over the Dargon Project, I thought  it would be a
good idea to  try to give the  stories some kind of  common reference to
help the reader understand what  was happening when. (This should become
very useful  in a few months  when some very interesting  things will be
happening  in Baranur,  and you  will all  want to  keep the  stories as
straight as possible...) Of course, the best  way to do this would be to
have all  of the stories cross-reference  each other - but that  takes a
lot more time and coordination than we as a group of authors are capable
of supplying at this time. So, I decided that it would be a good idea to
date each  story and to  tell the readers what  the date was.  Hence the
date column in the TOC.
     Now, to  explain what the dates  mean. In Baranur, there  are 12 30
day months and a 5 day (or 6  in the case of leap years) spring festival
stuck in the middle. The month  names and their Earth equivalents are as
follows:

    Janis - January      Vibril - February    Mertz  - March
    Firil - April        Naia   - May         Melrin - *Spring Festival
    Yule  - June         Yuli   - July        Sy     - August
    Seber - September    Ober   - October     Nober  - November
    Deber - December

Thus,  for example,  the three stories  in this issue  are occurring  in
mid-to-late May, in Earth terms (more or less...).
     Well, that's about it for this issue. Next time (with luck, no more
than a month or so away), we  will continue Ms Henniquin's Trial by Fire
and begin a story  by a new author to the project. Feel  free to send me
mail  if you  have any  questions, or  mail the  authors or  myself with
comments about the stories.
     And until next time I remain,
          Dafydd, Editor DargonZine (b.c.k.a. White@BUVM.bitnet)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                              Backtrail
                         by Michelle Brothers
            (b.c.k.a. brothers%tramp@boulder.colorado.edu)

    The heavy rainstorm  that had broken yesterday had  begun to slack
off by mid-morning a day later,  spending its fury as it moved inland.
A gentle rain continued to fall, however, and Teran muttered irritably
as droplets splattered his face. Rain was his least favorite of Mother
Natures manifestations; sun was never a  problem and snow was at least
easy to deal with.
    His horse,  a large, heavyset  bay, didn't  seem to have  the same
problems with the weather that his  rider did. He walked with his head
held high,  delicately stepping over the  mud puddles in the  road and
prancing impatiently every time Teran stopped to dismount.
    Teran didn't  know why he  bothered trying to find  Eliowy's trail
anymore. Last night's rain had  probably obliterated any track, always
providing that  she hadn't decided to  take shelter along the  way. If
she had, he would have to go  back along the road to Tench, find where
Eliowy had taken refuge, and pick up her trail. Again.
    Eliowy  had  proven to  be  very  elusive  quarry, the  blond  man
admitted grudgingly. Not at all as easy to track and capture as he had
assumed at the  start of the chase. She had  managed to put additional
time   between  herself  and   her  pursuer  after  disembarking  from
Dolphins Anchor by buying a horse.  Teran took a certain grim pleasure
in the knowledge that the price  of the beast had probably shocked the
girl into a near faint. He, himself, had choked when the dealer quoted
his price.
    Since  leaving the  coastal city  of Foroni  the chase  had become
almost a  game; Eliowy trying to  get lost enough that  Teran couldn't
find her and Teran trying to get close enough to Eliowy to catch her.
    Thus far,  the 'game' had been  a draw. Eliowy stayed  just out of
Teran's reach,  but couldn't shake him  off her tail. After  well over
six months of  running after Eliowy, Teran had gained  a great measure
of respect  f for  the girl's resourcefulness.  She was  using tactics
that he hadn't  expected her to be  able to come up  with; like having
someone leave a false trail for him while she left the city in another
direction.
    Teran scowled at the memory.  He had nearly lost Eliowy completely
that  time.  If  she hadn't gotten rid of her  horse when she had...It
was the one move that Teran  thought was foolish on her part, although
she'd probably sold the animal to pay the young man to leave her false
trail. Teran thanked the gods that she hadn't paid him enough.
    The morning  mist had  cleared and  the blonde  man could  see the
battlements of a  keep in the distance. Allowing his  stallion to plod
along without guidance,  Teran pulled a carefully rolled  map from one
saddle bag.  After a little searching,  he was able to  find Tench and
from there he traced his path to the city he was headed for.
    "Dargon," said  Teran wearily. "Well,  I certainly hope  that they
have better accommodations  than Tench." He stowed the  map away again
and slapped the horse's neck. "Let's  go," and urged the animal into a
cantor.
    A short  hour later Teran  found himself  on the main  street into
Dargon. Rain had washed the streets clean and had finally slackened to
a barely  noticeable drizzle. He  glanced around  as he rode  into the
city, noting the people hurrying about their morning business.
    As was usual  when presented with a new city  to search, Teran was
uncertain where to begin. Eliowy  had become increasingly clever as to
her  hiding  places and Teran knew he could no longer simply go to the
most  inexpensive inn  around  to  get news  of  her.  Finding an  inn
wouldn't be  such a  bad idea  however, his  stomach pointed  out. The
1search could begin and breakfast  gotten in the bargain. Trail rations
did not a meal make.
    Teran agreed.
    This decided, Teran started searching for a respectable inn.

    Eliowy stared at  the grey stone ceiling through  slitted eyes and
decided  that this  time  she  was in  real  trouble.  Despite have  a
terrible   headache,  she  still  remembered  being  captured  by  the
Lieutenant of the Guard and it didn't  take much to guess that she was
now in a  guardhouse. Voices in the room prevented  Eliowy from making
an  immediate escape,  so she  simply lay  still and  listened to  the
conversation.
    "I just don't understand why you  brought her here, Kalen," a deep
voice was saying tiredly.
    "Her reaction was odd,  Captain," replied Kalen. Eliowy identified
him as  the guard she  had literally run  into earlier. "I  didn't say
much of anything to her and she  took off running; like I'd caught her
stealing or something."
    "Stolen something. Like  the sword? Or the  harp?" queried Kalen's
captain.
    "Well, yes,"  said Kalen.  "The  thought  had  crossed my  mind. I
mean, the workmanship of the blade is excellent and the harp is nearly
an antique. They'd be worth quite a bit on the black market."
    Eliowy  tensed  angrily,  reminding  herself that  she  was  still
supposed to  be unconscious. The sword  was one of her  most treasured
possessions; a  gift from Teran when  he finally decided that  she had
learned all he could  teach her. And as for the harp,  well. So far as
Eliowy was concerned,  the instrument was priceless, all  that she had
left of her mother.
    "Kalen, the instrument is too well cared for to have been stolen,"
said the captain patiently. "It's also not pretty enough to bring gold
on the market. And as for the blade," The silky sound of a sword being
drawn from a sheath rang through the room. "It is very finely crafted,
I grant  you, but feel how  lightweight it is," Eliowy  could invision
her weapon  being handed  to Kalen.  "It wouldn't be  of much  use for
either of  us, but I'll wager  my next months bonus  that it's perfect
for her. A smith would make  something like this on commission because
it's useless except for the one that it was made for."
    "You've made your point, Captain," sighed Kalen, sliding the blade
back into  it's sheath.  "She's not a  thief and it  was a  mistake to
bring her in."
    "Your  thinking  was  good--"  began   the  captain,  only  to  be
interrupted by the  clash of steel and excited  young voices clamoring
outside.
    "What in the  name of every god--" The captain  swore, rushing out
the door with Kalen hot on his heels.
    As soon  as she heard  the man  shouting in the  courtyard, Eliowy
rolled  off the  wooden bench and hurried to the table. She pulled the
baldric over her head like a sash so that the sheathed sword hung down
her back and pulled her backpack closer. One swift thrust and the harp
was  stuffed into  the bottom  of the  bag. Another  grab and  the her
clothes followed in an untidy mass.
    She  rushed the  door without  bothering  to close  the pack.  And
completely  ignoring the  silver piece  laying  in the  middle of  the
table.
    Outside, the  captain had  two young  men by  the collars  and was
shaking them both  vigorously while an impassive Kalen  looked on. His
angry voice easily reached Eliowy by the door.
    "You young  fools can either explain  to me why you  drew steel on
one another OR you can explain it to the Duke!" another vigorous shake
1punctuated his  words. The threat  had the  desired effect as  the two
youths  tried to  talk over  one  another to  make their  case to  the
captain.
    Stifling a smile, Eliowy slipped around the rear of the guardhouse
and paused in  its shadow to close  her pack and to  get her bearings.
The rain  had slacked enough so  that she was no  longer worried about
getting  soaked,  although the  constant  drizzle  was proving  to  be
annoying. Through the dim haze of  rain Eliowy could see a small group
of carts being unloaded by what seemed  to be the back entrance to the
Keep. There was not, however, any sign of a rear gate.
    The captain's voice  could no longer be heard  shouting and Eliowy
decided that, where ever she went, moving might be a very good idea.
    "The fastest way  out of here," thought Eliowy,  eyes scanning the
courtyard, "would be to go around the castle and out the front gate or
over the  wall. But that's the  most obvious way too..."  The sound of
footsteps on the flagstones  cut Eliowy's contemplation short. Without
pausing to  make a  conscious decision,  she headed  for the  group of
wagons by the servants entrance.
    As she walked,  Eliowy pulled her cloak and sword  off of her back
and arranged the  cloth so that it  hid both her weapons  belt and the
pack. Carrying the unwieldy mass like a box, held in front of her, the
girl joined the end of the line of people entering the Keep.
    "Is that  the last of it?"  someone demanded in Eliowy's  ear, the
second she stepped through the doorway.
    "Uh, yes, ma'am!" Eliowy looked up at the speaker, a tall woman in
a grey apron that looked very official. "Last load."
    "Well, what is it?" The woman asked the woman impatiently.
    "Linens."
    "Take  them up  to the  sewing room,  then," She  looked over  her
shoulder at a pair of boys who were heading for a large cabinet by the
fireplace. "And you two stay out of the pantry!"
    While the  woman was occupied, Eliowy  headed for the door  at the
far end of the room.
    "Girl!"
    Eliowy stopped dead in her  tracks and turned slowly around, heart
dropping to her boots.
    "Ma'am?"
    "You're new here?"
    "Yes, ma'am."
    A gentler expression covered the woman's tired face.
    "Get those up  to the sewing room, first door  on the second floor
up the back staircase, and then come down and get your breakfast."
    "Yes, ma'am.  Thank you!"  Eliowy stifled her  sigh of  relief and
hurried out of the kitchen.
    Once  clear of  the people  hurrying in  and out  of the  kitchens
entrance, Eliowy  slung her sword back  over her shoulder and  put her
cloak on over  it, arranging the hilt  so that it stuck  out under the
hood. Hoping that she looked more  like she belonged here, Eliowy went
up the nearest staircase, so as to avoid as many people as possible.
    The second floor  of the Keep was almost tomblike  in it's silence
compared to the bustle of the lower floor, additional noise being kept
out by a heavy wooden door at the  bottom and the top of the stairs. A
long hall  stretched to the  left, right,  and straight ahead  and was
hung with tapestries.  Rich carpet ran down the center  of each of the
corridors and light let in by  long, narrow windows with carved wooden
shutters. Doors lined the hall directly forward.
    Cautiously Eliowy walked down the middle hall, knowing that it had
to lead to the Keep's main  entrance. Even though it was unlikely, she
still  did not  want  to risk  running unawares  into  any of  Kalen's
soldiers. She  stayed close to the  wall, ready to dodge  into a room,
1should the need arise.
    She came to  an intersection that had small tables  at each of the
walls corners, all  with full vases on them. Sweet  perfume filled the
small area and Eliowy paused to  inhale the fresh fragrance. The sound
of  laughing voices  coming towards  her  from the  direction she  was
heading in broke off her reverie.
    Cursing herself for a fool, Eliowy ran down the left hand corridor
looking for a place to hide.
    The sound  of the voices  drew closer and, panicked,  Eliowy began
trying doors to see if any were unlocked. Her second frantic turn of a
door handle proved  to be the lucky one and  she breathed a  prayer of
thanks to the gods as she ducked inside.
    As quickly and as quietly as  possible, she closed the door behind
her and put her  back to the door, only to nearly  have a heart attack
because  the room  she had  chosen to  hide in  was occupied.  She had
interrupted someone in the middle of their breakfast.
    The  man  stared  at  her,  fork  poised  halfway  to  his  mouth,
surprised, but not alarmed, as if  he had unknown people bursting into
his room all the time.
    Frantically, Eliowy put  her finger to her lips  and made shushing
motions at  the man as  the voices she had  heard out in  the corridor
sounded directly outside her chosen hiding place.
    The voices in the hall weren't clear enough for Eliowy to make out
the conversation, but she kept one  ear tuned to the murmuring outside
and both both  eyes fastened on the  man at the table.  He had finally
put his fork down and was hiding  a smile behind the act of wiping his
mouth.
    "I don't  think they'll  find you  in here,  girl," the  man said,
finally  able to  keep  a  straight face,  brown  eyes sparkling  with
suppressed laughter. "I promise that I won't give you away."
    Eliowy's heart  nearly stopped  when the man  spoke, but  his last
statement coupled  the fact  that he  made no move  to rise  or shout,
assured her that he would, indeed say nothing. In fact, she thought as
the  voices in  the  hall faded  past  her hearing,  he  seemed to  be
enjoying the entire episode immensely.
    "Sorry to disturb your repast," she said softly, deciding that the
passage way  had to be  clear by now. She  fumbled behind her  for the
door handle still keeping puzzled eyes on the man. She bobbed her head
to him in thanks and slipped out the door.
    Clifton Dargon, Lord of Dargon Keep,  leaned back in his chair and
laughed, a little ruefully, at the freedom of youth.

    Eliowy  hurried down  the  main  staircase as  fast  as she  could
without attracting too  much attention. She encountered no  one on her
way down  but as  she neared  the bottom of  the stairs,  the everyday
sounds of  the Keep  grew louder  and people  could be heard  hurrying
about their business.
    Pausing at  the bottom of the  stairs and trying to  be invisible,
Eliowy waited until there was a  break in the stream of people, before
slipping across the main hallway and out the door into the main yard.
    The wide, open courtyard spread out  in front of the auburn haired
girl, as she stepped out into the  slowly clearing day. It was just as
busy with hurrying  people as the kitchen entrance and  the main keep.
From where she  stood, Eliowy could see the main  gates, heavy looking
wood and  iron affairs,  wide open.  A pair of  guards stood  at post,
seeming to ignore the occasional cart that came through.
    Taking a  deep breath,  Eliowy started  out across  the courtyard.
None of the people she passed payed much attention to her and she made
it to the gates with no difficulties.
    "I'm going to  make it," she thought confidently.  "Just walk past
1the guards and I'm free...just a few feet more..."
    "Here, girl. Where do you think you're going?"
    Eliowy halted, heart pounding, and  turned reluctantly to face the
younger of the two gate guards.
    "Cook needs some herbs from  the market," she lied hastily, trying
to  sound disgusted.  "Decided, all  of  a sudden,  to make  something
special for the evening meal."
    "But why are  you leaving by the main gate?"  pressed  the  guard,
stepping closer. Eliowy  thought frantically for a reply  as the young
man added, "The secondary gate is much close to the market."
    "I'm  new here,"  began  Eliowy,  looking up  at  him, amber  eyes
guileless and  a little confused. "I  get my bearings better  from the
main gate."
    "But--"
    "Let up, Jaron,"  advised the other guard, coming  to stand behind
Eliowy. Let the poor  girl get on with her errand  so the cook doesn't
get angry with her. Someone can show her a faster route later."
    "Thank  you, sir,"  said Eliowy  on the  heels of  his words.  She
ducked out of the main gate  before any more protests could be raised,
and ignored the younger man's command to wait.

    Teran leaned back in his seat  and calmly surveyed the common room
of Belisandra's. Late morning breakfasters lingered comfortably around
scarred  wooden  tables  and  sunlight, poking  abound  ragged  clouds
brightened the  room. A  stout woman stood  behind the  bar, carefully
wiping glasses while chatting amiably with the serving girl.
    A faint  smile flickered across  Teran's lips. He  quietly enjoyed
the  wine  and  his  few  hours rest.  Renewing  his chase  could come
later, after  his spirit had been  refreshed. He drained his  glass of
its fruity wine and signalled the bar-maid for another.
    The inn's main  door was pushed open with a  breath of fresh, rain
washed air and Teran's eyes were automatically drawn to the intrusion,
wariness not relaxed  even in such a safe  seeming environment. Seeing
the person  framed in the doorway,  Teran was glad for  his ever alert
vigilance, even as surprise nearly made him drop his empty wine glass.
    Eliowy's eyes flickered over the  room, noting, Teran assumed, how
many  people  were  present,  wether  or not  any  of  them  might  be
dangerous, and where the alternate exits were  in the room. It was not
a skill he had taught her, but he  still felt a glow of pride that she
had learned it.
    Their eyes  locked as Eliowy's gaze  slid to the corner  Teran had
seated  himself in,  and the  wariness  in Eliowy's  face melted  into
horror.  She took  a  hesitant  step backwards,  shaking  her head  in
denial.
    Teran rose slowly as she took another backwards step.
    "Eliowy," he  said softly, all  plans of grabbing her  and telling
her  that she  hadn't a  chance of  escaping him,  fading away  at the
pained look in her face.
    The fear  in Eliowy's amber  eyes hardened to defiance.  Her third
backwards  step  was confidently taken  and she  was out  the door and
running, even as Teran shouted for her to wait.

    Eliowy ran straight down the street, trying to lose herself in the
crowd,  not bothering  to use  the dark,  inviting recesses  of nearby
alleys  to secret  herself in.  Lythly  she dodged  around people  and
horses and listened intently for  the sounds of pursuit. Teran's pleas
for her  to wait  faded in the  distance as the  voices of  the people
drowned him out.
    Certain, now,  that she would  again lose him, Eliowy  ducked into
the nearest open shop,  to put herself completely out of Teran's sight.
1    The smell  of dye and  cloth surrounded her  and the three  men in
front of the counter turned from  their observation of a bolt of cloth
held by a fourth man to stare at Eliowy as she stood in the portal.
    "Well," said the dark haired man at the center of the group. Sharp
brown eyes studied the girl in  the doorway. "It appears that you have
another customer, Kelmin. Perhaps you should see to her needs first."
    "No  need," said  Eliowy hastily,  as the  slender man  behind the
counter set  down the bolt  of cloth and  started to move  out towards
her. "I, uh,  just stepped into the wrong shop."  She glanced over her
shoulder. No sign of Teran. She hadn't  heard his shout going by so he
either took another path or...
    "Are you having  difficulties, my dear?" inquired  the dark haired
man, leaning casually  against the counter. The taller of  the two men
at his side jerked in surprise.
    "Ah--"
    "I'll be glad to help you out of your trouble," the man continued,
before she  could come up with  a plausible lie. "Mentis,"  The fourth
man stepped forward briskly. "Why don't  you take the young lady to my
office so that we can discuss her  problems at our leisure in a little
more private surroundings."
    "Of course, my lord." He gave Eliowy the slightest of bows. "Lady,
this way." He grasped her upper arm and led her outside. Completely at
a loss, Eliowy didn't even thing to struggle or protest.
    As they disappeared down the street, the brown haired man chuckled
deep in his throat.
    "You're  going  to use  her  to  replace  Kera, aren't  you,  Lord
Liriss," said the tall man matter of factly.
    "Yes," The  smile deepened  around the  corners of  Liriss's lips.
"She'll do nicely, don't you think, Kesrin?"
    "I think  you're moving prematurely," retorted Kesrin. "Cril might
just manage to bring Kera back.  And," he added quickly, before Liriss
could comment on that. "You caught the girl by surprise. She might not
want  to  cooperate.  She  might   not  even  have  any  skills  worth
utilizing."
    Liriss shrugged.
    "Every  woman has skills,  Kesrin.  And if she  doesn't accept  my
extremely generous offer,  I'll kill her, just as I  plan to kill that
bitch  Kera if  Cril manages  to bring  her back  to me  alive. What's
Dargon with one less street urchin? No one will even notice that she's
gone."
    "Except whoever she's running from," muttered Kesrin too softly to
be heard  while Liriss ordered  a new summer  cloak from the  rich red
material he had been fingering.
    "What was that, Kesrin?"
    "Nothing, my lord. Shall we go talk to your new recruit?"
    "By all means, let's."
    Liriss's laughter was drowned out by  the crowd as he followed the
path his bodyguard and most recent captive had taken.
    Less  than  twenty  feet  away,  a  tall,  blond  man  desperately
questioned passersby  as to whether or not they  had seen a  young red
haired girl come running this way.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                             Dragon Hunt
                               Part 1
                           by Max Khaytsus
             (b.c.k.a kaytsus%tramp@boulder.colorado.edu)

    The young mage released his most powerful spell, but it did little
good. The  glowing sphere engulfed the  old woman and just  as quickly
faded.
    The witch hesitated a moment, recovering from the attack. The mage
started backing across the clearing, looking for an escape.
    "No farther,"  the witch  said, drawing  a symbol  on air.  A tree
behind  the mage  shook and  and with  a splintering  sound bent,  its
branches gripping him, raising him into the air.
    "Tell them to leave my work  alone!" the witch hissed and the tree
threw its captive up. "Alone!"
    Moments  passed before  the  witch approached  the unmoving  body,
nudging it with her foot. There was no motion. From a pouch on her red
belt she  produced a  handful of  white powder.  "Go home,"  she said,
sprinkling it over the mage. The body disappeared from sight.

    Gerim glanced at the three men  before him. "I am not an assassin.
I refuse to kill for you."
    "But she  has to die.  You know  that as well  as we," one  of the
sitting elders answered.
    "We can force you," another man  said. "...but we would rather not
have to."
    "Gentlemen, I  am no longer  a rookie mage. I  can opt for  one of
your  positions,  if I  so  chose,"  Gerim  responded to  the  threat.
"Please, don't ask me to do this."
    "Gerim, understand," the first wizard spoke again. "Maari has been
responsible for  the deaths of three  dragons in the last  year alone.
Two others died the year before. At  this rate there will be none left
within the decade. It's our duty to stop her. Your duty."
    A negative shake of the head was the only answer.
    "Don't  you understand?"  the wizard  insisted. "An  inexperienced
mage just can not do it. We already lost two."
    "No," Gerim stated again. "I refuse to kill."
    "You're leaving us no choice," the third man warned.
    "Either you go  or we will order your daughter  to do it instead,"
Nagje', the second wizard finished the threat.
    Gerim clenched his fists in defeat. "I never expected this of you.
I will go, but I shall challenge your post when I return. Be ready."
    "You're  one of  the few  strong enough  to stop  her," the  first
wizard spoke up. "Don't leave us as  an enemy; do it to save Makdiar's
past. Good luck, my friend."
    Gerim walked out of the great chamber in disgust.

    A  cloud of  dust appeared  on  a deserted  road, quickly  molding
itself  into a  man and  a horse.  Swinging into  the saddle,  the man
surveyed the  region, to be certain  that no one had  seen him appear.
Not a soul was around. "Come  on," he slapped the horse's neck, "let's
find Tench," and the steed obediently broke into a trot.

    Gerim entered the mostly empty  inn lobby and approached the desk.
"I'd like two adjoining rooms," he told the bald man on the other side
of the desk.
    The man shuffled through a drawer, pulling out two keys.
    "One will have to be large," Gerim hurried to add.
    The man again shuffled through the desk again and put two new keys
before him. "It costs double," he said.
1    Gerim picked  up the  second set  of keys. "I'll  take it.  Put my
horse in the stables. I will bring my bags in later."

    Gerim  looked out  from  the window  of the  larger  room. It  was
located on the corner of the inn's second story, overlooking the backs
of a few  houses on the north  and the lightly forested  fields to the
east. "This'll never  do," the mage considered the bright  rays of the
morning  sun.  The   power  of  his  magic   always  seemed  inversely
proportional to  the brightness of  the light.  He spent the  next few
hours  setting up  his work  space  in the  larger room.  A table  for
enchantment in the  far corner, a crystal ball in  the other. The rest
of the equipment spread here and there and a couple of black sheets on
the windows.
    Gerim was from the old school of wizards; the days when "black and
white"  was not  "punk and  punker". He  practiced a  unique style  of
magic, wrote in  a self designed script and unlike  the new generation
of mages, knew  magic theory and its  rivals. He was proud  of his art
and  angry  that  some  used  it  for  fun  and  profit.  He  recalled
overhearing one young mage, talking to  a friend, bragging that now he
can "amaze and  startle his friends". Gerim's eyes  burned with anger.
In  the days  before...his days,  individuality was  the focus  of all
mages and whether  working for purposes (considered) good  or bad, one
thing remained true - the quest  for knowledge. He remembered that his
own generation  was also considered  renegade. Could it be  that magic
was dying out? Weaker and looser as time went on.
    He let  the crystal ball  roll from his hand  and unscientifically
stop in the middle of the  table, almost making a statement. The glass
clouded  and displayed  the street  outside the  inn. Two  armored men
could be  seen, dragging a  third, quite possibly  unconscious, across
the road.
    "Lovely neighborhood," Gerim scowled, watching the two individuals
make their  deposit in  the alley  and leave.  The crystal  ball still
focused on  the body. "No, no!  The other way!" Gerim  instructed, but
the image stubbornly remained on the  closeup of the man. "So he's not
just unconscious. He's dead."
    The image did not move. "So what do you want me to do? Stop them?"
No response.  "All right, all right,"  Gerim gave in. "Where  did they
go?"
    The picture  changed to  the two men  entering a  different alley.
Gerim  watched  for  a  moment,  then stood  up.  "Find  me  something
interesting to look at by the time I get back," he instructed.
    The crystal ball, though efficient in  all its other jobs, had one
kink: every so  often it would require  the user to preform  a task of
some sort.  Whether as  a required duty  or as a  part of  the magical
link, Gerim did  not know. The crystal  ball had been a  gift from his
old master, a puzzle he had yet to solve before passing it down to one
of his own students.
    He walked out into the street.  Sunset was in full swing, throwing
murky  shadows into  the  street.  Gerim found  the  proper alley  and
cautiously entered. Dark shadows hid the walls of buildings. He cast a
spell,  coating the  inside  of his  cloak  with a  dim  red glow  and
carefully stepped deeper in.
    "...not enough," he heard a voice about half way down the alley.
    "This place is crawling with vagabonds," a second voice responded.
"Let's find another."
    'Cutthroats? Highwaymen?' Gerim cautiously moved forward.
    "I think three in one night is  plenty, even in a town like this,"
the first voice said. "I don't want to attract attention."
    "I've seen no evidence of guards," the second man answered.
    "There's a damned army camp just over the hill!"
1    Gerim smiled. An army would definitely  be too much for a job like
this. He stepped out  into the dim light of the  fire the thieves were
sitting at. The two men, noticing him, eyed him, wondering how long he
has been  standing there and listening.  Then one got up,  drawing his
sword. "Tonight it be four."
    Gerim  did not  move  a  muscle and  his  assailant paused  before
swinging. Why  was this man,  in view of  certain death, not  making a
defensive  stand? The  sword  made contact  with  the cloak,  stopping
abruptly, as if hitting solid steel. The man was so stunned, he didn't
even resist Gerim taking his sword from him.
    The second man got up and slowly approached, drawing his weapon.
    "It won't be any different," Gerim warned.
    The man  swung, making solid  contact with Gerim. Again  the sword
stopped dead against the cloak.
    Gerim  patiently waited  as  the  man swung  a  second time,  with
identical results,  then raised his  hand. A glow of  light surrounded
his  assailants  and  they  disappeared.   "I  hope  this  taught  you
something," the wizard's voice followed the fading figures into a dark
forest, echoing like the wind in the trees.

    Gerim bent down over a body lying in the tall grass. He recognized
the young  man as a  guild apprentice. Removing  a ring and  a pendant
from  the body,  he placed  these  symbols of  rank and  guild in  his
pocket. Deciding  that the  body, already damaged  by animals  and the
elements need  not be  retrieved, got  up to leave.  Before him  was a
path, leading to the home of the  witch he had been sent to challenge.
He took a deep breath and continued down the pathway. He and Maari met
before on a number of occasions,  sometimes as friends, but more often
as enemies.
    One particular meeting stood out in his mind, when five years past
he ran into Maari  in Conca, in Duurom. She was  after a mystical herb
that was rumored to bring youth to the aged and was more than prepared
to take on a village of over  a hundred, all of whom willingly died to
protect their treasure. Maari got the herb and a number of subjects to
use in  her magic and  Gerim felt pain  for the scorched  country side
left behind.
    That was the first time Gerim's  guild took a real interest in the
old  witch. It  was  a battle  in  which he  lost  two close  friends.
Sometimes Gerim believed he could  strangle Maari with his bare hands,
given the  opportunity, but each  time he remembered his  old master's
dying words, urging  him to respect life above  all other possessions.
It was the turn of events and not the direct action that was to decide
fate.  He wondered  how the  two  thieves he  dispatched the  previous
evening were doing.  He sent them off  to the region up  north, near a
frontier town he heard off; a city  by the name of Dargon. The thieves
were sent there to die.
    Gerim felt that the punishment offered was enough. Perhaps the two
men would  change their ways after  meeting a wizard, or  perhaps they
would  be caught  at  their own  game. Justice  was  usually harsh  in
frontier  towns, even  when administrated  by the  local law.  If they
died, it  certainly would  not be  by his hand  and he  felt as  if he
definitely gave  them an opportunity  to change  their lives in  a new
place. Hopefully new to  them, anyway. It would be new  to Gerim if he
ever chose to go that far north on Cherisk.
    Gerim  glanced at  the morning  sun and  judging by  its position,
turned sharply east.  His crystal ball had given  him solid directions
earlier in  the morning and  Gerim was confident  he was on  the right
path. His confidence,  however, lasted only so far  as finding Maari's
home. He had  no idea of what to  do once he got there.  He stopped in
mid stride and with a sigh leaned  on a tree, trying to reason out his
1plans. He wasn't  going to kill Maari. He knew  that. Perhaps he could
make a deal  or trick her into a compromise.  Then he remembered Conca
and sadly shook  his head. Maari did not listen  to reason. There's no
hope that she would start now.
    Gerim stomped around the tree,  observing an unnatural bend in the
trunk. He noticed a hard crack in  the bark, with sap hardening in it,
nature  providing  its  own  cure.   He  touched  it,  wondering  what
catastrophe would cause  this damage to a tree easily  three times his
waist span  around and at  least five times  his age. Seeing  that the
tree would soon die from the loss  of sap it was sustaining, he cast a
spell,  pulling  the splintered  bark  together.  The wound  lessened,
hopefully giving the ancient tree a chance to survive.
    An  animal cry  not far  away  attracted his  attention and  Gerim
looked up from  his work. A laska stood a  hundred feet away, watching
him hungrily.  Gerim wondered why  the animal  bothered to give  him a
warning, but wasted no time casting  a ward around himself. The animal
paused, still  looking at him with  hunger, but dared not  to come any
closer to  the unnatural  light. These  large cat-like  creatures were
never known to be free roaming and Gerim assumed he was getting closer
to Maari. No one but a witch would keep a laska around, roaming free.
    He  confidently turned  his back  on the  beast and  continued his
journey. A  brown roof soon  appeared through  the dense cover  of the
leaves and moments later he came out in a small clearing, facing a mud
colored hut. It took Gerim a few  seconds to size up the area. The hut
was weather-worn, as if it has  gone unattended for months on end. The
clearing was somewhat  more hospitable. It was filled end  to end with
short green  grass, still sparkling with  the morning dew. A  few well
worn trails  appeared to cross the  clearing, leading to and  from the
woods.  A large  black  cauldron  stood supported  on  a structure  of
bricks, on  the left  side of the  house. On the  other corner  of the
house he saw  a table with grasses  and herbs laid out  for drying. It
took him a little longer, but  Gerim finally spotted a plainly dressed
old  woman  standing   before  the  hut,  almost   blending  into  the
background.  Her  hair was  grey  and  face  wrinkled. Her  right  arm
quivered  with the  twitching of  old age.  Could this  be Maari?  She
should have been younger after her attack on Conca.
    The old  woman in turn  eyed the  newcomer with suspicion.  He was
tall, conservatively dressed and for some reason made her feel uneasy.
"What is your business?" she finally demanded.
    Gerim  eyed  the  surroundings  again.   This  had  to  be  Maari.
Everything was her.  He took the risk, drawing himself  up to his full
height. "I  am here  to give  you an ultimatum,  Maari. Your  magic is
damaging this world. It must stop."
    Maari's lip twitched.  "Who are you?" her senile  voice asked him.
She still  did not recognize  her old  enemy, although the  man looked
familiar. "Who are you to tell me what to do?"
    Gerim  stepped closer  to Maari.  His footsteps  fell sure  in the
moist spring grass. "I was sent..."
    "Marat!" the  witch exclaimed, recognizing  him at last.  "So they
finally sent a  man to fight me.  Well, let me tell you,  I killed two
sucklings and if I have to, I'll kill you."
    Gerim did  not back down.  "I was sent here  to warn you.  Let the
dragons be and the Guild will overlook you."
    Maari's grey  skin turned red.  "You haven't learned, have  you? I
don't fear your Guild. I can take all of you on!"
    "Maari," Gerim continued  calmly, "I am not here  to question your
talents.  I am  telling  you  to stop  killing  the  dragons. You  are
upsetting the balance of nature."
    "Go tell your masters the answer is no!"
    "That answer is not acceptable,"  he stated again. "By killing the
1dragons you are undermining your own efforts. If not for Makdiar, then
for yourself, don't kill them. At  this rate they won't last a decade.
Then what will you do?"
    "I won't need them after that," she insisted.
    Gerim  paused. Something,  somewhere clicked  and it  all suddenly
made  sense. The  herb, the  dragons. Maari  was on  a quest  herself!
"You're  after  immortality!"  he  accused her,  taking  a  bold  step
forward. "You're after dra..."
    Maari's hands came  up. "Let me be!" she hissed.  "Let my research
be!"
    Gerim smiled,  though lacking  the confidence  he felt  he needed.
"I'll let you  be. But I won't let  you ruin the world I  live in." He
quickly turned and walked to the  glen he came from, stopping a little
short  of the  tree line.  "That  legend is  only a  myth, Maari,"  he
hesitated before entering the cover of the trees, "and if it's true, I
won't let you prove it." He  entered the forest, hurrying to leave the
crazy old woman behind. It wasn't only youth she wanted. The old witch
was after  immortality itself and  she was slowly putting  the magical
puzzle together.
    Gerim rushed  blindly into the  forest, turning over plans  in his
mind, trying to think of a way  to insure a swift victory, but nothing
stood out as a miracle solution. Yet, he could not let the witch live;
he knew that now.
    He stopped in a small  grassy clearing, taking in the environment.
His  mind relaxed.  He had  a  laboratory set  up in  Tench. That  was
enough. Maari would not do much harm in the next few days. He'd find a
method to stop her soon enough.
    Gerim prepared  to cast a  spell, when from  deep in the  trees he
heard voices.
    "Where are you going?" a female voice asked.
    Then the same voice called out. "Hey!"
    Gerim quickly moved through the brush to see what was up.
    "There!" he finally saw an armored man pointing into the knee deep
grass. Stepping behind a tree, he observed a young woman, also clad in
armor, following the man.
    Gerim was about to step out of his cover, when a muffled hiss made
his  hair stand  on end.  He  glanced up,  only  to see  the laska  he
encountered on the trail not long ago.
    The laska  sat on  a branch,  some twenty  feet above  the wizard,
hungrily looking  down. Gerim  quickly produced his  pendant, stepping
away from the tree. A barely audible incantation coated the ground and
lower trunk with a musty green glow. The laska quickly jerked back.
    "If not  for the trail ending,  we'd miss this all  together," the
man's voice sounded from beyond the trees again.
    The wizard  smiled. 'I  hope you  appreciate what  I just  did for
you.'
    "Why does  the trail keep going  past here, if it  leads nowhere?"
the girl wondered  aloud, looking in the direction from  which she had
come.
    "Perhaps Maari  is a  recluse," the man  shrugged in  response and
Gerim's smile deepened. 'How will you pay me?'
    "Not knowing  to find  anything, most  people would  probably turn
back," the  man added.  He was carefully  studying what  began seeming
like a path to Gerim.
    "You think this leads to the place?" the girl asked.
    "It leads somewhere," her  companion answered, finally deciding to
try the path.
    Gerim  stepped behind  the tree,  making a  shushing noise  to the
laska above him, as the two travelers passed not ten yards away.
    'Perhaps  we'll meet  again one  day, so  you can  repay me,'  the
1wizard's  thoughts trailed  the  couple, as  they  disappeared in  the
trees. He turned to the tree and looked up at the laska. "And you... a
few hours up there and you'll love ground like you never have before!"
    The wizards merry  laughter echoed through the  forest, even after
he  disappeared in  a flash  of light,  leaving the  bewildered animal
staring at the glowing ground below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                             Dragon Hunt
                               Part 2
                           by Max Khaytsus
             (b.c.k.a kaytsus%tramp@boulder.colorado.edu)

    Rien paced the dark forest clearing, being careful not to make too
much noise.
    The  first three  days through  the forest  went quietly  with the
exception of an encounter with a bear that the spooked horses tried to
make as short as possible.
    Looking for  a nameless witch  amidst a  dense forest was  not the
easiest affair to undertake, but it  seemed much safer than facing the
unknown dangers Dargon  had to offer. The last time  Rien had both the
town guard and the town mob after  him was because each thought he was
a member of  the other. Naturally, being alone and  a lot healthier at
the time, the problem was a lot easier to solve.
    Circling the  clearing one  more time,  Rien made  his way  to the
center and gently shook Kera.
    "Go away." Her sleepy voice sounded with a certain finality.
    Rien shook her again. "It will be light soon. We need to go."
    Kera moaned  and sat up.  Her hands crept up  to her face  and she
rubbed the sleep from her eyes. "It's too dark. I can't see a thing."
    "You don't have to," Rien answered. "Get up."
    Kera's hands paused at her face.
    "Grow new body hair?" he smirked, pulling Kera to her feet.
    "Why don't  you check?" she asked  and with one hand  unstrung the
front of her tunic.
    Rien resisted looking down. "I think I'd better not."
    "I don't,"  Kera pulled herself  to him and instantly  pushed away
from the cold steel armor.
    Rien  hesitated for  a moment,  then turned  away. "If  you're not
ready by  the time it's light  enough to travel, I  am leaving without
you," and with those words left to prepare the horses.
    A few moments later Kera approached him. "I need some help with my
armor," she said solemnly.
    Rien assisted her  with the task and they were  ready to go before
the sun broke the horizon.
    They travelled  the forest path  until late morning, the  way they
had for the last three days, then  ate a late breakfast and while Rien
rested in the shade of a great oak, a few hundred feet from the trail,
Kera stood watch.
    This monotonous  routine continued  day after  day, with  Rien and
Kera traveling  morning and evening,  when the light was  passable and
the heat would not burn them in their armor.
    Kera found Rien's habit of sleeping  propped up against a tree and
his uncanny timing of when to get  up a bit strange, but attributed it
to his being a trained warrior.
    This afternoon  when he  opened his eyes,  she was  sitting across
from  him.  A  fresh rabbit  hung  on  a  spit  over a  smoking  fire,
distorting the air between them.
    "Explain your actions this morning," Rien said.
    "It seemed like the thing to do," Kera answered.
    "Why?" Rien demanded.
    "Because it's  a lot  better than  this iron  trap!" Kera  hit the
breast plate of her armor.
    "I think you're confused," Rien shook his head.
    "And would it really be that unpleasant?"
    "Would it?"
    "No!" Kera exclaimed,  instantly realizing that she  was too loud.
"It seemed so last night and even  more so this morning," she added in
1half voice.  "Look, perhaps I  am confused,  but I certainly  know the
difference between a human body and steel plating."
    "Give  it another  day,"  Rien said.  "If you  feel  the same  way
tomorrow, we'll discuss it further."
    After dinner they mounted their  horses and continued their search
through the forest.

    "Tilden?"
    The man  looked up at Cril.  "Two people, two horses.  Camped here
maybe a day ago."
    "Was it them?"
    Tilden walked around the remains of a half covered campfire. "They
were very heavy. Either large men or armored individuals."
    "They went  pretty far off the  trail to eat," Falgien,  the third
man, noted.
    "I'd  guess they  camped here  over night,"  Tilden corrected  his
companion.
    "There's  nothing  more  here,"  Cril  said,  walking  across  the
clearing. "Let's go before that bear shows up again."
    Wearily  the three  men recalled  that the  bear they  encountered
while breaking camp two nights ago,  shredded the fourth member of the
group  and had  been stalking  them ever  since; day  and night.  They
quickly returned to the trail,  mounted their horses and looking back,
continued their journey.
    "Tilden?" Cril called  back a few minutes later.  "Could they have
been stupid enough to travel the woods instead of the trail?"
    "I doubt  it," the man answered.  "It's too dense for  the horses.
They wouldn't get far."
    "The camps  are too close  together," Cril said. "They  are making
frequent stops...or perhaps even taking two breaks a day."
    "If they are  still in that armor, they'd have  to," Falgien said.
"It traps heat like an oven."
    "Those  who made  that camp  fire were  heavy..." Tilden  reminded
everyone.
    "Then  more than  likely we're  gaining on  them," Cril  whispered
almost to himself.

    Rien and Kera  came across the old hermit Tristin  and his hunting
dogs mid morning, the next day.
    While surprised by the intrusion, the  old man invited them in for
breakfast and to  satisfy his own curiosity.  The horses, apprehensive
of the four barking dogs went less willingly than they were commanded.
    "What brings you so deep  into the forest?" Tristin asked, waiting
for Rien and Kera to secure their horses to a tree.
    "A quest," Rien answered simply.
    "Young  people are  so  brash,"  said the  hermit.  "What sort  of
quest?"
    "Perhaps you could help us," Rien  said, as the hermit showed them
into his cabin.
    "Sit,  sit  down,"  Tristin  waved  his arm.  "I  have  some  stew
somewhere here." He momentarily left the room.
    "Somewhere?"  Kera looked  at Rien.  "I'm getting  the feeling  he
hasn't seen it himself for a month or two."
    Rien only  smiled, saying nothing,  as the hermit returned  with a
pot.
    "So what is it you want to ask me?" the old man questioned.
    "We're searching for  an old woman, said to be  a witch, who lives
in these parts," Rien answered.
    A large  grin spread on the  hermit's face as he  filled two bowls
with stew. "A knight on a quest  to kill an old hag," he laughed. "You
1are a knight?"
    "I am," Rien hesitated in  answering, slightly displeased with the
title. "But I am in search of the woman to ask her for help."
    The  hermit placed  the bowls  before  his guests.  "Eat up,  it's
otter. Very fresh."
    Kera threw a  paranoid glance from her bowl to  Rien, but followed
his example and picked up her spoon.
    "And  you?  A knight  too?"  Tristin  asked  Kera. "You  say  very
little."
    "Only a squire," she smiled, swallowing the stew and was surprised
at the taste - it wasn't bad at all. When the old man turned away, she
glared at Rien. "Just a squire," she repeated.
    "Well, so what is it you dare come all this way to ask old Maari?"
Tristin asked, missing Kera's remark.
    "Old Maari," Rien  repeated the name, "we are  told, has knowledge
of how  to cure a certain  disease, but I'm  afraid this is all  I can
tell you."
    "I  quite understand,"  the hermit  said. "She  lives a  ways from
here, down the  trail you were on.  Follow it to where  a second trail
intersects your path and  turn west, then a two day walk  to a fork in
the road, take  the right one. Two  more days will bring  you to where
you are headed. Perhaps only half the time on horse back."
    "Is  there  a  particular  mode  of  etiquette  you  recommend  we
practice?"
    "No,  no, nothing  special. Just  be ready  for anything.  Being a
witch, she possesses magic  and some of it is black.  Be sure you know
her price before she assists you."
    Rien finished  with his  stew and  stood up.  "Thank you  for your
assistance, sir. We should be going now. Our time is very limited."
    "I wish you  could stay, but I quite  understand," Tristin smiled.
"A pleasant change it  is to see someone all the way  out here. I feel
bad about having to cast you out like this. Perhaps you can stop by on
your return trip, if it takes you past here."
    "If it  takes us past  here," Rien promised. After  another 'thank
you' and 'goodbye', he and Kera took their leave.
    After a few minutes, Kera pulled her horse up to Rien's. "You're a
real knight?" she asked.
    "Worse than that," Rien answered. "A landed knight."
    "You  are?"  Kera's eyes  sparkled  with  excitement. "Where?  Are
you...nobility...?"
    "No," Rien said.  "I'm not nobility. Both  nobility and knighthood
are status  symbols I do  not find  of great importance.  They require
giving respect to people who often do not deserve it."
    "You'd make a hard follower for any lord."
    "I have no  master. I do not  follow a banner. What in  my land is
considered land  ownership is treated  as lordship here. When  I first
crossed the mountains, I had no real knowledge or understanding of the
society I faced and in due  time realized that here survival depends a
lot more on  the ability to fight and win.  Naturally I apprenticed in
the craft, was knighted  in the field and in due time  got where I am.
The  combination  of these  two  make  me a  minor  lord  - a  foreign
dignitary. I am neither."
    "Your title is still 'Lord'," Kera said. "Why didn't you tell me?"
    "I wish you would ignore it, now  that you do know," Rien said. "I
prefer not attracting too much attention. It holds no value to me."
    "Yes, my  Lord," Kera laughed.  "And where  did you learn  to pick
pockets?" she  reminded him of a  past event. "Same place  as the real
nobles?"
    "That I learned where I was born."
    "Not only are you a knight, but you used to be..." Kera started.
1    "A practical joker," Rien interrupted her. "Nothing more."
    "Of course," Kera said, somewhat mockingly. "And listen, it's well
past your bed time."
    Rien looked up at  the sun, higher in the sky than  he has seen in
the last few days  of travel and turned his horse  off the trail. Kera
followed him  until the  forest path  they were on  was out  of sight.
There, in a small clearing, they made camp.
    "I take  it you have a  castle," Kera asked Rien  after he secured
the horses.
    "A small keep," he answered. "Why?"
    "And a lady waiting for you?" she continued.
    "No," Rien said. "My  wife and I learned a long  time ago that our
life styles are too conflicting. She doesn't wait for me any longer. I
haven't seen her in quite some time."
    Kera cast  her eyes down.  "I'm sorry.  I thought that's  what was
holding you back."
    "It's a  decision both she  and I  agreed on," Rien  said. "You've
done no harm by asking."
    "That still  doesn't tell  me why  those plates  are so  much more
comfortable for you," Kera looked up.
    "Perhaps I'm afraid to admit you're right."
    "You know I am," she answered, removing the plates of her armor.
    Astonished, Rien simply watched.

    Cril and his companions dismounted  their horses at a small wooden
cottage. Four  dogs on long  leashes barked wildly as  they approached
the door.
    Cril swung it open, startling the old man who was about to open it
from the inside.
    "Can I help  you, sir?" Tristin asked, wary of  Cril's drawn sword
and his two companions.
    Cril placed the tip of his weapon against the base of the hermit's
neck and backed him  into a wall. "I will give you  only one chance to
answer my question. I have reason  to believe that two travelers, male
and female, dressed  in field armor, passed by here.  How long ago was
it and which way did they head from the crossroads up the trail?"
    Tristin stammered, unable to confront the danger he was in.
    "Now!" Cril yelled, applying pressure on his weapon.
    "They were here  late this morning!" Tristin  panicked. "They took
the west path!"
    "Very good,  old man,"  Cril said  with a sneer,  "but that  was a
chance too late." With a quick thrust, he shoved the sword through the
hermit's throat.
    "The west trail!" Cril commanded  his companions. "We're less than
half a day behind."

    Rien turned over  to the touch of something cold  on his shoulder.
Standing above him  was a man with a sword,  dressed in heavy leather.
Behind and next to him, stood two more.
    "I doubt  you could have  caught us at  a worse time,"  Rien said.
Next to him Kera stirred and tried sitting up.
    "It's very nice of you to wait for us, Kera," one of the men, whom
she recognized as Cril, said. "Liriss wants to see you...DEAD."
    Just then Rien thrust his feet  out, causing the man standing over
him to  fall backwards and drop  his sword. Grabbing the  weapon, Rien
rolled over, just  in time to parry the second  man's swing. He struck
back  with the  sword, blade  bouncing off  his opponent's  weapon and
digging into  his lower arm. The  brigand jumped back, his  weapon arm
obviously useless.
    Parrying Cril's blow,  Rien backed up to a tree,  trying to gain a
1perspective on the field of combat.
    Kera, with her stiletto, was taking  on the wounded man, who still
tried to lead an offensive, using his off hand to wield his weapon. On
the  far side  of the  clearing was  the man  Rien tripped.  He seemed
indecisive  without a  weapon, torn  between running  and helping  his
friends.
    Instinctively Rien blocked a glint of steel aimed at his torso and
counter struck. His  sword broke the surface of Cril's  armor, but did
no real  damage. In  turn, Cril  thrust his  sword forward,  leaving a
scratch in Rien's side and getting the blade stuck in the tree.
    Rien swung  his sword down,  smashing it  across the blade  of his
opponent and breaking Cril's grip on the hilt. Cril dodged a follow-up
swing  by moving  back and  fumbled with  a dagger  on his  belt. Rien
attempted another strike,  but stopped when he saw  Cril sinking down.
Behind him stood Kera, holding her blood covered knife. A quick glance
about the clearing indicated that she  had won her fight and the third
man had fled the battlefield.
    Wearily Rien dropped the sword and  embraced Kera. The grey in his
eyes slowly reverted to blue.
    "This is  what I was afraid  of," Rien finally said,  casting Kera
away. "Get dressed. We have no time to waste."
    Obediently Kera walked over to her bundle of clothes. "One man got
away," she pointed out.
    "Without a  weapon I doubt he  will try anything. He's  probably a
long way from here by now."
    "You think there will be any more coming after us?"
    Rien looked up at Kera and  noticing the blood on her arm, grabbed
it. The wound was only superficial and he let her go. "You know Liriss
better than I. Will there be more?"
    "Yes," Kera answered after a moment of thought. "He hates losing."
    "So do I," Rien said.
    "I am glad we took this break," Kera told Rien.
    "And only  luck kept us  alive," he answered. "It  was negligence.
Don't expect it to happen again soon."
    "Not soon?" Kera asked. "Then it will later?"
    Too many things  had been happening for Rien to  consider that. "I
need to give it some thought."
    Kera stopped him  with her bloody arm. "What's wrong?  What do you
need to think about? Three hours ago you looked like you were enjoying
yourself."
    "This is wrong!"  Rien said, holding Kera's bloody  arm before her
face. "That is wrong!" he thrust his arm out, pointing to the two dead
bodies.
    "I see  I'm the root  of all your  troubles!" Kera pulled  her arm
free. "Should I find my own way home?"
    "No," Rien said. "Too much has  been done already. No matter where
you are,  there will  be people  after you and  me. There's  safety in
numbers."
    Kera put her tunic on and  started on the armor. "I honestly think
you're more confused than I am."
    "Could very well be," Rien answered.
    When the  two were ready,  they set their assailants'  horses free
and mounting their own, took to  the west path at the crossroads. They
travelled  five miles  before it  became too  dark to  go on  and then
stopped to make camp. As at all other night stops, no fire was lit, so
not to attract unwanted attention.

    Rien restlessly  paced the  clearing, desperately hoping  that for
the time  being, no one else  was following them. The  surprise he and
Kera had received  that afternoon was very  sobering, considering that
1Dargon was a long way away.
    It would be wise  to assume that the man who  got away headed back
to Dargon. With the horses no longer in his possession, the trip would
take more than two weeks. If this  was the only group Liriss sent, the
next few days would not bring trouble.
    Of greatest importance  now was finding the old  witch, Maari, who
hopefully  was the  same individual  Taishent had  mentioned. Was  she
going to help? More importantly,  could she? Rien remembered Tristin's
warning about  the price. What would  a witch want? Money  would do no
good in the forest...
    Rien continued  pacing, wishing it  were light, so he  could relax
his mind through hunting. Finally giving up, he sat down under a tree,
sword  across his  lap and  sat out  the rest  of the  night with  the
impression of being the only one awake in the entire forest.

    The next day  passed quietly, with Rien and Kera  making their way
to the fork in the road and starting on the last leg of their journey.
They made  good progress before  darkness finally forced them  to stop
for the night, but excited about  the nearing end of their quest, they
resumed the journey well before sunrise.
    Halfway into  the morning, the trail  abruptly came to an  end. It
was well  worn only up to  a patch of grass  that looked as if  it had
never been walked  on. Rien and Kera exchanged  bewildered glances and
dismounted.
    "Maybe we took a wrong turn," Kera offered.
    Rien did not answer.
    "Maybe we went too far..." she tried again.
    Tying  his horse  to  a tree,  Rien walked  back  down the  trail,
examining  the grass  and shrubs  on both  sides. "There!"  he finally
pointed to a barely visible trail in the spring grass. "If not for the
trail ending, we'd have missed this all together."
    "Why does the trail keep going past here, if it leads to nothing?"
Kera wondered.
    "Perhaps Maari is a recluse," Rien suggested. "Not knowing to find
anything here, most people would probably turn back."
    "You think this leads to the place?"
    Rien  solidly  put  his  foot   on  the  fresh  grass.  "It  leads
somewhere."
    After a few  hundred feet, the light trail once  again turned to a
well worn path, indicating that security was indeed the reason for the
confusing trails.  A while longer  and a  small cottage appeared  in a
clearing. It looked lived in, but not overly used.
    Rien and Kera approached the hut with caution, pausing at a wooden
stand next to a wall. A large collection of herbs and dried roots were
spread on it.
    "Look," Kera picked  up a pair of gloves. "This  doesn't look like
leather."
    Rien took one of the gloves from Kera to examine it. Soft texture,
much softer than leather, covered the outside and the inside consisted
of short white fur. "This used to  be a cat," he finally said, tossing
the glove down.
    Kera almost dropped the glove she was holding. "Cat?"
    "What's  so surprising?"  Rien  asked. "They  make  gloves of  cow
hide."
    "Cow  hide, fine,  but not  cat," Kera  insisted, laying  down the
other glove.
    "Cats are usually associated with daemons," Rien explained. "Thus,
their coat can be  assumed to be the power of  a particular daemon. In
this case, probably an old familiar."
    "Doesn't white represent purity?" Kera asked.
1    "Sometimes,"  Rien  nodded.  "That's  why  virgins  are  so  often
portrayed wearing white.  It can also represent power, such  as a bolt
of lightning. Purple is another  common display of strength, though it
is not a common color for  cats." He smiled. "Almost any attribute can
be assigned to any color, if you do enough research."
    "What'cha two doing?" a female voice stopped Rien's explanation.
    Both he  and Kera turned to  face an old woman.  "We are searching
for a woman named Maari," Rien said innocently enough.
    "You won't find her on the table," the woman grunted. "What do you
want?"
    "We came in search of help."
    "Did you now?"
    "Are you Maari?" Kera asked cautiously.
    "I am!" the old woman declared and  moved to the other side of the
table. She  approached suspiciously,  squinting. "Lift up  your hair,"
she told Rien.
    He shifted uncomfortably. "Is there something wrong?"
    "Lift it up or leave," Maari insisted.
    Unwillingly Rien lifted his longer  than average hair, revealing a
pair of pointed ears.
    "Just like I thought!" Maari snapped. "An elf!"
    "Ljosalfar." Rien corrected with anger in his voice.
    "Ljosalfar, Dopkalfar. All  elf to me," Maari said,  pacing on the
other side of the table with herbs.
    "If you  are so knowlegable, then  you should know that  for me it
does make a difference," Rien answered.
    "What sort of help do you need, Elf?" Maari ignored his statement.
    "A cure for lycanthropy."
    Maari paced the length of the table again. "That I can do."
    "In exchange for what?" Rien remembered Tristin's warning.
    "Go!" the witch looked at Kera.
    "Wait for  me by  those trees,"  Rien pointed to  the edge  of the
clearing. "This won't take long."
    "I'm not..." Kera  started to protest, but  Rien's grim expression
suggested for her to leave.
    She turned  to go  and Maari  studied Rien until  Kera was  out of
hearing range. "You're  an elf. You have nothing of  value for my type
of magic, but she does."
    Rien glanced in Kera's direction. It was obvious what was coming.
    "She has a soul," the witch stressed. "I can use her life force to
channel my magic!"
    "Her soul is not  mine to give you," Rien said.  "You will have to
name a different price."
    "Any young life!"
    Rien set his jaw.
    "Don't look  that way at me!"  Maari warned. "I am  offering you a
cure.  You  will  die  without   it!  Only  pure  humans  can  survive
lycanthropy!"
    "A young  life..." Rien hesitated. To  Maari, it might be  just so
easy, but he did not approve of  magic such as hers. Perhaps she could
be tricked. If nothing else, there  was still time to stall for. "That
may take time," he finally said.
    The old woman  smiled and picked up a chalice  from the table. "To
seal the deal," she offered it to him.
    Accepting  the drinking  horn, Rien  spilled its  contents on  the
ground. "I seal  deals with people, not daemons."  Placing the chalice
on the table, he extended his hand and the witch reluctantly shook it.
    "Now leave and  bring me a dragon  egg, to make you  a cure. Don't
come back without it!"
    "Dragon egg?" Rien cocked his head.
1    "Big lizards, with wings. They lay eggs."
    "I thought they were all dead," Rien said.
    "I'm sure you'll find one,"  Maari answered. "Your life depends on
it."
    Gathering up some of the herbs on the table, Maari returned to the
house.  Rien  watched her  go,  then  picking  up some  blue  flowers,
rejoined Kera.
    "What's that?" she asked him.
    "Wolfsbane,  Monkshood, Friar's  Cap...depends  on  stem, leaf  or
flower. A poison, in any case."
    "What will you do with it?"
    "Fight a dragon."
    Kera's jaw dropped open. "Is that what she was telling you?"
    "She told me a lot," Rien said.  "I'll tell you on the way back to
the horses."
    Kera looked back to the cottage once more and accepted Rien's hand
for  the trip  back. "Your  ears are  pointed," she  suddenly reminded
herself and him.
    "They are in most of my species."
    "Why didn't you tell me?" she asked.
    "I assumed you knew that about elves."
    "Rien!"
    He stopped,  pulling his  arm back. "My  mother was  Ljosalfar. My
father human. Are you going to judge me?"
    "You can't help where or who you are born. No one has the right to
hold that  against you."  Kera took  his hands  in hers.  "I suspected
something two days ago - it was hard not to notice, but...you're flesh
and blood, like the rest of us."
    Reluctantly Rien permitted Kera to  keep hold of him. "Yours isn't
a typical human reaction."
    "I never considered  myself typical," Kera said.  "Did Maari agree
to help us?"
    "She agreed," Rien  answered, "but as payment she  wants a subject
to cast spells through. Necromancy, I assume."
    "Are you going to get her one?" Kera asked.
    "No. Life belongs  to the person living it. Neither  I, nor Maari,
nor anyone else  has the right to take another's  life, except in self
defence."
    "So she asked you for a dragon?"
    "That's  a  different story,"  Rien  said.  "She still  expects  a
donation of life, but  to cure us she wants a dragon  egg. What do you
know about dragons?"
    "They're large, breath fire and live in caves," Kera said.
    "Sounds like  we know about the  same," Rien sighed. "I  wonder if
Bistra wrote anything about it in his book."
    "We can check when we get back to the horses," Kera suggested.
    Rien nodded thoughtfully.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
  (C) Copyright May, 1989, DargonZine. All rights revert to the authors.
These stories may not be reproduced or redistributed save in the case of
reproducing the whole 'zine for further distribution without the express
permission of the author involved.






1                                                             /
  DDDDD                              ZZZZZZ                //
  D    D  AAAA RRR  GGGG OOOO NN  N      Z  I NN  N EEEE  ||
  D     D A  A R  R G    O  O N N N     Z   I N N N E     ||Volume 2
-=========================================================+|)
  D    D  AAAA RRR  G GG O  O N N N   Z     I N N N E     || Issue 3
  DDDDD   A  A R  R GGGG OOOO N  NN  ZZZZZZ I N  NN EEEE  ||
                                                           \\
                                                             \
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--   DargonZine Volume 2, Issue 3        09/22/89          Cir 850    --
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--                            Contents                                --
------------------------------------------------------------------------
  DAG                        Dafydd                 Editorial
  Sons of Gateway 1: Ne'on   Jon "Grimjack" Evans   Vibr. 17-Fir. 7, '13
  Unwelcome Encounter        Carlo Samson           Melrin 5, 1013
  Fortunes                   Max Khaytsus           1 Yule, 1013
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                          Dafydd's Amber Glow

         This will be very short.  First, I will apologize to  you
      loyal  (and brand  new) readers  for the  long wait  between
      Issue 2 and Issue 3 of  the second volume of DargonZine. The
      fault  is purely  mine, not  our  writers: my  job has  been
      rather hectic of  late and I just couldn't find  the time to
      put out an issue.
         Second, this is a second  call and a confirmation for the
      DargonZine T-Shirts, which feature  an artist's rendition of
      the  Title figure  of the  'Zine. All  of those  readers who
      ordered a shirt  many moons ago, please get  in contact with
      Rish again.  Anyone wishing  to order  a shirt,  please also
      contact Rish, who is the  instigator and coordinator of this
      aspect of  the Project. They  cost $8 at last  estimate, and
      final plans  will be set  two weeks  after the date  on this
      issue: if there aren't enough orders by then, he may have to
      scrap  the idea  as unfeasible  at  this time.  Rish can  be
      contacted at .
         Thank you, and good reading.
            Dafydd, Editor DargonZine (b.c.k.a. White@BUVM.bitnet)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                          Sons of Gateway
                           Part 1: Ne'on
                      by Jon "Grimjack" Evans
                     (b.c.k.a )

     Kald hung  his head low. He  had been travelling for  days in the
cold of Baranur in  Vibril. He didn't like the cold.  He liked it even
less when he discovered his trip was all for nothing.
     "Is  there nothing  you  can  do? This  means  more  to him  than
anything else. If he can just have a chance . . ."
     "Kald, he  failed." Marek's  eyes were  sympathetic. He  knew how
Kald felt. He  had felt the same  way when his son  Jordan had failed.
But Jordan had more than failed. Jordan was Drained. "There is nothing
more I can do. He has great potential-"
     "Then  let  him try!"  Kald's  desperation  worked loose  of  his
morals. He placed both hands on the table and leaned forward. "You owe
me . . ."
     The Leaf lowered his gaze. He had hoped it wouldn't come to this,
but he  should have known better.  Kald always got his  way. "Alright,
but after this I can't help you again. IF you decide to take the offer
I'm about to make."
     "Anything, I'll do it." Kald sensed he was rushing into this, but
it was too important. His son was too important.
     "Hold  on.  Let  me  explain something  first."  Marek  was  very
nervous; even  thinking about the  Draining made him  flinch. "Chances
are, your  son will fail again.  If that happens, his  potential power
will be drained from him. He will never work magic again. Not even the
most simple  magic skills  will work  for him.  In addition,  he'll be
instructed by a higher mage, another Leaf most likely, and every thing
he does  will have  to be  perfect when  he takes  his Branch.  Do you
understand what that means?"
     "I do; and  so does he." His voice trembled  at the next thought.
"Let him  decide." Kald rose from  his seat, his tired  bones creaking
loudly. As he strode out the door he turned, "Thank you, Marek."

     Ne'on couldn't believe it was  happening. Sitting cross legged in
the testing rooms, he contemplated the  past two hours. He had arrived
out of the cold  Baranurian winter just in time to  take the test. His
father,  eyes   shining,  was   proud  to  have   a  son   tested  for
apprenticeship.  It was  the first  time  he could  ever remember  his
father being proud of him.
     "Ne'on, of Gateway Keep," the testing mage jarred him back to the
present,  "you have  been  accepted into  the  Nar-Enthruen, guild  of
apprentice mages. Congratulations, son of Kald."
     Ne'on was irritated  by the way he was addressed.  "Son of Kald,"
he muttered  to himself. His mind  filtered back to one  of the myriad
times in his life he wished he wasn't Kald's son.

     "Ne'on!" Kald's voice bellowed through the manor. His son did not
join in the hunt today, and he  wanted to know why. "Ne'on! Come here,
you worthless sack of goat's meal!"
     Ne'on stumbled into the main  hall of his father's home. Brushing
back his long, snow-white hair and  wiping the sweat off his brow with
his sleeve, he stepped forward.
     "I am here,  father," he gasped. Having run all  the way from his
study to the main hall in the short time Kald had been calling him was
more exertion  than he was  accustomed to. Slightly  light-headed with
the effort, he wondered how he  would withstand the daily oral barrage
from his father.
     "You  weren't at  the  hunt,  today, boy.  What  were you  doing?
1Studying?" Kald was seldom happy. He  took no pleasure in being Keeper
of Gateway  - it was more  politics than he considered  necessary. The
little  pleasure he  did get  was from  his weekly  hunt; and  today's
excursion proved  fruitless. Coming down  hard on his sons  had become
second nature. 'Besides,' he thought, 'it's for their own good.'
     "Yes,  father,  I  was  studying."  Ne'on's  one  pride  was  his
familiarity with as many of the books  in Gateway Keep as he could get
his hands on. Cydrian had blessed  him with more intelligence than his
father, but an equally proportionate  lack of strength. He had learned
at an early age the power to be found in knowledge.
     "Knowledge is nothing  without the strength to  back your ideas!"
Kald saw  no use for education  beyond learning to read  and write. 'A
sword  can solve  any problem'  was his  motto. "Strength  you've been
doing very little to build. When I  was sixteen, I had the strength of
your whole body in  my right arm!" As if to prove  this, he thrust his
massive  arm  out in  a  fist,  muscles  bulging. "You've  barely  the
strength to wield a blade, and hardly the skill to use it! Marcus says
you haven't trained in days, let alone touch a quiver an-"
     Ne'on had had enough. "Bloodshed  and barbarism are not my ways!!
If you wish to kill like an  animal, then do so. I prefer intelligence
over strength!"  Ne'on looked at himself  in awe. Never before  had he
spoken out  so blatantly  against his father.  Kald, however,  was not
quite so intrigued.
     "You prefer  . .  ." A  low rumble, like  an oncoming  storm, was
building inside Kald. "YOU prefer?! I don't care what YOU prefer!! YOU
are not Keeper, here. And you shall  not be. Goren is heir apparent at
Gateway. YOU are to be First Warder. That means leading the men in any
and all battle situations, as well  as fortifying the Keep in times of
war. Why should  the men listen to  you when they don't  know they can
trust you?!  Why should they listen  to you when they  don't even know
you? If it weren't for  your ghost-like appearance, they wouldn't even
recognize you at all!" Kald had had a long, tiring, and fruitless day.
Obviously, this 'discussion' with his youngest son was proving just as
rewarding. He  gave up, and left  his son standing alone  in the large
hall.
     'Ghost-like,' thought Ne'on. His  albino-pale skin did leave that
impression, he supposed. 'The ghost of my mother, I'm told. If you had
spent more time with her, and less time with this damn Keep, she might
still be alive today. I wish she had died instead of you.'

     "Ne'on,  would-be mage  of the  Guild!" Again,  the Leaf's  voice
pulled him back from the past.  "To be accepted into the Nar-Enthruen,
you must succeed as apprentice to Qord,  Leaf of the Guild. Is it your
wish to do so?"
     "It is so."
     "Do you know what it means  to fail the Nar-Enthruen?" The Leaf's
voice was cold and foreboding. Ne'on knew he spoke about the Draining,
the inevitable fate of all unfortunate apprentices.
     "I do." A hint of fear touched Ne'on's voice.
     "And do you still wish the knowledge?" A last chance to back out.
Marek hoped the boy  would take it. If Ne'on were  to fail, Kald might
become 'unreasonable', to say the least.
     'More than  anything', he thought.  "I do!" All fear  escaping in
his final  words, Ne'on  stood firmly  in his  position, a  great grin
encompassing his face.
     "Welcome to  the Guild,  apprentice. Let's  hope you  survive the
experience." A grim frown on his face, the mage shook Ne'on's hand and
turned away.
     As his  family congratulated him,  he noticed a troubled  look on
his father's  face. 'Why  are you  not proud,  Father? Would  that you
1could share my joy  with me.' Ne'on began to feel  sad for his father;
but then,  a voice spoke  to him: "Do  not trouble yourself  with your
father, Ne'on. He is jealous of the  power you have which he can never
attain! You should  scorn him, for he begrudges you  this moment." And
Ne'on felt only bitterness toward Kald.

     "Ne'on," Qord's voice was soft with  worry, "what do you think is
the problem?"
     Qord  was, of  course, referring  to Ne'on's  past two  months of
study with the  Leaf. Ne'on remembered these months  well. Vibril, the
month of  his testing, had  ended as well  as its beginning.  With the
following Mertz,  however, things had  gotten much worse.  He couldn't
seem to  concentrate correctly; and  more than  once he had  started a
fire while mixing  potions, a potentially deadly mistake  in the grass
huts  of  the  camp.  His latest  difficulty,  last  night's  disaster
involving a hog and  a kitchen knife, turned out to  be the worst yet.
The hog  was, supposedly, protected  from the knife by  Ne'on's spell.
Instead, as Ne'on threw the knife  near the hog, the hog dove straight
into the  knife's path,  impaling itself  in the  head. Firil  was not
turning out to be a good  month, starting with that catastrophe on the
first. Qord thought it was a bad omen.
     "I do not know, Leaf Qord." The Guild mages of this section had a
way of evaluating  each other by tree parts. Ne'on  was a Root, second
lowest rank above apprentice. He had taken his "Grounding" - a test of
the most  simplistic skills - and  passed easily. His Rooting,  on the
other hand, had not gone so  well. He had burned more spell components
for potions than any previous mage, and  he might not pass his Bark at
all! And failure there meant . . .
     "Do  you know  what .  . .  Draining is,  Ne'on?" Qord's  ancient
visage trembled with the word. What was left of his hair shook in time
with the chill running up his spine, and his eyes seemed almost to pop
out.
     "Yes, O  Leaf..." Ne'on  tiredly replied.  Qord had  mentioned it
time and time again since he fumbled his first potion. His familiarity
with the word had lessened his fear of it a great deal.
     "No,  young Root..."  Qord's voice  was cold  and hard.  He would
teach this boy  what the Draining was like. "You  have only heard what
it is .  . . you do not know  what it is. Let me show  you. Close your
eyes . . ."
     Ne'on closed his eyes. For a  moment, he saw only blackness; then
. . .

     He was in a large room,  ornately decorated, with a large crystal
on a  pedestal. All around  him, black-clad  mages were chanting  in a
low, solemn voice. Up ahead, Qord lead him toward the crystal.
     "This is the Crystal of Strength, failed mage!" Qord's voice rang
out  strong and  powerful in  the hall.  Ne'on was  afraid. "Feel  the
Crystal, and know what it is to be Drained!!"
     The light  of the hall  grew dim as the  Crystal began to  glow a
deep, dark  purple. As Ne'on reached  his hands toward the  Crystal, a
force pulled them  closer. Instinctively, he tried to  break away, but
he couldn't!  He was  trapped! Slowly,  his hands  grew numb,  and the
Crystal began to pulse with the beat of his heart.
     "No.." Ne'on's voice  was hoarse and stifled. The  beating of his
heart grew loud,  and his arms were numb to  his shoulders. Louder and
louder, the  Crystal and his heart  pulsed faster and faster.  He felt
his head pounding - the numbness reached his chest, driving toward his
heart. Desperately, he  tried to pull away, each  attempt useless. The
noise beat louder, his pulse beat quicker - soon, it would have him!

1     "NO!!"  he screamed,  scrambling back  against the  wall. He  was
breathing very heavily  and his heart was racing. The  light of Qord's
room filled his  eyes as he recognized his teacher  sitting across the
room from him, frowning.
     "Your father was  wrong, you were not ready for  this. Damn Marek
and his eternal  debts! He should have known-" Qord  caught himself in
mid thought and hoped the boy  was too frightened from the illusion to
hear him.
     "What's that?" called Ne'on, half  dazed from his experience, but
still quick enough to understand. "What  are you saying? My father got
me in here? Not my ability?"
     Ne'on stared  in disbelief. For  the first time he  could recall,
his father had  thought of Ne'on, and not himself.  Ne'on did not hate
his father, then; but, again, a voice  spoke to him: "Ne'on, do not be
proud of  your father. Have you  forgotten how he covets  your talent?
How he would destroy you and take  your power for his own? He does not
send you here for  your benefit, but for his! He  would consign you to
this hell, rather than let you live your life in peace! But, do not be
dismayed! You can overcome this obstacle and revenge yourself upon him
yet! Him,  and your bastard  brother Goren who  would rob you  of your
rightful fate!" And, as before, Ne'on was bitter. He hated his father,
and silently  swore to pass the  upcoming tests, to become  a powerful
wizard, in order to bring about his revenge.
     "Your potential is great, Ne'on."  Qord attempted to be soothing.
He saw the hatred  in Ne'on's face, the likes of  which he hadn't seen
in some great time. He attempted to  sooth this part of Ne'on, turn it
to good. "Imagine people are mountains,  and magic is the wind," began
Qord, his  words all but bouncing  off of Ne'on. He  continued anyway,
not knowing what else to do. "When  the wind blows, it goes around the
mountains. Now imagine  a few mountains can let the  wind pass through
them, affecting it, and shaping it,  as it goes through. Most of these
mountains, we  mages, can  affect and  shape magic  only to  a certain
extent. You, however, can  do more than most of us.  You can shape and
affect the magic  to a greater extent - if  only you would concentrate
on what you are doing! Concentrate, Ne'on! You've got the ability! I'd
hate to see it Drained..."
     With that,  Qord stood up,  brushed himself off, and  retired for
the evening.  Ne'on was  left to  think alone once  more. After  a few
minutes  of bitter  recollection, he  left for  his own  room. In  the
morning, he would pack his horse and ride to Gateway. He promised Qord
he would return, and he never went back on his word.

     The  gentle Firil  air fluttered  over Ne'on,  blowing his  long,
unkempt hair behind  him. Sitting on his horse, Koros,  he removed his
cape so  the guardsmen would recognize  him. He nodded slightly  as he
entered, urged Koros  into the main courtyard of the  keep, and headed
toward his father's home.
     In the dimming  sunlight of the evening, he made  out the sign to
his  second  favorite  dwelling,  the  River  Snake's  Den,  where  he
sometimes  attempted to  outlast  the tavern  keeper's  stock of  ale.
Sliding out of the saddle, he realized  how much he wanted a flask, or
two, before he  met with his father. Besides, the  class of people one
met in  the 'Den had more  . . .  "character" than those found  in the
Riverside Parlor. A class of people he would be needing in the future.
     Entering the main room, he signalled Mika and took his usual seat
in  the back  of the  room. After  Mika delivered  the ale,  Luke "the
acquirer" slid  into the  chair opposite  him. Luke  was one  of those
people Ne'on was hoping to meet  here tonight; in fact, he was perfect
for the job. He was looking a  little less than wealthy at the moment;
Ne'on decided to make the offer now.
1     "Must have been  a slow winter," began Ne'on.  He found insulting
Luke's type of person was never profitable - intimidation was the key.
Intimidation, and then an offer. "By  the looks of it, you barely kept
the meat on your bones. Didn't make it to Magnus, eh?"
     "And what of it?" Luke didn't  particularly like the way the past
winter had  gone. He was a  respectable thief; it wasn't  his fault he
got  stuck in  this rat  hole for  the season.  If he  had made  it to
Magnus, that  would be different.  Plenty of opportunities  in Magnus,
when you knew where to look for them, and he had connections.
     "What if I told you I had a permanent offer for you here? No need
to go all the way to Magnus for funds..." Ne'on's voice shook a little
- he tightened his grip on his  mug and took a drink. He was hesitant.
He knew an offer which sounded good and was eagerly offered would cost
him a great deal.  And yet, he wanted Luke, not  a lesser mongrel. "An
offer that paid well, and gave you status here at Gateway?"
     Luke looked  around for a  moment. 'Status', he  thought. 'Status
and money,' he thought greedily. When Ne'on said "paid well", he meant
gold. "Whadda I haf ta do?"
     "Find   me  ten   good  swordsmen.   Not  common   ruffians;  not
back-stabbing mongrels. I  want men who know the  blade." Ne'on didn't
want to  imagine the kind  of men Luke would  find if he  hadn't added
that last statement. Feigning curiosity, "Can you handle a sword?"
     "I can make do - killed more'n  my share o' mugs." This was true.
Before he had learned to steal quietly, he had killed more men than he
had stolen from. "Whaddaya want wi' swordsmen? And how do I fit in th'
picture? I mean, how do I benefit from it?"
     "These men  must be loyal  to their employer.  They are to  be my
personal guard.  Your part  will be  to lead them.  I'll give  you ten
golds for each man you bring me. Their pay will be five golds a month.
Yours will be ten a month. All I want you to do is enforce my will and
guard me. Agreed?" Ne'on offered his  hand a bit too quickly, and Luke
knew he could get more.
     "I don't  know...ten golds  isn't very much  for a  personal body
guard..." Luke  was never one  to settle for  less, when he  could get
more. Ten gold coins a month would be comfortable living for him; but,
if he could get more...
     "Ten, and  not a  copper more.  There are a  dozen others  here I
could have do this job for me."  Ne'on was mildly annoyed, but he knew
it was his own mistakes to which Luke was responding.
     "Yeah, well;  maybe you  could, and  maybe you  couldn'." Ne'on's
point was well  taken; unfortunately, Luke's downfall  had always been
his  greed. "'Course,  them what'll  take  ten don't  know 'bout  your
previous business wi' me. Fifteen seems more 'propriate ta me . . ."
     "Fifteen!" Ne'on's  eyes flared.  Without realizing it,  his hand
glowed a hot red, blackening a  small portion of the table. Instantly,
subconsciously, Ne'on  summoned the magic within  him, fully intending
to melt the maggot where he sat.
     And for a third  time, the voice spoke to him:  "No, Ne'on - hold
your anger! Use him now. Kill him once his purpose is served!"
     As  suddenly as  he  started,  he stopped.  This  time with  eyes
sparkling, "I suppose  my life is worth three times  the amount a city
guard  makes.  Fifteen  it  is,  then! It's  a  deal."  Extending  his
no-longer glowing hand, they sealed the deal.
     "Deal!" grabbed  Luke, anxious for  money and quite  pleased with
himself. "When do ya need these men?" he asked.
     "Four months," he said. "If I need more time, I'll let you know."
     Tossing a pouch of silver on the table, "Here's a downpayment. It
should last you till  then." He got up and left. As  he walked out the
door, he heard Luke call Mika for a tankard of ale.

1     Entering Winston Manor - the house  of his father - he tossed his
cloak to  Horrace, the  butler. "Send a  meal and some  wine up  to my
room," he barked.  As an after thought, "And get  a fire started; it's
going to be cold tonight.
     Ignoring Horrace's humble reply, he walked through the main hall,
making his way to his father's  study. He knew his presence in Gateway
had been  reported. He would  have to make  a small show  of affection
toward his  father, at least.  Entering his father's chambers,  he saw
Kald at his desk, drinking his  nightly flask of wine. 'A useful tool,
that flask,' he noted with sudden inspiration.
     "Hello, father." As  he crossed the room, Kald stood  up to greet
him.
     "Ne'on, my son! What brings you  to Gateway?" Slapping his son on
the shoulder,  "Did you miss your  old father? Come, sit  by the fire.
You look much older since I last saw you." Kald's eyes shone brightly,
and Ne'on thought for  a moment that he might not  kill him after all.
Then   he  remembered   the  Draining,   and  quickly   dispelled  his
forgiveness.
     "I  have recently  discovered  discipline in  my  life," was  his
response. Sitting  down in front of  the fire, he poured  wine for the
two  of them,  the red  light of  the fire  flickering off  the silver
goblets. "Discipline . . . and purpose." He smiled.
     "Purpose,  eh?" his  father teased  him, "what's  her name?  It's
about time you became interested in a woman!"
     "It's  not  that,  father."  Seeing  the  disappointment  in  his
father's eyes, "but it is something I think you'll like." Ne'on paused
for a moment,  letting a wry smile  curl the corners of  his mouth. "I
want to have a keep of my own, some day. One very much like this one."
     "Well,  tell me  all  about it!  Perhaps I  can  help you!"  Kald
smiled, finally having something in common with his son. Ne'on laughed
at the irony of it all.
     "Yes, father," he said. "Perhaps you can . . ."

     Ne'on strode toward  his brother's chambers. He  knew exactly how
he  would rid  himself of  both  his brother  and his  father, and  he
determined to make it as painful  as possible. The hallway echoed as a
metal ring struck Goren's door.
     When Goren  opened the  door, he could  hardly believe  his eyes.
"What are  you doing here?"  he snapped, as  he returned to  his seat.
Taking a sip  from his flask, he calmed himself.  "You are supposed to
be  with your  magical friends,  not haunting  this house.  What's the
matter, run  out of  stray cats  to torture?" There  was no  love lost
between the  brothers. Goren  had realized  several years  ago Ne'on's
heart was filled with hatred  and bitterness. He was surprised nothing
had come of it, yet.
     "It is  nice to see you,  too, Goren," mocked Ne'on.  "I see your
wit has improved with your age." Ne'on had also come to a realization,
several years ago. This was the fact Goren was everything their father
loved, and everything Ne'on hated.  Taller than the average man, Goren
stood  a full  head over  Ne'on. His  shoulders were  broader, and  he
rivalled even Kald in his skill with  the bow. Goren also had the dark
hair and eyes  of their father. And, Goren was  all that stood between
himself and the keep.
     "Enough with the niceties, Ne'on. You are here for a reason. What
is it?" Goren also had all  the intelligence and tact of their father,
as well as his stubborn  attitude and hot-headed reactions. Ne'on knew
this could only help him.
     "Why Goren!"  Ne'on sarcastically  feigned surprise.  "What would
ever possess  you to  think I was  here for any  other reason  than to
visit our poor, aging father?!" Ne'on took a seat next to his brother.
1"I wanted to sit  and talk with him about my plans  for the future. In
fact, I just got back from telling him how I planned to have a keep of
my own, some day." Ne'on paused for a moment, "just like this one!"
     "Wrong, Ne'on!"  Goren flared with his  realization. "You'll have
to kill both father and me! Even you couldn't get away with that!"
     There was  a moment  of silence. Ne'on's  visage became  grim. "I
don't think  you understand," he spoke  with a voice of  ice. "I don't
want you to die. I want you to live! Live to see me Keeper of Gateway,
while  you wallow  away  the days  in misery  knowing  you could  have
prevented it." He  drew a knife from within his  robes. "Here, Goren,"
he offered, "take my blade. Kill me, and save our father."
     Goren reached for the knife,  stopped, started again, and stopped
again. Finally,  the battle  ended. "No, Ne'on."  He turned  away, not
able to  determine if  he had  made the right  choice. "I  couldn't do
that, and you know it."
     With  Goren's back  to him,  Ne'on  took the  flask from  Goren's
table. "Yes, brother,"  he sneered, hiding the flask in  his robes, "I
know it."
     "Then know this, Ne'on," warned  Goren, softly, "I shall stop you
from taking Gateway if I have to burn it down around you."
     Ne'on  chuckled as  he walked  out of  the room.  "We shall  see,
brother. We shall see!"
     His laugh stayed in his brother's mind for a long time. Ne'on was
about to cross a  line Goren had seen drawn a long  time ago. He would
stop Ne'on, when the time came.
     Ne'on   left  early   the   next  morning,   riding  toward   the
Nar-Enthruen.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                         Unwelcome Encounter
                          by Carlo N. Samson

     Cydric Araesto  stood at the  rail of the trading  ship _Vanguard
Voyager_  and looked  out over  the deep  green waters  of the  Laraka
River.  The mid-morning  sun  warmed  his face,  and  a gentle  breeze
whispered  through his  short brown  hair. For  a while  he watched  a
seagull wheel about in the clear spring sky; then a glint of something
on the horizon caught his attention. Squinting and shading his eyes to
get a better  view, he made it  out to be a small  patch of shimmering
haze. He stared at  it for several minutes, then decided  it must be a
kind of mirage,  similar to the illusions of water  reported by desert
travelers.
     "Cydric! There  you are.  Aren't you  glad to  be done  with your
chores? Brynna's been  working me like a slave all  morning! Pox, if I
didn't know better I'd swear this was a prison ship. Sometimes I don't
know why I ever became her cabin girl."
     The young  man turned  at the  sound of the  voice and  smiled as
Mandi Mercallion approached him, her mandolin slung across her back. A
gust of  wind disarrayed the  curls of  her tawny-auburn hair;  with a
look  of  annoyance, she  smoothed  her  locks  back into  place.  Her
expression brightened as she came to stand next to Cydric.
     "I don't know  if you should be speaking ill  of the captain," he
said, turning to face the girl.
     "Why not?  She's only my cousin,  and if she does  anything to me
I'll simply tell Uncle Quill. I'm his favorite niece, you know."
     "Not a very mature way to handle it, but effective."
     Mandi  swatted him  playfully. "Oh,  you. Shall  we get  started?
Where do you want to do it?"
     Cydric looked around the deck for a place where they would be out
of the crew's way. He settled on a spot further up the starboard rail,
near a stack of lashed-down crates.  As they walked over to the space,
Mandi asked  him, "How's it going  in the galley? Oddfoot  didn't give
you anything tiring to do this morning, did he?"
     "No, nothing besides the usual kitchen duty," Cydric replied.
     "Good," Mandi said.  "I mean, if you're too tired  to do it right
now, we can always wait 'till we arrive home."
     "It's no  problem. I've actually  been looking forward to  it all
morning."
     They reached the place Cydric had selected. He took off his vest,
while  Mandi  slipped  the  mandolin  off  her  back.  "Is  there  any
particular position you want me in?" she asked.
     Cydric took  out a charcoal stick  and a piece of  parchment from
his vest. "Well,  why don't you stand  next to the rail,  and hold the
mandolin like this."
     Mandi moved to  where he pointed, and copied the  position of his
arms. "This way?"
     "Yes, perfect. Now hold that pose."
     "What if I put my leg this way? Does that look better?"
     "That's fine. Okay, now--"
     "How's my hair? It hasn't gone flat, has it?"
     "Mandi!"
     "Sorry. I'll be still now," she said with a slight giggle.
     Cydric sat down on a crate. Using a piece of polished wood one of
the  crew had  given him  earlier as  a writing  surface, he  began to
sketch  on the  parchment. He  outlined Mandi's  figure, then  quickly
filled in  the background. As  looked out  at the horizon,  he noticed
that the patch  of distant haze had gotten somewhat  larger. He didn't
realize that he'd been staring at it until Mandi spoke.
     "What is it? Do you see something out there?" she asked, starting
1to turn.
     "No,  nothing. Just  glare, I  suppose." Cydric  returned to  his
sketching. He  drew in  Mandi's loose tunic  and tight  leggings, then
worked on  her face:  a small,  pert nose,  softly blushed  cheeks, an
impish smile.
     Just then  a tall, sandy-haired  man swaggered up to  them. "Hey,
dovey, what're you doing?"
     "Oh pox,  not you  Danner," said Mandi,  dropping her  pose. "Why
don't you leave us alone?"
     Ignoring Cydric, the  brawny youth stepped up close  to Mandi and
laid a  hand on  her shoulder.  "Leave you alone,  dovey? Not  me. All
through my duty  shift all I could  think about was you.  How about us
going below and--"
     "Excuse me," Cydric said, putting down the sketch and rising. "We
were in the middle of something here."
     Mandi shoved Danner's hand away. "That's right. Cydric was making
a nice drawing of me. Now we'd like  to get on with it, so please just
let us be."
     "Oh, so he's an artist, is he?" Danner turned to face Cydric. "He
hasn't been  doing naked drawings  of you, has  he? I'd hate  to think
that's why I haven't seen you all week."
     "Of course not, you swine! And  besides, if he was it wouldn't be
any of your business."
     "Look, Danner, maybe you should go visit with someone else," said
Cydric.
     "Go draw a  seagull, sissy boy," Danner sneered. "And  if I catch
you with Mandi again, the only thing you'll be able to draw is breath.
And barely that."
     Mandi interposed  herself between the  two young men.  "Don't you
threaten him! What makes you think I want to be with you, anyway?"
     Danner grinned. "What about that night back in Dargon? You wanted
to be with me then. I couldn't get you off me until you fell asleep."
     "You lying mouthful of fleas! You  just wish it were true. We all
know how you can't get a girl--not even a queenie!"
     "You  want me  and you  know  it." To  Cydric's surprise,  Danner
grabbed Mandi and roughly kissed her on the lips.
     "Pox!" sputtered Mandi, shoving him away.
     Cydric swiftly  went over and  took hold of Danner's  shirt. "See
here! Who do you think you are?"
     Danner looked  down at  Cydric and slowly  grinned. "I  think I'm
about to split your skull."
     Just then Cydric  remembered that Danner had once  punched a hole
in a keg  of ale when the  cork had become stuck.  Releasing his hold,
Cydric said, "I see the light's better  on the other side of the ship,
Mandi. Let's go over there, shall we?"
     Danner gripped Cydric by the  tunic and hoisted him upward. "Ever
see the birds up close, sissy boy?"
     Cydric tried  to back  away, but  found that  his feet  no longer
touched  the deck.  Smiling frantically,  he said,  "Perhaps we  could
settle this another way?"
     "How  about  with  swords?"  said  a  voice  from  near  Danner's
shoulder. Cydric  looked over and  saw with  relief that it  was Tyrus
Kayne, First Mate of the _Voyager_, who had spoken. Pressing the point
of his cutlass against Danner's  side, Kayne said, "Let's be civilized
about this, what say?"
     Danner started and  let Cydric go. "We were just  having a bit of
fun, sir. Nothing wrong with that."
     "He was about to mash Cydric into pudding!" Mandi exclaimed.
     "Spend your  offshift with  your bunkmates, Danner,"  said Kayne.
"Or you'll be swallowing the anchor cold."
1     "Aye, sir," Danner  mumbled. He cast a hostile  glance at Cydric,
then walked away.
     "Now,  what  was all  that  foaming  about?" Kayne  asked.  Mandi
quickly explained Danner's intrusion.
     "He's at  it again, is he?"  Kayne said when Mandi  had finished.
"Acting like a snupper so the  Captain'll let him out of his contract.
Well, I'll  have a speak with  him; but meanwhile, I  caution you both
keep  him upwind  until we  make port.  Think you  can stay  out of  a
wrinkle for a couple of hours?"
     "Yes sir," Cydric said. "And--thanks."
     Kayne nodded. "Don't  mention it. Wouldn't want a  new crewman to
end up as pudding." He sheathed his sword and headed astern.
     "Maybe we  should do this  another time," Cydric said  when Kayne
had gone.
     "Why? Danner won't  bother us again. And even if  he does, you'll
be able to handle him."
     "I probably would have been killed if Kayne hadn't come by."
     "I don't think so.  You were very brave, to stand  up for me like
that."
     "Well, why  wouldn't I? If it  wasn't for you I  wouldn't be with
the  ship at  all--getting seasick,  sweating in  a hot  galley, being
threatened by possessive sailors...."
     Mandi giggled and patted him on the cheek. "Yes, and I'm glad you
enjoy it so!"
     Cydric grinned. "Now, where were we?"
     Mandi started to resume her  pose when a long-haired crewman came
up to them.  "Hey-o, Cydric! Captain wants to see  you--in her cabin,"
he said.
     "We're never going to get this done," sighed Mandi.
     "We can continue this later. I'm almost finished, anyway." Cydric
carefully  folded the  parchment and  tucked  it into  his pocket.  He
thanked the crewman, and headed for the lower deck hatchway.
     "Hey, I'm coming too!" Mandi said, hurrying to catch up with him.
"What do you think she wants you for?"
     "I don't know." He looked back, but the crewman who delivered the
message was  engaged in a dicing  game with several others.  "Should I
have asked?"
     "Better not, now," said Mandi.  "They take their gaming extremely
seriously."
     They reached  the hatchway and  descended the stairs to  the mess
room. A short, stocky man in his  late fifties was wiping off the long
wooden tables with a multi-colored cloth. He appeared oblivious to the
pair's approach.
     "Hi, Oddfoot!" Mandi  called. The old ship's cook  made no reply.
The girl walked up to him  and tapped his shoulder; Oddfoot turned and
smiled broadly. Mandi repeated her  greeting, making a hand gesture at
the same time. The cook nodded and wordlessly gestured in response. He
turned to Cydric and made the same sign.
     "Hello Oddfoot,"  said Cydric, making the  appropriate motions in
reply. "Does the, ah, Captain want  to see me?" He signed his question
as he spoke.
     The cook frowned and signed to Mandi, who broke into a laugh.
     "That wasn't exactly a joke," said Cydric, puzzled.
     "You  just  asked  him,  'Does   a  capstan  wet  seaweed?'"  she
explained.
     "I  really   must  practice   more,"  Cydric   replied,  slightly
embarrassed.
     Mandi signed  the correct question  to the deaf cook.  He nodded,
and pointed  to the other  door out of the  room. She thanked  him and
left with Cydric.
1     "Don't  worry, he  knows you're  still learning  the hand-speak,"
said Mandi as the walked down the hallway.
     "Couldn't the Captain just have hired a hearing person?"
     Mandi  stopped  and  turned  to  him, hands  on  her  hips.  "I'm
surprised at  you, Cydric!  Don't you know  Oddfoot is  considered the
best ship's cook this side of  the Valenfaer? We're lucky to have him!
Anyway, what does hearing have to do with making great food?"
     Cydric scratched the back of  his head and smiled apologetically.
"I don't know what I'm talking about, do I?"
     "In two languages, yet!" Mandi said, shoving him playfully.
     They continued  on. Three  doors from  the captain's  cabin Mandi
stopped. "Let's  check on Scarabin,"  she suggested. They  entered the
room of Brynna's Master-at-Arms.
     "Hi, Scar!  How're you  feeling?" Mandi said  to the  lean, dark-
skinned figure occupying the single bed.
     "Ah, Mandi. Cydric. Good that you stopped by," Scarabin said, his
Desert accent nearly obscuring his words. He raised his head slightly,
grimacing as he did so.
     "Now,  Scar! Remember  what  Oddfoot said.  You've  got to  rest.
Razorworms don't  die overnight,  you know."  Mandi gently  pushed the
Lashkirian back down.
     "How everything is, above?" he asked Cydric.
     "Just fine. Nothing exciting to report."
     "These worms in my gut, how they feed!" Scarabin muttered. "A bed
is no place for a warrior. If pirates attack, the Captain will need me
for battle."
     "Brynna wants you to get  better," said Mandi. "Besides, it's not
your fault. Danner's the one who put the worms in your stew."
     "A dog-skin rug, he is, when I have my health back!"
     "We hope you recover soon," said Cydric.
     "Relax  now, and  I'll bring  your medicine  later," said  Mandi.
Scarabin smiled faintly as the two left the room.
     They  came to  Brynna's cabin.  Cydric knocked  on the  door, but
received  no answer.  Mandi went  in anyway,  motioning for  Cydric to
follow.
     A large map  hung on the left wall of  the room; directly beneath
stood a long desk and a chair. Opposite  the door was a bed and on the
right wall hung various objects.
     "I suppose she stepped out for  a moment," Mandi said, turning up
the lantern that was mounted next to the door.
     Cydric went over to the map  and located the Laraka River, on the
northwestern edge of  the continent called Cherisk. He  put his finger
on the town  of Shark's Cove, on the Laraka's  outlet to the Valenfaer
Ocean,  and traced  the  river's  path inland  to  Port Sevlyn,  their
current destination. He continued on past Gateway Keep, and stopped at
the city of Magnus. He shook his head at the memory of his home there,
and the events that had caused  him to leave. Pushing the thoughts out
of his  head, he turned  and examined the  Captain's desk. A  piece of
dragon's horn scrimshaw weighted down a loose stack of papers; next to
them  was a  large leatherbound  book. Cydric  tried to  make out  the
gold-scripted title, but the words were in an unfamiliar language.
     "Look at this, Cydric," Mandi  said, tapping him on the shoulder.
He looked  up to see a  demon's face laughing at  him through twisted,
gaping jaws.
     "Yaah!" he said, nearly jumping out of his skin.
     Mandi removed the mask and giggled. "Scared you!"
     "Ah, no you didn't," Cydric replied, trying not to breath fast.
     "It's only a  Melrin mask from Comarr. If we  arrive early enough
today we may be  able to catch the festival dance."  She went over and
replaced  the mask  on the  other wall.  "Here's something  that won't
1scare you,"  she said, taking  down a large intricately  carved wooden
bow. "One of Brynna's most favorite things."
     "Should you be touching it, then?" Cydric said as he joined her.
     "She doesn't mind," Mandi replied, holding it out to him.
     Cydric took  the bow and  examined it.  Lines of gold  and silver
traced   complex  patterns   on  the   back  and   face.  "Very   nice
workmanship--probably made for a prince or a king," he remarked.
     "Are you any good at archery?"
     "A little. I do better with swords."
     A voice from  the doorway said, "That's quite all  right. I'm not
such a crack shot myself."
     Cydric and  Mandi turned to  see Captain Brynna Thorne  enter the
room. She tucked the last bite of a dried fig into her mouth and wiped
her lips with a handkerchief.
     "You wanted  to see us,  Brynna?" Mandi asked as  Cydric replaced
the bow onto its peg.
     "I only  asked for  Cydric," she  replied. "Haven't  you anything
else to keep you occupied?"
     "I won't be in your way. Really! Let me just stay."
     Brynna  sighed  and  ran  a  hand  through  her  slightly  curled
shoulder-length hair, black  except for a streak of  blue running down
the  left side,  by  her forehead.  "Oh very  well.  Just don't  start
playing that mandolin, straight?"
     "Straight! I mean,  right," Mandi said, laying  the instrument on
the bed and plopping herself beside it.
     Brynna sat down  behind the desk and motioned for  Cydric to come
forward. "Pull up that stool over there  and have a seat." When he had
done so, she said, "We'll be  docking before midday, so there won't be
much more for you  to do until then. I've been  watching you all week,
and have made my decision on whether to keep you on or not."
     Cydric thought back to the night  in Shark's Cove when Brynna had
signed him  on. Noting his inexperience,  she had accepted him  on the
condition that he could be discharged  if she found his performance to
be unsatisfactory.
     Mandi leaped up. "Yes? Well? What?" she asked excitedly.
     Brynna gave her  a quiet-down look, then said  to Cydric, "You've
done tolerably well,  for a landling. I  think you could make  it as a
shipman, if that  was your bent. So  I'm going to let  you decide your
fate--I'd be glad to have you, but you may have changed your mind."
     Before Cydric could  reply, Mandi danced over to him  and put her
arms around his  shoulders. "Stay on with us, please!  If you do it'll
be most fun--Brynna's  planning a voyage AROUND THE  WORLD! Isn't that
the most exciting thing you're ever heard in your life?"
     The  Captain made  a sound  of  irritation and  twisted the  blue
streak in her hair. "Gods' breath, girl, I can't tell you anything!"
     "Oh!" Mandi exclaimed, putting her hand over her mouth. "Forget I
said that, Cydric. It's not supposed to be known just now. Pretend you
never heard it. Sorry, Bryn."
     "It's Captain,  when we're  on the  ship," answered  Brynna. "Sit
down and  be quiet, all right?"  Mandi went back to  the bed. "Anyway,
Cydric, did you have an answer for me?"
     The young  man paused  before replying.  He had  been considering
leaving the ship and finding  other employment, but Mandi's revelation
now changed his  mind--a voyage around the world was  exactly the kind
of adventure  he had  been yearning  for ever  since he  abandoned his
royal heritage.  He decided not  to ask  Brynna for details  about the
trip; she would no  doubt tell him were he to  become a regular member
of the crew.
     "Yes," he  finally said.  "I've been thinking  about it  for some
time. I want to stay."
1     "Oh  goodie!" Mandi  said, springing  up once  again and  hugging
Cydric. "I was hoping you would."
     "Very well,"  said Brynna, a  faint smile  on her lips.  "Now all
that remains is the standard articles of agreement--"
     Just then a  crewman burst into the room.  "Captain! Beggin' your
pardon, but  you'd better  come on deck  quick! There's  somethin' you
have to see."
     "What is it?" Brynna asked, rising from her chair.
     "I don't know, rightly, but master Kayne says it's real strange."

     Brynna, Cydric, and Mandi followed  the crewman up onto the deck.
"Captain! Over here," Kayne called  from the starboard rail. The three
made their way over to him. "What's the trouble, Kayne?" Brynna asked.
     "See  for  yourself,  Captain," he  replied,  motioning  outward.
Cydric  looked to  where  the  first mate  pointed.  At  first he  saw
nothing, then became aware of a  large rippling air mass drifting over
the surface of  the water about two leagues distant.  He surmised that
it was the same shimmering haze he had noticed earlier.
     "What do you make of it?" queried Brynna.
     "Fog or sea-mist it isn't,"  the first mate replied. "But stiffed
if I can say  what it is. I was watching a flock  of barjee birds when
they just went blurry for a second. Thought I was losing my sight, but
then the lookout spotted the same thing."
     Brynna frowned. "Peculiar. Mandi, fetch the spyglass please."
     The young girl hurried off, and returned a few minutes later with
the requested  item. Brynna  studied the strange  transparent rippling
through the ocular for a few moments, then shook her head.
     "You fathom what it is, Captain? " asked Kayne.
     "I'm not sure.  But whatever it's birth, it appears  to be moving
towards us."
     "Moving towards us?" echoed the first mate. Brynna handed him the
spyglass.
     "Do you think it's dangerous?" Mandi asked.
     "Perhaps not,  but I don't want  to go petting the  sharks," said
Brynna. She strode back to the quarterdeck and ordered the helmsman to
steer well  clear of the shimmering  mass. Cydric felt the  ship lurch
slightly as it came about onto its new heading.
     Moments  later,  Kayne shouted,  "I  think  it's still  with  us,
Captain! Looks like it's getting larger, too."
     Brynna dashed  to the  rail. The  rippling entity  had apparently
altered it's  direction to match  the ship's; it  was now on  a direct
collision course.
     "Damn peculiar," said Brynna.  She ordered another course change,
but the shimmering mass still stayed with them.
     "Still think it might not be dangerous?" asked Kayne.
     Brynna bit her  lip. "Sorcerous, more likely,"  she murmured. She
took Kayne  aside and  spoke to him  in a low  voice. Cydric  tried to
listen but was unable to hear  what they said. A moment later, Kayne's
eyebrows shot up and a look  of understanding came over his face. "You
fathom that's what it is?" he said aloud.
     "I hope I'm  wrong," Brynna replied. "But we have  to be ready in
case  I'm not.  Alert the  crew, then--battle  readiness. Prepare  the
scorpion for firing."
     "Aye, Captain." Kayne left to carry out the orders.
     Cydric looked over at Mandi, who had been staring at the mass and
apparently missed the  exchange. He started to tell her  about it when
she turned and said, "You know what it looks like, Cydric? Heat waves.
What if it's just a ball of heat coming towards us?"
     "Ball of heat, indeed," said  Brynna, approaching them. "Mandi, I
want you to go below and secure the cabin, then stay there. Straight?"
1     "Me?" Mandi said, eyes wide. "But Brynna--"
     The  klaxon bell  sounded,  followed by  Kayne's  call to  action
stations.
     "You'll just be in the way  up here. Cydric, take her down, would
you? Go  now, please."  She abruptly  turned on her  heel and  left to
oversee the preparations.
     The  deck  came  alive  with crewmen  hustling  back  and  forth,
preparing to defend the ship against its possible danger.
     "She must think I'm a child or something," Mandi said indignantly
as they headed for the entrance to the lower deck.
     "She's just concerned about your safety," Cydric replied.
     "We don't even know what's out  there, and she's acting if it was
a fleet of pirates or something! It  could be just a trick of the eye,
you know. I've heard stories about people being lost at sea for months
who've thought they saw the All Creator riding a horse backwards while
eating a chunk of smoked meat."
     "I doubt  that's what it  is. In any  case, you'd be  safest down
below."
     Mandi stopped and put her hands on her hips. "And what about you?
You've been at sea barely a week. You ought to be down there as well."
     "Cydric! Come with me!" Kayne called as he dashed past.
     "Hellblaze,  Mandi--just  go, please?  For  my  sake, if  nothing
else?" Cydric gently squeezed her arm.
     "But--oh, since you asked nice,  I'll go." She started toward the
lower deck hatchway, then stopped and  turned. "But only until it gets
exciting."
     Cydric waited  until she had  disappeared below, then  hurried to
join Kayne.
     The first  mate was waiting  for him  at the scorpion.  The large
crossbowlike weapon was swivel-mounted  amidships, a little forward of
the main cargo hatch.
     "Finally getting a little action, eh Cydric?" Kayne said.
     "Yes,  sir," the  young man  replied.  "But shouldn't  we try  to
understand what's out there first?"
     "The Captain's got a notion, and if she's right we'll all be hard
up in a clinch."
     "Oh. Sorry sir, I didn't mean to be questioning orders."
     "Ah, I  won't tell.  But, it's  better to  be safe  than flotsam,
right? Righto.  Well, let  me show  you how this  old girl  works." He
turned to the three men manning the scorpion. "Line to bow, forty-five
up, and  hold." Two of  them turned  separate cranks that  aligned the
weapon with the bowsprit, and tilted the barrel upward. The third took
a large, heavy  spear from a nearby  long box, dipped the  head into a
pot of tar,  then loaded the projectile into the  groove along the top
of the barrel of the scorpion.
     "When I give the signal, all you have to do is set the spear head
on fire.  Then we pull  back the bowstring and  let her fly!  And pray
that it hits, of course."
     "I understand, sir," Cydric said.
     "Good. Now  take these." Kayne  handed him  an unlit torch  and a
piece of flint & steel. "Be ready when the Captain gives the word."
     "Aye,  sir,"  acknowledged  Cydric.  Kayne  clapped  him  on  the
shoulder and proceed astern to join Brynna.
     The two crank operators started chatting amongst themselves. "So,
what do  you think it  is?" Cydric asked  the spear loader.  The large
bearded man shrugged and began chanting a prayer against evil.
     "Ah, I see. You could be very  well be right," Cydric said as the
man lifted  his arms  to the  sky and  begged for  deliverance. Edging
away, Cydric looked  out again at the mysterious rippling  mass. As he
watched,  it appeared  to lose  speed slightly,  but continued  moving
1toward the ship.
     A  frantic shout  jolted him  out  of his  thoughts. "The  wind's
dying, Captain!" The crewman who  had made the observation gestured up
at  the  rigging. Cydric  saw  that  the  sails, previously  full  and
billowing,  were now  flapping idly.  He  realized that  the ship  was
slowing in its forward motion.
     The  crew  began muttering  in  consternation.  The spear  loader
stopped his frantic praying just long enough to advise Cydric to light
his torch.
     "Hard a-port, while we've still got headway!" called Brynna. "All
hands clear for action. Stinger crew stand ready."
     The ship began turning in a slow arc, and soon came to drift with
its port side facing the shimmering mass.
     Cydric got the torch lit just as Kayne returned to the scorpion.
     "What  do you  make the  target distance,  Flix?" the  First Mate
asked.
     "Hard to say, sir," replied  the spear loader. "It's like looking
for a black cat in the dark. I'd say about a league, though."
     "Fine," Kayne  said. He took  a sighting on the  nearly invisible
mass using  an astrolabe-like device. "Okay,  lads-- thirty-five marks
port, down five, and  hold." As the men brought the  weapon to bear on
the  mass, Kayne  turned in  Brynna's direction  and called,  "Stinger
clear and steady, Captain! Just give the word."
     "Very well, Kayne. Steady on."  Brynna raised the spyglass to her
eye.
     Cydric shifted the torch from hand to hand as he watched the mass
of rippling waves  draw closer to the ship. As  it drifted nearer, the
area of distortion it caused became  larger and easier to see. The sky
behind it  appeared to  writhe and  undulate like  a heap  of restless
snakes.
     "Close enough, I think," said  Brynna, snapping the spyglass away
from her face. "Fire when ready, Kayne!"
     The First Mate quickly took another sighting.
     "Port plus three, up two, and pull," he said.
     The men made the corrections and cranked back the bowstring.
     "Light up!"
     Cydric set the spear head afire.
     "And let her fly!"
     The  spear  shot  away  into  the  sky.  Cydric  watched  as  the
projectile  gracefully sailed  through the  air, curved  off into  the
distance  and shattered  in a  burst of  flame against  the shimmering
mass.
     The crew's cheers became shouts of dismay.
     "Cirrangill's blood!" exclaimed Kayne.
     A dark  patch appeared at the  center of the shimmering.  From it
emerged a bright green globe  which darted with amazing speed straight
toward  the _Vanguard  Voyager_. Cydric  quickly predicted  the impact
point and  flung himself away  from the  scorpion a second  before the
globe struck  the weapon  and caused  it to explode  amid a  shower of
green flames.
     Bits of wood  and metal rained down on the  deck. Cydric lay flat
on his  stomach, sheltering his head  from the shrapnel. When  no more
fell, he looked up and saw Mandi crouching before him.
     "Cydric! Are you all right? Did you get any splinters in you?"
     "What are  you doing  up here?"  hissed Cydric,  glancing quickly
around. Most of  the crew were still covering their  faces against the
blast. "The Captain will have my head if she sees you!"
     "Is anyone hurt?"  Brynna called, brushing debris  from her hair.
Flix  the  spear  loader  and  one of  the  crank  operators  reported
injuries. She instructed them to report to Oddfoot for treatment.
1     "Better go," Cydric said.
     Mandi nodded and started back. She  was halfway to the hatch when
Brynna caught sight of her.
     "I thought I  told you to stay below, Amanda!"  the Captain said,
striding toward the girl.
     "I  heard the  noise--just  wanted  to see  what  it was,"  Mandi
hastily explained.
     Brynna gestured  for her to  be silent. "Cydric, take  Mandi down
again. And this time stay with her!"
     "Right, Captain," Cydric said. He took  Mandi by the hand and led
her to the lower deck hatchway. As they started to descend the stairs,
Cydric looked  once more at  the rippling mass,  now less that  half a
league from the ship. Suddenly the shimmering became translucent, then
opaque, and  finally resolved itself into  the shape of a  large black
ship--a war galleon.
     Brynna smacked her palm. "I knew it! Damn him."
     "A ship!"  gasped Mandi.  "I never  would've guessed.  That's the
most amazing thing I've ever seen in my life!"
     The men of  the _Vanguard Voyager_ babbled in  amazement and fear
as the  galleon drew closer. Cydric  saw the name "Black  Swan" on the
prow, and  that the  figurehead was  the namesake  bird. Long  oars on
either side of the ship propelled it silently through the water.
     "You were right, Captain," said Kayne. "It's him, by Cirrangill."
     Mandi tugged at Cydric's sleeve.  "We'd better hide before Brynna
sends us below." She pointed to some barrels near the hatchway. Cydric
nodded and they both crouched down  behind the casks. Peering over the
barrel tops, they watched as the black ship slowly pulled up alongside
the _Voyager_.
     On the  deck of  the _Black  Swan_ were  assembled the  crew, all
armed with steel. By the rail stood four men: one balding and bearded;
the  next,  large  and  wearing  a rusty  breastplate;  the  third,  a
grey-haired gentleman  wearing long  black robes  and holding  a large
crescent-shaped crystal  object; the  last, somewhat younger  that the
third man and dressed in green robes. As the _Swan_ drew alongside the
_Voyager_,  the  black-robed  man  put  a hand  to  his  forehead  and
collapsed to the deck. Several crewman  rushed to his aid and took him
below. The green-garbed  man smiled and retrieved  the dropped crystal
object, tucking it into the folds of his robe.
     "All hands, prepare to repel boarders!" commanded Brynna.
     "Ho there,  Captain Thorne!" the  armor-clad man called out  in a
deep, resonating  voice. "What kind of  a greeting is that,  hey? What
makes you think I wish violence upon you?"
     "Ho yourself,  Commander Challion," Brynna answered,  striding to
the rail. "I suspected you were behind this. And why the freezing hell
did you fire on my ship?"
     "Indeed, you  fired upon me first.  But I only wished  to disable
your weapon. I hope no one was hurt."
     "As if you actually cared.  Now tell me straight, Challion-- what
gives you the right to stop a peaceful vessel in Baranurian waters? Is
piracy your profession now?""
     "As  you no  doubt saw,  Captain,  I have  regained the  Cavarnon
Shield; I was merely testing  its effectiveness. And judging from your
early  reaction, I  think  it  would be  better  used  under cover  of
darkness."
     "You haven't  answered my question. Is  this a raid? If  not, I'd
very much  like to get under  way. Tell your mage--the  conscious one,
that is--to give us the wind back."
     Challion leaned over the rail. "I have one other objective, and I
think you know what I mean."
     Brynna shrugged. "Do elaborate."
1     "The Codex  Araltakonia, Captain  Thorne. I  wish to  purchase it
from you."
     Cydric turned to Mandi. "The what?" he whispered.
     "That book  you were  looking at  in the  cabin," she  replied in
hushed tones. "The one on her desk--it's  supposed to be as old as the
Mystics!"
     "Sorry. I  don't have what  you're looking for,"  Brynna replied,
folding her arms.
     "No  lies, no  games, Captain!  I know  you acquired  it back  in
Dargon. But I'm prepared to offer twice what you paid for it."
     "In  truth, Commander,  I  never thought  our  paths would  cross
again--the dragon whale seemed rather attached to you, as I recall."
     "I  got  the  better  of  the creature,  in  the  end,"  Challion
answered. Hitching  his trousers up  around his ample waist,  he said,
"Well, three times your purchase price, then. You'll be making quite a
profit."
     "The knowledge in the Codex is beyond price. In any case, what do
you  want with  it? You're  by no  means a  scholar--neither are  your
mages."
     Challion rubbed  his fleshy  face and  exhaled loudly.  "My final
offer--quadruple the amount you paid to acquire it! A fine trader such
as  yourself cannot  fail to  recognize  a wonderful  bargain such  as
this."
     "True, but I also recognize barjee squat when I hear it. And I've
heard enough,"  said Brynna. "Spear detail,  forward!" Several crewmen
went over to the remains of the scorpion and picked up spears from the
storage box. After dipping the points  into the tar pot, they lined up
alongside Brynna  at the rail. Kayne  lit up a torch  and stood behind
them.
     "It always comes to violence, hey Skoranji?" Challion said to the
balding man. To Brynna he said, "Very well. If you do not wish to sell
the book, then I am afraid I will just have to take it."
     "You and  what battle fleet?  Your men  won't set foot  upon this
ship," Brynna shot back.
     The balding  man spoke. "Truly  now, m'  dear? Be you  willin' to
test your pups 'gainst me bloodseekers?"
     "Would you  be willing  to bet on  it, Captain  Skoranji?" Brynna
asked, smirking. The _Voyager_ crew laughed.
     Even from his vantage point Cydric could see Skoranji turn red.
     "Please,  please,  let's  not  bring  my  friend's  fondness  for
gambling into this," said Challion.  "I appeal to your reason, Captain
Thorne. Give  the Codex  over peacefully, and  we'll part  on friendly
terms."
     Brynna shook her  head. "You raffenraker, do  you seriously think
you intimidate me?"
     Challion motioned to the green-robed man, who lifted his arms and
spoke a short  phrase. An intense green glow limned  his hands, then a
ball of  light the  same color  formed and  shot toward  the _Vanguard
Voyager_. It  came to hover over  Kayne, then sped downward  to strike
him full  in the  chest and  knock him backwards.  It then  ringed his
neck, and slowly the First Mate rose into the air.
     "Certainly not, Captain. I know  better than to threaten you. But
a threat to your friend is another matter," Challion said, smiling.
     "True  men do  not hide  behind magic,"  Brynna returned  coldly,
gripping the  rail so hard her  knuckles turned white. "Let  him down,
Commander Challion. Now."
     "We are  going to  board your  ship. If  you or  any of  your men
resists, mister Kayne will no longer have the use of his head."
     "First let him down, damn you. Then I'll give you the Codex."
     "The book  first, in  exchange for  his life.  That is  your only
1option."
     Brynna chewed on her lower lip, then finally agreed.
     "I think we deserve a little  more for our trouble. We'll also be
taking whatever cargo you have."
     Behind the barrels, Mandi wrinkled her nose.
     "Don't sneeze!" whispered Cydric.
     "I..I.."  Mandi closed  her eyes  and clamped  her hand  over her
mouth. "Choo!"
     Brynna's head jerked at the sound, but she did not turn.
     "Now, tell  your men to  lay down their  weapons and move  as far
astern as possible. It will only take a few moments for us to maneuver
into boarding position," said Challion.
     Brynna glanced up at Kayne. The  First Mate twisted slowly in the
air, struggling  feebly to  remove the  ring of  magic from  his neck.
Sighing heavily, she ordered the crew to obey Challion's instructions.
     "Who  is  this Commander  person,  anyway?"  Cydric whispered  to
Mandi. "He looks like an old, fat knight to me. And if Skoranji is the
captain, why is Challion giving the orders?"
     "They're not  high up on  the list of Brynna's  favorite people,"
Mandi replied.  "Back in--" She looked  up as someone sat  down on the
barrels.
     "It's the  Captain," said Cydric, recognizing  the silver-blue of
her tunic.
     Mandi tapped Brynna's  slim posterior. The Captain  put her hands
behind her back and made signs with her fingers.
     "She's going  too fast," said  Cydric as  he tried to  follow the
gestures.
     " 'Cydric, shoot the mage,' " Mandi translated. " 'Use my bow and
arrows. Tap twice, understand.' "
     "She wants me to shoot  their sorcerer?" Cydric said, astonished.
"I said I wasn't  much good at archery. There's a  good chance I might
miss. What if--"
     Mandi tapped twice. "He understands, all right."
     Brynna continued signing.  " 'Wait for my word,' "  said Mandi. "
'Stand up to fire. Get bow now. Be ready.' "
     "What if I miss?" said  Cydric, gripping Mandi's arm. "He'll kill
Kayne! I don't know if I can do this."
     "You won't miss,"  Mandi reassured him. She  tapped Brynna twice;
the Captain rose and strode away.
     "I'll go  and get everything,"  Mandi said. "Stay here  and watch
out." She  quietly edged backwards  toward the hatchway  and carefully
made her way down to the lower deck.
     Cydric peeped  out over the  barrels again. The _Black  Swan_ had
dropped behind the _Vanguard Voyager_ a little, and was now angling in
closer. Brynna went over  and tried to grab Kayne out  of the air, but
the mage  raised his arms higher,  and the First Mate  floated up just
beyond her reach.
     "Kayne will be returned to you,  after we have what we came for,"
Challion boomed out.
     Mandi  silently returned  with the  bow and  a quiver  of arrows.
"Here. Now get ready when Brynna says."
     Cydric nocked an arrow and sighted  on the mage. "I'm not sure if
I can  hit him at this  range. Maybe a  little closer. How far  do you
think she'll let them come?"
     Mandi  did not  reply. Cydric  relaxed the  bowstring and  looked
around--the girl was nowhere to be seen.
     "Hellblaze!" he muttered.

     The  _Black Swan_  shipped her  oars  and drifted  on a  parallel
course with  the _Voyager_. "One  more thing, Challion,"  Brynna said.
1"You have to agree to just take the  cargo and leave my ship as it is.
I've  heard of  how  Skoranji's  men like  to  torch  the wrecks  they
scavenge."
     "Your  position is  highly unsuitable  for bargaining,"  Challion
replied,  "but  I will  respect  that.  Let it  not  be  said that  I,
Commander Artemus Challion, was ever ungracious to a lady."
     "As if a lady would ever have you!" a young voice chimed in.
     Cydric groaned inwardly. Mandi stood  by the bowsprit, waving her
arms. "Yes, you who looks like a  pregnant toad. Why don't you just go
home!"
     "Who is that?" Challion asked sharply.
     "My--former--cabin girl," Brynna said through clenched teeth.
     "Look, milord  Scullion, we told  you we  don't want you  on this
ship. So make  like the wind and blow!" Mandi  said, making an obscene
gesture.
     "We're all fish food," Cydric sighed.
     Brynna  walked to  the foredeck,  giving Cydric  a clear  line of
fire. "Amanda Lynn, please come over here. Now."
     "Now?" echoed Mandi. "NOW?"
     "Yes. Now!"
     Cydric drew  back on  the bowstring and  prepared to  stand. Just
then Mandi  screamed. Looking up,  he saw Danner standing  behind her,
holding her arms back.
     "Hey,  let me  go,  you pox-ridden  gutter  rat!" Mandi  shouted,
struggling.
     "Commander Challion! I  want to make a bargain. Let  me join your
crew, and you can have this girl," Danner called to the other ship.
     "What  do  you  think  you're doing,  Danner?  Release  her  this
instant," demanded Brynna.
     "It  appears,   Captain  Thorne,  that   one  of  your   crew  is
dissatisfied with  his lot,"  Challion said. "Perhaps  your reputation
for running a fair ship is a trifle exaggerated?"
     "Let  Mandi go,  Danner. Immediately."  Brynna ordered.  "Why the
freezing hell are you doing this?"
     "Sorry, Captain. I've  told you I want out of  my contract. I see
this as my chance."
     "Ho, son!  Wait until  we board.  Then we  will talk  about this,
hey?" Challion turned to Skoranji. "Whenever you are ready, Captain."
     "Ayah, Commander," said  Skoranji. He turned to  his crew. "Right
then, me bloodseekers! Prepare to grapple!"
     Cydric tensed, torn between waiting  for Brynna's command to fire
on the mage, and trying to save Mandi by firing on Danner instead.
     "Don't try to stop them, Captain Thorne," Danner warned. "Or I'll
have to get a little rough with Mandi here."
     "Toss  lines!"  called  Skoranji.  A moment  later,  three  rope-
attached grappling hooks sailed  across and anchored themselves around
the _Voyager's_ rail.
     "You're a god-cursed disgrace, Danner,"  Brynna said. "I ought to
shoot you right now.  Do you hear me?" She spun  around and shouted in
Cydric's direction, "SHOOT YOU RIGHT NOW!"
     Gulping a quick  breath of air, Cydric leaped up,  drew a bead on
the _Black Swan's_ magic-maker, and let the arrow fly. It sped through
the air  in a flash  of silver, and  smacked deep into  the sorcerer's
left eye.
     The man screamed, clutched at his face with both hands, staggered
forward, and pitched over the rail into the river.
     Kayne fell to the deck as the green ring vanished from around his
neck. "Battle  positions!" shouted  Brynna. The _Voyager_  crew surged
forward, scooping up their weapons and whooping in defiance.
     Mandi slammed her heel hard  against Danner's shin. He grunted in
1pain and loosened his grip, allowing the girl to wrench free.
     "Codless traitor!"  she said,  ramming her  knee into  his groin.
Danner yelped and pushed her away.
     Cydric  ran over  to check  on Kayne.  Challion cursed  as Brynna
severed the grappling lines.
     "Are you all right, sir?" Cydric asked, helping Kayne to sit up.
     "Never did  like wizards,"  the First  Mate replied,  rubbing his
throat.
     Danner staggered to the rail.  "Little slut!" he spat. He reached
into his  boot and pulled  out a  stiletto. Mandi's eyes  widened; she
turned and ran.
     Brynna instructed two  crewmen to take Kayne  below, then ordered
the spear detail forward again. She retrieved the torch and re-lit it.
     Challion  ordered the  _Swan's_ oars  back into  the water,  then
directed Skoranji to prepare the ballista for a counterattack.
     Cydric was about to report to Brynna when Mandi came rushing over
and hugged him tightly.
     "Thank the  gods you're  safe!" Cydric  said, holding  her close.
"How'd you get away from him?"
     Mandi looked up.  "Well, let's just say, he  wasn't codless after
all."
     Brynna handed  the torch to  the first  spearman, who lit  up his
weapon and passed the  flame to the next man. After  the torch made it
down the line and  all the spears had been lit,  Brynna gave the order
to let fly.
     Several  of the  burning spears  struck  the side  of the  _Black
Swan_. A  few of them  landed on  the deck, and  one managed to  hit a
sail. The fire  spread quickly, forcing Challion to  abandon his plans
for a retaliatory strike in favor of saving his ship from the flames.
     Cydric and  Mandi watched the  action from the rail.  As Skoranji
dashed madly about the deck of the _Swan_ calling out orders, a breeze
rippled across  Cydric's cheek. At  the same time the  helmsman cried,
"We've  got the  wind back,  Captain!" Cydric  looked up  and saw  the
ship's sails billowing proudly once more.
     "Get us under way immediately!" called Brynna.
     As the _Vanguard  Voyager_ slowly pulled away  from the enkindled
_Black Swan_, Cydric could  see Commander Challion standing motionless
at  the rail,  flames licking  at his  back. Suddenly  he shouted  out
across the widening gap between the ships.
     "I will not  forget this, Brynna Thorne! I cannot  be defeated so
easily--revenge will be mine, in the end!"
     Brynna came over and took the bow and arrows from Cydric. "Wrong,
Challion. It  ends now!" she said.  She nocked an arrow  and fired. It
struck the Commander square in the chest, penetrating his breastplate.
Challion gasped and fell back into the fire.

     Soon  the _Vanguard  Voyager_ had  left the  doomed _Black  Swan_
behind and was sailing clear on the river.
     "Excellent work, everyone!" Brynna said to the crew, assembled on
deck.  "When we  dock, there'll  be a  bonus in  your pay.  Right now,
though, I think a  double ration of spice ale is  in order. You've all
earned it!"
     The men cheered  her, and began filing below into  the mess room.
"I've never had to serve the whole crew at once," Cydric said to Mandi
as they joined the line.
     "You  won't have  to," Brynna  said,  coming over  to them.  "You
helped save the ship. Mandi will fill in for you."
     "Me?" Mandi said, a look of incredulity on her face.
     "That's right. You almost ruined everything with your antics."
     "I was just trying to help," Mandi protested. "Commander Challion
1might have  figured out  what you  were planning.  I was  just helping
distract him. And before  you say it, I had no  idea Danner was there.
Oh, and  besides, wasn't I the  one who got your  message about having
Cydric shoot the wizard?"
     "You were supposed to be in your cabin," Brynna reminded her.
     "I'm afraid that was my fault," Cydric admitted.
     Brynna sighed.  "Well, since everything  turned out in  our favor
anyway, I suppose I can overlook these things. But next time, I expect
_all_ my orders to be followed. Straight?"
     Cydric  and Mandi  exchanged  glances. "Straight!"  they said  in
unison.

                        (to be continued)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                             Fortunes
                         by Max Khaytsus
             (b.c.k.a khaytsus%tramp@boulder.colorado.edu)

     Taishent walked  quickly through  the market place,  prodling his
young granddaughter along. "Come along,  come on. I'll be late because
of you."
     The girl ran after him, looking right and left, distracted by the
multitude of vendors and people rushing about.
     "Aimee! Would you please move faster!"
     She ran  to catch  up to  her grandfather and  trailed him  to an
enclosed booth a half block away.
     A young woman  met them at the  door and asked them  to sit down,
while  she announced  their  arrival. Taishent  lowered  himself in  a
chair, while Aimee lingered by the door, looking at people pass by.
     "Why is  it you act  like you've never  been to the  market?" the
mage complained. "Each time I bring you here, it's the same story."
     The girl sat down in a  chair by the door, restlessly kicking her
feet, a short distance off the floor.
     "Dyann!" Corambis  appeared at the  door through which  the young
woman disappeared. "I was wondering if you were going to come."
     Taishent rose  to his feet and  greeted the sage. "Aimee  made me
late again," he complained. "I can't wait for her father to return!"
     "Again," Corambis smiled. "Did you enjoy the holidays?" he asked,
bending down next to the girl.
     The girl nodded shyly and looked down at her dangling feet.
     "Would you  like Thuna to  show you around the  market?" Corambis
asked.
     Aimee nodded, still looking at her feet.
     "Good, good. Thuna!" he called for his assistant, getting back to
his feet. The young woman entered and stopped by Corambis. "Take Aimee
to the market  for a few hours.  Taishent and I have  some business to
see to..."  Thuna nodded in  agreement. "...and  if she pick's  up any
more of your bad habits..." he warned in half voice.
     How I fear  what an influence Thuna might be  on Aimee," Corambis
told Taishent when  his assistant left with her charge.  "She's such a
quiet girl."
     "She's only quiet in public,"  Taishent said. "At home she's only
an angel when asleep in a locked room."
     The two  men laughed for  a moment, then Corambis  suggested they
get to business and they entered his office.
     "I'm very sorry that Roisart Connall died. You've been predicting
a holiday disaster for a while now," Taishent mentioned.
     "You know, the  Connall twins stopped here for advice  just a few
days ago, right  before the murder," Corambis said with  some irony in
his voice. "I read it on the Wheel and considered our last casting and
warned  them lightly  and dismissed  it all  as soon  as they  left. I
thought Fionn Connall's death was it."
     "I hope Luthias recovers," Taishent  sighed. "The two were almost
inseperable. I've never seen a place love its nobility as much."
     "Quite a  tragedy," Corambis  agreed, preparing ten  wooden discs
for a new casting. "Have you heard that someone killed Terell?"
     "Bah!  Heard it  and  didn't  feel a  bit  of remorse,"  Taishent
snapped. "The only thing  we had in common with him  were two years in
the same  school. I never  did like his style.  I'd bet he  got killed
after striking a bad deal."
     "Don't be so negative. I'm sure some people out there consider us
to be eccentric."
     Taishent grunted in disbelief. "Let's do the casting."
     "Let's," Corambis agreed.
1     After a short ceremony, the ten  wooden discs were dropped on the
Wheel of Life.  Most of them landed  on the symbols of  Fox, Torch and
Mistweaver.
     Corambis shook his head. "If the last one was bad..."
     The discs of  Heart, Spirit and Body lay in  the center, together
with the red disc representing  Dargon. "In the Mistweaver's grasp..."
The ally  lay in  the clutches  of the  Fox and  the adversary  in the
flames of the Torch.
     "Too symbolic," Taishent said.
     "Trouble. Trouble,"  Corambis verified. "Our allies  won't be our
allies for  long and adversaries may  crush us. It's very  uncommon to
have most land on so few symbols."
     "What's the bottom line?"
     "Do your casting first," Corambis said.
     The  two men  moved  to a  small makeshift  table  and sat  down.
Taishent produced  a deck of cards,  placed a Fate card  on the table,
then shuffling the  deck, placed an unknown card on  it. He reshuffled
the deck  and lay  out a  pattern around  the two  cards. Both  he and
Corambis bent down to scrutinize the pattern.
     "Look  here," Taishent  pointed.  "Good  present, tense  future."
Knight,  Wizard and  Sorrow decorated  the top  row. Beneath  them lay
Tranquility, Eagle,  Water and a  hidden card. "The past  doesn't tell
much," Taishent ignored the bottom three cards. The card covering fate
was turned over to reveal the ugly face of the Jester.
     "Incredible," Corambis said.
     "I'll  skip  the  dramatics,"  Taishent  hurried.  "I  predict  a
conflict in Dargon sometime soon."
     Corambis  stood  up  and  walked  over  to  the  Wheel  of  Life,
contemplating the challenge.  "I say an external conflict,  but in due
time."
     Taishent came  back to the larger  table, to look at  the pattern
again. "I see no resolution."
     "The Wheel  hardly ever shows the  means to an end.  Your casting
wasn't conclusive either."
     Taishent recast the future row,  using the method for far future.
Fire, Air, Griffin. "Nothing," he said. "Conflict."
     Silence ruled  the room for  some time, while the  men considered
the fortunes they had cast.
     "You know," Corambis finally broke the silence, "we've been doing
this after every equinox for for more  time than I wish to account for
and to what results?"
     "We've been right most of the time."
     "I hope  we're wrong  now," Corambis sighed.  "I couldn't  wish a
fortune like this on anyone."
     "I feel  guilty for making  predictions like this  too," Taishent
said.
     "Let's  get some  air," Corambis  said, sweeping  all the  wooden
discs with his arm to the side of the table.
     Taishent reshuffled the cards.
     "May Dargon get through this with its skin intact..."
------------------------------------------------------------------------
  (C) Copyright  September, 1989, DargonZine.  All rights revert  to the
authors. These  stories may not  be reproduced or redistributed  save in
the case of reproducing the whole 'zine for further distribution without
the express permission of the author involved.






1                                                             /
  DDDDD                              ZZZZZZ                //
  D    D  AAAA RRR  GGGG OOOO NN  N      Z  I NN  N EEEE  ||
  D     D A  A R  R G    O  O N N N     Z   I N N N E     ||Volume 2
-=========================================================+|)
  D    D  AAAA RRR  G GG O  O N N N   Z     I N N N E     || Issue 4
  DDDDD   A  A R  R GGGG OOOO N  NN  ZZZZZZ I N  NN EEEE  ||
                                                           \\
                                                             \
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--   DargonZine Volume 2, Issue 4        09/29/89          Cir 816    --
------------------------------------------------------------------------
--                            Contents                                --
------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Dragon Hunt 3              Max Khaytsus           Naia 25-Yule 7, '13
  The Knight of Stone        Jon "Grimjack" Evans   Yuli 11-22, 1013
  Trial before Tribunal      Wendy Hennequin        Sy 15-22, 1013
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                          Dragon Hunt
                            Part 3
                        by Max Khaytsus
            (b.c.k.a khaytsus%tramp@boulder.colorado.edu)


         When I was  young and foolish, I  sought adventure, not
    realizing  what dangers  it could  bring. Once,  when in  my
    early  twenties, I  signed  on  a ship  going  on a  foreign
    safari.
         The  passengers  were  a   mystic,  a  priest  and  two
    warriors, on their  way to Gereon, to hunt  a dragon rumored
    to  live there.  To make  a story  that may  take a  book in
    itself short, one of the two warriors drank the blood of the
    dragon  and bathed  his  body  in it,  in  hope of  becoming
    invincible. He died  a few weeks later, on  the return trip,
    when a  mast broke in  a storm and  crashed down on  him. In
    view of this, I must dispute the myths cast upon dragons.
         To start  with, let me assure  you that a dragon  is no
    more than a large lizard. It has not the rump of a lion, nor
    the forelegs of  an eagle, nor the wings of  a bat. A dragon
    is a survivor of times past, when giant lizards still walked
    the surface of Makdiar. As such a survivor, the dragon is in
    no way a supernatural or  mythical combination of beasts and
    is completely  characteristic of other lizards.  Dragons are
    cold blooded, with scaly skin, a forked tongue and so on, as
    long as this  describes a lizard as well,  although there is
    one notable discrepancy to this  rule. Dragons have what can
    be termed as wings, but  from my research and single meeting
    with a dragon, I feel safe in stating that these are no more
    than strong membranes binding the  extension of the spine to
    the body,  much as the  skin on  a duck's webbed  feet. This
    trait enables the dragons to fly or more accurately, glide.
         This  leaves  one more  myth  to  be disclaimed  -  the
    dragon's ability to breath fire. If such an ability, which I
    will not  dispute, exists,  I have not  witnessed it  and so
    must dismiss it as a mythical ability of this species. Fires
    and  treasures  and  great  intelligence  have  always  been
    attributed to  dragons by legend  alone. Perhaps it  is some
    lizard's fetish for shiny objects, just as the crow's, which
    made its way into folklore and  in order to obtain and store
    the  treasure, these  lizards  were  made intelligent.  Fire
    breathing can  be just another  part of this same  myth. The
    dragon's  primeval element  is water  and all  recorded have
    lived in damp dark caves on  shores of large bodies of water
    or deep inside non-volcanic mountains.
         No magic, no mystery. A dragon is simply an animal that
    happened to  become famous  in folklore  and myths.  Being a
    nearly extinct species has  contributed to the dragon's fame
    and fewer sightings and almost  no survivors of dragon hunts
    are what we consider to be a romantic legend.
        -Bistra, head chronicler, City of Shakin, "The Realities
            of Myths", pages 81-85


     Dead. Rien looked  at the body of the hermit.  Blade wound in the
neck...
     "It was probably Cril or one of his men," Kera said.
     Rien fought  to retain his sanity.  "How long will we  be leaving
this bloody trail?" he looked at her.
1     "We didn't  do this," Kera said.  "We only killed those  who were
after us..." Her voice trailed off, as she realized she had killed two
men.
     "We led them here," Rien glared  at her. "We did this." He turned
to leave. "Coming?"
     Kera looked  at the dead hermit  one last time and  followed Rien
out. "Aren't we going to bury him?" she asked.
     Rien paused  and looked back.  "No," he answered. "We  don't have
the time." He took two more steps  and stopped again. "He did his best
to help us. We have to put him to rest."
     "We need  to release the  dogs too," Kera added.  "They'll starve
otherwise."

     A few  hours later Rien  and Kera  finished with their  tasks and
returned to the  horses. "I was thinking of not  returning to Dargon,"
Rien said. "It  would only put us  closer to Liriss. Let's  go down to
Tench. Hopefully that will give us a lead."
     "I doubt there are any dragons in Tench," Kera said. "It would be
easier to find a  sage or a scribe or a chronicler to  point us on our
way in Dargon than in Tench."
     "Tench  is a  two  street town.  There are  no  sages or  scribes
there," Rien stated.
     "Then why go there?"
     "For a two  street town, Tench sees more traffic  than Dargon can
hope to. We need  the people in Tench. A lot of  them travel; they see
things that  may help. Besides,  Dargon is not  a very safe  place for
either of us right now."
     "Do you really consider Dargon to be such a danger?" Kera asked.
     "I killed Terell. Liriss is probably  on a war path by now. There
are plenty of other  things that would be hard to deal  with at a time
like this. We have to got to Tench."
     "But if it's so small..." Kera began. "Why bother going there?"
     "Hope," Rien answered simply.

     "Lame Duck Inn?" Kera wondered out loud, stopping in mid stride.
     Rien bumped into her and thoughtfully looked up at the sign above
the door, then guided Kera inside.  Across the lobby a small man, with
his back to the entrance, was flipping his way through a book.
     "Excuse me?"  Kera approached the  counter, seeing that  Rien was
not going to take charge.
     "Uh..." the man froze, holding up a page, but then turned it over
and continued reading the listings.
     Kera struck  her plated forearm  against the top of  the counter,
making the innkeeper jump. "Yes,  yes!" he spun around, startled. "One
room or two?"
    Kera looked at the short balding man with a hint of amusement on her
face before answering.  "One," she ordered.
     Rien started to protest, but decided against it.
     "Right  away, right  away,"  the man  mumbled,  placing the  book
before her. "Sign  in right here," he pointed to  a blank line. "Boy!"
he screamed into the doorway behind the counter. "Boy!"
     Moments later a  skinny boy, with half open eyes  appeared in the
doorway.
     "Show these people to room four," the innkeeper ordered.
     "And take  care of  our horses,"  Kera instructed,  returning the
book.
     The boy nodded,  circling the counter to the front  of the lobby.
"This way, please," he said with a sleepy voice.
     "Coming?" Kera prodeled Rien and he followed her up the stairs.
     "This town is even smaller  than I remember," Rien commented when
1he and Kera were left alone. "It will  be a miracle if we will be able
to get anything accomplished here."
     "So will we go on to Magnus?" Kera asked.
     "No," Rien answered. "Not yet. It was only a passing thought when
I mentioned it.  Magnus has the resources  to help us and  I have some
friends there  who would  be willing  to help, but  we don't  have the
time.  Depending on  what we  learn  here, we  may have  to return  to
Dargon...or to Maari.  I strongly doubt that there are  any dragons in
Cherisk."
     "First time I heard you giving up," Kera commented.
     "First time  I had  my back  to a wall,"  Rien said.  "You didn't
expect me to be all powerful, did you?"
     Kera shook her head. "No, but I've seen you take on odds I'd turn
down."
     "Like  what? Terell  the  'great' alchemist?  Cril  and his  men?
Liriss' guards in the alley?"
     Kera nodded.
     "That wasn't taking on greater odds.  That was fighting the way I
learned it  -- dirty." Rien  paced the room, metal  sollerets clanking
unevenly against the wood floor. "If  I would have stopped to think, I
would have never drunk Terell's potion, chased you down an alley and I
certainly would not have agreed to have  sex with you in the middle of
a forest. I created my problems by  not thinking and had to get out of
them by use of force."
     "Where do elves have sex?" Kera smiled.
     Rien looked at her sternly, then smiled back. "Ljosalfar do it in
the woods. I don't know about Dopkalfar."
     "So what wrong with the forest?" Kera asked.
     "I suppose  nothing," Rien  answered. "Only  it's not  done while
someone is trying to hunt them down."
     "And anything wrong with this room?"
     Rien glanced around at the old stained furniture he did not get a
chance to look  at before. "There's a  lot of work to do  and you need
rest."
     "Won't you be resting?" Kera asked suggestively.
     "My rest  does not depend on  sleep," Rien said and  Kera's smile
widened. "But I do intend on finding out what this town has to offer,"
he added hurriedly.
     The innkeeper was still up, still reading his book where Kera had
left  it. Rien  looked  over his  shoulder, realizing  that  it was  a
ledger, containing guest names, room numbers and lengths of stay.
     "Is there a tavern here?"
     "Down the street," the man yawned, not looking up from his work.
     "Thank you,"  Rien muttered and walked  out of the inn.  The town
was dead quiet, with the exception  of a single noisy building not far
away.
     Rien made his way there and found  the bar. A fat balding man was
pouring  drinks, at  times  missing  the glasses  he  aimed for.  Rien
ordered an ale and when it was  served, asked the bartender if he knew
anything about dragons. The man wandered off laughing to himself.
     "Pay no attention to him," someone behind Rien said. "By the time
it's this late, he's tasted most of what he served."
     "I wonder how he ever makes a profit," Rien said, turning to face
a  farmer  standing behind  him.  "You  wouldn't know  anything  about
dragons...would you?"
     "Sorry," the  farmer released an  abrupt laugh. "You need  a sage
for that problem. I'm afraid this town is just too small."
     "I realize that," Rien said.
     "I'd even  venture to  say there's  no such  beast in  this whole
kingdom,"  the  farmer  added.  "Why  are  you  asking  anyhow?"  Rien
1hesitated answering  and the  farmer went on.  "Want to  recapture the
glory of the old dragon hunts?"
     Rien smiled silently.  "As easily as in a  legend..." He returned
to the Lame  Duck Inn shortly before sunrise and  spent the first half
of the morning rereading key paragraphs of "The Realities of Myths".
     By the  time Kera came downstairs,  the inn was full  with people
eating breakfast.  She found Rien  sitting in a corner,  going through
his book. "You've been at it all night?" she asked.
     "Since sunrise," he answered. "I spent the night asking questions
in the tavern, although most drunks aren't very cooperative."
     "Did you learn anything?"
     "One man recommended I find an old witch named Maari in the woods
west  of here,"  Rien smirked.  "Most people  couldn't even  recommend
that."
     Kera  too smiled,  in spite  of the  graveness of  the situation.
"What about the book?"
     "It's about as  helpful as Maari. Bistra wrote  it for reference,
not practical applications."
     Kera shook her head in dispair.
     "But I have  come to a decision," Rien said.  "Having polled most
of this town in a single  night, I've decided that tomorrow morning we
will leave for Magnus."
     "It will take  too long!" Kera gasped. "You won't  be leaving any
time for yourself!"
     "I am  half human," he reminded  her. "I may have  more time then
they said. The disease may not even have as great an effect on me."
     "And if you don't have that time?"
     "Then I'll  make sure you  have a  better chance than  you've got
now."
     Kera was  about to protest, but  kept quiet as two  men pushed by
her and  sat down at a  neighboring table. She hesitated  talking with
strangers so near  and was about to  ask Rien to move when  one of the
two new comers started talking.
     "If the old man  wants to have a dragon, he can  go hunt one down
himself."
     Kera and  Rien looked  at each other  in disbelief.  "Excuse me,"
Rien leaned to face the new comers. "Did you say dragon?"
     One man continued  sipping his drink as the other  turned to look
tolerantly at Rien. "Yeah. You dumb enough to go get one?"
     "Perhaps 'desperate'  would be  a better  choice of  words," said
Rien.
     "Room twelve,  on the corner,"  the man answered and  returned to
his companion.
     Rien and Kera did not waste any precious time persuing their good
fortune and  hurried to the  specified room.  Behind them the  two men
watched them leave, then one flipped a silver coin, catching it in mid
air. "Easiest  silver I  made all month..."  The two  laughed merrily,
calling for more drinks.

     A middle aged, grey haired man opened the door for Rien and Kera.
He  stood as  tall as  Rien, dressed  in a  silver and  red robe  with
swirling patterns.  "What can I  do for you?"  he asked with  a slight
accent, examining the visitors.
     "We  heard you  were  interested in  hunting  dragons and  became
curious," Rien said.
     "Ah, it  is I who is  curious about your dragon  fetish," the man
responded. "Why don't you come in and tell me about it?"
     Cautiously Rien and  Kera stepped into the man's  room. They were
surprised at  the man's approach to  their visit and he  seemed mildly
amused.
1     "Please, don't  be surprised  by my curiosity,"  the man  said to
Rien. "I  heard you in  the tavern last night  and could not  help but
wonder what you need a dragon for."
     "You know where there is one?" Rien asked.
     "First things first," the man said. "Sit down. My story is short,
but our discussion may  take a while." He waited for  Rien and Kera to
follow his  instructions before continuing.  "My name is  Gerim Marat,
though it  should mean  nothing to you.  I am a  jeweler by  trade and
wizard by  profession. I give  advice to those  who can afford  it and
will go out of my way for a good adventure."
     "So are you here for adventure or we for advice?" Rien asked.
     "Be  courteous and  introduce yourself  first," Gerim  suggested.
Without hesitation Rien did so. In  his view Gerim could be a powerful
wizard and these would better be left satisfied with the way the world
spins around them. Old lessons  taught by wizards are certainly things
to remember and keep in mind when talking to men of the trade.
     "Good, good," Gerim  smiled. "Why don't you tell me  now what you
need a dragon for."
     "Why do you want to know?" Kera asked in a how-dare-you tone.
     "If I like your reason well  enough," the wizard said, "I may opt
to help you."
     "We don't really need a dragon," Rien admitted. "We need a dragon
egg..."
     "This is the right time  of the year," Gerim approved. "Providing
that the dragon is in the mating  mood, that is. What will you do with
it if you get it?"
     "We were promised medicine for it."
     "What kind of medicine?"
     "Aren't  you getting  a little  personal?" Kera  lost her  temper
again.
     "Perhaps I am," the wizard agreed, "but  then I did say it was to
be a lengthy discussion."
     Rien weighed the situation. Neither thinking, nor fighting seemed
appropriate here. He  clasped Kera's hand in hopes that  she will calm
down. "The cure is for lycanthropy."
     Gerim nodded.
     "May I see your book?"
     Rien permitted him to take  it and the wizard smiled approvingly,
flipping through the pages, stopping  at the bookmarks. A minute later
he returned the volume. "Which of you has the disease?"
     Kera tried pulling her hand from Rien's grip.
     "Both of you. I see..."
     "If this is  all you wanted to know," Rien  began, getting up and
pulling Kera up with him.
     "No, not yet,"  the wizard stopped them. "One  man yesterday told
you to  see old Maari and  you told him that  she is the one  who sent
you. Is that right? Is she the one who wants the egg?"
     "She said she needs it as an ingredient," Rien answered.
     "Good, good," the wizard smiled.  "If you return tomorrow at this
time, I will have one waiting for you."
     "And how much will you want for your 'advice'?"
     "Let's just  say it's  my adventure,"  Gerim continued  to smile.
"Now go. I have a lot of work to do."
     Rien and Kera left the room,  as amazed as they were entering it.
"Do you  think he is  serious?" Kera asked when  they were out  of the
man's hearing range.
     "He seemed anxious to help," Rien admitted. "I really don't know.
We won't lose much if we don't leave tomorrow morning."
     "Do you think he's a real wizard?" Kera asked again.
     "We'll know tomorrow," Rien answered.
1     "How? Have you ever seen a dragon egg?"
     "No, but I  assume it's bigger than that of  a chicken. Maybe the
size of a head."
     Kera sighed. "I hope you're right."
     Rien  smiled at  her.  "Go eat  breakfast and  I'll  see to  what
supplies we may need."
     "I'm  not hungry.  I'll go  with you,"  Kera said  and leaned  on
Rien's shoulder. "I wish this was all over. I wish I could relax."
     "Life was  boring when it  was simple,"  Rien put his  arm around
her.

     Gerim went  into the make  shift laboratory, considering  what he
had just done. If this couple was gullible enough, he could force them
to do the job for him. If they weren't...they had to be. It would be a
simple con, easy to execute and they would never be in danger...unless
they knew or Maari suspected.
     Gerim approached the crystal ball. "Where are they?" and an image
of Rien  and Kera exiting the  inn appeared. He listened  carefully to
their conversation, then got up. "They need to be tested..."

     "I thought  you said  there wasn't anything  to sight  see around
here."
     "There wasn't  last time  I was here,"  Rien repeated,  almost to
himself.
     "That's a pretty big army camp,  to be in the middle of nowhere,"
Kera said. "When's the last time you were here?"
     "A while back," Rien sighed. It was really before the rule of the
previous king.
     "What's a while in your terms?"
     "Long enough for this to be  built, it would seem..." He sat down
in the  lush spring grass, pulling  Kera down next to  himself. "I was
really hoping for this to be a bit more deserted..."
     For the first time Kera realized just how tired and worn out Rien
looked. "Why  don't you go  back to the inn  and get some  sleep," she
suggested. "I can take care of the supplies we need myself."
     "I'm fine," Rien shook his head. "I'll get some rest tonight."
     "I wasn't recommending it," Kera insisted.
     Rien's gaze followed  the people practicing in  the field. "Trust
me, I'm fine."
     Kera leaned  on his  shoulder and  he shifted so  as not  to fall
over.
     "I can tell,"  Kera sighed, as Rien pushed her  back, forcing her
to the ground.
     "Don't argue  with me,"  he held  her down for  a moment.  "I was
hoping to find a  quiet place to soak in the  atmosphere. It's not the
army camp I should  be worried about distracting me --  you do the job
well enough alone."
     Kera sat up, brushing the lose grass off her side, then lunged at
Rien, pushing him down under herself. He grunted, rolled over and held
her down, reducing her struggling to helpless wriggling.
     "Cut it out."
     Kera held still and Rien let her go. They lay next to each other,
staring up at the blue sky.
     "Are  you going  to trust  the wizard?"  Kera asked  after a  few
moments of silence.
     "Probably," Rien said.  "Even if he wants some  payment, it can't
be worse than Maari's, but I want to hear what he has to say first."
     "What about Maari?"
     "I can deal with the dragon egg -- a task in itself," Rien began,
"but the  business of her wanting  a subject to cast  spells through I
1can not  agree to. I  wish I could  come up with  a good way  to trick
her."
     "But if you're  against what she is doing, why  not stop her from
doing it?"
     "That wouldn't be right. If anyone could kill anyone else because
they disagree  with their basic beliefs,  the only rule would  be that
the strongest rule.  I don't believe in making myself  an exception to
that. Plenty people already do as it is."
     "So what are you going to do?"
     Rien turned  over, digging his  elbows into the ground.  "I don't
know. Burn that bridge when we get to it."
     They lay like  that for a while longer, enjoying  the morning sun
without their  armor, observing  the army  camp at  the bottom  of the
hill.
     "That  camp   is  strategically   misplaced,"  Rien  said   in  a
matter-of-fact voice. "It would take them  weeks to get to the nearest
border..."
     Kera turned over, adjusting herself to the moving sunlight. "This
is wonderful," she muttered completely out of context and Rien sat up.
     "What?"
     Kera lay still.
     "What?" Rien asked again, touching her shoulder.
     "This is  wonderful without  armor," Kera mumbled,  shifting away
from his touch.
     "Get up," Rien took her arm.  "You're not going to fall asleep on
me. We still have a lot to do today."
     Lazily Kera  sat up and  Rien helped her  to her feet.  "Let's go
find that store."
     They  returned to  town and  locating the  small wooden  building
named Kristee  & Daughter, entered.  A mildly overweight woman  at the
counter greeted the pair and asked what she could get them.
     "We'd like to  look around," Rien answered  politely and together
with Kera retreated to the shelves of merchandise.
     "I'll get the  rations," Kera said, disappearing  deeper into the
store after Rien's approving nod.
     Rien paused at a display of  equipment when suddenly he heard the
woman at the counter exclaim loudly.
     "The money," a male voice sounded as Rien turned around. Two men,
one with a sword,  a second with a crossbow stood  between him and the
counter. The man with the crossbow motioned to Rien.
     "Yours too."
     The woman started frantically placing coins on the table.
     "You know you won't make it out of town," Rien pointed out.
     "And who's to stop us?" the man with the crossbow asked. "You?"
     Rien shrugged. "I doubt it. You seem too determined."
     "The money," the man repeated.
     At that time Kera  showed up at the front of  the store, her arms
loaded with goods. "Are you just going to stand there?" she asked Rien
before noticing anything wrong.  She shifted uncomfortably, looking at
the two armed men. "I'll wait back there..."
     "Your money," the man with the crossbow repeated.
     Rien  noticed Kera  balancing what  she carried  on one  hand and
immediately  stepped forward,  handing his  money to  the brigand  and
blocking  Kera  from  his  view.  When he  stepped  back,  Kera  stood
perfectly still.
     "You too," the  man indicated to Kera, who slowly  bent down, put
what she  carried on the floor  and straitened with a  sudden flick of
the wrist.
     The crossbow  went off  in panic, the  bolt harmlessly  hitting a
wall and  the man who  fired it sank to  his knees, grasping  a dagger
1stuck in his stomach.
     Kera pulled out another dagger.
     The man  with the sword  hesitated -- try  throwing a sword  at a
dagger.
     "Take your friend and go," Rien  instructed. "Or she may hack you
too."
     The man hastily sheathed his sword and scooped some money off the
counter.
     "Leave  the  money,"  Rien  added and  the  man,  supporting  his
companion beat a hasty retreat.
     "Oh, mercy!" the  woman exclaimed, looking from Kera  to Rien and
back again.  "How could  I ever  thank you? Oh...  Just take  what you
wanted to buy and don't bother paying for it!"
     "That's  quite  all  right,  madam," Rien  smiled.  "It  was  our
pleasure to help. No gratitude is needed."
     "I insist!"  the woman exclaimed  again. "You can't  even imagine
how much help  you were! Now you  see, normally one of  the nice young
men from  Lord Morion's school is  here to help  me if I need  it, but
this time..." She was certainly long winded...

     The crystal ball  grew dark as its owner stood  up. His own quest
would soon come to an end.
     "A test well  passed, but you two  will yet do my  job for me...I
wish I could help your quest as well..."
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                       The Knight of Stone
                     by Jon "Grimjack" Evans
                    (b.c.k.a. v047kfz7@ubvms)

     Setting rays silhouette the figure of a knight on a horse, poised
on a hill.
     The rain fell heavily from the  dark grey sky, as the sun dropped
behind the trees to the west. Jaryn, ankle deep in the muddy waters of
the  graveyard, stared  at the  stone monument  honoring his  father's
life. "Here lies  Sir Karl von Gruen," read  the headstone, "honorable
knight of his Royal Majesty, the King."
     Jaryn gripped the sword at his side tightly, remembering the day,
four years ago,  when his older brother left to  avenge their father's
death. "If I'm  not back in a  year, my brothers," he  heard Mark say,
"the  next son  must  follow."  That meant  young  Karl, our  father's
namesake.
     Jaryn pulled  the grey hood of  his cloak over his  soaked blonde
hair and turned toward the gates.  That day came and went, he thought,
and Karl repeated those same words to  Dirk, the third son of the dead
knight. Karl  left with the  hope of  rescuing Mark and  defeating our
father's murderer at the same time.
     That year passed just as quickly as the first; and, on the second
anniversary of  their father's  death, Dirk said  to Jaryn,  "Keep the
family name alive. Marry before you leave in search of our honor." And
then Jaryn was alone.
     Stepping into the stables, he called  the boy to fetch his horse.
By the third anniversary of Sir Karl's passing, Jaryn had not married.
He still  had dreams of falling  in love and raising  children, and he
hated his father for  dying at the hands of a  foreigner, and he hated
his  brothers for  not succeeding  in their  quest, leaving  him alone
without hope of a life of peace. On  that day, he sank to his knees in
the mud,  crying before the monument  of his father, hating  the world
for the poor lot he was given.
     Jaryn mounted his beast, accepted his lance, and left the stables
on  a  journey  marked  for  him four  years  before.  On  the  fourth
anniversary of his  lord's demise, he left his wife  and son, the last
bearers of his proud family name,  and entered the graveyard to mourn,
one last time, his father's death. He did not expect to return.

     A flash of lightning captures the  figure of a charging knight in
a split second of daylight.
     Jaryn knew what must be done, and  he knew where he had to do it.
His  enemy lies  beyond the  hills to  the south,  in the  land called
Caeredwyn. Jaryn  was no fool, however,  and knew his enemy  should be
expecting him. Three times before, his enemy had defeated his father's
sons; and three times before, he  knew they would be coming. Jaryn hid
his approach not with stealth or cunning,  but with a field of grey on
his shield.  He would not carry  the family crest as  did his brothers
for he  had adopted this  new banner. The  grey of the  stone monument
erected for his  father, and the greyness which filled  his life since
his first brother's leaving.
     He spurred his mount lightly as  he approached the open fields of
oats filling  the lands  outside his  father's home.  The huts  on the
horizon belonged to his subjects, the farmers who worked day and night
to  produce the  grain  which kept  them alive.  What  a simple  life,
thought  Jaryn as  he rode  over  the lands.  To be  alive and  happy,
married to  the woman of your  choice rather than one  chosen for you,
having only to plant the seed and harvest it. I wish I could be one of
you, not bound by honor to defend  a king you hardly know, or a father
who never had time  for anything but his land. To be  able to grow old
1with  my wife,  to  raise my  children,  and not  to  worry about  the
politics and  economics of the realm.  I am cursed, instead,  with the
wealth of previous  oppressors, duty bound to tax you,  and pressed to
defend my family's name. Such a simple life you have.
     Pulling himself from his dreams of  sunny days in the fields with
a  beautiful wife  and three  strong sons,  he looked  out toward  the
slowly approaching  hills on  the horizon. By  morning he  would reach
them, nine days  he would travel through them, and  then he would meet
his enemy.

     The stone knight's lance pointed at its target, ready to strike.
     Along the  road through  the hills, Jaryn  came across  a peasant
with a  broken cart.  He looked at  the man, so  pitiful and  old, and
thought that  surely there would be  another passerby to help  him. It
was beneath Jaryn's  station to help him, and he  didn't want to touch
the grimy fielder's cart, in any  event. First able person I encounter
I will send  to help you, old  man. And he rode past,  hiding his face
behind the grey steel visor of his helm.
     Farther  along, he  encountered  a group  of  young men,  healthy
looking, and apparently more wealthy by  the swords at their sides. He
told them of the man in the  road, and they laughed. It had been their
work, and wasn't that a nice horse he was riding, and a fine lance and
blade by his  side. They didn't have to explain  the situation to him,
and he hastily grasped his lance, striking the first of the group.
     Red blood poured out of the man's throat as the lance struck into
his neck. A  gasp, a cry, and the  man fell to the ground  with a dull
thud. Jaryn looked at the corpse in surprise, and shock. He's dead, he
thought  as he  watched the  blood mix  with the  muddy puddle  at his
horse's feet. Several  times he was struck by the  weakly swung blades
of his  opponents, but  he never  noticed. He  was untouchable  in his
armor and his melancholy.
     He dropped  the lance and drew  forth the great blade  his father
had made  for him  when he was  barely strong enough  to lift  it. Its
weight was familiar to him, and gave  him the strength to look back at
his attackers. He felt little or no remorse, now, as he lopped off one
man's  head,  and  separated  another's arm  from  its  shoulder.  The
remaining two fled  the unfeeling knight, hoping for  a more favorable
encounter in another territory.
     Jaryn wiped his  blade and sheathed it. He would  leave the lance
for any who  would take it. It  was his no longer, and  he thanked the
thieves for  ridding him of  such an ignoble  tool. He would  face his
enemy with  a sword,  not the  cowardly weapon his  enemy had  used to
pierce his father's throat.

     A shield of  stone hung on the knight's arm,  ready to defend its
owner from the oncoming blows of the enemy.
     Jaryn  arrived in  Caeredwyn with  much ado.  The people  did not
often see strangers  from other provinces, and rarely a  lord. With my
shield of grey,  he will not realize  who I am until  I challenge him,
thought Jaryn.  He rode up  to the gates of  the keep, and  called for
permission to enter. Jaryn gained the courtyard and begged an audience
with the lord of the manor. Upon seeing his enemy, he spoke.
     You are  Kalen-Ord, the lord of  this keep? My name  is Jaryn von
Gruen. I  have come to avenge  my father's death at  your hands, these
four years past, as well as the death of my brothers before me. I will
meet you in  combat of arms in  the fields outside your  keep when the
sun is low in the sky. And Jaryn left.
     There was now much talk going  on in the town and its surrounding
villages. Once more, Jaryn looked out  over the peaceful people of the
land. They looked  just like the peasants of his  own land. They spoke
1the same  language as his  people. They had  the same simple  life his
people  did. Again,  he longed  for a  simple life;  more so  now than
before, since he  knew his life would  soon end. He wished  to see his
wife again, to  hold his son in  his arms once more, and  to taste the
wines his people made for the  summer festival one last time before he
died.
     He had had enough of this.  Honor and pride had given him nothing
in life, and had taken his father and three brothers from him besides.
He would not fight Kalen-Ord. He would not avenge his father. He would
go home, love his wife, raise his son, and rule his land.
     And  there was  Kalen-Ord, with  hundreds of  villagers following
him, out to see their lord defend his honor.

     The grey  stone visor hid the  stoney eyes beneath the  helm, the
last defense for the knight of stone.
     Kalen-Ord drew  up to  Jaryn and  asked him  where his  lance had
gone. I do not use a lance, Kalen-Ord, Jaryn replied. It is the weapon
which slew my father, and probably my  brothers, and so I will not use
it. I will not fight you, Kalen-Ord. I have changed my mind. Honor and
pride have only lost me my family, and I do not wish to die.
     You have  changed your  mind? Kalen-Ord  was much  surprised, and
slightly annoyed. I  wish I could accept that, young  von Gruen, but I
cannot.  You  have  challenged  me  in  the  presence  of  my  people,
dishonored me, and  called me a murderer. Your brothers  did so before
you, and I can  only hope Sir Karl did not have  more children such as
these. I tire of killing young souls  in the name of honor, but let it
be known that I never challenged them to battle. I sought to ally your
father to  me, those years  ago, when I  was fearful of  more powerful
lords. It was  his challenge I faced, when his  honor was bruised, and
it has been his sons' ever since. You cannot change your mind, boy, as
I cannot change the past.
     And so, he swung his horse  around and galloped a distance. Jaryn
would face the lance  of Kalen-Ord with but a sword.  He did not care.
He hoped  his son  would not follow  in his footsteps,  as he  and his
brothers had followed in their's.
     It was  decided in  the first pass  as Kalen-Ord's  lance knocked
Jaryn to the ground. The blood flowed slowly from his chest, his wound
barely worth the effort to heal  it. Stripping his helm from his face,
he spat on his sword and flung it from him.
     Kalen-Ord  rode to  him and  dismounted. My  honor is  satisfied,
young lord. I still have no wish to kill you. You may go in peace. And
Kalen-Ord,  Lord of  Caeredwyn,  rode  back to  his  keep, his  people
straggling behind.
     Jaryn rose to  his feet and looked at his  wound. It was nothing,
but it would scar and remind him of this day for the rest of his life.
He stripped  his armor from his  body and mounted his  horse. He would
return to the  house of his father,  now his house, and  love his wife
and hold his son and rule his lands.
     A grey statue of stone stood  in the graveyard of his father, the
figure of a knight on a charging war horse, the monument to his life.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                             Trial by Fire
                                Part II
                         Trial Before Tribunal
                         by M. Wendy Hennequin
                   (b.c.k.a. HENNEQUI_WEM@CTSTATEU)

     Luthias stormed  into the Duke of  Dargon's office as if  he were
the  god of  war. "Coranabo  has  accused my  Castellan of  conspiracy
against the crown!"
     Clifton blinked. "You're really having  a hard time of it lately,
aren't you?" he joked, smiling, but  the smile only adjusted the lips;
it didn't glow in the Duke's eyes.
     The teasing didn't  work. Luthias was furious.  "This is serious,
Clifton. There are witnesses! I have to try my own Castellan!"
     "Coranabo is saying that Ittosai--"
     "Yes, for the third time!" Luthias shouted, pounding his cousin's
desk. "The Tribunal wants the trial in two days."
     The Duke of Dargon leaned back  in his cushioned chair. "There is
evidence, you said?"
     "Witnesses...a witness.  A townsman,  who overheard  something at
the Sy tourney..."
     "Credible?"
     "I don't believe him," Luthias  revealed. "I know Michiya has too
much honor to--to--"  Luthias didn't even want to say  it, didn't want
to think it.
     "Yes, cousin," Clifton said carefully, "but there's a witness."
     "Am I to believe that scum  over my own Castellan?" Suddenly, the
young Baron  of Connall stared  at the  Duke in horror.  "Clifton, you
don't think that--"
     Clifton Dargon smiled. "My dear cousin,"  he said, a lilt of mild
mocking in his tones,  "if you, practical as you are,  can see all the
evidence and dismiss it as nonsense, so can I. Besides," he continued,
before Luthias could  become much angrier, "I agree  with you. Ittosai
Michiya is  much too honorable to  do such a thing.  Sit." Obligingly,
Luthias sunk into a chair. "Where is Ittosai?"
     "In Connall. I insisted that he be released into my custody."
     "What does he have to say about all this?"
     "What do  you expect?  Michiya told me  he was  innocent, that--"
What  had  Ittosai  said  exactly,  and what  had  the  witness  said?
Carefully,  Luthias told  his cousin  the  Duke what  the witness  had
reported, and what the Castellan of Connall had told him.
     Clifton frowned. "I am more inclined to believe Michiya."
     "As am  I." Luthias frowned.  "Yet I am the  one who must  try to
prove him guilty!"
     "I hate to  have to fight you, cousin," Clifton  sighed, "but I'm
going to defend him." Clifton grimaced. "War with Bichu...but both you
and Sir Edward agree that war with Bichu..."
     "Ittosai is falsely accused," Luthias said with conviction.
     "I know, manling,"  Clifton returned with gravity,  "but you must
try to prove the lies."

     Separating the Barony of Connall  from the Barony of Coranabo was
the wide river Coldwell which flowed from the mountains to Dargon, and
thence to  the sea.  Its shore  in Connall was  bordered by  trees, in
which Roisart, Luthias, Clifton, and Myrande had established a retreat
when they were younger. An archery range  and a pell had been long set
up for  private practicing. By a  bend in the river  where the Connall
twins and their cousin and Myrande often swam was a clearing they used
for picnics and privacy.
     Here Luthias came to escape his  own thoughts and his own barony.
1Here, by the river range, there were three things in the entire world:
the pell, his arm, and his sword. And the heat: stripped to the waist,
he imagined an enemy and fought.
     One blow,  then another. A triple  blow. A blow to  the waist, to
the head, to the right, to the  left. A twisting shot that wrapped his
sword to the helmet area.
     There was a horse coming slowly behind  him. He saw it out of the
corner of his eye, but did not stop. The horse was black and the rider
small: Sable. Luthias smiled slightly, and continued to fight.
     The contact of wooden sword and wooden pell rang in the woods and
beat out the rhythm of the fight. One blow, a second, two quick shots.
Keep the rhythm. Strength flowed from Luthias' arm, but the power came
from the movement of his body.  Without moving his arm, he could twist
and hit the pell and sound a ringing blow.
     On the helm  from the right, from the left,  a twisting blow that
would  hit from  behind. Right  arm. Left  arm. Right  leg. Left  leg.
Thrust. Thrust to  the face. Helm right, helm left,  helm thrust, helm
wrap. Right leg, left leg...
     Finally,  a soft  pair of  arms gently  encircled his  waist. The
Baron of  Connall smiled and  allowed his  tired arm to  drop. Panting
only slightly, he  said, "I wondered how long you  were going to stand
there and watch me."
     Her hair  brushed against  his sweaty  back. "You  look beautiful
when you fight, Luthias," she replied softly.
     The Baron  of Connall laughed  heartily. "You look  beautiful all
the time." He put his free, left hand over her arms.
     "Don't mock  me," she  warned, slightly  testy, starting  to draw
away.
     "Never, Sable," he promised  sincerely, patting her wrists. "So,"
he continued in a light, jesting tone,  "did you come out here only to
admire my body, or are you going to practice with me?"
     Luthias  could  almost  feel  his  seneschal's  smile.  "Neither,
actually," she bantered playfully. "I came here to seduce you."
     "Mmmm," Luthias  chuckled deep in  his throat with  amusement and
anticipation. Slowly, he reached his left  arm in back of him and drew
Myrande forward as he savored the idea.
     My father will return from the dead and kill me!
     Still, it  reminded him of something  he had been trying  to tell
Myrande  before   the  tournament.   He  looked   down  at   her,  not
relinquishing the embrace. "We must talk, Sable."
     "Can it wait?" she pleaded.
     "For what?"
     "For the real reason I came  here. The Knight Commander's come to
see you."
     The young Baron of Connall wasn't certain whether to feel despair
or amusement. "And here I am, sweating and dirty!"
     Myrande patted his  stomach lightly. "How do you think  he got to
be Knight Commander? By practicing on  the pell and getting sweaty and
dirty! In  any case,  I knew you  were practicing so  I brought  you a
change of clothes. Why  don't you leap into the river  to wash some of
the dust off?"
     Luthias nodded, squeezed her waist  once, then ran off toward the
river. He  stripped off his breeches  and dived into the  Coldwell. It
usually was a chill river, especially as far north as Connall was, but
with the  recent heat  wave, it was  actually warm.  Luthias submerged
himself,  then rose  to see  Myrande laying  out his  clothing on  the
grass. Luthias began to swim toward shore.
     "Give me a minute," Myrande requested.
     "For what?"
     "To give you some privacy."
1     Luthias snorted. "You've seen me like this before."
     "Only by accident."
     It was true; still, the Baron Connall's laugh echoed like a merry
shout, "You come  here and admire my  body, and now you  don't want to
see it!" Myrande  shook her head and made her  escape. Luthias laughed
again, left the water, and dressed himself.
     He met Myrande  near the pell. Eyes closed, she  was lying on the
grass,  resting near  her steed.  Luthias reached  down to  touch her.
"Come on, sleepy."
     She opened her  eyes and smiled. "Yes, sir."  Luthias offered his
hand, and,  taking it, Myrande  pulled herself to a  sitting position.
Gingerly, she felt  at the chopsticks which she  had placed, crossing,
in  the  back  of  her  head,   above  the  dark  braid.  "That  isn't
comfortable," she chuckled.
     "Why wear them, then?" Luthias asked, hauling her to her feet.
     "Michiya  advised it,  with all  the fuss  about Shipbrook,"  she
revealed, smiling. "I think he's afraid for me."
     "What good are those things going to do you?"
     Myrande reached back and pulled forth one of the ivory sticks for
Luthias' inspection. The  Baron of Connall took it and  glanced at its
steel-tipped point. Carefully, he pricked  his finger with the tip. It
was  sharp as  a dagger.  "They're used  in Bichu  as weapons  of last
resort,"  Myrande explained.  "Michiya  wants to  make  certain I  can
defend myself at all times."
     "Good," Luthias  approved, returning  the ornament.  "Michiya's a
good  man, and  he's right:  you should  be ready  and able  to defend
yourself at all times."
     "Do you suspect more trouble with Baron Shipbrook?"
     "Not really," Luthias told her,  "but I still want you prepared."
He smiled  tiredly. "And  I was going  to grow up  to be  your Knight,
Sable, to protect you from this sort of thing."
     Smiling, Myrande  slipped her  small arm  around his  waist. "You
do," she assured him, standing on her toes to kiss his cheek. "And you
will be a Knight someday."
     The Baron grinned at her quietly.  "Let's hope so, Sable. Are you
ready to go?"
     "Of  course.  Where's  Dragonfire?"  she  inquired,  looking  for
Luthias' horse.
     "I walked. We'll have to ride together." He swung onto the mare's
back and, without asking, lifted Myrande  to sit in front of him. With
one hand,  he took the  reins; with his  left, he held  his seneschal.
Slowly, he started the horse. As much as he wanted to hurry, he didn't
want to ride the animal too hard: it was infernally hot. He would have
to make his  excuses to the Knight Commander when  they arrived. For a
while, they rode silently.
     "Did Sir  Edward say  what he  wanted to see  me for?"  the Baron
asked his seneschal finally.
     She shook her head. "No. I was wondering, but I didn't ask."
     Luthias thought about it. "He probably  wants to talk to me about
Magnus."
     "Magnus?"
     "He wants me to go to Magnus to train under him. He says I'd be a
Knight by the next Melrin."
     Suddenly, Myrande  looked up  at Luthias with  elated admiration.
"When are you leaving?"
     Luthias was  silent a moment.  He guided  the horse around  a few
stones. "I may not go."
     Sable's expression snapped into concern and confusion. "What? But
all your life, you've wanted--"
     "Do  you   think  I'd  leave  you?"   Luthias  challenged,  anger
1smoldering beneath his words.
     "I don't understand," Myrande answered  slowly. "I'm a woman now,
Luthias. You don't need to stay here and protect me--"
     "With Oleran--"
     "Michiya's been  making certain that  no man would ever  touch me
unless I  allow it," Myrande  retorted, her words crisp.  "Besides, do
you think I would ever allow you to give up your dream because of me?"
     After a moment of silence, Luthias  said, "Sable, I don't want to
leave you."
     "What?" Myrande  asked, as if  she couldn't believe what  she had
heard.
     "I don't want  to leave you," Luthias repeated, and  it was true.
Luthias wasn't certain why, but it was true.
     Myrande bowed her  head. "Then I'll go with you.  I won't let you
give up any chance for Knighthood because of me."
     Luthias smiled. "What would you do in Magnus?"
     "What do I do here?" she  returned, smiling at him. "If you don't
want to leave me, I'll go with  you." She bowed her head again. "Truth
be told, I  don't want you to leave me.  Now," she concluded, resuming
her jocularity, "no more arguments--or excuses."
     Of course,  if she by  some miracle  approved his other  idea, it
would be normal  that she go with him to  Magnus..."We'll talk later,"
he promised both her and himself. "We'll see."
     They soon  arrived at  the keep.  Luthias tossed  the reins  to a
stable lad. "Where's the Knight Commander?" he asked Myrande.
     "In the study."
     "When  you get  a break,  join me  there," Luthias  commanded. He
nodded to her once then hurried through the halls to his study.
     When he arrived,  the Knight Commander was  standing opposite the
cold hearth, staring  at the portrait that hung  there. Sothos turned.
"Baron," he greeted Luthias, stepping forward and offering his hand.
     Luthias shook the hand heartily.  "Sorry to keep you waiting, Sir
Edward," the young Baron apologized. "I was out practicing."
     "So  Lady Myrande  said." The  Knight Commander  smiled. "As  I'm
expecting  war, Luthias,  I can  wait  for a  warrior who  practices."
Luthias returned  the smile  thinly. Edward gazed  up at  the picture,
which portrayed a tall beauty with auburn hair, smiling blue eyes, and
skin the color of apple blossoms. "A relative of yours?"
     Luthias glanced at  the portrait quickly, then  averted his eyes.
"My mother."
     "I don't remember meeting her when  I visited Sir Lucan all those
years ago," Edward mused.
     "I  should  think not,"  Luthias  returned,  his smile  strained.
"She's  been  dead  twenty-one  years. My  father  never  removed  the
portrait, however."  Out of respect  for his father, Luthias  vowed he
never would, either, but he didn't  want to talk about his mother. "To
what do I owe this visit, Sir Edward?"
     "You have Castellan Ittosai here in your keep, correct?"
     Luthias nodded. "The Tribunal allowed,  at my insistence, that he
be in my custody."
     Sir Edward sat. "Be so good as to summon him."
     Luthias opened the door and  bellowed for one of the men-at-arms.
"Bring the Castellan to the study, and treat him respectfully."
     "Of course, Baron," the soldier agreed, confused. Luthias smiled;
despite the  rumors of  war and the  accusations against  Ittosai, the
men-at-arms of Connall still respected him.
     "It  seems  your  men  have  no  suspicion  of  Ittosai,"  Edward
observed.
     "Some  do,"  Luthias  confessed.   "I'm  having  Macdougalls,  my
assistant castellan,  keep an rein  on them.  Some have been  ready to
1tear  him  apart ever  since  Yuli,  when  the  rumors about  the  war
started."
     The Knight Commander made a face. "I would suspect."
     There was  a discreet  knock on  the door.  Luthias opened  it. A
guard  stood with  Ittosai Michiya,  who stared  directly through  the
young Baron. "Leave us," Connall told the guard curtly. The man looked
confused, but  bowed spartanly and  obeyed. Luthias shut the  door and
turned  to  Sir Edward.  "The  Knight  Commander  wanted to  see  you,
Michiya."
     Aloof, Ittosai bowed toward Sothos.  "I am wondering," Sir Edward
began, his  face stern, "what  you think of these  accusations against
you, Lord Ittosai."
     The Bichanese  Castellan's face  was immobile. "They  are absurd,
lord Commander."
     "You are not guilty, then?"
     Again, Michiya's face did not move;  he was too proud to show his
emotions. Luthias, however, could tell that his Castellan was seething
at the fact that anyone would question his honor. "I would not do such
a  dishonorable  act, nor  would  I  dishonor  Luthias-sama so.  I  am
innocent."
     Suddenly, Sir Edward's face relaxed. "I believe you," he revealed
matter-of-factly. "And you, Luthias, what do you think?"
     "I know  Michiya well enough to  know he would do  no such thing,
and that he would not lie to me," Connall affirmed, his voice guarded.
He didn't know what this was leading to, but he didn't like it. "He is
innocent."
     Ittosai Michiya's  mouth twitched  a little  towards a  smile. "I
think I am  being used as...what is it?...a  scapegoat, because people
fear the war and fear my country will invade yours."
     "It's  more than  that, I  think," Edward  sighed. "Luthias,  why
would anyone bring charges against Castellan Ittosai?"
     "It's as  he said,"  Luthias began.  "The people  are mad  to see
war--"
     "No!" Sothos  interrupted quickly, "You're thinking  as a lawyer,
Luthias. It doesn't become you. Think as a general."
     Luthias' mind  raced. If he were  a general, why would  he accuse
Ittosai? "The  war. They're  trying to  start a  war with  Bichu!" The
Baron of  Connall swore violently.  "It's the same reason  they killed
Roisart and my father. The same  God-damned merchants who hired men to
kill my brother  are accusing Ittosai and are trying  again to start a
war!"
     "I  too  came  to   that  conclusion,"  Edward  finished  softly.
"However, I  didn't know that  merchants were behind the  plot against
Lord Dargon  and your  father." The  Knight Commander  appeared deeply
concerned. "You must prove this false, Luthias. A war with Bichu would
be a major mistake."
     "The King  must declare war,"  Luthias pointed out. "It  would be
easy to advise him otherwise--"
     "If the mob is like this, there will be no help for it."
     "He speaks truth," Ittosai  interjected. "The King cannot control
hysterical men."
     "And there are war-mongers in  Magnus," Edward added. "You've got
to find a way to expose this accusation."
     "You should be having this  talk with Clifton," Luthias protested
grimly. "I  am the  one who  is trying to  prove these  jack-asses are
right."
     "The Duke of  Dargon is an intelligent and  educated man," Edward
said, "but he might not see the connection you did."
     "Don't underestimate him," Luthias laughed shortly, but the laugh
was  not  merry. The  anger  that  he had  beaten  into  the pell  was
1returning, fast  and furious as  floodwaters. "He reads books  of war,
too."
     "You must do something," Edward  repeated. "The Duke will put his
Duchy before principle."
     "He's  not defending  principle  here,"  Luthias returned.  "He's
defending Michiya!"
     "Luthias-sama," Michiya began, "you truly understand, as the Duke
does not--"
     "Don't you  see?" Luthias snapped.  "I am the Duke's  Advocate. I
can't defend you. I know they're  wrong. I know this whole business is
wrong. War with  Bichu is wrong. But  I can't do anything!  I can't do
anything!"
     Another knock sounded. "What?" Luthias demanded angrily. Myrande,
in a  streaked dress, poked her  head just inside the  study. "What do
you want?"
     Concern  laced with  anger adorned  her face.  She paused,  as if
unsure  which  emotion  should  take  precedence.  Tact  and  courtesy
overruled  them both.  "I  came  to ask  if  the  Knight Commander  is
remaining for supper."
     "Please do," Luthias invited, his politeness somehow not strained
by anger. But he was angry--furious!--at  the Tribunal, at the mob, at
the  merchants, and  at himself,  for he  had taken  his anger  out on
Myrande.
     "With  pleasure," Sothos  accepted, smiling.  The grin  did funny
things to his scar, Luthias thought dispassionately.
     The  seneschal nodded  and began  to shut  the door,  but Luthias
halted it  with his  hand. "I'm sorry,  Sable," he  apologized softly.
"Look, we  need to talk."  She smiled, accepting his  apology, nodded,
and shut the door.
     And  then he  remembered: the  trial was  tomorrow. With  company
tonight, he would  not have a chance  to speak to Sable  for two days.
Damn!

     The heat  still prevailed,  and on the  day of  Ittosai Michiya's
trial before the Tribunal, the sun  rose an ominous scarlet. The Baron
of Connall,  swathed in the  hue of  that bloody sunrise,  entered the
Hall of  the Tribunal within Dargon  Keep in the same  manner he would
have approached  a battlefield. He  looked so fierce at  the injustice
and his own impotence that no one, not even Sir Edward who had come to
observe, dared to say a word  against the sword he had improperly worn
into a court of law.
     Seeing his  placid cousin  and stoic  Castellan calmed  Luthias a
little,  but  did nothing  to  cool  his rage.  There  was  a year  of
injustice  behind it:  his father's  meaningless death,  his brother's
sudden  murder, his  new,  horrible  responsibilities, Sable's  broken
heart, and now  this...this! his friend accused of  conspiracy. And he
had to  prove it.  And he knew  better; he knew  better! He  knew, Sir
Edward knew, and there was nothing either of them could do.
     Luthias  bowed to  the  Tribunal, who  sat up  on  a dais:  Baron
Coranabo to his right; Baron Vladon  in the center; and Baron Winthrop
on  the left.  In front  of the  dais was  a table,  behind which  sat
Chronicler Rish Vogel, whom Luthias  knew slightly. Apparently, he was
acting as Scrivener in the case.  Behind Luthias were two benches, one
for him and the other for the accused.
     Baron Vladon, as  elected head of the Tribunal,  spoke softly and
solemnly. "We are familiar with  this case," he addressed both Clifton
and Luthias. "We  know that Castellan Ittosai--" How  they mangled his
very name! "--is accused of conspiring  against the King of Baranur to
begin a  war with Bichu.  You have witnesses, Baron  Connall?" Luthias
nodded. "And you, your grace?" Clifton nodded once. "Advocate, begin."
1     Luthias  stood. "As  you have  said, sir,"  he began,  "Castellan
Ittosai Michiya is accused of conspiracy against the Crown. The charge
was made  by one  merchant called  Danal. I  call forth  this merchant
Danal to testify."
     A mousy man with greedy eyes  slunk forward like an animal afraid
of a beating. He  bowed to the Barons on the  Tribunal, then faced the
Duke's Advocate, who  glared at him with merciless eyes.  "You heard a
conversation," Luthias prompted, "between two men."
     "Yes, so please your lordship,"  answered the merchant. His voice
was  high-pitched  and  nervous.  It grated  upon  Luthias'  ears  and
increased  his  rage. "Between  that  man--"  He pointed  wickedly  at
Ittosai Michiya,  who sat erect  and unmoving beside the  Duke, "--and
another man of his country."
     "Who was this other?"
     "A merchant, who  sold near my stall.  I do not know  his name. I
saw the Castellan walk away with  two swords and some chop sticks from
this other merchant."
     Oh, Michiya, Luthias thought desperately, my katana and the sharp
hair pieces for Sable. Presents,  mere presents! Why couldn't you have
waited? "And where is he now?"
     "I don't know, lordship. I haven't seen him since that day."
     Luthias switched his gaze to the  Tribunal. "I have sent the city
guards in  search of this  merchant. It seems  that he left  for Bichu
that afternoon,  before the  ball." Baron  Vladon nodded,  and Luthias
continued. "What did this merchant and the Castellan say?"
     "They spoke of Bichu," Danal whined, "and a coming invasion."
     "What did they say?" Luthias repeated.
     "I told you," the man wheezed. "They spoke of the coming invasion
that Bichu plans to send."
     Clifton stood. Luthias looked at  him, unsure. Didn't he have the
floor? "I invoke the right of the Defender to interject questions when
I so deem,"  Clifton announced, by way of  explanation. Luthias nodded
his  permission.  "Did  they  speak of  the  *rumors*  concerning  the
invasion?"
     "They  spoke  of battle  plans,"  Danal  corrected, wringing  his
greedy, sweaty hands. Luthias found himself wishing to strike the man.
"Of a time table. And of some men here helping them."
     "Did they say how they were involved?" Luthias asked.
     "That man--" Again, the ugly,  knobby man pointed his dagger-like
finger and knife-like  gaze at Luthias' Castellan. "--was  to open the
river Coldwell to  the Bichanese ships. They were then  to take Dargon
City and Dargon Keep."
     Out of the corner of his  eye, Luthias saw the Knight Commander's
scar twitch with displeasure. Take the Coldwell River, then Dargon and
Dargon  Keep?  Luthias almost  snorted.  The  Coldwell would  hold  no
strategic value; Dargon was too well  fortified to take, and the Ducal
navy, headed by Clifton himself who  was a good seaman by inclination,
would  take out  any Bichanese  ships as  if they  were toys.  Luthias
angrily hoped that  this was a bold  lie. He would hate  to think that
the Bichanese were that stupid.
     "How  did  you  understand   them?"  Clifton  inquired,  relaxing
slightly. "Did they not speak Bichanese?"
     "I understand Bichanese," the merchant told the Duke proudly.
     Rish  Vogel shifted  uncomfortably. Suddenly,  Luthias remembered
that  Vogel  spoke  Bichanese.  It  would   be  a  good  test  of  the
witness...but surely, Clifton  would bring that up later.  It was just
the sort of angle Clifton would try.
     "They spoke of men here who were to help them," Danal finished.
     "Men in  Baranur aligned  with them?"  Baron Winthrop  burst out.
"Who? I demand it!"
1     "They mentioned no names," Danal  revealed, slowly, as if he were
calculating  something.  Behind  him,  the Baron  of  Coranabo  leaned
forward in his seat. "But they did mention a Duke."
     "A Duke?" Coranabo shouted, leaping to his feet. The Baron glared
at the Duke of Dargon. "No wonder you sprang to the spy's defense!"
     For a moment, the Duke of Dargon could do nothing but stare. "You
accuse me  of treason?" Clifton  finally asked, his voice  hoarse with
astonishment.
     "I do," Coranabo stated firmly.
     Very, very slowly, Luthias turned  toward Coranabo. "My lord," he
began,  his  voice steady,  but  very  controlled,  "this is  a  heavy
accusation you make. You need proof--"
     "Did not the merchant say the Duke--"
     "The merchant," Luthias interrupted,  his fists curled so tightly
that they glowed white, "said *a* Duke. Not the Duke of Dargon."
     Sir Edward Sothos, behind Luthias, rose. Baron Vladon spoke. "You
know that  when the highest noble  of the Duchy is  accused, Coranabo,
the matter is brought before the King. The Duke's Advocate is correct.
The word  of a mere  merchant is hardly enough  to accuse the  Duke of
Dargon for  treason before the  Crown of Baranur. The  Duke's Advocate
will need proof of a more substantial sort to try the case, if one can
be made, before King Haralan."
     "Very well," Coranabo replied easily.  "The matter can be settled
simply enough.  If the Duke  is involved, there  will be some  sort of
indication in his home, will there not?"
     "I  cannot   believe  this,"   Clifton  interjected,   anger  and
incredulity spilling over. "I am no traitor!"
     "Then allow us to search your keep," Coranabo argued. "If you are
innocent, as you say, then the search can do no harm."
     Helplessly, Luthias turned to his cousin. "He's right, you know,"
he whispered. "And unless you allow the search, he'll bring you before
the King himself."
     Scowling,  Clifton waved  his permission  and turned  away. Baron
Vladon  stood. "Bring  the accused,"  he instructed  calmly. Two  city
guards came forward, but  did not lay a hand on  either Ittosai or the
Duke. Ominously, Luthias  left the room, and the rest  followed him to
Dargon Keep.
     "It's all  right, Lauren," Clifton  said softly to his  wife when
they entered, but  his eyes betrayed everything. One  look at Luthias'
smoldering eyes flooded her face with panic.
     "What is it?" she whispered.
     "Stupidity, nothing," Clifton returned as Luthias angrily ordered
the search.
     "The trial?"
     Clifton closed  his eyes. "Nothing--worse--where is  your father?
Send for him."
     As the Duchess did so, a  soldier walked up to Luthias. "The desk
in the office is locked."
     Luthias' mouth became taut. "Your grace," he addressed his cousin
formally, "I will need the key."
     Clifton's  eyes raged  at  his younger  cousin,  and angrily,  he
reached in his  pocket. "I'll do it," the Duke  decided, marching into
the study.
     The Baron  of Connall followed,  hurt that his  cousin apparently
blamed  this on  him.  What could  he  do about  it?  The Duke  halted
abruptly before his desk, thrust the key into its hole, and yanked the
drawer open.  He stepped  back and  threw a  contemptuous look  at the
soldiers and the Tribunal. "There. Look if you must."
     Luthias frowned and turned to  leave. He couldn't remain in here.
His  cousin's  arm stopped  him.  "Hey,  manling," Clifton  whispered,
1looking  where  the  soldiers   searched,  supervised  by  Vladon  and
Coranabo, "I'm sorry. This isn't your fault."
     "This is ridiculous," Luthias replied. "I--"
     "So  you  are  innocent?" Coranabo  yelled  triumphantly,  almost
dancing to the Duke. "Kindly explain this!"
     He held out a large piece of parchment, heavily embossed with the
Duke's  seal. Concerned,  Clifton  took  it, read  it  over. "I  don't
understand this," he muttered. "It's my hand...my signature...but I've
never seen this document before in my life."
     Luthias frantically snatched it, read it, recognized his cousin's
seal and signature as easily as the Duke himself had.
     And then he stared at his cousin, pain and horror in his eyes.

     With a heavy,  worried look on her face,  Myrande Shipbrook raced
through  her duties.  Something  was wrong,  very  wrong, and  Luthias
wasn't talking. Nothing new: he and Roisart had almost never spoken to
her about their troubles.
     Yet, whatever was  so wrong couldn't be left  in silence. Myrande
shuddered when she  recalled how Luthias appeared when  he returned to
Connall Keep  alone. His face was  pale, full of shock,  horror, pain,
and yes, fear. The look had  frightened her. She had only seen Luthias
look that  way once  before. It  was the night  Roisart had  died, and
Luthias  became  Baron;  he  had been  stunned,  appalled,  hurt,  and
terrified then, too.
     "My  lady," Mika,  her assistant  called, "all  is ready  for the
storm."
     Myrande nodded. She had been watching the storm come since before
sunset. Lightning had started soon after,  and the winds were high and
hard. Myrande could hear them, even in the little keep that served the
Connall family as  a town house. She  went to the wall  and opened the
window. Now, nearing midnight, the warm, rushing wind smelled of rain.
Lightning flashed  across the sky, cutting  it cleanly. It would  be a
ravaging  storm, no  worse  than  the one  that  was  laying waste  to
Luthias.
     Damn it all! What could it  be? Myrande had no clue. The servants
that had accompanied Luthias knew  nothing. Luthias had dismounted his
horse slowly, looked  at her once, and went straight  to his study and
closed the  door tightly. Myrande had  called him, had knocked  on the
study door, but had not received an answer.
     Enough. Myrande  gave a few  final instructions to  the servants.
Let  them finish  the duties  by themselves  for once!  Luthias needed
her--now!
     With a swift, determined stride, she  made her way to the Baron's
study  and tried  the door.  Locked.  Myrande's lips  tightened for  a
moment, then  she grasped the keys  which hung on her  belt. Normally,
she wouldn't have even thought of  unlocking the door and intruding on
Luthias' privacy, but this was important, and by God, what was the use
of being seneschal if you couldn't use your keys? She quickly unlocked
the door and shoved it open.
     "Go away,  Sable!" Luthias called  angrily from behind  the desk.
Myrande swayed backward  a moment, his rage greeting her  like a blow.
The study was  dark, except for a  fire in the hearth,  and the abrupt
flares of  lightning from outside. The  window of the study  was open,
and the wind  whipped the curtains and Luthias'  hair mercilessly. The
Baron himself  was standing,  tall, ominous, and  half-dressed, behind
his desk. In his left hand,  he held a half-empty brandy decanter. The
other hand held his  glass. His shirt and the red  tunic of his office
lay flung  on the floor. The  look of fright, hurt,  shock, and horror
remained,  but  it was  now  flavored  with  fury.  He stared  at  his
seneschal coldly and gulped some of the amber brandy as if in defiance
1of her.
     Myrande almost shuddered; for the first time in her life, Luthias
actually was frightening her instead of projecting safety. Determined,
however, she stood her ground and shut the door behind her.
     "Luthias," she insisted,  her words distorted by  the wind, "tell
me what happened."
     "You've got enough  to worry about," he  snapped, pouring himself
some  more liquor.  He  spoke clearly  and  held himself  confidently.
Luthias  had always  done  well holding  his  liquor; still,  drinking
enhanced whatever  emotions had made him  want to imbibe in  the first
place. Myrande was afraid.
     "It's the same  as always, isn't it?" she  accused softly, slowly
crossing the room. "You and Roisart, always the same. Whenever you had
joy, you shared it with me  willingly, but if something was wrong, you
two would withdraw into yourselves and--"
     "We didn't want  to trouble you then,"  Luthias snarled, slamming
the brandy onto the desk. He drained his glass without flinching. "You
have enough problems now. I don't need you. Leave me alone!"
     "No," she denied  flatly. She held herself  regally, although his
tone whipped her and she wanted  to run and hide. "What happened? Have
they condemned Michiya?"
     Luthias  laughed in  a  bitter, furious  way. "Practically.  They
won't even listen, the bastards, and now Clifton!"
     Myrande's fear heightened. "What about Clifton?"
     "He's a traitor, that's what!"  the Baron of Connall screamed. He
lifted  the brandy  decanter  to  his lips  and  drained  some of  the
honey-colored liquid. "They found the evidence in his own desk--in his
own hand!"
     "Clifton,  a  traitor?"  Myrande   gasped  finally.  Outside,  an
explosion of lightning seared the sky. Thunder tried to mask Myrande's
words. "You can't really believe that Clifton's a traitor!"
     "I tell  you, I saw  it!" Luthias raged.  "I SAW it!  My cousin's
condemned to die, traitor  or no, and Michiya with him,  and I have to
do it!"
     "What  are you  talking about?"  She was  beginning to  fear that
Luthias was hysterical or delirious.  Lightning flared again. The rain
was beginning, falling violently against the keep.
     "I  have to  try my  cousin for  treason in  front of  the King!"
Luthias shouted  shrilly. "I  have to  prove my  cousin a  traitor! In
front of King  Haralan! It isn't true!" the Baron  screamed, "It can't
be  true! I  have to  prove it  true! Oh,  God!" he  shouted, laughing
bitterly at the ceiling. Lightning again, and thunder. "My only living
kinsman--and I have to make him a traitor!"
     "Make someone else  try him," Myrande suggested  readily, like an
arrow ready  to spring  at any  target. The  wind projected  hard rain
through the window.
     "Kingdom law, Sable!" he yelled at her, swinging the bottle, then
drinking from it. "I'm the Duke's Advocate, and when the highest noble
in the Duchy  commits a crime, I  have to try him before  the King. My
God, Clifton!" He drank again.
     Suddenly, Myrande could take it  no more. She leapt forward. "You
can't believe Clifton a traitor!" Thunder roared outside, and the rain
whistled on the wind.
     "How can  I believe anything  else?" Luthias screamed at  her. "I
saw it, I SAW  IT! I have to try him, see him  die, become the Duke of
Dargon! I have to see my last kinsman die a traitor!"
     He moved  to drink again,  but Myrande wrested the  decanter from
his hands. "Do  you think this will help you?"  Myrande yelled at him,
and enraged,  she flung the  brandy onto  the stone hearth.  The glass
exploded into a crystal shower; the flame flared brilliantly blue from
1the brandy. There was explosive thunder.  "I can help you, Luthias, if
you'd talk to me!"
     "You help me?  You won't even let me help  you," Luthias shouted,
taking her by the shoulders. "What the hell am I going to do? What the
hell do you think you can do?" He shook her violently. "Tell me!"
     "Ask the King!"  Myrande managed to shout somehow.  Her brain was
rattling in her  skull. Lightning split her eyes and  blinded her. "Or
reason it out. Ask the King."
     "What?" Luthias  laughed haughtily.  "The King?  The King  help a
traitor?  Help  me?  You're  joking! And  reasoning  it  out--I'm  not
Roisart!  I'm a  fighter, not  a  lawyer!" He  released her  abruptly.
"There's nothing  you could do!"  he told her bitterly.  Suddenly, the
rage left his face,  and he sank into a chair, his  head in his hands.
"There's nothing to be done," he whispered, choking.
     Myrande knelt  before him and put  her arms around him.  The rain
spattered  through the  window,  dampening them  both.  "When are  you
leaving?" she whispered.
     "Tomorrow,"  came  the  muffled  answer.  "We  sail  from  Dargon
tomorrow, then down to the Laraka."
     "You should get  some sleep," she said gently,  stroking his hair
in an effort to soothe him. She  shuddered as the wind chilled her wet
skin. "You'll be dead tomorrow if you don't."
     "What does it matter?" the Baron asked bitterly.
     "Come, Luthias,"  she cajoled. "It  matters to me." She  took his
head between  her small hands and  forced him to look  at her. Despair
and lightning glowed in his dark eyes. "It matters to me." Wordlessly,
she  coaxed him  to his  feet  and led  him  to his  room. Again,  his
expression  worried  her;  he  oozed   despair.  "Go  to  sleep,"  she
counseled, seating him on his bed.
     Suddenly,  Luthias was  clinging to  her, his  grip like  frantic
iron. "Sable, Sable, what am I going to do?"
     "I don't know," she whispered. "I don't know."
     "Sable,  Sable," he  cried, rocking  as if  to comfort  himself a
little. "There's going to be no one left. I'll have no one."
     "No," she  said, pulling back  to see  his face. She  touched his
cheek  tenderly. "I'm  here, Luthias.  I'll always  be here."  Myrande
gently brushed  some hair out  of his  dark eyes. "You'll  always have
me."
     "Oh,  Sable," the  Baron said  suddenly, pulling  her close,  and
within  moments,  Myrande  found herself  being  kissed  passionately.
Luthias was  equally surprised,  though slightly  distant, due  to the
alcohol. Still, it felt  good to hold her, to kiss  her, and he didn't
let go, wouldn't let go, no, not ever.
     Luthias  didn't know  how long  the kisses  lasted, but  then his
hands were  moving carefully,  subtly--he had  had much  practice. Her
black hair  unwound beneath  his hands,  and it  felt like  velvet and
smelled of  roses. His hands  continued to move slowly,  carefully; he
did not want to frighten her. One thing at a time, slowly.
     He felt Myrande  uncertainly returning the caresses.  He held her
more tightly then,  shifted his weight, started to lower  her onto the
bed--
     Abruptly,  she  pushed  him  away. "You're  drunk,"  she  accused
roughly, then fled the room.
     Luthias buried his head in his hands and tried to scream, but was
silent.  He had  just ruined  everything--with the  one person  he had
left.

     Only an hour  past dawn, the sunlight was so  bright that Ittosai
Michiya had to bow his head in order to guide his horse on the road to
Dargon. The heat made his stomach  queasy; that was why, the Bichurian
1mused, that neither he, nor the silent, still Luthias, nor the hurried
seneschal, could eat much in the dark hours before dawn.
     The hot air oppressed Michiya; it was never so warm in Bichu. The
sun seared his eyes. He was glad that they would soon be in Dargon and
leaving for  Magnus; if he  were to be doomed,  let it come,  and come
quickly. He had had quite enough of this horrid waiting.
     If that  weren't enough,  the silence  was driving  the Castellan
mad. Luthias had  barely spoken to Ittosai that morning,  and what the
Baron had said was brief and  gruff. Myrande, who rode beside Michiya,
had been  hurried before they left  the little keep Luthias  kept just
outside Dargon and had no time to talk; now, Luthias silence seemed to
weigh on her as well.
     But enough. "If  you do not like something,"  Michiya's uncle had
once told him, "you  must do something, and not wait  for others to do
it for you."
     The Castellan began softly, "Why did you come with us, Myrande?"
     Her  head jerked  toward him  as  if she  were startled.  Ittosai
smiled  at her  in an  effort to  reassure her;  Myrande returned  the
gesture, but the smile was  exhausted. "Someone should be with Duchess
Lauren today."
     Crisply, Ittosai nodded. "It is well. I have no desire for you to
be  alone. This  business  with the  Baron of  Shipbrook  has made  me
uneasy."
     Myrande made an effort to laugh, but like her smile, her laughter
was full of fatigue. "Don't worry; I can take care of myself."
     "Still,   practice  much   with  the   naginata,  and   wear  the
chopsticks."  Myrande reached  back  and plucked  one  from her  hair.
Michiya smiled. "Will you stay with the Duchess?"
     "For a few days, perhaps."
     "They're waiting  for us," Luthias muttered  suddenly, looking at
Ittosai, then swiftly turning when he found Myrande's eyes upon him.
     An astonished  Ittosai stared  at his Baron,  then turned  to the
seneschal. "Did you and Luthias-sama have a fight?" he whispered.
     Her eyes,  concerned, stared  past the  Castellan at  his master.
"What? No," she revealed, sighing. "This trial..."
     "Is he ill? He did not eat his breakfast. His color is not good."
     Myrande compressed her lips and  looked past the Castellan at the
young Baron  of Connall. His  eyes were red,  as if from  weeping; his
complexion was a  ghastly gray. Luthias was clenching  his jaw. "Yes,"
she answered softly,  "he is sick." Eyes dark with  sorrow, she turned
to Michiya. "Take care of him, will you?"
     "I could never do that,"  Ittosai replied ruefully, but smiling a
little. "He  would never allow  anyone but you  to take care  of him."
Myrande  bowed  her head.  "It  is  you who  must  take  care of  him,
Myrande-san," the  Castellan gently corrected  as he looked  ahead. "I
have no hope  for this trial, and--" Confused, his  voice raised. "Why
is the High Mage waiting for us?"
     "We'll find out," Luthias returned gruffly. Like Ittosai, he kept
his eyes on  the waiting group: the Tribunal,  Winthrop, Coranabo, and
Baron Vladon;  Sir Edward  Sothos, the Knight  Commander; the  Duke of
Dargon and  his Duchess; and,  sitting calmly on his  mount, Marcellon
Equiville, the  High Mage. Ittosai made  to spur his horse  ahead, but
Luthias abruptly held out his arm to  stop him. "Don't go ahead of me;
they'll suspect  you of  trying to escape,"  the Baron  winced against
some unknown pain. Ittosai paused.
     "I do  want you to know  that I know you're  not guilty," Myrande
started softly, "and I--"
     "No  more, Myrande,"  Michiya cut  her  off swiftly.  "It is  all
right."
     "Are  you  ready then,  Baron  Connall?"  Baron Vladon  asked  as
1Luthias  and his  party approached.  Worried, Michiya  watched as  the
Baron nodded painfully. "Good day,  Lady Myrande. Gentlemen, pray join
us."
     "Why  are you  here?" Luthias  bluntly asked  the High  Mage. The
physician turned to him, a doctor's concern evident in his expression.
"Don't you think you should stay with Lauren?"
     Gently, the  High Mage returned, "It  is my right, as  a noble of
Baranur,  to  defend  Clifton  and  Michiya.  Besides,"  he  continued
wistfully, "I have been neglecting my  duties as High Mage of late. It
is time I return to the King."
     "Enough," Coranabo interrupted angrily. "We are wasting time. Let
us leave. The ship  is waiting." He turned to the  Duke of Dargon, who
was tenderly kissing his wife good-bye. "Bind the traitors."
     "No!"  Luthias' denial  rang  like a  clap  of thunder.  Coranabo
turned to him  sharply. The furious Baron of Connall  stared him down.
"They  are not  traitors until  the King  decrees," Luthias  explained
curtly, his color paling. "I will not allow them to be bound."
     "That is your decision,  Advocate," Baron Vladon agreed smoothly.
"If you are ready, Duke Dargon."
     "My horse..." Clifton began, motioning for one of his servants.
     "Here,  take  mine," Myrande  offered,  sliding  from her  mount.
Clifton smiled at  her briefly and threw himself into  the saddle. The
seneschal smiled her good-bye to Ittosai; she then turned to the young
Baron. "Luthias..."
     He didn't  turn his head.  "Good-bye, Sable," he took  his leave,
and abruptly he spurred his  horse away, leaving the sorrowful Duchess
and the seneschal behind him.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
   (C) Copyright September,  1989, DargonZine. All rights  revert to the
authors. These  stories may not  be reproduced or redistributed  save in
the case of reproducing the whole 'zine for further distribution without
the express permission of the author involved.






1                                                             /
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  D     D A  A R  R G    O  O N N N     Z   I N N N E     ||Volume 2
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  D    D  AAAA RRR  G GG O  O N N N   Z     I N N N E     || Issue 5
  DDDDD   A  A R  R GGGG OOOO N  NN  ZZZZZZ I N  NN EEEE  ||
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--   DargonZine Volume 2, Issue 5        10/13/89          Cir 824    --
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--                            Contents                                --
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  DAG                        Dafydd                 Editorial
  Sons of Gateway 2: Magic   Jon "Grimjack" Evans   Naia 21-Ober 13, '13
  Dragon Hunt 4              Max Khaytsus           Yule 8-23, 1013
  Damsel in Distress         Wendy Hennequin        Sy 24-27, 1013
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                           Dafydd's Amber Glow
                 by Dafydd Cyhoeddwr, Editor DargonZine
                       (b.c.k.a white@duvm.BitNet)

       Today's editorial  is to  let all of  you readers  know that
    DargonZine  is  not  alone.  Two  other  magazines  of  Science
    Fiction/Fantasy have recently come to my attention - Quanta and
    Athene.  In a  spirit  of cooperation,  we  three editors  have
    gotten together  in the hopes  of increasing the  readership of
    each others'  'zines. Please note:  we three  are in no  way in
    competition. All three magazines are  free, and all three of us
    would be happy if each and  every one of our readers received a
    copy of all  the magazines currently available. See  the end of
    this issue (and future issues)  for more information about both
    Quanta and Athene.
       On  a related  note, if  any of  you readers  know of  other
    electronic magazines  about SF/Fantasy, either Fiction  or Fact
    'Zines,  please let  me know  about them,  and perhaps  let the
    editor (if  you know  him/her) know  about DargonZine.  I would
    love to have more reading material available to me and I'm sure
    that most of our readers would too.
       Thank you,

             Dafydd Cyhoeddwr, Editor DargonZine
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                           Sons of Gateway
                            Part 2: Magic
                       by Jon "Grimjack" Evans
                      (b.c.k.a. v047kfz7@ubvms)

     The early morning sun sparkled off the sweat pouring down Ne'on's
forehead,  red from  the  effort. Symbols  flashed  through his  mind,
mimicked  by  interweaving  patterns  of  flying  fingers.  The  final
incantation, and the command:
     "Burn!" Ne'on concentrated on his  target and a branch burst into
flames.  He  smiled  as  he  imagined  skin  of  his  brother's  limbs
blistering and burning like the twig. He was pleased with himself.
     Just then,  a pale ghost of  a human being "floated"  through the
wall next to  him. It was Qord, astrally projecting  himself to summon
Ne'on. 'It is time,' Ne'on thought.
     "It  is time,"  Qord said.  Turning  back toward  his room,  Qord
"flew"  immediately back  to his  body,  walls and  tables proving  no
obstacle for him.  Ne'on took a quick  drink of water from  a glass on
the table  and poured the  rest on  the smoldering branch.  Wiping his
brow, he answered his master's summons.
     "Ne'on Winston,  son of Kald,  Lord Gateway," called Qord  in the
ritual of the test. "You are charged with a claim to the title of Bark
- do you deny  this claim?" Qord was a little  uneasy. Ne'on had shown
much improvement and discipline since  his return from Gateway, and he
was proud of Ne'on. However, if he failed now, he would be Drained. If
Ne'on believed he  needed more time for study, he  could always answer
"Yes".
     "No," Ne'on replied, tensing for the test.
     "Mage," smiled Qord, "prove your mettle."
     With that, the  test began. Potions were  concocted and illusions
shimmered. Energy  flew in all  forms as  every color of  the spectrum
flared.  Spell  upon  spell  was uttered;  elixers  were  created  and
destroyed. For hours, the chambers  of Qord, Leaf of the Nar-Enthruen,
glowed, darkened, flared, and faded. And  with the setting of the sun,
the final spell was uttered. Ne'on collapsed in a pool of sweat.
     "You made one mistake, my son," noted Qord, shuffling through his
robes. "Well,  two, actually," he  continued, producing two  vials. He
quaffed one of the elixers and extended the second to Ne'on, "First of
all, you  have to work  a little more on  definition of the  images in
your illusions.  Second, you  didn't save a  strength potion  for your
recovery." Qord smiled. "Lucky for you, I always carry a spare!"
     Ne'on feebly reached  for the flask, fumbled with the  seal for a
moment,  and quickly  inhaled  it. Breathing  in more  of  it than  he
swallowed, he choked  as he felt the strength returning  to his bones.
"Thank you, Qord," he finally managed  to say. A bit anxiously, "Well?
How'd I do?"
     "If you had failed, Ne'on, you  would already be stripped of your
power. As it happens," Qord's grin grew broader, "I am proud to bestow
upon you the title of Bark!
     "In celebration of this indubitable  honor, I propose a vacation,
of sorts.  A trip!  As you  know, the Melrin  festival begins  in nine
days. Magnus  is renowned  for its holiday  extravaganza, and  is only
four days  ride from here.  I haven't spent  Melrin in Magnus  in over
five years. What say we go? We  can laugh, drink, celebrate . . . I've
a few old friends I  would like to see . . . and  I'd be proud to have
you with me."
     Qord was practically  bubbling over. He was  obviously very happy
about Ne'on's success, and Ne'on wondered if that potion Qord had just
taken didn't  have more  than just a  strengthening herb.  He supposed
magicians would have knowledge of  such substances. Quite pleased with
1his own  success, his reply  was obvious. "Why  not? I could  use some
rest. And, speaking  of rest . .  ." Grunting to stand up,  he bid his
master  goodnight.  Potions  that  granted  unusual  strength  usually
demanded a high price in sleep for their benefits.

     On  the morning  of  the  twenty-fifth of  Naia,  Qord and  Ne'on
departed  for Magnus.  With  some final  instructions  to Jordan,  the
servant, they  moved their horses  onto the  brightly lit path  of the
forest. In the  early morning light, the dew glistened  off the leaves
of the underbrush, and the shadows of the trees mixed with the moss on
the ground.
     Around midday,  they came across  a terrible sight! Lying  on the
path in front of them was a man, half-conscious, and covered in blood.
He was sprawled  out on his back  with his head against  a tree. "Help
me..." he gasped weakly, "help...me..."
     Qord leapt  from the  saddle with  a speed  be-lying his  age and
rushed to the man's side.  "Ne'on, bring the potions, quickly!" Easing
the man's head down to the ground, he gently probed the man's body for
the wound, or wounds, robbing the man of his life.
     Just  as Ne'on  arrived with  the potions,  the blood  soaked man
raised his arm and pointed behind them. "There..." There was the sound
of people  crashing through the  brush and a  dull THUNK! as  an arrow
struck the  man in  his chest!  He twitched  once, and  stopped. Ne'on
stood still, afraid to move.
     "Turn around  slowly, both of you.  And step away from  that man.
Very good," he  added, as Ne'on and Qord obeyed.  "What have they got,
Red?"
     "Very nice  purses, Mackie!" The man  they had stopped to  help -
the one  with an  arrow in  his chest!  - stood  up and  walked toward
"Mackie", presumably the  leader of the rogues. "Must be  on their way
to  Magnus for  Melrin, by  the  look of  them. Well,  now, they  just
ensured us a  very nice holiday!" The  band of men, seven  of them all
told, laughed heartily  as Red withdrew the arrow from  a wooden board
hidden under his leather jerkin. "Next time, Mackie, use a little less
force on the bow, eh? The arrow tip nipped me a bit."
     Ne'on's mind  was racing. Qord's  life and his were  worthless to
the thieves,  and they knew  it. If anything ws  to be done,  it would
have to be  now; but, he didn't  know what to do!  His stomach knotted
and his limbs grew unsteady. His pulse beat loudly in his ears, and he
began to panic.
     "Hold, Ne'on." Once again, the  voice spoke to him. "These paltry
ruffians cannot harm  you. With a single thought,  their crude weapons
cannot touch  you. And with  a single  motion, your enemies  will flee
before you."
     "Who  are  you?"  Ne'on  called  out,  no  longer  aware  of  his
surroundings.
     The  voice was  not the  one who  answered, though.  "Just simple
travellers on our way to Magnus!"  Red's answer brought out more jeers
and laughter from the thieves. "Yeah! Collecting charity from the good
people in  these parts for  our favourite cause:  us! Ha-ha-ha-ha-ha!"
The band was quite pleased with itself  and the fun it was having, but
Ne'on was oblivious to them all.
     'Who are you?' he thought, this time.
     "A  part of  you  that  wishes to  survive.  Now," it  continued,
"protect yourself."
     Ne'on closed his eyes. Mystical symbols danced across his mind as
the low hum of his voice summoned the magic within him.
     "Hey! What's  he doin'?"  Red called attention  to Ne'on  and the
whole party sobered. "You idiots!"  he cried. "He's a freakin' wizard!
He'll kill  us all! Shoot him!"  In less than two  seconds, six arrows
1were nocked and  loosed. Too late. Ne'on's spell was  finished and the
arrows deflected off him.
     "Now, make them run."
     More  symbols  appeared  as  he  traced runes  in  the  air.  His
incantation finished the  spell. Suddenly, a wall of  fire burst forth
between the  rogues and the  mages! Smoke rose  in the air,  and twigs
crackled as they burn.
     "Gods! He's  gonna burn us ta  death! Let's get out  a here!" The
men dropped money,  weapons, and packs in their  desperate scramble to
flee the  burning woods.  "There," spoke the  voice, and  a lightening
bolt struck out of the clear blue sky.
     "And there."
     "And there." More than one of the thieves would be cleaning their
britches this day  as the last bolt  struck Mackie and he  fell to the
ground. It would be a long time before they returned to this area.
     The  wall  of fire  dispersed  as  quickly  as it  appeared.  The
electrically charred ground of the  forest floor vanished, leaving the
soil marred only by the panicked scamperings of frightened men. Mackie
lay on the ground, unconscious.
     "Well done," praised Qord as he went to collect their belongings.
"I almost believed  you cast those spells for real!  If it weren't for
this scoundrel's  breathing I  might not  have been  able to  tell the
difference. You amaze me more and more, Ne'on. You'll be a great mage,
one day - you're already a respectable illusionist!"
     "Why is  Mackie unconscious?", he  thought aloud. He was  glad he
didn't finish the thought verbally for he had meant to kill the rogue.
     "Well,  you couldn't  expect him  to stay  conscious, could  you?
After all, the  mind believes the body has been  struck by lightening.
It shuts itself  down in order to keep the  body from experiencing too
much pain.
     "Now, before he wakes up, let  us be moving along." Qord repacked
the rest of their belongings. "Oh, yes. I almost forgot." He removed a
silver dagger from within his robes. "Here, I found it near Mackie."
     Ne'on took the  knife, admiring it's beauty. "It's  a fine blade.
Very well crafted. Thank you, Qord."
     "Oh, no! Don't  thank me. After all, you were  the one who chased
off those ruffians. No, no; you deserve it."
     And with that, they set forth once again for Magnus.

     The warm summer  evening settled heavily on  Ne'on's shoulders as
he watched Qord exit  yet another of Magnus' inns. By  the look on his
face, Ne'on knew  the answer to his question before  it was asked. "If
we keep this up we'll be spending Melrin in a stable!"
     "Not very likely." Qord was tired. Four and a half days of travel
took their  toll on the seventy  year old Leaf. "All  the merchants in
town brought extra  horses to carry their wares. There's  less room in
the stables than in the inns." He laid a reassuring hand on his horse,
"But don't worry, Gal,  I know a place where all of  us can stay." His
gaze returned to Ne'on, "A gentleman whom  I aided a few years back. A
mystical  being from  another dimension  fell in  lust with  him, poor
chap. She was an atrocious  sight. Didn't take rejection well, either,
I'm afraid."

     There were  fewer street lamps  on this  side of Magnus,  but the
light from the shops, houses, and taverns kept the street well lit. Up
ahead, Ne'on noticed, was an inn  with the standard of two unicorns in
battle. The sign read: "The Fighting Unicorns", and Qord assured Ne'on
they would be able to stay here.
     Before they  could reach  the inn,  there was  a loud  crash, the
sound of  breaking glass, and  a heavy thud!  as the door  swung open.
1Silhouetted  against the  bright light  from  within was  a large  man
swinging another  through the air, releasing  him at the hight  of the
swing. The smaller man flew through the air, landing in a wagon on the
other side  of the street.  The larger  man's voice bellowed  over the
noise from  within, "Next time  you touch one  of my girls  like that,
it'll be more  than a bottle I  break over your head! Now,  get out of
here before I lose my temper - and you lose your neck!"
     "I hope you don't treat all  your customers like that, Sir Hawk,"
Qord spurred  up to  the light  of the  inn, removing  his cowl  as he
spoke. "I do not think I could survive such a toss, at my age."
     "I treat 'em the way they deserve,  old ma- Well! By my sword and
shield!" Sir  Hawk's visage  turned from  one of  annoyance to  one of
great joy. "Qord, you old son of a she-wolf, how are you? And what are
you doing in such a common part of the city?"
     Qord dismounted  and grasped his  friend's arm firmly.  "I'm here
for Melrin, of  course! And, other than  lack of a place  to stay, I'm
fine. Very well, in fact."
     Sir Hawk smiled.  He had guessed the reason Qord  had ventured so
far  from  the  nicer  districts   of  Magnus.  Thankfully,  he  could
accommodate him. "Say no more, my friend! I have just the room for you
and  your companion.  Come in!  I'll have  the boy  take care  of your
steeds."
     A servant came at Sir Hawk's  behest and took their mounts to the
stables. Sir Hawk ordered a meal for his guests and cleared a table in
the well-crowded tavern. The room was  loud with song and revelry, and
Sir Hawk almost  had to yell to  be heard above the din.  "So tell me,
Lord Winston: why is it you do not spend Melrin in the Royal District?
I thought it was a matter of  etiquette to stay with your family while
you are visiting Magnus."
     "A matter of honor, sir," Ne'on  replied. "My father and my uncle
were  never on  good terms.  Rather than  inconvenience my  uncle, and
embarrass  my father,  I declined  to stay  there." It  wasn't unknown
among the  nobles of Magnus that  Lord Keeper Winston of  Gateway Keep
and his  brother, Lord Winston,  a minor land holder,  associated with
each other as little as possible. Ne'on sipped his wine.
     Hawk looked confused. "No, not  your uncle. I meant your brother,
Lord Goren."
     Ne'on choked  on his wine,  spitting a little, and  drooling some
onto his napkin.  "My apologies, sir! But Goren is  here? In Magnus?!"
Ne'on instantly  became nervous and  defensive. What's he  doing here?
Does he know I'm  here? Does he know WHY I'm here?  What does he want?
He almost  betrayed his emotions to  the others; but, once  again, the
voice, like rolling  thunder, spoke to him: "Do not  fear, Ne'on. Your
brother could  not possibly be aware  of your presence here.  You need
not worry."
     Then Hawk spoke. "No need to  apologize, my lord. Had I known how
you would react, I would not have asked. It is I who should apologize.
Let us have some more wine." Sir  Hawk called one of his serving girls
and ordered more wine.
     "I thank  you, Sir  Hawk, but  I must be  getting to  bed." Ne'on
stood up. "I have never been  in Magnus during Melrin before, although
my father  often told  me of  it, and I  wish to  make an  early start
tomorrow morn."  Ne'on made his leave  of the mage and  the innkeeper,
and found a servant to lead him to his room.

     'I'll have  to go to  the Fifth Quarter,' thought  Ne'on, sipping
his mead. It was the second day of Melrin and most of the populace was
at  the  festival, leaving  the  Fighting  Unicorns  all but  bare  of
customers. Ne'on  had not been  having a good  time in Magnus.  He had
spent all of the previous day trying to enjoy the festival, but he was
1troubled with  the knowledge of  his brother's presence in  Magnus. It
was an  added worry which he  didn't need. Last night,  however, Ne'on
had  found his  solution:  whoever he  found to  replace  Luke as  his
Captain would have a test - find  his brother and make him leave town.
Finding him wouldn't be the hard part, but making him leave town would
be; Goren isn't one to take  threats idly, and he is fairly proficient
with a sword.
     Just then, Ne'on noticed an  argument growing louder in the room.
It  was coming  from behind  one of  the curtained  booths to  Ne'on's
right.  The curtain  drew apart,  and  a large  hulk of  a man  walked
through.  A smaller  man,  with  a black  cloak  about his  shoulders,
remained seated.
     "You still owe me fifty gold coins," stated the smaller man as he
rose from his seat, "and I'll get it  from you whether you give it . .
. or I take it."
     The  larger man  stopped. He  smiled an  amused smile  and turned
around. "Well, I don't think you'll be takin' too much from me, Bart."
The large  man had an almost  equally large sword sheathed  across his
back. He  drew it. "So  I think  I'll give it  to you." A  faint smile
could be seen on Bart's face as the lummox swung his sword through the
air. Like  lightning, Bart drew his  own sword with his  left hand, to
parry  the attack,  while  a dagger  flew out  of  his right,  solidly
lodging itself in the man's chest. The giant fell loudly to the floor.
     Bart sheathed his sword and walked over to the corpse. Wiping his
dagger on the  dead man's clothes, he sheathed it  and removed a purse
from within the man's pockets. He tossed a gold coin to the man at the
bar. "It was self-defense. You don't remember me."
     Bart looked around once, stared at  Ne'on for a moment, and left.
Ne'on  hastily  finished  his  drink   and  rose  to  make  his  exit.
'Apparently', he  smiled, 'I  won't need  to go  to the  Fifth Quarter
after all!'

     The sound of Goren's footsteps echoed off the walls and buildings
of the  street around him. The  light of the street  lamps were blurry
and bright, so he raised his hand to block it out. Unfortunately, this
was the hand which held his wine bottle, and its meeting with his head
caused him to  stumble about the sidewalk, narrowly  side stepping the
sludge-filled drainage gutters between the  street and the walkway. He
was drunk. He  was not happy. And  what he saw next made  him think he
was dead.
     In the street ahead  of him was a man. The man  wore a long black
cloak about his  shoulders, disguising much of his body,  but his face
was unhidden.  His face was long  and thin and well  cleaned, his eyes
were a piercing blue-grey,  and his hair . . . His  hair was what most
struck Goren for  it was long, as  if it hadn't been cut  in years. It
was dirty  blond in  color, and  thin, and it  fell lightly  about the
man's shoulders. In  the man's left hand was a  long, sharp sword, and
he was  pointing it at  Goren. Then the man  spoke, and his  voice was
deep and deadly.
     "Certain people don't want you in Magnus, Lord Winston." His thin
lips barely parted when he spoke, and  a slight smile broke out on his
face. "I've been instructed to tell you to leave. By tomorrow noon, on
the  third of  Melrin,  you should  be  out of  Magnus.  This is  your
warning."  With deadly  grace, the  man jumped  forward and  lunged at
Goren. Goren  was too drunk  to react, and  his only thought  was 'I'm
dead' as  the sword drove  toward his  skull. However, the  blade only
just cut him  above the eyes, causing  a lot of bleeding  but doing no
serious harm. Goren could not see  with all the blood pouring down his
face, and he tensed as he anticipated the killing blow.
     It never  came. "This is  to remember me  by," the man  said, and
1Goren heard  soft footsteps  striding away.  Blackness settled  on his
skull.

     Darkness faded  in and out  as Goren  dreamed. He dreamed  of his
brother, Ne'on,  and the man  who attacked him.  Ne'on gave the  man a
purse of coins  and a letter, and  told the man to go  to Gateway. The
man left, darkness faded in and out, and Goren awoke, the dream fading
in his memory.
     "He'll be alright,  Lord Winston." The robed  healer was hovering
over Goren and  speaking to someone elsewhere in the  room. "More than
likely, it  was the wine which  made him unconscious, not  the wound -
that was just bleeding  a lot - it is nothing  serious." Goren saw the
healer's head  and shoulders pull  out of his tunnel-visioned  line of
sight. "The bleeding  has stopped and the tissue has  begun to heal. I
can heal it completely, if you wish."
     "No, no; let it scar." The second voice was deeper and older than
the healer's. And  familiar. "It will teach him not  to walk unguarded
and inebriated  through the streets  of Magnus. Besides,  it shouldn't
take  more  than  a week  to  heal,  and  there  are others  who  more
desperately  require your  services." Now  Goren recognized  the other
voice: it belonged to Lord Cameron Winston, his uncle.
     "In that case," spoke the  healer, as Goren's vision expanded, "I
shall take my leave." The healer  bowed, "Good morning, my Lords," and
left.
     After a  short while, Goren spoke.  "Whe- AHEM! Where am  I?" His
voice was  gravely from little sleep  and much alcohol, and  his mouth
was filled with paste. When he cleared his throat he became aware of a
pressure in his skull,  and when he moved his head  the room seemed to
have  to catch  up with  him  before he  could focus.  "Ugh! And  what
have . . . I done to myself?"
     Cameron Winston laughed  loudly at his nephew's state,  and in so
doing  caused even  greater  suffering to  Goren.  This effected  even
greater laughter  from Lord  Winston, and Goren  decided he  hated his
uncle. "I apologize, young Goren," Lord Winston began, "but if you saw
yourself,  you would  laugh,  too." Lord  Winston  calmed himself  and
waited for Goren to reply.
     "Oh . . . I don't know,"  spoke Goren, softly, "I might find pity
on myself  . . . and  kill me . .  ." At any other  time, Lord Winston
might have found this humorous; now, however, he was serious.
     "It seems someone  already tried that for you,  my nephew." Goren
looked up and saw only concern in his uncle's eyes.
     "No . .  . this was just a  warning . . . Whoever  did this could
have killed me . . . Gods! I was  sure he would! . . . but he just did
this, and told me to leave Magnus." Lord Winston's confusion now added
to Goren's. "And you still haven't told me where I am."
     "Oh! My sincerest apologies, young  lord. I had forgotten you and
your brother have never stayed in  my home." Lord Winston extended his
hand. "If you feel  well enough, allow me to give you  a tour of House
Winston." Goren took his uncle's hand and allowed himself to be helped
to his feet.
     In the next  hour and a half,  Goren was given the  grand tour of
House  Winston. From  the  master  bedroom to  the  wine cellar,  Lord
Winston instructed Goren on the history of the house and their family.
Goren was pleased with being able  to hear the history, for his father
never discussed it. It was a large house, bigger than Winston Manor in
Gateway Keep, yet it was one of  the smallest in the Royal District of
Magnus. Goren's  ancestor's, it was  explained to him, were  not rich.
However, during  the Great  Houses War  in 97  BY, the  Winston family
sided with House Tallihran, King Haralan's ancestors, and became Lords
as a result of their fealty.
1     Lord Winston  seemed eager  to answer  any questions  Goren asked
about  the family  history;  however, when  he  asked about  Cameron's
feelings toward  his father,  Lord Winston replied,  "I leave  that to
your father to  explain, if he will.  It is between he  and I, mostly,
and I  would not want that  to interfere in future  generations of the
Winston family."
     Finally,  Goren  asked  his  uncle what  he  thought  of  Goren's
encounter the  night before. "Well,  Goren," began Winston,  "you have
assured me it  is not some young lady's father  trying to frighten off
suitors, so it can only mean one thing."
     "And what is that?"
     "Someone in Magnus believes you pose a threat to him or her. Now,
you  have two  rational  courses of  action. First,  you  can stay  in
Magnus; I'll give you five of the  House guards to protect you for the
rest  of your  stay. Second,  you can  leave Magnus,  in which  case I
should still give you those guards to protect your journey." They were
in  the Main  Hall,  again, and  Goren  looked at  two  of the  guards
protecting the outside entrance.
     "No,  that won't  be  necessary. I-"  Goren  stopped. His  vision
wavered,  and he  felt  weak  for a  moment.  He  grasped his  uncle's
shoulder to steady himself, and then it was past. "No doubt I've still
to recover  from last night's activities.  But, as I was  saying, I do
not think the guards will be necessary." Goren raised his hand to stop
the protests he saw  building in his uncle. "Do not  worry, my Lord, I
have no  intention of staying in  Magnus. While I'd love  to meet that
man while  I am sober,  I have no doubts  about his having  friends. I
shall leave within the hour."
     "Well thought, Goren."  Lord Winston was surprised.  He had heard
of Goren's usually-rash behavior from  Marcus, and his reaction toward
this matter was unexpected. "I thought you would have wanted to form a
search party and hunt the man down. It seems I was mistaken."
     "Not really."  Goren looked  down for a  moment, then  raised his
head. "My first thought,  when I awoke, was to grab  my sword and find
this man. But I  was in no shape to go anywhere -  and I don't believe
you would  have let  me -  so I had  the opportunity  to think,  for a
while. It seems some problems cannot be solved with a sword."
     Lord Winston smiled,  and Goren felt proud of that  smile. It was
meant for him. Already,  he began to feel closer to  his uncle than he
did to his  father. "I see you've heard my  brother's favorite motto,"
said Winston.
     "Heard!" Goren exclaimed, "I lived it for 23 years!"

     The sun  had just fallen. The  lamps of Magnus were  being lit by
men and women  on carts, travelling the streets with  fire and oil. It
was night  time. A man  huddled on one side  of an alleyway,  his form
barely visible  in the darkness.  Another man  stood a foot  away from
him, speaking softly.
     "And how will he know who I am?" spoke the second.
     "Give him this letter," replied the first, producing a letter and
a small sack of coins from within his robes. "And here is a retainer -
I'll be there in a few more months."
     "Thank you, my Lord. Everything will be ready when you arrive."

     Fire  licked the  edge of  the  stone platform,  and molten  lava
boiled  for miles  about it.  Phos laughed.  All was  proceeding well.
Control  was almost  effortless, and  his  puppet was  unaware of  his
danger.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                        Dragon Hunt, part 4
                          by Max Khaytsus
             (b.c.k.a khaytsus%tramp@boulder.colorado.edu)

     The egg  Rien held in his  hands was much larger  and harder than
that of a  chicken, but it in no  way revealed itself to be  that of a
dragon. He carefully turned it over, hoping that somewhere there would
be an indication or marking that would brand the egg uncommon, but not
finding anything he looked at the wizard.
     Gerim smiled. "How will she know? Trust me, this is just what she
needs."
     "What do you want for your 'advice'?"
     "Ah, it may  have come across as  advice, but for me  it was just
another adventure."
     "Sir," Rien sounded vexed, "I  do not like carrying debts. Before
I accept this, what is your price?"
     "No price," Gerim said. "Let it be my good deed to you."
     "You don't  even know me,"  Rien pointed  out. "We only  met last
morning."
     "I  saw you  in  the  tavern two  nights  ago," Gerim  corrected.
Actually there was also that time in the forest two weeks before...
     Rien still looked at him, unsure of what to do.
     Gerim waited, thinking what he could offer as collateral, in this
unstable and lopsided business deal. "When I was your age," the wizard
spoke, unconsciously  bringing his hand  to his ear and  making Rien's
gaze jerk  up, "I  had a  friend who  was poisoned  by a  snake bite."
Rounded ear --  no evidence of elf  blood. "They told me  there was no
cure and I watched that boy waste  away in a matter of hours." Boy. In
the elven tongues there is no  distinction of age, just gender. "I see
a similarity here and perhaps this time I can do something to help..."
Gerim  spread  his arms  out  as  an  offering  of peace.  "Please,  I
travelled half the world in one night."
     "Very well," Rien  finally nodded. The wizard  seemed sincere. "I
wish I  could express  my thanks.  You're saving  two lives,  not just
one."

     In a  week and a half  Rien and Kera  made their way to  the path
where the  hidden trail to  Maari's house  lay. Their rushed  pace had
taken its  toll and they  made camp a  half day's distance  from their
destination, to rest and regain their strength.
     "I'm a  little worried," Kera  mentioned to Rien, over  the early
evening fire.
     "I'm anxious too," he answered. "I want to get this over with."
     "I keep thinking that she won't help us," Kera continued, staring
into the fire. "What if she tries something?"
     "That's a possibility," Rien said. "Something to be aware of, but
at times it's best to hope for the better."
     "How are we going to pay her?"
     Rien shook his  head. "I don't know. I refuse  to sentence anyone
to death."
     "What if that means our death?"
     "I can make that choice for myself, but not for you."
     Kera moved herself to sit next  to Rien. "I remember a while back
you told  me you saw nothing  wrong with killing someone  if your well
being was threatened."
     "Nothing wrong with  killing an individual who  threatens my well
being," Rien corrected.
     "I am sure we can find one," Kera smirked.
     "I couldn't condemn an individual to the kind of death that Maari
has in mind," Rien sighed.
1     "Can you condemn yourself to lycanthropy?"
     "At this point I am not desperate enough to say 'no'."
     Kera leaned  back into the  grass, looking up into  the darkening
sky, with the first stars beginning  to appear above the forest. "What
day were you born on?" she asked abruptly.
     "A cold one," Rien smiled.
     "Don't be silly," Kera laughed. "When?"
     "Under  the  great  oak...a   green  one,  in  unseasonably  cold
weather."
     "In Yule?"
     "Naia 27," Rien said.
     "Why didn't you tell me?" Kera sounded hurt.
     "Wasn't important," Rien said. "There  were too many other things
to worry about, particularly Maari's request."
     "Melrin wasn't much of a holiday either," Kera agreed. "I'll just
have to surprise you sometime."
     Rien put his arm around Kera's  shoulder and pulled her close, in
an attempt to comfort her.
     "You remember the weather you were born in?" she asked.
     "Not really. My mother  told me it was a little  too cold for the
event."
     "She should have had the windows closed," Kera laughed.
     "It was outdoors," said Rien.
     "Doesn't sound  very private," Kera  said, "but then you  did say
morals weren't much where you came from."
     "It's traditional," Rien explained.
     "Well,  there's  your  Oak,"  Kera   said,  pointing  up  to  the
constellation of Valonus, materializing slowly in the almost dark sky.
     "When were  you born?" Rien  asked, sitting up and  throwing some
dirt on the fire.
     "Eighth of  Janis," Kera said, sitting  up as well. "I'm  sure it
was seasonably cold."
     The fire  went out,  leaving the clearing  covered by  the bright
light of the almost full moon.
     "What happened to your parents?" Rien asked.
     "When I was  young, Liriss told me that I  was found abandoned. I
stopped believing him  after a while...after seeing how  he deals with
people. I guess my  parents got in his way and he  had them killed and
took me."  She again leaned  back into  the grass, admiring  the moon.
"Not having known them I really can't say I that miss them."
     Rien leaned  back in the grass  next to her, also  looking at the
moon. "Aren't you even curious..?"
     "I'm  curious who  they were,  but...if they  are still  alive, I
don't think I'd want to meet them."
     Rien  lay  quietly, staring  up  at  the  sky. "What  about  your
parents?" Kera suddenly asked.
     Rien  remained  quiet   for  some  time.  "My   mother  lives  in
Charnelwood," he finally said.
     "What about your father?"
     Rien shifted  uncomfortably on  the ground. "He  was killed  by a
Dopkalfar  hunting party  before I  was born...before  he found  out I
would be born."
     "I'm sorry," Kera whispered.
     "There's nothing  to be sorry  for," Rien answered. "In  spite of
how  we feel,  life comes  and  goes. We're  not all  friends on  this
planet. Some of us simply don't belong."
     Now it was  Kera's turn to fall  quiet. The two lay  next to each
other in  the dark for a  long time, then Rien  heard Kera's breathing
become more even. Exaustion had  taken its toll. Carefully pulling his
arm from under his companion, Rien relocated himself to the other side
1of the clearing.

     Kera woke  up in the morning  to the smell of  a roasting rabbit.
She looked around the clearing to  see Rien managing a small camp fire
with a  rotisserie set up  over it. "Why didn't  you wake me  up?" she
asked.
     "You needed the rest," Rien answered without turning around.
     Kera  shuffled around  on the  ground, then  got up.  "Let me  do
that," she indicated the rabbit. "I already smell it burning."
     Rien moved away from the camp fire.
     "How did you  ever survive in the wilderness  alone?" Kera asked,
taking his place.
     "I  don't discriminate  against raw  meat," Rien  said, "even  if
cooked is better. Besides, I know that it's fresh if it's raw."
     "Gross," Kera mumbled. "I'd rather eat it burned."
     "I know," Rien smiled. "I thought the smell of burned flesh would
get you up."
     Kera laughed  and continued preparing  the food. "It will  all be
over  today, won't  it?" she  asked a  bit later.  Her voice  suddenly
somber and serious.
     "I hope  so," Rien said. "One  way or another." He  moved to face
Kera  and continued.  "Listen,  I've  been thinking.  When  we get  to
Maari's home, I don't want you to dismount. Just stay on the horse and
if  anything goes  wrong,  leave."  Kera tried  to  protest, but  Rien
continued. "Don't argue. Like you said, this gets resolved today and I
don't want you to get hurt. If a fight starts, if a spell is cast, go.
Don't worry about me."
     "I'll agree to  this now," Kera said,  "but I may not  do it when
the time comes. My  best chances are with you and in  the end I'm sure
you agree that it's purely my decision  what to do in a situation like
that and you certainly won't be in  a position to argue if it comes to
that."
     Rien nodded approvingly  after a moment. "Well  said. You've been
paying attention."
     Kera smiled back.  "I was hoping you'd like it."  But in some way
it appeared to Rien that the smile  was false and there would be a lot
more to do before all would be resolved.
     After breakfast  they mounted  their horses  and in  the building
heat of the  afternoon summer sun made their way  to Maari's dwelling.
They rode their horses onto  the hidden path, cautiously guiding their
animals through  the thick  grass until  the roof  of the  witch's hut
appeared in the  distance. Rien stopped his horse and  checked the egg
one more  time; a final inspection  in the unlikely event  that he had
missed something previously.
     Kera  stopped next  to him,  shifting restlessly  in the  saddle.
"Maybe we should spend some more time preparing..." she said.
     Rien looked  up in  mid turn  of the  egg. His  companion's voice
sounded shaky. "Are you alright?" his concerned eyes focused on her.
     "Just a little nervous," Kera smiled awkwardly.
     "You look  downright scared," Rien  said. He replaced the  egg in
its pouch and  moved his horse closer to Kera's.  "Get down before you
shake yourself from the saddle," he said, dismounting to help her.
     Kera half slid, half fell from  the saddle and Rien helped her to
a shaded  patch of  grass beneath  a tree.  "What's wrong?"  he asked,
gently pushing her down.
     Kera leaned  back against  the tree trunk,  trying to  regain her
composure.
     "Relax," Rien took Kera's hands in his own. "I won't let Maari do
anything to  you..." He was  beginning to understand what  her problem
was.
1     Kera violently shook her head in response.
     "Nothing  will happen,"  he insisted  again, taking  Kera in  his
arms.  It  did not  help.  "All  right,"  Rien  said after  a  minute,
releasing Kera and  rising. "We're not going to see  her. Mount up. If
we push the horses, we can make it to Magnus in little over a month."
     Kera looked up  at him, her shaking not as  strong as before. She
tried to smile.  "I'm alright," but it didn't  look convincing. "Let's
talk to her," she managed to say.
     "Are you certain?" Rien knelt before her. She still seemed on the
verge of a breakdown.
     Kera nodded  and started to get  up. Rien hurried to  help her to
her horse,  but as  Kera grabbed  the saddle,  she looked  towards the
barely visible hut among the trees and again broke into a shaking fit.
"I can't," her voice shook with fear. "She'll kill me!"
     Rien recognised himself as part of  the problem. To Maari, he was
worthless, but Kera could provide exactly what the old witch wanted; a
soul to experiment  with. He took Kera in his  arms again, holding her
up against the horse. He permitted himself to realize just how much he
feared and  hated humans who  practiced magic. He turned  Kera around,
his now  grey eyes searching for  an answer in hers.  Kera held still,
not understanding what the changes in  her companion were. Her fear of
Maari  lessened, replaced  by that  of Rien,  who suddenly  thrust her
away, tore the  saddle bag with the egg off  his horse and disappeared
in the direction of Maari's hut.
     Kera stood  still, holding onto  her horse, watching  Rien leave,
then, her curiosity and concern winning over her fear for herself, she
advanced forward, with her mount obediantly following her lead.
     Making his way to the clearing,  Rien looked around. "I have your
egg, witch!"  he shouted.  A moment later  Maari appeared  from around
back.  She seemed  completely unprepared  for his  visit. "I  have the
egg!"  he yelled  again, triumphantly  holding up  the saddle  bag. He
patiently waited  for her to approach  before dropping the bag  to the
ground and drawing his sword.
     "Bitch!" he stammered, ready to swing.
     Maari answered something  in anger, making an  unseen force throw
Rien backwards to the ground. She  fell on her knees before the saddle
bag, tearing it open,  to get to the precious egg.  It was whole. With
triumph  in her  eyes, Maari  got up,  egg in  her hands.  "Fool," she
looked at Rien's  unmoving body. "There never was and  never will be a
cure!"
     She turned to leave, when the egg in her hands disloved to a glob
of slime. It covered her hands and spread slowly to her body, in spite
of her loud protests,  as Kera watched from a cluster  of trees at the
edge of the clearing. As the  witch transformed into a puddle of slime
on the  ground, Kera advanced from  the trees, for a  better view. Her
fear was completely dominated by curiosity and when she spotted Rien's
motionless body,  she ran towards him,  in spite of what  she had just
seen.
     "Don't  touch him,  girl,"  a pleasantly  accented voice  sounded
above her, as  Kera reached Rien's body. She  looked around, startled,
seeing Gerim not ten feet away. How did he get there?
     "Don't touch  him," the wizard  repeated. "I can only  change the
chain of events if you do what I say."
     Kera  took two  steps back,  looking  at Gerim  in disbelief,  to
shocked and surprised by the turn of events to ask any questions.
     "He was  an innocent  victim of  poor planning  on my  part," the
wizard continued. "Hurry,  bring me the large black book  Maari has in
her house."
     Kera bolted before the instructions  were complete. She tore into
the dark  two room hut,  tripping over a chair  and winding up  on the
1floor. A  large black cat  hissed at her  from the corner  and quickly
disappeared into  the darkness  of the  second room.  Kera got  up and
looked around. Her heart beat faster,  now that she realized where she
was. She  held onto  a chair  for support.  Dark blinds  and furniture
decorated  the spartan  main room  of the  witch's dwelling.  A heavy,
murky smell hung  in the air, making Kera think  of the blocks beneath
Liriss' private pier. She slowly scanned  the room, fearing to walk in
any further, when she came to face  a human skull -- she assumed it to
be human,  anyway, -- which  lay on the  table behind which  stood the
chair she  used for support. She  jerked back in surprise,  looking at
the empty  sockets that  somehow seemed  to look back.  The lack  of a
bottom jaw made it appear as  if this horrid creature had something to
say.
     Barely forcing herself to look  away from the skull's empty gaze,
Kera realized  that beneath it  lay a  thick book, covered  with black
leather. She  cautiously stepped  forward, then  dashed for  the book,
pulling it  out from under  the skull, causing  the relic to  fall and
roll on the floor and ran out as quickly as she ran in.
     Outside Gerim looked  up from the puddle of what  was left of the
witch. "Ah, the book," he said, taking it from Kera.
     Kera  watched restlessly  as Gerim  opened the  book and  started
flipping  through it.  After  a  while he  found  what  he needed  and
pronounced an incantation. Kera felt her  back grow cold, as the spell
grew to  its climax.  A low  rumble sounded in  the cloudless  sky and
Rien's hand twitched.
     Gerim closed  the book and  let it  fall to the  ground, kneeling
before Rien.
     Kera cautiously  approached, fearing that the  wizard would still
forbid her to come near. Noticing  that, Gerim called her over, saying
that it was all right.
     "How is he?" Kera asked with a shaky voice.
     "He's fine,"  the wizard answered.  "He's lucky not to  be human.
Elves pay for their  long lives by not having a  soul. Maari could not
kill him. She was no more than a necromancer."
     Kera took Rien's twitching hand into her own.
     "Give him some time," Gerim  suggested. "His system will overcome
the shock." He got up to leave,  but turned to look back at Kera. "You
two did me a great service, but I'm afraid I have nothing to repay you
with. I wish you luck with your quest. May you find what you need."
     With those words  the wizard retired into the  woods. Rien's hand
grasped tightly around Kera's.

                     Epilogue

     Liriss stared coldly  at Tilden, who stood before  him. This fool
had the gall to fail and return to tell of his losses. That took guts,
but certainly no brains. Then again, most of his men had no where else
to turn  and knew  no more than  mercanary work. "I  sent four  men to
bring back two people and what do I see before me?" Liriss asked after
considering the trapper's story. "I  see a bedraggled fighter who lost
his companions,  weapons and mount. I've  got half a mind  to send you
off to the blocks."
     Liriss walked  a wide circle  around Tilden, waiting for  fear to
set  in.  The  man  remained motionless,  but  became  noticably  more
nervous. Liriss made a second  circle, smiling when behind Tilden. The
feeling of power can at times be  intoxicating and an offer of mercy a
god-like act. "I  should send you to the blocks,"  Liriss came to face
Tilden again, "but I won't. I'll assign  a real man to do your job and
in the mean time you can get some simple guard work done."
     Tilden released his breath, which Liriss imagined he had held for
1quite some time. "Thank you, sir."
     The  crime leader  walked  over  to the  window  and looked  into
Dargon. "Return  to your quarters.  I will  have your new  orders sent
down."
     Tilden left the room with  another sigh of relief, permitting his
master's female  attendant to  come back inside.  The girl  closed the
door and waited patiently for Liriss to notice her. He finally turned,
looking at her thoughtfully. "Rene, find  me Kendall and have him come
here."
     "The assassin?" she  asked. "You said you didn't want  to see his
face again."
     "I don't," Liriss nodded solomnly, "but at least he's reliable."

     Gerim's loud  footsteps sounded  in the great  hall of  the keep.
"Nagje'," his  voice boomed above  the loud echos. "Prepare  to vacate
your chair."
     As he  approached the  large table  at the far  end of  the great
hall, three gazes met his.
     "I told you," Gerim looked at  the man in the center, "once Maari
is dead, I'll be seeking a council position."
     "Explain to us one thing," the  wizard on the left said. "The elf
was dead. Why did you interfear?"
     "He was caught in the struggle through my intervention."
     "He would have gone to the witch anyway."
     "He would not have gone to her in anger with a dragon egg!"
     "Dragon egg my ass, Gerim! You brought life to a dead man!"
     "I reunited an elf with his spirit, a much easier task than a man
with  his soul!"  Gerim stopped,  realizing  he was  now shouting.  "I
tricked him  into helping me  and repaid him as  best I could  for the
services he offered, risks he took and damages he suffered."
     "You broke the rules," Elaff insisted.
     "Whose rules?" Gerim  snapped. "Rules of three  hypocrites who do
not  follow the  advice they  give others?  There is  nothing more  to
discuss. Prepare for the challenge."
     With those words he left the keep.

     Rien and  Kera sat by a  creek, looking through the  leather book
that once  belonged to  Maari. "It's  a very  old script,"  Rien said,
explaining the  writing. "I've  seen this on  old calendars,  the ones
used before the current one was introduced."
     "I wish I could read it," Kera said.
     "So do  I," Rien answered.  "I never had  the time to  learn when
there was an opportunity.
     "So if  we can't  read the  book, then why  are we  trying?" Kera
asked.
     "I was hoping there'd be pictures," Rien smiled. "Just curious of
what's in  it, I guess."  He flipped a few  more pages. "You  may have
heard  that those  who use  magic keep  notes on  their knowledge  and
experiences, not just a list of  spells. Look here," he pointed to the
open page. "See how messy this is?  I'd gamble this isn't a spell, but
a memo  or a  description. And  over here..." he  flipped a  few pages
back. "See how neat  and evenly spaced the text here  is? This I can't
say  is a  spell,  but I'd  guess  it requires  care  when reading  or
performing."
     "But if you can't read it, why bother with it?" Kera asked.
     "It's worth something to someone," Rien  said. "It may be good to
us."
     "How?"
     "You  probably didn't  have  much experience  with  this sort  of
thing, but information can at times be more precious than money."
1     "Like blackmail?" Kera asked.
     "It's an example," Rien nodded. "There are other types. It's like
an old book, valuble beyond the price of money and sometimes life." He
closed the volume with a smile. "This maybe such a book."
     "And you're hoping to find someone in Dargon who has use for it?"
Kera asked, going back to the conversation they had before arriving at
the creek.
     "It would do us little good  in Tench," Rien said, "and Magnus is
too far  away at this  point. Dargon should give  us a safe  margin of
time to apply what we learned...may learn."
     "I heard Maari say that there was no cure," Kera said.
     "I guess I was  out by then," Rien said. "That  was foolish of me
to charge out  after her like that.  She could have killed  me just as
easily."
     "Does your head still hurt?" Kera asked.
     "It's not  as bad as  it was,"  Rien smiled awkwardly,  "but I'll
remember it for quite some time."
     Kera put her arm around him sympathetically. "What if there is no
cure?"
     "I don't believe that," he answered. "If there is a way to induce
a condition, then there is a way to reverse it. There are two faces to
every coin. We'll  find something. Tomorrow. It's getting  too late to
go any further tonight. Let's make camp here."
     "Good, I wanted  to take a swim," Kera said.  "Why don't you join
me?"

     "That's all  there is," Alicia  said. She  and Mija stood  over a
dark  green patch  of ground,  after unsuccessfully  searching Maari's
house.
     Mija sat down on the grass next  to the dead patch and poked with
a branch at  what looked like a  piece of an egg shell.  He watched it
crack and break under the pressure before tossing the branch away.
     "What are you doing?" Alicia asked.
     "Thinking," he  shrugged. "Can  you figure  out what  got spilled
here?"
     Alicia sat down next to Mija, with a thoughtful look on her face.
"Ever feel helpless without your notes?" she smiled.
     Mija  shifted  uncomfortably,  pushing himself  back,  as  Alicia
started on a semi-familiar spell.
     "Certainly wasn't  a normal potion,"  Alicia said a  while later,
finishing with her spell. "I never saw anything like this."
     Mija stood up  behind her and helped her  up. "Something's wrong.
Maari knew we were coming. Let's inform the coven."
     The pair quickly disappeared in the woods.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                            Trial by Fire
                               Part III
                          Damsel in Distress
                         by M. Wendy Hennequin
                   (b.c.k.a. HENNEQUI_WEM@CTSTATEU)

     Myrande sat in her hot, little office and stared at the stones in
the wall. She put her hand to her lips, remembering Luthias' kiss.
     "Are you  all right about  what happened between you  and Luthias
last night?" Lauren had asked her that morning, almost a week ago when
Clifton and Luthias had left for  Magnus, when neither the Duchess nor
the seneschal could eat breakfast.
     Suprise had jolted  Sable, then some slight  resentment crept in.
She could  never manage  to keep  anything she  felt strongly  about a
secret from Lauren--and this time it bothered her. "What do you mean?"
Myrande hedged.
     "You know what I mean," Lauren replied calmly.
     "Nothing  happened. He  was drunk.  He  didn't know  what he  was
doing," Myrande replied sullenly, toying with a sausage.
     Lauren smiled. "What makes you think that?"
     "He  was drunk,"  she repeated.  "He  doesn't want  me when  he's
sober. If only--" Myrande tried to  finish, but there was nothing left
to say.  "He was  so hurt,"  she confided to  the Duchess,  who leaned
forward sympathetically. "I  haven't seen him like  that since Roisart
died..." Sable could feel Luthias' pain, a hard, cold, burning lump of
stone in her heart. "But he was  drunk, and I pushed him away. I don't
know how, I don't know if I should  have, I don't even know why, but I
pushed him away."
     Despair washed  over her then,  as it  had consumed the  Baron of
Connall the night  before. "Perhaps you shouldn't  have rejected him,"
the Duchess  said coldly.  Myrande stared at  her, confused  and hurt.
"Perhaps you should  have let him continue. Luthias is  a man of great
honor, young as he is. He would have married you--"
     Furious, Myrande leapt to her feet, and her chair flew toward the
stone wall  of the keep,  crashed, and  tumbled noisily onto  the cool
floor. "I would  never do such a thing!" she  cried, enraged. "I would
never compromise Luthias' honor to--"  The Duchess of Dargon looked at
her  calmly and  compassionately. Sable  compressed her  lips angrily,
reached  behind her  for the  chair, righted  it, and  sat. "You  knew
better," she accused tightly. "You know better. Why did you say that?"
     "So *you* would  know why you pushed him  away," Lauren explained
gently.
     And Myrande did  understand. She had wondered whether  or not she
had scornfully  rejected the only  opportunity she would ever  have to
feel Luthias' touch,  to be anything like  a wife to him,  to have his
love. Tired, sorrowful, her head lowered.
     The  Duchess touched  Myrande's hand.  "It will  be all  right. I
know."
     Myrande  didn't question  her; there  were some  things that  the
Duchess  of Dargon,  daughter of  the High  Mage, just  knew. She  was
magical, the Duchess of Dargon was.
     "Do  you  know  what  this trial  will  bring?"  Myrande  finally
inquired.
     "Only that Luthias  will gain great honor by  it," Lauren sighed.
"Perhaps when he returns, he'll make you Duchess of Dargon."
     "Don't  say that;  it's ill  luck," Myrande  hushed her  swiftly.
"Luthias doesn't want  to convict Clifton or Michiya. No  more does he
want to be a  Duke. I don't wish to be Duchess. The  only thing I want
is  Luthias' love."  Which I  shall never  have, she  reminded herself
sternly. "What does your father think of all this?"
1     "He's  consulted  his crystal  for  days,"  Lauren revealed.  The
Duchess stared at the wall. "And he sees war and blood."
     War and blood. Sir Edward Sothos had told Luthias that he thought
war was coming. And so the seneschal  this day, a week after the Baron
of  Connall  left  her  to  try  his  cousin  for  treason,  sent  for
Macdougalls, who sauntered into her office and her reverie.
     "Hi,"  said the  assistant  Castellan  casually, seating  himself
without permission.  He had  know Myrande  all her  life and  had been
assistant Castellan  under her father;  he saw  no reason to  stand on
ceremony, and Myrande knew it. "What can I do for ye, lassie?"
     Myrande smiled slightly at Macdougalls. He was a short, dark man,
perpetually wearing a quiver of arrows and a saucy grin. "You can send
to Dargon for masons and carpenters, since you won't let me out of the
castle without a  guard," she bantered, only  half-playfully. The fact
that Macdougalls  did not  permit her to  go anywhere  alone irritated
her, as did the fact that Luthias had ordered it so. "In case there is
a  war,  I  want  this  castle  ready.  Besides,  we're  due  for  the
maintenance."
     "Aye, lassie," Macdougalls agreed.  His grin expanded. "These yer
orders, or the lad's?"
     "Both, I  think." But she didn't  want to think of  Luthias. "And
when they  arrive, I  want you  to oversee the  repairs. I'm  sure you
know, as well as I, what needs attention."
     "Aye," Macdougalls  agreed, "and I would  say ye're on top  of my
list."  Myrande rolled  her eyes  in  dismissal, but  the archer  only
laughed. "Ye've  been workin' too hard,  lassie. Why don't ye  just go
shootin'?"
     "Will you let me go alone?"
     "Nay. Lad's orders," he reminded her.
     "Then I'm  not going," Myrande decided.  "I refuse to give  up my
privacy. If I'm going  to be surrounded, I might as  well stay where I
am." She paused. "Were  you telling me the truth when  you said that I
shoot better than half the archers of the Barony?"
     "Aye, of course, lass," he confirmed confidently. "I wouldn't lie
to ye."
     Myrande  grimaced.  "If  that's  so,  you'd  better  institute  a
mandatory daily archery practice for all the soldiers in the castle."
     Macdougalls laughed loudly and irreverently. "Ye don't have to be
so accurate when you fire into a whole troop, lassie!"
     There  was  a  discreet  knock   on  her  door.  "Come,"  Myrande
instructed. Mika, her pretty, young  assistant, crept into the office.
"My lady," the  girl announced, "the lord of Shipbrook  is here to see
you."
     "My cousin, Lord Warin Shipbrook?" Myrande asked.
     "No, my lady. It is your uncle, the Baron himself."
     "Oh, damn," Myrande  breathed. Louder, she ordered,  "Seat him in
the solar, and  convey my regrets that I cannot  join him immediately.
Assure him I  shall attend him shortly." Mika nodded  to the seneschal
and the assistant Castellan and timidly crept away.
     "What  would the  Baron  of Shipbrook  want  of ye?"  Macdougalls
wondered aloud. "He knows the lad ain't here."
     Sable's lips twitched with  displeasure. "Yes, he knows." Myrande
knew exactly what Shipbrook wanted. "He came here because the Baron is
absent, Macdougalls."
     "I'll set a guard in there," the archer decided.
     "No," Myrande countermanded the order. "I don't want him to think
I fear  him." She rose  to leave her office.  "But keep an  eye sharp,
Macdougalls. I don't trust him."
     "Me neither," Macdougalls agreed as she left the room.
     Myrande  sped upstairs  to her  chambers, threw  off the  stained
1muslin overdress  and slipped  into a semi-formal  gown of  light blue
silk. She  could not  look the  seneschal for  company, and  her pride
would not  permit her  to look  overworked to  her uncle.  She quickly
unbraided her hair, brushed it, and wound it behind her head. Hastily,
she reached  for the two  Bichanese hair ornaments Michiya  had bought
her. She smiled;  they were beautiful--and deadly.  Although topped by
exquisite Bichanese artwork, the ivory sticks were tipped with a sharp
silver point. Michiya  had told her that often these  chop sticks were
used as weapons for a final defense.
     She  finally slipped  them into  her ebony  hair and  checked her
appearance in the mirror.
     As usual, she was dissatisfied; she was short, dark of skin, eye,
and  hair, and  looked capable  rather than  ornamental. Her  face was
well-formed, but not striking. She glanced  at her body and wished her
figure were not so pronounced.
     Oh, to  look as  the Duchess  of Dargon  did, tall,  willowy, and
beautiful, with creamy  skin and blue-green eyes...to  be educated and
magical, as Lauren was...then, perhaps,  Luthias might have loved her,
if she were beautiful and enchanting.
     But she was small and dark  and practical, a seneschal and not an
enchantress. She sighed and hurried from  her room; no matter what she
felt about her uncle, she would not shame Luthias' house.
     The Baron of Shipbrook, a tall, heavy-set, dark-haired man, stood
as his neice entered. "You are  looking well, my dear," he greeted her
with a  bow Myrande found  artificial rather than courteous.  "How are
you?"
     "Well, thank you, your lordship," Myrande addressed him formally.
Somewhat gracefully, she offered a curtsey. "And you, sir?"
     "I thank you, well," the Baron  of Shipbrook said. He sat without
invitation. "I came  to inform you that I have  arranged your marriage
for the twenty-fourth of Seber."
     "I am not marrying," Myrande told him. Did the man really find it
necessary to go through this again?
     "But, my child," Shipbrook protested  in a gentle, wheedling tone
full of a feigned concern, "you must marry."
     "The Baron of Connall says I needn't; he is my guardian, sir, not
you."
     Shipbrook's eyes narrowed angrily.  "Girl, you have no conception
of the shame  you bring on your family, and  on yourself, by remaining
unmarried. Half the Duchy thinks you Connall's whore--"
     All the blood drained from Myrande's face as rage exploded at the
comment, but she somehow kept silent.  How dare he! Whore? It was true
that most  of the  Duchy thought her  Luthias' bride  --Fionn Connall,
Luthias' father,  had started  that rumor  years ago--but  whore?! How
dare he! When Luthias returned--
     But he wasn't here now. Her words were slow, careful, and formal;
she must be careful and keep her rage in check. "I am the seneschal of
Connall, sir,  nothing else, and  you know  it. My guardian,  the Lord
Baron, has  refused permission  for my  marriage, has  he not?  When I
asked him  about it,  he forbade  me to enter  into such  a marriage."
Remembering his absolute refusal made Sable smile.
     Shipbrook's  lips compressed  into thin,  pink lines.  "He wishes
that you be a spinster, to be mocked by the Duchy."
     "That is not true," Myrande  argued, wondering at the serenity of
her voice. How  cool and placid she sounded! "The  Baron of Connall is
doing his best to see I am happy." Within her, something warm lit when
she remembered the arguement she and  Luthias had had in Dargon before
the Sy tourney. He  had put his arms around her and  said then that he
wanted her to be happy.
     "Don't  you want  to  marry Baron  Oleran?" Shipbrook  continued.
1Somehow, he had subdued his anger  and was again employing a wheedling
tone. "He is a  handsome man; he's rich and owns a  great deal of land
in the Duchy of Northfield. Granted, he is older than you--"
     "I do not  wish to marry," Myrande informed firmly.  Her calm was
wearing thin.
     "Oleran has only seen you once,  at a distance, and he is already
in love with you."
     Myrande  supressed a  desire to  laugh. True,  she had  never met
Oleran and that she  was judging him by the rumors,  but she could not
conceive of  a man of  Oleran's evil  reputation falling in  love with
anyone, let alone a dark seneschal. "I do not love him," Sable replied
flatly. "And I shall not marry him. I shall not marry at all--ever!"
     "You must  marry!" Shipbrook  demanded, rising.  He was  tall and
ominous now, his dark, surly eyes wicked. "If you refuse--"
     "What  will  you  do?"  Myrande  challenged  him.  "You  have  no
authority  over me.  Luthias  has forbidden  the  match--yet you  take
advantage of his absence to try to  convince me to disobey him. I will
not marry, your  lordship. And if you think you  can convince me, try,
but I warn you  that a hundred guards will protect me if  I so much as
call."
     Shipbrook grimaced and  turned away. "I suppose you  will turn me
out, then."
     "I would not  think of shaming the hospitality  of Lord Connall,"
Sable  assured her  uncle  haughtily.  "You are  welcome  to stay  for
dinner."

     Myrande woke  slowly, woozily.  In confusion,  she stared  at the
ceiling. It was not the low, beamed ceiling in her chamber at Connall.
Where  was she?  This was  not  any room  in Connall  Keep or  Connall
Castle; she would have recognized it.
     Perhaps  she  was  ill.  Yes,  at  dinner  with  her  uncle,  she
remembered  feeling  dizzy and  sick.  That  was  the last  thing  she
recalled. Where was she now? What had happened?
     "You dispatched men to  intercept the Castellan's messenger?" she
heard her uncle's voice say.
     "Yes, my lord. The man was stopped."
     "Good. I  don't want the Baron  of Connall knowing of  this. Make
sure of it. You may go."
     "Thank you, your  lordship." Myrande heard a door  close a moment
later.
     "She is  rather lovely, in a  dark way," Myrande heard  an urbane
voice appraise her cooly. "Like a fairy child. She will do."
     Where was she?!
     "And the bridal  price?" she heard her uncle ask.  "I grant it is
more usual to receive a dowry--"
     "One thousand, as we agreed,"  Oleran returned politely. "You are
taking a good deal of trouble to get  me my bride; I am willing to pay
a good deal for her. Besides, as I  told you, I need a bride to rescue
my reputation."
     The door--where was the door? Myrande  could not turn her head to
see--opened and  shut rapidly. "Father,  what is this?"  Myrande heard
her cousin, Warin, demand. "How did you get Myrande here? Does Luthias
know of this?"
     "Of  course not,  and  he won't,"  Shipbrook  said firmly.  "Lord
Oleran, I believe you know my son, Warin."
     "Sir," Warin acknowledged the other  noble quickly. For a moment,
Warin's  eyes stared  at Myrande's.  "My God,  Father, she  looks like
death. What did you do to her?"
     "I gave  her a  little callin.  It calmed her  enough to  be more
cooperative."
1     "Callin?!" Warin  squeaked. Inside, Myrande felt  like screaming.
That--! He had  drugged her and taken her from  her home. Myrande knew
of drugs; part of her duties as seneschal involved healing. Callin was
used to calm people too agitated  to relax alone. But its side effects
included  euphoria  and  susceptibility   to  suggestion.  Her  uncle,
that--!, had  probably used this  power of suggestion to  assure their
escape from Connall, to convince Macdougalls that all was well.
     But would Macdougalls  allow her to get away?  No...they had said
something about a messenger. Which her uncle had done stopped.
     "You  drugged  her?"  Warin  continued,  outraged.  "Father,  she
doesn't want to marry!"
     "I'll  convince her  otherwise," Myrande  heard the  urbane voice
promise. She felt  some of her hair  move, then felt the  point of the
chop stick on her scalp. But Myrande couldn't adjust her position; she
was still too drowsy.
     "If  not, I  still have  plenty of  callin," Shipbrook  reassured
Baron Oleran. "You'll have a wife yet."
     "You--" Warin began, but did  not finish. "Father, you can't just
kidnap Myrande and marry her off. Luthias--"
     "Is  two weeks  away in  Magnus,  attending the  business of  the
King,"  Shipbrook reminded  his son  cooly. "Now,  have you  something
useful to say, son, or am I to take away your birthright."
     There was silence for a moment,  then Warin said, "I did actually
come to  tell you something 'useful.'  There is a ship  our harbor. An
ambassador from the Beinison Empire,  one Count Tyago, has arrived and
asks hospitality."
     Shipbrook  suddenly sounded  interested in  his son's  words. "An
ambassador from the Beinison Emperor? Where is he?"
     "In the great hall."
     Myrande heard  her uncle rise.  "Come, Oleran, we must  greet the
man civilly.  An ambassador from  Beinison in my house!"  he concluded
joyfully. "We must hold a ball in  his honor. Warin, send a message to
the  Duchess of  the  ambassador's  arrival, and  see  that you  don't
mention your cousin."
     The room went  dark as the men left it,  and Myrande slipped back
into sleep.

     Myrande Shipbrook,  Seneschal of Connall, woke  seething when the
maid came  in to  tend her.  She rose silently,  glared at  girl, then
regretted it. It wasn't her fault, after all. Myrande smiled sadly and
allowed the maid to  dress her (dress her? She was  no noble lady like
Lauren. Sable didn't need  or want a maid to dress  her). Her sky blue
gown had  been wrinkled  by sleep,  but the  maid provided  another of
peach silk.  Myrande gazed at  herself in  the mirror in  disdain. The
garment's color made her skin appear dirty.
     The maid brought breakfast then,  but Myrande shook her head. The
maid seem  confused and left,  but she  left the tray  behind. Myrande
gazed at  it, took a  deep breath, and  made a decision.  Ignoring the
food, Sable went to the window and gazed out. She was high in a tower,
the highest tower  in Shipbrook's keep. She smiled. She  could see the
towers of Connall.

     "You must eat!" her uncle raged at her a day later.
     "No,"  Myrande  refused  firmly.   Although  as  furious  as  her
relative, she refused to raise her voice and lower herself.
     "You'll starve yourself."
     "If I am kept captive."
     "Eat!" Shipbrook commanded.
     "I  will not,"  Sable repeated.  She smiled.  Luthias had  always
called her  stubborn and prideful;  thank God  she was. She  would not
1allow this toad to win.
     "Oleran will not have a starved bride!"
     "Baron Oleran will have no  bride at all," Myrande corrected him.
"I refuse to marry him, sir. In the ceremony, I am asked to accept the
bridegroom. It is my choice. You cannot make me marry."
     "I  pursuaded   you  to   leave  Connall,  my   girl,"  Shipbrook
threatened. "I can use my pursuasion again."
     "Not if  I neither  eat nor drink,"  Sable reminded  him, smiling
triumphantly. "How will you drug me again?"
     Her uncle looked shocked at the words.
     A  knock sounded.  "What?" her  uncle shouted  angrily. Myrande's
cousin Tylane opened the door slightly. "Father, the Count of Tyago is
ready for the ball. Is Myrande coming?"
     "No," the Baron  of Shipbrook said flatly. He  turned to Myrande.
"I will  not let you  out of  this room until  you agree to  marry the
Baron Oleran." Myrande  only smiled at him, and  Shipbrook turned back
to Tylane. "Where is your brother?"
     "Getting ready. He'll meet us downstairs."
     "Very well. I shall also join you there." Tylane nodded, cast one
sympathetic, helpless look  at his cousin, and  disappeared behind the
heavy door. Myrande stared at the  door. She heard the bolt slide into
place every  time Shipbrook  left, and  she knew  that there  were two
guards outside  it. Shipbrook  turned to his  neice again.  "You shall
change your mind," he promised. He whirled and left the room.
     A  ball  tonight.  Perhaps  she could  escape.  Lauren  would  be
invited; if  only she could  get a message  to her. No;  the servants,
though sympathetic, couldn't risk  it. Tylane wouldn't. Warin--perhaps
he would help. But she could depend on no one but herself.
     As night fell, Sable went to the window again and looked out. She
smiled as she  saw the towers of Connall again,  then she examined her
own tower.
     Her room was  over four hundred feet high (can't  climb down, she
decided; not enough bed covers to make a rope); the roof of the tower,
which was  a flat stone floor  with crenolations, was only  forty feet
above her. Myrande pulled her head back into the room and examined the
ceiling. Yes, she could see the trap door, and there were stairs along
the  walls leading  to it.  Reaching the  roof wasn't  a problem.  She
looked back out.  The top of the tower was  accessible from the castle
walls;  she had  an  escape route.  But the  walls  were patrolled  by
Shipbrook's men  and Oleran's; she would  never get out alone.  If she
could get  a guard's uniform,  that might be  one thing. She  might be
able to  trick the guards and  send one away, but  she couldn't subdue
the other one unless she chose to kill him with her Bichanese weapons.
No; she would not kill.
     Myrande jolted  as she heard  the bolt  slip back from  the door.
Perhaps Oleran had  come to beat her, or Shipbrook  to try to convince
her to marry. Her mouth set; she would not let them win.
     A slim figure slipped rapidly into  the dim tower room and closed
the door. "Myrande!" it rasped.
     Myrande smiled slightly and came forward. "Warin! What is it?"
     Warin took  her hands firmly, but  the grip was also  frantic and
frightened. "Why aren't you eating?" her cousin demanded. "Do you know
what you're doing?"
     "I  know  exactly what  I'm  doing,"  Myrande assured  him.  "I'm
preventing  your father  from drugging  me again.  He drugged  my food
before; he  isn't going to  trick me into  marrying Oleran the  way he
tricked me into leaving Connall."
     "Myrande, you  must eat  something," Warin reminded  her, holding
her hands so tightly that it hurt. "If you don't, you'll die."
     "I'm so  glad you  went to the  University, Warin,"  Sable teased
1playfully. "I would never know these things if you didn't tell me."
     "I'm serious!" the frustrated Warin cried out, jerking her hands.
"Myrande, you could die! Do you want to die?"
     "No," Myrande  spat angrily, "of course  I don't! Do you  think I
want to give up on life? But  I'd rather die honorably than be tricked
into  a marriage  and beaten  by Oleran.  Luthias would  rather--" She
stopped.
     Warin  sighed  and,  defeated,  he released  her  hands.  "You're
right," he  conceded, sounding tired.  "Luthias would rather  you died
like this  than married to Oleran.  So would I," he  revealed heavily.
"But I wish there were some other way."
     "Get  me  out of  here,"  Myrande  suggested. "Send  someone  for
Luthias. Get me a guard's uniform. Anything."
     "I can't get you  a uniform or take you from  here. My father has
the soldiers watching for tricks," Warin told her, collapsing onto her
feather bed. "And as  for messengers--Father's already killed Luthias'
man that your archer castellan sent out." Young Lord Shipbrook sighed,
was silent,  then sat up quickly.  "Myrande--if I bring you  the food,
will you eat it? I understand why you don't trust my father, but--"
     "I'll eat it," Myrande agreed. Perhaps there was a way after all!
"At the ball...can you talk to the Duchess?"
     "My father's after me like a hawk."
     "He'll disinherit you if he finds out about the food."
     Warin smiled weakly. "I'd rather be  right than rich, if it comes
down to  your life, Myrande."  He was  silent again. Myrande  sat down
beside  him. Warin  looked up  at her,  his hazel  eyes cloudy  in the
dimness. "We could get married."
     "No," Myrande said softly, but quickly.
     "Why?" Myrande looked  away. "Is it that man Luthias  told me of,
the one you're in love with?" Myrande was still, then she nodded. "Who
is he? Maybe--if he knows you love him--he'll help us."
     Myrande laughed and  turned toward her cousin.  "I wouldn't doubt
it!" She  sobered quickly. "But  it wouldn't do  us any good.  He's in
Magnus--"
     "Good God!" Warin  cried out, caught between  laughter and shout.
"You love Luthias."
     "Yes," Myrande admitted, sighing. "I love Luthias."
     "He doesn't know? You didn't tell him?"
     "I couldn't."
     "He would marry you, Myrande, if--"
     "For the wrong  reasons," she argued. "I don't  want him marrying
me  because he  feels he  should.  And I  don't want  him pitying  me,
either. Let it alone, Warin."
     For a long while, young  Lord Shipbrook didn't speak. Finally, he
stood. "We'll find some way, Myrande," he promised.
     "Thank you," Myrande  said, and Warin knocked on  the bolted door
to be let out.
     He turned back. "I'll bring something before dawn."
     Myrande assented, understanding. Her  cousin disappeared when the
door opened.  She took  the chop  sticks from  her hair,  slipped them
beneath her pillow, then undressed and went to sleep.

     Warin  slipped into  the ball  room once  the music  started. His
father  snagged his  tunic angrily.  "Where  were you?"  the Baron  of
Shipbrook demanded of his elder son. "Why are you late?"
     "I was  talking to Myrande,"  Warin explained defiantly.  "Do you
object?"
     "She will marry Oleran," Shipbrook insisted. "I will see to it."
     "I told her that," Warin  lied. "She's stubborn, Father, like her
mother."
1     Warin watched his father's face; it  did not move, but he saw the
flinch  behind his  eyes.  Yes,  that still  hurt  his  ego, that  his
brother,  who had  no title,  no  wealth, and  at the  time, not  even
Knighthood, should have  been preferred to him by  the loveliest woman
in the Duchy of her generation.  Like her mother, Myrande was immobile
when she loved another.
     "You are  trying to trick me,"  Shipbrook accused his son  in low
tones. Smiling, the Baron bowed to a passing noble.
     "Not  at all.  I don't  want to  see Myrande  caged. It  would be
better for  her if she  gave in," Warin  stated, lying again.  A brief
thought cascaded  across his brain;  if Myrande conceded, would  he be
able to smuggle her out of the keep?
     His father  looked him over  cooly. "It is  good to see  you have
come to  your senses," his  father finally  told him. "Come.  You must
meet the Beinsison ambassador."
     The Baron of Shipbrook led his  elder son toward his younger son,
Tylane, and Tylane's betrothed, Danza  Coranabo. With them was a young
man who  looked to be about  Danza's age: fifteen. To  this young man,
the Baron of Shipbrook bowed. "Count Tyago," he announced himself. The
young man, blond  and boyish, nodded respectfully. "This  is my eldest
son, Warin. Warin, Count Tyago."
     "How do you do, sir," Warin said politely, bowing.
     "How do you do," replied the Count in an accent pronounced enough
to be noticed  but slight enough not to  interfere with understanding.
He held out his hand to Warin. "A pleasure to meet you."
     "And you, your--" What was the proper term of respect for a Count
of the Beinison Empire? It  was "excellency" here... "And you, Count."
Warin smiled at the young man. "What brings you here to Baranur?"
     "The business of  the Emperor," Count Tyago replied.  "I am going
to Magnus  as an  emissary from  his Imperial  Majesty to  your King."
Tyago glanced at  Warin's brother. "Your father has offered  to me the
companionship of Lord Tylane."
     "You're going to Magnus?" Warin asked his brother. Tylane nodded,
almost  shyly. "And  leaving your  bride?" Warin  teased. His  brother
blushed, as did Danza.
     "I  would  not want  your  son  to  leave his  betrothed,"  Tyago
protested. "Please stay."
     "I'll go  in his place,  Father," Warin volenteered,  then cursed
himself. Who would bring food to Myrande? She'd die for certain!
     "No," Baron  Shipbrook refused  with finality. "Tylane  will go."
Danza appeared dejected, Tylane sad. "I have given my word." The Baron
looked over his shoulder and saw  the entrance and announcement of the
Duchess of  Dargon. He grimaced.  "I must  attend to my  other guests,
sir," he said to the young Count. "Pray excuse me."
     Tyago bowed to him  as he left, then bowed to  Danza as the music
started.  "Would you  like to  dance, my  lady?" Danza  blushed again.
"With your  permission, Lord Tylane?"  Tylane smiled and  nodded, then
whisked Danza gracefully away.
     Warin grabbed his brother's sleeve. "You're going to Magnus?"
     "Don't get  any ideas,"  Tylane warned him  in a  hiss. "Father's
like a falcon; he's watching every move I make. If he--"
     "Take a  message to  Luthias," Warin  breathed. "Tell  him what's
happening. Tell  him to get the  hell back here before  Father marries
Myrande off to Oleran, before she gets beaten or raped or killed!"
     "I can't,"  Tylane swore.  "If Father  suspects, he'll  refuse to
accept Danza for me."
     "Would you rather have Myrande's blood on your hands?"
     "I won't give  up Danza!" Tylane vowed angrily. He  smiled as the
Duchess of Dargon  passed him. "Not for you, not  for Myrande, and not
for Luthias."
1     "You'd better," Warin threatened,  snagging his brother's sleeve.
"You *owe* Luthias. You told me yourself that if Luthias hadn't chosen
to listen to Danza  when she said she loved you and  not him, she'd be
married to him now and you'd have no hope!"
     "I won't risk losing the woman I love!"
     "And you are willing to risk Myrande's losing the man she loves?"
     "She loves no one," Tylane  stated petulantly. "If she had, Fionn
Connall would have married her off years ago."
     "She loves  Luthias," Warin  hissed. "Is it  any wonder  the late
Baron held off?"  Tylane looked at his brother, then  looked away. "It
isn't hard, Tylane," Warin cajoled.  "Just tell him." Tylane looked up
again, then shifted his gaze. "You owe Luthias."
     "Yes," breathed Tylane reluctantly, "I owe Luthias."
     "You'll do it?"
     "I'll  tell  him," Tylane  promised,  sighing.  "I can't  promise
anything else, Warin."
     "It's  enough," Warin  assured him,  and  he went  to dance  with
Pecora Winthrop.
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1------------------------------------------------------------------------
   (C)    Copyright   October,    1989,   DargonZine,    Editor   Dafydd
.  All rights revert  to the authors.  These stories
may not be  reproduced or redistributed save in the  case of reproducing
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of the author involved.






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  D     D A  A R  R G    O  O N N N     Z   I N N N E     ||Volume 2
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  D    D  AAAA RRR  G GG O  O N N N   Z     I N N N E     || Issue 6
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--   DargonZine Volume 2, Issue 6        11/03/89          Cir 861    --
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--                            Contents                                --
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  Trial Before the King      M. Wendy Hennequin     Seber 5-12, 1013
  Knight in Shining Armor    M. Wendy Hennequin     Seber 24-Ober 7, '13
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1                          Trial by Fire
                             Part IV
                      Trial Before the King
                      by M. Wendy Hennequin
                 (b.c.k.a. HENNEQUI_WEM@CTSTATEU)

     At the  sound of  a warrior's scream,  Sir Edward  Sothos lurched
awake and  grabbed his sword, ready  for the attack. The  air was dark
and not lit by moon or stars. Light streamed from a low crack.
     The ship, that's  right; they were on the ship  bound for Magnus.
Luthias  was having  nightmares  again. Edward  crossed  the room  and
gently called the Baron's name. There was a gasp as Connall woke. "You
should have the High Mage make you a sleeping potion," Sothos advised.
"You haven't slept well at all on this trip."
     Luthias stared  at Edward as best  he could in the  dark. Luthias
hadn't slept  well in weeks, not  since the heat wave  had hit western
Baranur and Luthias received the job  of Duke's Advocate. That job now
took him from his Barony and his  ward Myrande. It brought him to this
ship, which in  turn would bring him  to Magnus to try  his cousin and
his Castellan for treason. Was it  any wonder he couldn't sleep? Every
time he  closed his  eyes, visions  of horror and  war erupted  on his
eyelids.
     "You might as  well stay awake," Edward  counseled. "We'll arrive
in Magnus before dawn. We'll go to see the King right away."
     "King  Haralan accepts  visitors this  early?" Luthias  wondered,
reaching for his book, "History of the Beinison Emperors."
     "He's received  the message by  now that we were  coming," Edward
speculated. "And his  doors are always opened to  the Knight Commander
and the High Mage."
     "Will he want to see me?"
     "Most likely. You are prosecuting the Duke and the Castellan."
     Luthias grimaced at the reminder  and glanced at the locked, iron
chest  which contained  all the  physical evidence  pertaining to  the
case. He  had pored over the  contents time and again  with Marcellon,
who was  defending Clifton Dargon  and Ittosai Michiya. Both  had been
looking for some hole  in the evidence, some clue to  lead them to the
real traitors. There  had been none, and there had  been no hints from
the crystal ball over which Marcellon had brooded in silence.
     Crystal ball  indeed. As if  magic could  help them now.  If only
Roisart were here,  Luthias thought for the thousandth  time, he would
find the  hole, reason it all  out, help me through  this. But Roisart
was dead, Myrande was in Connall, and Luthias was alone.
     "I'm  sure  it will  end  well,  Luthias," the  Knight  Commander
addressed him  sympathetically. "Not many  in this Kingdom  will think
Clifton Dargon a traitor."
     "What do they matter?"
     "The King  hears all opinions on  the case after the  evidence is
presented to the  court. Rest assured that I will  support your cousin
and your  castellan." Edward  smiled so widely  that his  scar danced.
"Believe me,  the opinions of the  Knight Commander and the  High Mage
won't be  taken lightly.  And I'm sure  that Clifton's  relatives will
support him."
     "The evidence  is very convincing, Sir  Edward," Luthias reminded
him.  It had  almost convinced  Luthias at  one point.  Thank God  for
Sable,  who had  brought him  back to  his senses.  Luthias smiled  to
himself. Thank God for Sable, period.
     Luthias  glanced at  the box  again.  All that  evidence, and  he
wasn't convinced. Some Duke's Advocate he  was, his heart not truly in
his duty or his case. Let me  go home, Luthias wished, looking out the
porthole to see  the towers of the King's castle  in Magnus pierce the
1sun like a score of spears.  Although Luthias had always wanted to see
Magnus, now all he  wanted was to return to Connall. Go  home and be a
baron--he  had  never wanted  to  be  a  baron--and stay  with  Sable,
assuming she had forgiven the fact  that he, drunk and despairing, had
tried to force himself on her.
     He had thought  much about that last night in  Connall. He wished
he could  remember it  more clearly,  but the  brandy had  smudged the
memory  irrevocably.  He  didn't  get far  with  Sable--thank  God  he
remembered that  much!--but he had toyed  with her, as his  father had
strictly  prohibited two  years before.  "If  you toy  with her  body,
you'll toy with her heart! I forbid  you to touch her!" His father had
actually scared him.  Luthias couldn't fathom why Sable  allowed it to
go  as  far as  it  had;  she had  told  him  before--not in  so  many
words--that she  wanted no man but  her beloved to touch  her. Yet she
had allowed Luthias' touch.
     Luthias shrugged at himself and lit a candle to read by. He hoped
Sable had forgiven him. She must have, Luthias concluded; she tried to
say good-bye, but  he in his shame  and guilt could not  face her. But
still, Luthias did not know for certain.
     All he wanted was  to go home and find out.  Again he wished, Let
me go home.

     King Haralan,  as Edward had  predicted, admitted the  party from
Dargon immediately, despite the early hour. "Marcellon!" was the first
person  the  King  greeted.  "How  good of  you  to  return!"  Haralan
exclaimed,  only  slightly  sarcastically.  Good mages  are  rare  and
difficult to  find. "Good morning,  Edward," the King said  the Knight
Commander. Edward bowed. The smile vanished. "I received your message.
The  Duke of  Dargon  is accused  of treason?"  The  High Mage  nodded
gravely. "By whom?"
     The  Baron of  Coranabo came  forward. "At  the trial  of Ittosai
Michiya, the witness  said the accused and a  Bichanese merchant spoke
of a plot by Bichu to take Dargon with the help of the Duke."
     "A Duke," Luthias interrupted.
     "Who are you, sir?" the King addressed him sternly.
     "I  am Luthias  Connall, your  majesty," he  replied proudly.  He
knelt, as his father had taught him was proper.
     Marcellon gestured to Luthias and added, "The Baron of Connall is
the Duke's Advocate, your majesty."
     Slightly amused at Luthias' gesture, the King motioned Luthias to
rise.  "You  are  the  Duke's Advocate?"  Luthias  nodded.  "We  shall
question you, then, Baron. First, who  is this Ittosai Michiya who was
tried?"
     "He is a  man who left Bichu  because he won a duel  of honor and
was sought by the dead man's family," Luthias explained. "He has lived
in Dargon for two  or three years. He once worked  for Lord Dargon and
then went on a quest in  the countryside." Luthias paused, then added,
"He is now my Castellan, your majesty."
     The King's  eyebrows rose.  "Indeed. Was Castellan  Ittosai found
guilty by the Tribunal?"
     Baron  Vladon stepped  forward to  answer.  "We never  came to  a
conclusion, your majesty.  We brought the case to you,  as it involved
Duke Dargon."
     "There  is evidence,  Baron?" the  King addressed  Luthias again.
Luthias nodded. "Is  there anyone to defend Duke  Dargon and Castellan
Ittosai?"
     "I shall, your majesty," Marcellon replied. "The Baron of Connall
has been kind enough to allow me to go over the evidence."
     "Very well," the King concluded.  "Well, we have already summoned
the nobles. Are the Duke of Dargon and Castellan here?"
1     "They are on the ship, sire," Edward told him. "I've already sent
a detachment to escort them to the Keep."
     "Very well.  We will  begin this afternoon."  The King  nodded to
Baron Vladon, Rish Vogel, Baron Coranabo, and Luthias in dismissal.
     The  older men  filed out  of the  room, but  Luthias lingered  a
moment, attempting  to decide.  Now was  the time;  there would  be no
other chance, and  he couldn't do this thing. Ask  the King, Sable had
said, and maybe  she had been right. He turned,  but was uncertain how
to begin.
     Luckily, the King saw him. "You wish to speak, Baron Connall?"
     "Yes, your majesty," Luthias began  after a heavy sigh. There was
only one thing to do, and he would do it. "I wish for you to put Baron
Coranabo or  Baron Vladon in  charge of the  case against the  Duke of
Dargon and Ittosai Michiya."
     "Why?  You are  the Duke's  Advocate; you  know the  evidence and
circumstances better  than they,"  the King argued.  "That is  why the
Duke's Advocate is summoned as well, to try the case."
     "I know,  your majesty, but  I cannot try  the Duke of  Dargon or
Ittosai Michiya."
     "Don't you understand  the evidence?" the King  prompted. "I knew
your father, Baron Connall; you cannot be uneducated or stupid. Why--"
     "Because Ittosai Michiya is my friend. He has been loyal and good
to me. He saved my brother's  life," Luthias began, his tone desperate
but his  voice quiet. Beneath the  words, Edward heard the  screams of
Luthias' nightmares. "Because the Duke of  Dargon is my cousin and has
been like a brother to me for as long as I can remember. He is my only
living kinsman, and I--my brother is dead and so is my father. I can't
do this, your majesty."
     The King  gazed at Luthias  thoughtfully, and the young  Baron of
Connall stared  at the monarch  with a  mixture of calm  and strength.
Luthias knew  he must be a  sight: his well-formed face  disfigured by
lack of sleep  and tension more than  it ever had been  by the slight,
white scar above  his right eye; his bearing a  mixture of fatigue and
strength; and his words a mixture of bravery and desperation. Well, he
and Roisart had always been a pair of paradoxes...
     "You are the Duke's Advocate," the King repeated. "Go and do your
duty, Baron Connall."
     Fire  blazed beneath  Luthias' brown  eyes a  moment; the  flames
quickly died,  and Luthias'  face turned to  stone. He  bowed stiffly,
turned, and left without another word.
     The King turned to his High  Mage, who raised an eyebrow, then to
his  Knight  Commander, who  was  openly  seething. "His  only  living
kinsman,  Haralan!" Edward  protested through  his teeth.  "He doesn't
deserve this from you!"
     "He is Fionn Connall's son, is he not?" the King inquired calmly.
"The one whom Fionn  Connall wanted you to train, the  one you wish to
make a Knight?"
     Edward nodded. "He'll be in no condition--"
     "I agree,"  Marcellon interrupted. "Unless you  have an excellent
reason for  keeping him  as prosecutor,  I would  remove him  from the
strain.  It isn't  an easy  thing  for Luthias  to try  men he  thinks
innocent, men  who are  like brothers  to him.  He's already  lost one
brother this year,  your majesty. Through this trial he  may cause the
death of  his cousin  and friend.  I'm not sure  how he'll  handle the
stress."
     "If  he cannot  do so,  he doesn't  deserve Knighthood,"  Haralan
argued casually.
     "Luthias will be knighted, all  right," Edward argued, "but he'll
never be  the same." The  Knight Commander  turned to his  King again.
"Haralan,  Luthias Connall  is one  of the  finest fighters  I've ever
1seen. There is  a war coming; I'm  certain now. Think whom  you may be
turning against you."
     Haralan smiled at  the scarred Knight Commander. "I  don't want a
Knight who will turn on me, Edward.  If he turns, he'll turn now, when
I've oppressed  him. I would  rather know now  what he's made  of than
wait until his loyalty is  crucial." The King's face waxed thoughtful.
"His loyalty  is worth  having. I  want him  to prove  I have  it. His
loyalty for me has to come before any other."
     Edward shook his head. "I don't like it, Haralan."
     "Nor I,  your majesty," Marcellon  added. "He is the  only living
kinsman  of the  Duke of  Dargon; Clifton's  maternal cousins  are all
dead. If  Clifton is proven  guilty, Luthias will become  Duke Dargon,
despite the  fact that Clifton  has fathered an unborn  child. Luthias
doesn't want the Duchy--"
     "Still, people will expect that he does," the King argued easily.
"And if Baron Connall cannot prove Dargon guilty with that motivation,
people will accept  the Duke's innocence more easily."  The King rose.
"And now,  gentlemen, if you would  join me for breakfast,  I would be
much obliged. There is much that we need to discuss."

     Luthias stormed through  the halls of Crown Castle.  How dare he!
Clifton  was  the  only  person  Luthias had  left,  the  only  living
kinsman...oh, he had a few female  cousins on his mother's side, girls
he had never met, but Clifton  was a brother! And Michiya, Michiya his
friend and rescuer and teacher! And he would have to try him; the King
so ordered.  "Your first  duty as  a Knight is  to your  country, your
home, and  family," Sir Lucan had  told Luthias long ago,  in that hot
summer  when he,  his wife,  and  Clifton's parents  had died.  "After
these, you  must serve  the King."  For the second  time in  his life,
Luthias found himself not wishing for Knighthood.
     "Connall?" a soft,  female voice called him,  and slowly, Luthias
turned. Facing  him was a tall,  statuesque woman of middle  age, with
auburn hair streaked by white.
     Luthias stared  at her, confused  and not remembering.  The woman
looked familiar, but  he couldn't place it. The lady  laughed. "I know
you don't remember me; I haven't seen  you since you were a small boy.
You look so  like your father that I recognized  you. You are Luthias,
are you not?" The Baron of Connall nodded. "I am your Aunt Tornia."
     That was  it. She looked like  his mother, that laughing  face on
the portrait in the study. She was his mother's sister, the Duchess of
Asbridge. Luthias  could remember when  she last visited; he  had been
five years old, and  she had brought him and his twin  a box of wooden
soldiers. Luthias bowed to her, unable to speak.
     Tornia  Asbridge  reached  out  and  touched  Luthias  hair  with
maternal concern. "You don't look well, Luthias. Are you ill?"
     "No,  Aunt Tornia,"  Luthias replied  breathlessly. "I'm...tired,
that's all." It  was true; Luthias felt exhausted.  Well, almost true:
it wasn't all.
     "Are you  here because of the  trial of the Duke  of Dargon?" the
Duchess asked, taking  her nephew's arm. "He is your  kinsman; are you
here to defend him?"
     Luthias' throat felt like sand.  "I'm the Duke's Advocate. I must
try  to prove  him guilty."  Suddenly,  the Baron  of Connall  stopped
walking and turned to  his aunt. "How did you know  I was Luthias, and
not Roisart?"
     The Duchess' blue eyes looked at him quizzically. "Your seneschal
sent me  a letter--on  your orders,  I assume--which  told me  of your
father and brother's death."
     Yes, that was  right; after Roisart's death, he  hadn't wanted to
handle all  that, so Sable  took care  of it. Suddenly,  Luthias' mind
1could only  see his brother's corpse,  ripped by the two  bolts. "Aunt
Tornia, could you take me to the Keep?"
     "Whatever for?" the  Duchess of Asbridge asked  in surprise. "The
worst of noble criminals are there."
     "I want to see my cousin."

     Built four  hundred years ago on  the southern edge of  the Royal
Quarter of Magnus,  the Keep stood five stories high,  with six towers
two stories taller. For a hundred years, it had housed the King. After
that, it became home to nobles convicted of horrid crimes less hideous
than  treason. Now,  the  top of  the southeast  tower  was prison  to
Clifton  Dargon  and  Ittosai  Michiya.  Although  exhausted,  Luthias
climbed the stairway while his aunt Tornia waited for him below.
     The guards  at the door halted  him. "No one's allowed,  my lord.
You can question them at the trial this afternoon. High Mage's orders,
my lord."
     "I am the Duke's Advocate  of Dargon," Luthias explained. "I have
come to  see the  Duke. Surely  the High  Mage would  allow it.  It is
imperative."
     "We can't forbid the Advocate," the second guard argued.
     "You want to tell the High Mage?" the first returned.
     "Let  him in!"  Marcellon's voice  echoed amiably  from the  room
beyond the guards. "Baron Connall is permitted, by order of the King."
     Odd, Luthias thought  as the guards admitted him.  He walked into
the  half-circle room  lit by  the  noontime sun.  Ittosai stood  upon
seeing his lord; Marcellon and Clifton nodded.
     "How are you doing, manling?" Clifton asked, trying to sound like
he  was teasing,  but the  words  came out  harshly, impatiently,  and
angrily. "You don't look very well."
     "The  King won't  take me  off the  case," Luthias  blurted. "I'm
sorry." The  Duke's Advocate glanced  sorrowfully at Clifton,  then at
his friend Michiya. "I tried. There's nothing I can do. I--"
     "Do  what   you  must,"  Michiya   told  him  gently,   his  eyes
understanding.
     "But I know that neither of you is guilty!"
     "Don't say  that!" Clifton  snapped, abruptly standing.  "I don't
want  you pulled  into this  too, Luthias.  If--" The  Duke of  Dargon
looked away to face the horror. "I  want you to take care of Lauren if
nothing can be done to save my life."
     "Clifton--" the  Baron began to  protest. He didn't even  want to
think about that possibility anymore.
     "He's right, Luthias," Marcellon interrupted gently. "He may die.
There may be nothing  I can do to convince the King  and the nobles of
his innocence and Lord Ittosai's. You  must keep yourself free of this
madness."
     Luthias sighed and collapsed into a  chair tiredly. "I want to do
something. But  there's nothing--" He  looked away. "And I'll  have to
stand by and watch you die, just as  I had to watch my father die, and
Roisart die. And again, there will be nothing I can do."
     "Hey, manling," Clifton said softly, "you can't fight the King."
     Well, he could, but it wouldn't be Knightly. What would Sir Lucan
have done, what would Sir Edward do? "I'm sorry I have to do this."
     "Do  the best  you  can,  manling," Clifton  advised  him with  a
half-smile. "I want to be proud of you."
     Luthias  tried  to  laugh,  but  it  came  forth  a  snort.  With
difficulty, he rose to leave. "I'll see you soon," he mumbled over his
shoulder.
     "Take care,  Luthias-sama," Michiya  said as  the Baron  left the
room.
     "I'm  worried about  him," Clifton  said quietly  after the  door
1closed behind his  cousin. "He doesn't look well, Father,  and I'm not
certain--"
     "I'll do what I can to take care of him, no matter what happens,"
the High Mage promised his son-in-law.
     "Make certain that he marries Myrande," Ittosai Michiya suggested
with the tone  of a command. "That  will be the best for  him, and she
will take care of him."
     Clifton smiled. "I should order him, as Duke, to do that, in case
we die."
     "I  will do  what I  can to  make certain  that doesn't  happen,"
Marcellon promised sincerely.
     "There is no hope for us," Michiya snapped.
     "You must learn to trust in God," the High Mage gently advised.
     "God!" spat Ittosai Michiya disdainfully. "There is no such thing
as gods!"
     Marcellon  looked  at  the  Bichurian  Castellan  and  raised  an
eyebrow.  "I have  been both  mage  and physician  for thirty  years,"
Marcellon told  him. "I  have seen things  impossible for  medicine or
magic, Michiya."
     Ittosai  laughed  contemptuously. "So  I  have  as well.  I  once
thought I  was led and protected  by a god. I  roamed the countryside,
doing and seeing miracles. And  then this--god--led me back to Dargon.
And for what?"  Michiya snorted with disdain. "To see  a boy murdered,
to see the man  who was once my lord tried for  treason, to be accused
of a crime I  have not committed, and to see  Luthias-sama go mad with
the strain! There is no such thing as gods!"
     "We shall see," the High Mage answered.

     Two  long  days. Luthias  was  beginning  to wonder  exactly  how
exhausted  he could  become before  he collapsed  dead. That  would be
nice: Fionn  Connall, dead from  a fall  on a horse;  Roisart Connall,
killed  by  assassins;  Clifton  Dargon,  beheaded  for  treason;  and
Luthias, dead of exhaustion from the trial. It would be the end of the
family line.
     At  least  he  had  managed   well,  he  thought.  Marcellon  had
complimented his  presentation of the  evidence, as had  Baron Vladon.
Luthias presented  the evidence--all the evidence--impartially,  as if
he didn't care one way or the  other what became of the Duke of Dargon
or the Castellan of Connall. Calmly, he questioned Danal the merchant.
Luthias called  forth Rish Vogel  to prove  that the man  indeed could
understand Bichanese (which, unfortunately, he did). Luthias presented
the document to  the King. Haralan reviewed it, then  had the piece of
refuse read  aloud for  all the  Court to hear.  The Baron  of Connall
questioned Barons Coranabo  and Vladon, who had found  the document in
the Duke's office. And Luthias himself corroborated that it was indeed
Clifton's handwriting.
     Throughout  it all,  Luthias was  impartial as  he was  with such
cases in  his history books.  Clifton was sober and  agitated; Ittosai
Michiya was stone calm, as if he hadn't heard a word. Marcellon seemed
simply to be biding his time.
     Then, it was the High Mage's turn. He questioned Ittosai Michiya,
who swore on all he held holy that he would never do such a thing, and
that he had  not. Michiya told of  the swords he bought,  and the chop
sticks for  Myrande. Clifton, on the  stand, said he was  surprised at
the  findings in  his desk  and  also swore  he knew  nothing of  this
so-called plot.  The Duke also revealed  that a thief had  broken into
his keep  a few months  ago. They had found  the thief where  they had
found the document: in the Duke's study.
     The High Mage  questioned Luthias, too, and the  Baron of Connall
corroborated that  he had received  as a gift  a katana, and  that his
1seneschal, Myrande,  had been  given the  chop sticks.  Then Marcellon
questioned the  nobles of the  duchy who  had come, every  single one,
except Luthias. And each said that they never would have expected that
Clifton Dargon would betray the Kingdom. Half of them said they didn't
believe it now.
     Of course,  Luthias was  unsure of  who spoke  truth. He  had his
doubts about  that slimy  Danal, and  he had  never quite  trusted the
Baron of  Coranabo. Oh,  all had  been sworn in  by the  Master Priest
himself,  but the  Baron  of  Connall knew  that  oaths  did not  bind
dishonorable men,  and the King would  not permit Marcellon to  cast a
spell that would insure that only  truth was spoken. The King believed
in honor, as did Luthias, but the King, Baron Connall thought, trusted
too much that all people possessed it.
     And on the third day, the King  stood. "We are soon to decide the
fate and guilt--or lack of it--of the Duke of Dargon and the Castellan
Ittosai  Michiya." Couldn't  *any*one  in this  Kingdom  say his  name
right? Luthias wondered. "We will hear our nobles' opinions."
     The Duchess of  Narragan rose. "Your royal majesty,  I advise you
to behead  the traitors.  The evidence which  the Duke's  Advocate has
presented removes all doubt."
     "I doubt the Duke of Dargon  is guilty," Edward Sothos replied to
this.
     "How well do you know him?"  argued Dame Martis Westbrook, one of
Sir Edward's two  Knight Captains. She was tall, of  light brown hair,
and hazel eyes.
     "Dame Martis is  correct," said the Duke of  Pyridain, the King's
Royal Treasurer.  "We have the evidence  here before us, but  we don't
know the Duke  of Dargon well enough  to know how much  credit to give
his story."
     "True," Baron Vladon agreed. He stood. "Your majesty, Duke Dargon
has been a Duke  for six years. When Lek Pyle, who  had the late Baron
of Connall and the current Baron's brother murdered, went to trial, he
spoke of a  conspiracy going on for  about as long as  Duke Dargon has
ruled. How are even we, the nobles  of his Duchy, to know if he hasn't
been involved all this time?"
     "Quite so," Coranabo interjected. "We didn't grow up with him. He
spent most of his time with tutors,  or at the University. And we only
see him at state functions."
     "None  of  us  know  him  well  enough  to  judge,"  Dame  Martis
concluded.
     "The Baron  of Connall would," Duchess  Tornia Asbridge supplied,
smiling. "He  grew up with  the Duke,  and he knows  Castellan Ittosai
well. Tell me,  Baron," Aunt Tornia began, facing her  nephew, "do you
think Duke Dargon committed this crime? And what of Ittosai Michiya?"
     Tiredly, Luthias rose. "Your grace,"  he addressed his aunt, then
turned  to the  King. "Your  majesty,  I am  a practical  man. I  have
evidence, physical evidence, which proves the Duke of Dargon guilty. I
have witnesses who have sworn oaths and have testified to the guilt of
Ittosai Michiya." Luthias  paused, looked King Haralan in  the eye. He
suddenly felt that his exhaustion had  left him, and what remained was
strength and  certainty. "Your  majesty, my  cousin has  not committed
treason, nor has my castellan betrayed the country which has sheltered
him."
     The collective court murmured at  the confidence of his voice and
of his  conviction. "You  sound very sure,  Advocate," the  King noted
calmly. "You do not believe the evidence?"
     "No,  your  majesty,  I  do  not. I  believe  the  Duke  and  the
Castellan."
     "I can understand trusting their words above that of the merchant
and  of Lek  Pyle,"  the  Duchess of  Narragan  commented, "but  above
1physical proof? How can you be so sure?"
     "Madam," Luthias answered calmly,  looking at the pretty Duchess,
"I know Clifton Dargon, and I know Ittosai Michiya."
     "But  the  documents,"  began  the  Duke  of  Northfield.  "Baron
Connall,  surely you  can't ignore  them. You  yourself said  that the
document was in Duke Dargon's handwriting and seal."
     "I did," Luthias agreed. "That  didn't mean that Clifton wrote it
or sealed it."
     "You contradict yourself, sir," Martis Westbrook pointed out.
     "Not  at  all,"  Marcellon  easily  disagreed.  "A  forger  could
reproduce Duke  Dargon's hand, and  as the incriminating  document was
found locked in  the Duke's desk, the criminal who  broke in and might
have put it there could have easily used the Duke's own seal upon it."
     "This is quite an impasse," the King commented, and the people in
the great  hall immediately quieted  to hear him. "We  have convincing
evidence that Duke  Dargon and Castellan Ittosai  have indeed betrayed
this country." Behind  Luthias, a door opened. A  herald scurried past
the Duke's Advocate  and the High Mage and knelt  before the King. The
King motioned  him forward, but  continued speaking. "We  have equally
convincing testimony and  logic which prove the  opposite. Therefore I
order a trial by combat."
     There was a loud murmur. "Baron Connall," the King continued, "as
Duke's Advocate, you  must summon the Ducal champion to  fight for the
Duchy's good."
     "I  am  the  Ducal  champion, your  majesty,"  Luthias  announced
quietly.
     "I see," the King said slowly.  On his left, Sir Edward grimaced.
"You must fight for their conviction." King Haralan turned to his High
Mage. "You, with the Duke of  Dargon and the Castellan of Connall, may
name a champion to fight for your cause."
     Ittosai Michiya  stood and  bowed toward  the ruler.  "Your royal
majesty,"  the Castellan  began slowly  and with  dignity, "with  your
permission and the permission of the  Court and the Duke, I will fight
for our innocence."
     Luthias closed his  eyes in despair and anger. Yet  once again he
would  be pitted  against  his  friend! He  would  have  to fight  for
something he didn't believe in, perhaps cause Michiya's death--
     But then he remembered the Sy  tourney and exhaled in relief. The
duel would be to the death--his own death. Ittosai could beat him, and
they both knew it. Luthias was unsure that Michiya would actually kill
him; however,  at least  Clifton and  Michiya's innocence  and release
would be guaranteed.
     But, Sable...he hated the thought of dying and leaving her--
     He stopped the  thought swiftly and angrily.  Never mind. Clifton
would take  care of Sable, and  she would take care  of herself. "When
shall we  fight?" Luthias inquired  quietly. I'm sorry, Sable,  but it
has to be done.
     The  herald  whispered  something  in his  sovereign's  ear.  "An
ambassador has arrived  from the Beinison Empire,"  the King announced
suddenly.  A buzz  of  curiosity rose  from the  crowd  of nobles.  An
ambassador from the Emperor of Beinison? Here? "Therefore, we postpone
combat to  hear him. After  that, there need be  no delay, if  you are
ready, Baron  Connall." Luthias nodded. "And  you, Castellan Ittosai?"
Michiya  bowed  his  head  with  respect.  "Let  the  ambassador  come
forward."
     Pages strenuously pulled open the heavy double doors leading into
the great  hall of  Crown Castle. Walking  nervously but  with dignity
came two  men. One was a  blond, blue-eyed boy--he can't  be more than
seventeen!  Luthias  thought  in  surprise--who  must  have  been  the
ambassador from  the Beinison Emperor  Untar II. The other  young man,
1Luthias knew, was not the ambassador; he was Tylane Shipbrook, Sable's
cousin. The young  Baron of Connall wondered what he  was doing there.
As Tylane passed Luthias, he gave  the young Baron a pained look which
injected panic in Luthias' heart. Sable!
     The  young   ambassador  bowed   to  King  Haralan,   who  nodded
respectfully in  return. "Greetings," King  Haralan spoke to  him. "We
welcome you to our home. I am told you are the Count of Tyago?"
     That boy, a Count? An  astonished murmur spread through the Court
as quickly  as the  Red Plague.  Why, no man  Baranur could  hold that
authority without  having reached  twenty-one years!  A boy,  a Count?
Luthias regard the younger man coolly. Well, he held himself well, for
a man so young, but the Baron  of Connall was certain that Count Tyago
was  no warrior.  He stood  incorrectly for  that. He  was a  scholar,
Luthias  somehow knew.  Something  in the  innocence  in Tyago's  face
reminded Luthias of his twin, and  the Baron of Connall looked away as
Count Tyago spoke to the King.
     "I greet  you, your royal  majesty, in  the name of  his Imperial
majesty, Emperor  Untar," the Count began  in a heavy accent.  "I come
bringing tidings of peace in this time of war."
     "War?" King Haralan  questioned. "What mean you,  sir? Baranur is
not involved in a war."
     "Your royal  majesty," the  boy-Count began again,  "his imperial
majesty  knows well  of the  danger you  suffer from  the heathens  in
Bichu." Luthias  grimaced at the implication;  Michiya's eyes narrowed
at the insult. "The Emperor has sent  me to represent him here in your
royal majesty's Court, and to make an offer to you."
     Something  was nagging  at the  edge  of Luthias'  brain, but  he
couldn't  focus one  it.  Tylane  sent the  Baron  of Connall  another
stricken glance. Luthias worried.
     "As ambassador, we welcome you," the King replied. "It is good of
the Emperor to send you. What is this offer he proposes, Count Tyago?"
     "As you  will, most likely,  soon be  at war, your  majesty," the
Count  of Tyago  explained innocently,  "his imperial  majesty, Untar,
offers you a hundred thousand men,  troops to protect you from Galicia
and the other countries to your east  when you send your men to war in
Bichu."
     The nagging tug turned into clanging bells and war drums. Luthias
darted from his chair to where  Rish Vogel, the Chronicler, sat. "Does
this place have a library?" he hissed at Vogel, who was here acting as
Scrivener. Confused, the Chronicler nodded. "Do you know where it is?"
Again, Vogel nodded. "Go there, quickly, and bring me a book--'History
of the Beinison Emperors.' Now. Go!"
     "Why?" Rish Vogel asked, leaning toward Luthias annoyingly. "What
for?"
     "Don't ask. Do it!" Luthias  demanded, shoving the Chronicler out
of his seat violently. Vogel gave Luthias the look he might have given
a madman, but he scurried out  of the room in obedience. Luthias stood
straight, noticed Sir Edward giving  him a strange stare, and returned
to his own seat before the King.
     "That is truly a gracious offer,"  the King was saying as Luthias
sat. Apparently,  the Count Tyago  had elaborated, but  Luthias hadn't
heard a word.  Vogel had better hurry with that  book! "We will indeed
consider it. For now, Count Tyago,  accept our thanks and our welcome.
We will have rooms prepared immediately for you and your companion."
     "I thank you, your majesty," said the boy-Count of Tyago, bowing.
     "I also thank you, your majesty," his companion said, "but I have
relatives in  Magnus. My father,  the Baron  of Shipbrook, sent  me to
guide the Count Tyago."
     "He did  well," the  King praised  Tylane's father.  "Our thanks,
Lord Shipbrook. Welcome to the  Court." Tylane bowed in gratitude. "If
1you would be so  kind, please escort the Count to  the guest rooms. We
will hold  a feast  in your  honor tonight, Count  Tyago. You  are, of
course, invited, Lord Shipbrook."
     Both of the  young men bowed and were escorted  out of the throne
room. Rish  Vogel collided with  Tylane on the  way in. The  Court was
making a  noise which reminded  Luthias of  a hornets' nest.  The Wasp
King,  coming  to  get  us!  a  hysterical  part  of  Luthias  thought
gleefully.
     "What think  you, Knight Commander?"  the King was saying  to his
advisor. "A generous offer--"
     Panting,  Rish Vogel  dropped  a heavy  tome  on Luthias'  table.
Without  asking  permission  to   speak,  Luthias  rose.  "Your  royal
majesty," the  young Baron of  Connall spoke urgently, "do  not accept
the offer!"
     The King turned toward the  daring young noble. "You sound rather
sure of yourself, Baron Connall," he observed, smiling slightly, as if
he knew a secret. "What is the matter with it?"
     "It's a trick, an old one," Luthias informed him, his voice quick
and concerned. "Listen,  your majesty." Luthias opened  the heavy book
before him,  flipped a few pages  until he found what  he needed. "'In
this  time, the  Emperor Radnok  VIII wished  to take  the country  of
Alannor. It  was a great  and powerful country,  and to take  it would
involve great  losses. The Emperor sent  many men to the  country, and
with them, began a rumor that Alannor's neighbor, Jardrine, would soon
attack.  When Alannor  sent troops  to Jardrine,  the Emperor  offered
troops to Alannor's King, to  help hold the country against Jardrinian
invaders. When  the troops were  settled, the Emperor  had effectively
occupied the territory.'" Satisfied, Luthias closed the book.
     "I've never heard  of this Alannor, or Jardrine,"  the Duchess of
Narragan protested.
     "No, of course not, your grace," Luthias answered her. "They were
both...absorbed  into  the  Beinison Empire  centuries  ago."  Luthias
turned his attention back to the monarch. "Your royal majesty, this is
an old  trick. I can  cite at least  eight other examples  of Beinison
doing this. Now they are trying to convince that Bichu will attack us.
Then they'll move their troops in here and never leave."
     "That's preposterous!" the Baron  of Coranabo protested. "We know
that the Bichanese are going to invade any day. The document--"
     "Is probably a forgery," Marcellon finished. "Your royal majesty,
if Baron Connall is correct--"
     "Yes, I  see, High Mage.  If Baron  Connall is correct,  then the
Beinison Empire has been trying to make us believe Bichu would attack.
We then would attack Bichu, and  while we were there, the Beinisonians
could invade us.  Yes, Lord Marcellon, I understand  what this means,"
Haralan finally answered the High Mage's unfinished question. The King
turned back to Luthias. "Pray continue, Baron Connall."
     "Your majesty,  this is  ridiculous!" Coranabo  interrupted. "You
have seen the document."
     "It is forged. It means nothing," Luthias asserted scornfully.
     "You  cannot  prove  it  forged," Coranabo  reminded  the  Duke's
Advocate. "Baron, this  is only speculation. May I remind  you that as
Duke's Advocate, you must prosecute this case?"
     "Baron Coranabo," the King spoke, and the buzzing comments of the
Court ceased. "What is important is  the truth. Knowledge of the truth
of this  matter is  crucial to  the Kingdom. As  he has  presented the
evidence, it is now Baron Connall's right and duty to seek the truth."
     Grateful, Luthias  smiled at  the King, but  Coranabo desperately
continued, "The future  of this country is an attack  from Bichu! Look
at the document!"
     "I  did not  write that  document or  order it  written," Clifton
1Dargon asserted firmly. "Your majesty, it is a forgery."
     "Of course you protest your  innocence," Coranabo scoffed. "It is
true. You are a traitor. You cannot prove it a forgery."
     "I  can  prove it  simply  enough,"  Marcellon offered,  standing
placidly. "Your majesty?" At the King's nod, the High Mage reached out
and  took  the  document.  Silence  covered  the  Court  as  Marcellon
whispered a  spell. The document  glowed. Marcellon smiled.  "As Baron
Connall conjectured, your majesty, a forgery."
     "Of course  you would  say that!" Coranabo  shouted. "He  is your
daughter's  husband, and  you are  defending  him! We  grieve for  the
effect his crimes must be having on you, but you must not--"
     "I  am  willing  to  accept  the  High  Mage's  word,"  the  King
interrupted quietly but very firmly. "Lord Marcellon does not lie."
     "What of the merchant's  testimony?" Coranabo pressed urgenty. He
was turning a purple shade of red.
     "He could  be lying," Luthias  argued quickly. "I suspect  he is.
He's a greedy snake, waiting to strike. And the merchants would profit
by a war with  Bichu. That's why Lek Pyle hired  the assassins to kill
my father and my brother."
     "They were hired to kill you,  boy, and your cousin, and had they
not bungled  the affair we wouldn't  be in this tangle  now!" Coranabo
screamed.
     The court gasped collectively. "What mean you, that the assassins
were  to  kill Baron  Connall  and  Duke  Dargon?" the  King  demanded
ominously.
     "That's  nothing, your  majesty," Luthias  remarked, moving  with
confidence and strength toward the Baron of Coranabo. "It was revealed
in Lek Pyle's trial that the assassins were to have killed the Duke of
Dargon  and  me.  However,"  Luthias  concluded,  standing  menacingly
directly before Coranabo, "I would like  to know what he means by this
'tangle.'"
     "It was a  slip of the tongue, nothing,"  Baron Coranabo supplied
quickly.
     "I have this feeling that you are not telling the truth," Luthias
answered him. If  Roisart were here, he would  have figured everything
out by now. As it was, Luthias  didn't think he was doing so badly. He
thought he was beginning to see.
     "I  have  the  same  feeling," Marcellon  agreed,  standing  with
unhurried grace. "I can read your mind, Coranabo."
     "You lie!" Coranabo accused.
     "I do not  lie," Marcellon returned. The High  Mage turned toward
his  King. "With  your permission,  your majesty,  I will  ensure that
Baron Coranabo does not lie, either."
     Gravely, King  Haralan nodded  his approval. Coranabo  leapt over
his table,  tried to run,  but Luthias  caught him easily,  looped his
arms below Coranabo's  armpits, and locked his hands  behind his head.
Then  he lifted  the  Baron of  Coranabo five  inches  off the  floor.
"Proceed, High Mage," Luthias invited, smiling grimly.
     "I do not lie!" Coranabo protested.
     Clifton Dargon stood. "Then why did you run?"
     "Be  seated, Lord  Dargon," the  King commanded.  "Be seated,  my
lords and  ladies." Everyone  except Luthias, Coranabo,  and Marcellon
sat. "Lord Marcellon?"
     The High Mage closed his eyes  and murmured a chant. Luthias felt
static electricity in  his hair. Marcellon opened his  eyes and looked
directly  at the  Baron of  Coranabo. "Now  tell His  Majesty and  the
Court," Marcellon ordered, "of  your involvement with this Beinisonian
plot."
     Coranabo opened his mouth, but closed  it suddenly, as if he felt
that he now could not lie, and looked away.
1     "I advise you to answer," the King ordered quietly. "The Baron of
Connall looks to the strength and  leverage to break your back. If you
are, indeed, involved with the plot  against his brother and father, I
am sure I will have no problem convincing him to do it."
     Luthias grinned the smile of  an anticipating assassin. "Oh, yes,
your majesty, you would. It is too quick." He looked at Coranabo. "Did
you have my  father and brother killed?" When  Coranabo didn't answer,
Luthias shook him ungently. "Did you?"
     "Your father--yes.  Your brother was  to have lived when  you and
Dargon died. He would have become Duke. We could have trapped him into
war," Coranabo spat defiantly. "I would have married Danza to him, and
when the Beinisonians came in, I would have taken, by right of age and
family, the Duchy of Dargon."
     "You pretentious--"  Luthias hissed.  "That is  why you  tried to
marry Danza to me!"
     "What of this treason trial?" the King inquired calmly.
     "We had  to get rid of  Duke Dargon. He advised  too much against
the war  with Bichu.  We chanced  that we  could have  convinced Baron
Connall." Luthias wanted to squeeze his neck.
     "And Castellan Michiya?"
     "A tool,"  Coranabo answered  defiantly. "Just to  accomplish our
plot."
     "Who," the King demanded, "is 'we?'"
     "I and the Beinisonians."
     Luthias growled. "You  see, your majesty, I was  right. They were
planning to invade. They were trying  to advise your majesty to invade
Bichu,  so that  they could  easily take  the country."  The Baron  of
Connall jostled Coranabo again. "Am I right?"
     Coranabo was  silent for a  few more jostlings. "You  are right!"
Coranabo screamed finally. The Court  gasped. "And you would have been
mine, you would have married Danza had it not been for that whore of a
seneschal of yours--"
     Abruptly, Luthias  thrust the  Baron of  Coranabo from  his hold.
Coranabo landed hard  on the stone steps of the  King's dais. The King
motioned the  guards forward, but  they did  not take him.  Their eyes
were instead on the Baron of Connall.
     Luthias had  never burned  with such white  rage. His  hands were
clenched so tightly that Marcellon  feared for the bones, and Clifton,
for the first time in his life, realized just how dangerous and deadly
his cousin was.  Flames raged behind the Baron of  Connall's eyes, and
when he spoke, his words were furious and rough. "You had better thank
God that you and I are in  the presence of the King!" Luthias shouted.
"You would have paid dearly for that insult otherwise!"
     Coranabo laughed  malevolently. "I kill your  father and brother,
and nearly  succeed in killing  your cousin  and your friend,  and you
worry over an insult!"
     "The King's justice  will take care of the  others," Luthias spat
at him, his words  hard and sharp as steel swords.  "But that you dare
to call  a lady in my  protection, my ward, my  seneschal--" my Sable!
"You would have paid dearly."
     Coranabo laughed disdainfully.
     "Take him,"  the King commanded  the guards. Swiftly,  the guards
laid hold of the Baron and presented  him to his King. "You are guilty
of treason," King Haralan pronounced  gravely and clearly, so that all
the Court could hear.  "It is our duty as King  to serve justice." The
King's face softened, and he smiled at the young Baron of Connall. "It
would seem to us that the  most just of punishments for you, Coranabo,
would be  to turn you over  to the Baron of  Connall." Luthias flashed
the King a wicked, grateful grin.  "However, it would hardly serve the
law. We therefore strip you of your lands and sentence you to death."
1     Luthias  paled,  thinking  of  tiny  Danza  Coranabo  and  Tylane
Shipbrook. "Your majesty, please wait,"  Luthias called out. The King,
puzzled, looked at him. "His death I don't dispute," Luthias explained
quickly.  "He  deserves  that  surely." The  young  Baron  of  Connall
frowned. "He  deserves it many times  over. But his daughters  are not
guilty of any  crime. Don't take their dowry from  them, your majesty.
They do not deserve any punishment."
     His royal majesty the King  raised his eyebrows at the precocious
Baron. "You speak  wisely, Baron Connall. Bring us a  map," he ordered
an assistant. The servant promptly brought the King a map of the Duchy
of Dargon.  "You own the  strip south  of the Coldwell,"  King Haralan
remarked to the prisoner. "We will divide your land in half," the King
determined.  He took  a  pen and  drew  a line  along  the river  that
separated Coranabo  into two  parts. Then, he  crossed out  the border
between Connall and  the southern half of Coranabo's  barony. He stood
straight and faced the Court. "I now pronounce that the Duke of Dargon
and the Castellan Ittosai Michiya are innocent of all charges and free
of the Court."
     Luthias closed  his eyes, and  his shoulders relaxed.  He smiled,
and put  his head on  his hands tiredly. Free.  He had freed  them. He
felt weak with relief and shaky with joy.
     Across   the  aisle,   Ittosai   Michiya  was   smiling  at   the
announcement.  Clifton  laughed like  a  boy.  Marcellon sat,  looking
satisfied.
     The King turned  angrily to the Baron of  Coranabo. "We pronounce
you guilty of  treason, Coranabo. You are stripped of  your title, and
of your lands south of the  Coldwell. You are sentenced to death." The
King looked at the guards. "Release your hold, but do not allow him to
escape. Baron Connall, come forward."
     Slowly,  Luthias   obeyed  and  knelt.  Haralan   looked  at  him
benevolently. "We forced you to try this case," the King revealed. "We
wanted to test you. You have surpassed the test, Lord Connall, and you
have shown wisdom and control beyond  your years." The King raised his
eyes to  behold the entire Court.  "In years past, our  ancestors were
wont to  give the  title of Count  to those who  served them  well and
loyally." King  Haralan unsheathed the  decorative sword that  hung at
his side and touched each of Luthias' shoulders with it. "We pronounce
you now, Luthias  of Connall, in reward for your  loyalty and service,
Count of Connall,  with the lands of your ancestors  and those we have
taken from Coranabo to support that title."
     Shaking, Luthias stared at the  King with weak astonishment. Him,
a Count? But  the title Count was  given only to those  who had served
the King in the highest manner. It was so rare--the last of the Counts
had died two  hundred years ago! And he had  done nothing outstanding.
He had only done what any man would have.
     "Rise,  Count  Connall,"  the  King  ordered.  His  legs  feeling
rubbery, Luthias did so. "Because of  your wisdom, we also appoint you
a our ambassador  to Beinison, to reject their  proposal and represent
us in the Beinisonian Court." King  Haralan then spoke directly to the
new  Count. "It  is  rare to  find  a  man who  so  trusts the  King's
justice," Haralan remarked. "We will serve all Coranabo's other crimes
by severing his head. We give  you leave, Count Connall, to avenge the
insult to your ward."
     Luthias smiled calmly and bowed his gratitude to King Haralan. He
turned toward Coranabo.
     Sir Edward suddenly spoke  softly. "Remember, Count Connall, that
you may not draw a sword in the presence of your King."
     Luthias smiled at the Knight Commander.  "I do not need one, your
Excellency," the Count of Connall  stated placidly, and without taking
his eyes  off of Edward Sothos,  Luthias slammed the back  of his hand
1against Coranabo's  jaw. His jaw  snapped loudly, and he  flew fifteen
feet into the waiting arms of the King's guards.
     "Thank  you, your  majesty," Luthias  said,  and he  went to  his
cousin and his friend.

     Giddy with happiness, the new  Count of Connall was drinking that
evening at  the feast. His cousin,  the Duke of Dargon,  was laughing,
happy  that it  was  over. Messengers  had already  been  sent to  the
Duchess of Dargon, and to Myrande. Everything was finally all right.
     Sir  Edward watched  Count  Luthias  with the  eyes  of an  older
brother. Perhaps young Luthias could  actually get some sleep tonight.
And then,  by pronouncement of the  King, Luthias would return  to his
home and  quickly leave it  for Cabildo,  the capital of  the Beinison
Empire.
     "You did  it, Luthias-sama,"  Ittosai Michiya  said to  his lord.
Michiya was grinning, ecstatic at his release, and at his appointment.
The King  of Baranur had  honored Luthias'  castellan by making  him a
royal emissary to Bichu. "And now, I may go home."
     "Yes,  but you  have to  take  that idiot  Chronicler with  you,"
Luthias pointed  out jokingly. The  King had mandated that  Rish Vogel
accompany the  Ambassador to Bichu.  Ittosai Michiya rolled  his eyes.
"You will come back?"
     "In the spring, when you return from Beinison," Michiya promised.
"We will compete  in the Melrin tournament, and perhaps,  this time, I
will  not  allow you  to  win."  Luthias  grinned  and pushed  on  the
Bichurian's arm.
     "Maybe I'll give  you both baldrics and save us  all the hassle,"
Clifton muttered good-naturedly. "You two are the best we've got."
     "The father  speaks," Luthias mused, his  smile lop-sided. "Watch
Lauren give  birth to  seven full-grown Knights.  Dargon will  be well
protected." Luthias became serious. "Clifton, will you be regent of my
lands while I'm away?"
     "Of course."  The Duke of  Dargon looked into his  cousin's eyes.
"What do you plan to do about Myrande?"
     "I'm giving her a choice," Luthias announced. "Either she marries
the man she loves or--"
     "Good evening,  gentlemen," came  an even  greeting. The  Duke of
Dargon, his cousin, and Ittosai  Michiya stood as the King approached.
He was  accompanied by  the High  Mage and  the Knight  Commander. The
three man  bowed to the monarch.  "I see you are  enjoying yourselves.
You look much better, Count Connall; I am glad."
     "Thank you, your majesty," Luthias returned, bowing again.
     "You have told me, Lord Ittosai, that you will enjoy returning to
Bichu," the King prompted.
     "Indeed, your majesty," Michiya  replied, bowing and grinning. "I
can now return to my family with immunity."
     "And how do you like your reward, lord Count?"
     Luthias appeared to  think about it, although there  was no need.
"I never wanted it, your majesty. I  never wanted to be Baron or Count
or Ambassador. I only wanted to be a Knight."
     King Haralan laughed.  "So does my elder son, Kalien;  yet he too
must bear  a title. Sir Edward  assures me, however, that  you will be
Knighted eventually." The King came forward and put a hand on Luthias'
shoulder. "I must confess, Luthias, that the reward I gave you is more
to my  benefit than yours."  The Count of  Connall gave him  a serious
look. "You receive the land, certainly, and you will become one of the
richest men in your Duchy, if you aren't already. But the title Count:
it  isn't that  you don't  deserve it,  but I  cannot send  Beinison a
nobleman of  less rank  than the  one they  sent to  Baranur." Luthias
nodded his  understanding. It  was a wise  move. "And,  Count Connall,
1your skill in war will make you  useful to me there." Again, the Count
Connall nodded. "Your knowledge and your  control will make you a good
ambassador, Count Connall."
     "He  will make  you  proud,  your majesty,"  the  Duke of  Dargon
assured his King. "He has always made his lords proud."
     Luthias smiled gratefully at his  cousin, then turned back to the
King, who  had not removed  his hand  from Luthias' shoulder.  "As the
rewards are as much to your benefit as mine, Luthias, is there nothing
your King can give  you that would be to your  benefit alone? Is there
something, besides the Knighthood that you must earn, that you want?"
     Luthias gazed  at the floor and  sadly shook his head.  "No, your
majesty. What I want you cannot give me."
     Haralan raised his eyebrows. "Ask. As  King I have quite a bit of
power."
     "You cannot  give me the  lives of  my father and  twin," Luthias
stated flatly.
     "That  is   a  bit  difficult,"  Haralan   admitted  with  amused
ruefulness, "even for a King."
     "That  is a  bit  difficult  even for  a  mage," Edward  remarked
cheerfully.
     "Difficult for a mage?"  laughed Marcellon. "That's difficult for
a god!"
     "What  else would  you want?"  the King  pressed. "There  must be
something."
     "I want  to go home," Luthias  sighed, "but you cannot  let me do
that; you need me in Beinison." Luthias took a heavy breath. "The only
other thing I want is for Sable to be happy."
     The King appeared confused. "Forgive me; who is Sable?"
     "My ward, Lady Myrande."
     "Ah,  the seneschal  whom  Coranabo maligned  so blithely,"  King
Haralan said. "And to make her happy is beyond my power?"
     "Yes, your majesty," Luthias affirmed.  "I cannot tell you how to
do it. She loves someone who doesn't love her."
     The King  appeared grim. "I  think," Ittosai Michiya  ventured, a
knowing smile on his visage, "that I could tell you how."
     "Yes, your majesty," Clifton added. The Duke of Dargon apparently
shared insight. "I know how."
     "Well, then, my lords," the King began, "if--"
     A rough pull  tugged Luthias' face away from the  King. A frantic
Tylane Shipbrook  stood there.  "Luthias!" he  cried. "Thank  God I've
found you!"
     The Count  of Connall gripped  Tylane's shoulders. "What  is it?"
Luthias inquired, the worry he had felt previously returning. Tylane's
eyes were as pained as before. "What is it? What's happened?"
     "My  father's got  Myrande," Tylane  began. "He  took her  and is
going to marry her to Oleran on the twenty-fourth."
     All the  blood seemed  to disappear  from Luthias'  face. Luthias
felt his chest go numb, and he  stared like a madman at his friend. He
shook  Tylane's shoulder  in panic  and frustration.  "How? I  had her
guarded-- My God, they'll kill her!" Sable! What would they do to her?
If they-- Daydreams  of rape, torture, and pain  filled Luthias' mind.
Wildly, he tried to put her away and listen.
     "Father drugged her and took her with guards. I doubt your archer
Macdougalls even knew there was anything wrong."
     Luthias face was ashen, and his eyes were wild. Voices seemed far
away and unreal--my  God, Sable!--but the shoulders  were warm. Again,
he shook Tylane. "Drugged her? Then he'll drug her again! She'll marry
Oleran and he'll--My God--!" Sable! And  I am supposed to protect her!
Sable!
     "No, she's not eating," Tylane explained.
1     "Not  eating?" Luthias'  voice  rose  to a  squeak.  A vision  of
beautiful Sable,  ravaged by hunger  till she  was little more  than a
skeleton  covered with  skin,  flashed before  his  eyes. He  released
Tylane and shot a frantic hand  through his hair. "Not eating? My God,
she'll starve before I can get her--she'll die--" My God, Sable dead!
     "No--Warin's sneaking her food," Tylane explained. "But--"
     Luthias had turned to Clifton  and gripped his cousin's shoulders
desperately. "We've got to go get her, Clifton!"
     "I know,  I know,"  Clifton attempted  to soothe  Luthias. "We're
leaving in the morning."
     "No,  now!" Luthias  demanded. "God  knows what  they--Oleran--my
God!" he finished, his oath powerful. "My God-- Michiya," he turned to
his castellan.
     "I will help you," Ittosai vowed. "If they have harmed her--"
     "Harmed her?" Luthias repeated  with incredulous anger. The Count
Connall's face became a fiery mask of fury. His voice became rough and
ferocious. "If they hurt her," he began, seething, "if they even touch
her, I'll kill them!"
     "So  you  *are*   in  love  with  her,"   Edward's  soft  chuckle
interrupted the Count's tirade. Luthias turned to the Knight Commander
and stared in panicked astonishment. "I had thought so, but--"
     "Of course I'm in love with  her!" Luthias shouted. "Do you think
I'd be--"  As if  he had  been slapped,  Luthias abruptly  stopped and
blinked. He turned slowly to Clifton  and Ittosai Michiya. "Did I just
say," Luthias asked deliberately, "what I think I just said?"
     Ittosai's grin was completely unmerciful. "Yes," he answered with
simplicity and triumph.
     "And it's high time, too, manling," Clifton growled.
     "I've got  to go  get her,"  Luthias was  mumbling. "I  can't let
them--"
     "I can give you her hand," the King offered.
     "Your majesty, I'm  her guardian," Luthias reminded  the King. "I
don't  need you  to give  me  that. But  you  can give  me this,  your
majesty: allow me to leave immediately."
     "Go pack your  things," the King granted, and  Luthias dashed off
with dragging Ittosai Michiya in much the same way he would have taken
Roisart. "Duke Dargon, come with me."

     Just as the ship was docking to take Luthias back to the Duchy of
Dargon, the King summoned the new Count to a private audience. Luthias
wanted to tear his hair in frustration  at the delay, but he went, his
walk quick and frantic.
     The  King sat  in his  private chambers  in a  comfortable chair.
Opposite him  sat the  High Mage  and the Duke  of Dargon.  The Knight
Commander stood  nearby. Luthias bowed breathlessly  and hastily. "You
are ready to leave then, Count Connall?"
     "As  soon as  I can  collect my  cousin, Lord  Ittosai, and  Rish
Vogel," Luthias  confirmed, his  voice as hurried  and breathy  as his
movements. "I ask your majesty that you allow the High Mage to come as
well." The King raised his eyebrows. "He is a physician; they may have
hurt her."  And Luthias grimaced.  He hated thinking about  that. What
they could have done to her in all this time...
     "I have searched for her  in my crystal," Marcellon told Luthias.
"She is in a tower, but she is unhurt."
     "Still--" Luthias began.
     "I have  no objection,  Marcellon," the King  cut the  Count off.
"Go; it  will give  the Count  some peace  of mind,  and the  Baron of
Shipbrook  and the  Baron of  Oleran  may indeed  hurt Lady  Myrande."
Marcellon  smiled  and  assented  with  a  nod.  "Now,"  King  Haralan
continued, returning his attention to the anxious Count, "to business.
1I have  given your cousin the  Duke authority in this  matter. If your
ward is unhurt, the Barons of Oleran and Shipbrook are to be sent here
to  the Keep.  If they  have harmed  her in  any way,  they are  to be
executed. I will not tolerate this sort of behavior in my Kingdom."
     Luthias  nodded and  wished with  all his  might that  King would
hurry. The more time they wasted--!
     The King smiled at him. The King seemed to be full of smiles, and
Luthias wished to  leave. They had to get Sable!  "You love this young
woman, do  you not?" To  expedite matters, Luthias nodded  once. "Will
you marry her?"
     "Yes,  your  majesty,"   Luthias  answered  confidently.  Clifton
grinned.  Luthias followed  suit. "Perhaps  even if  she refuses  me."
Clifton laughed loudly at the idea.
     "Very well. Take this." King Haralan offered the Count a piece of
parchment. "You asked me to gain Lady Myrande's happiness. The Duke of
Dargon has explained to me how this  lady loves a man, unknown to him.
Ask her to marry you, Count Connall.  And if she refuses you, give her
this paper. It  will, I hope, insure the happiness  you seek for her."
Luthias  took the  parchment but  gave the  King a  puzzled look.  "It
orders that she marries the man she loves."
     "But I don't know who--"
     "It's all right, manling," Clifton assured him. "I know."
     "Now,  if  you  give  me leave,  your  majesty--"  Luthias  began
hastily.
     The King laughed. "I hope that  you will allow this your bride to
come to  the War Council  I have called. Duke  Dargon, see if  you can
bring her.  She must be  quite a  lady to have  caused this much  of a
panic."
     Clifton laughed,  and Edward confirmed, "A  veritable Alana, your
majesty."
     "Alana?" laughed the King.
     "What better  consort for the war-god?"  chuckled Marcellon. "She
is Alana indeed."
     "Have  you  gotten her  the  moon-jewel,  then?" the  King  asked
Luthias, his blue eyes twinkling.
     "Moon-jewel?" Luthias questioned. "What are you talking about?"
     "It's this legend," Clifton explained. "You see, the war-god--"
     "A legend?  You sit here telling  me stories, and Sable  could by
dying!"
     "Get him out of here, Dargon,"  the King laughed. "God speed you.
Marcellon, take care  of them. And, Count Connall,"  Luthias, half out
the door, turned. "I can give you  two weeks once you reach Dargon. No
more. A fortnight after  you reach Dargon, I want you  on a ship bound
for Cabildo."
     "Yes, your majesty," Luthias assented, and he raced to the ship.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                         Trial by Fire
                            Part V
                     Knight in Shining Armor
                      by M. Wendy Hennequin
                 (b.c.k.a. HENNEQUI_WEM@CTSTATEU)

     "We'll reach Shipbrook Harbor an hour after dusk," Clifton Dargon
informed his cousin as he approached.  Luthias was leaning on the side
of the ship, staring at the ocean. "It should only take a half an hour
or so to reach Shipbrook's keep from there."
     "The sooner the better," his  cousin replied, not taking his eyes
from the calm, vibrant water. "It's been too long already."
     "Can't make the wind blow any faster, manling," Clifton remarked,
leaning on the edge of the ship with his cousin.
     "Don't  be  flip, Clifton.  She  may  be dead  already,"  Luthias
snapped. Angrily, he threw  a bit of wood at the  water. "When I think
of what Oleran and Shipbrook must have done to her--"
     "Easy, manling,"  the Duke of  Dargon soothed, placing a  hand on
Luthias' shoulder. "If she were in that much danger, Lauren would have
sensed it  and let Marcellon know  by now. Besides, Tylane  said Warin
was looking out for her."
     "Well, knowing Shipbrook,  Warin's been kicked out  of the estate
by now, and Sable--"
     "It'll all be well," Clifton  assured him. "Don't worry, Luthias.
We'll take care of it. And if they've hurt Sable--" The Duke of Dargon
grimaced; he didn't relish the thought of Myrande's being hurt. He had
grown up  with her, and he  cared for her  as if she were  his sister.
"Then we'll do as the King says and execute the pair of them."
     "Won't bring her back," the Count of Connall pointed out, tossing
another bit of wood at the silent waters. "Didn't bring Roisart back."
     "Don't worry," Clifton repeated. "We'll be in Shipbrook within an
hour and a half.  I've sent messengers to Lauren, and  she and some of
my forces will  meet us there. We'll get Sable  and you married within
the week." Luthias allowed himself to smile a little.
     The Count  of Connall  was silent  for a  moment. "I  still can't
believe it."
     "Believe what?"
     "That I'm  in love with  her." Luthias appeared puzzled.  "I know
that I'm in love with her, but  I don't believe it." He shook his head
against the thought. "I don't feel any different about her than I ever
did, than I did last week, last month, or before my father and Roisart
died. It's--strange."
     Clifton laughed  merrily. "Come on, Luthias,"  he choked, "you've
been in  love with  her for  years! Of  course what  you feel  for her
hasn't changed. You just finally found the right word for it." Luthias
gave his cousin  a sobering look. "Why are you  so surprised about it,
anyway? Myrande is very special; she's..."
     "A  consort   for  the  war-god,"  Luthias   finished,  repeating
Marcellon's words. He finally looked at his cousin the Duke. "What was
that legend you and the King were talking about?"
     "Legend?"
     "Something about a moon-jewel."
     "Oh, that," Clifton chuckled. "It's about the war-god Gow and the
night-goddess Alana.  They used to  be worshipped here--still  are, in
some parts of  Baranur, and in most of the  Beinison Empire." The Duke
turned toward  his cousin and  lounged against  the side of  the ship.
"The war-god fell  in love with the night-goddess, and  to woo her, he
slew this  terrible monster,  and brought  the night-goddess  back the
treasure: the moon, as a jewel to wear around her neck, and the stars,
as a mantle for her hair."
1     "Moon-jewel," Luthias  repeated, slightly contemptuous.  He flung
another piece of wood into the water. "I probably won't even have time
to get her a betrothal ring."
     Clifton  smiled.  "It  won't   matter  to  Myrande;  believe  me,
Luthias." Luthias gazed  seriously at his cousin.  "Come on, manling,"
the Duke  invited, putting  his arm  around Luthias'  tired shoulders,
"we've got a damsel to rescue."
     Luthias smiled  slightly, tossed  the last bit  of wood  into the
river, and followed his cousin to their cabin below.

     Myrande opened  her eyes as  Warin Shipbrook entered her  room at
the top of the highest tower  in Shipbrook Keep. She had been sleeping
much lately.  She had never been  so lazy--or sleepy--in her  life. It
came of having only  one meal a day, the one  Warin brought her before
dawn each  morning. She sat  as her  cousin approached, reached  for a
brush, and began to stroke her hair with it.
     "I didn't mean  to wake you," Warin apologized  as he approached.
Myrande smiled him serenely; the nap  had done her good. "Father wants
you to prepare for the wedding." He looked away, then abruptly set the
goblet he had brought on the table. "Here is some wine."
     "Did your father send it?" Myrande asked, struggling with a snarl
in her dark locks.
     "I  wouldn't  have   brought  it  if  he   did,"  Warin  answered
scornfully. He  stared at his  cousin's ebony  eyes. "I don't  know if
you're thirsty, but you may want it anyway."
     The snag in  her hair finally loosed itself.  Myrande resumed the
rhythmic brushing.  "Why?" she asked.  "I don't  want to be  drunk for
this, Warin."
     "You want  to have your  wits about  you when you  marry Oleran?"
Warin wondered.
     "Yes.  In the  ceremony, I  am asked  to accept  the bridegroom,"
Myrande explained patiently. "If I don't accept Oleran, there's no way
I can be married to him."
     "This  won't make  you drunk,"  Warin rushed.  "It will  make you
dead."
     Myrande  stared at  him, shocked.  "You want  me to  kill myself?
You've been risking your inheritance for weeks to keep me alive!"
     "I thought Luthias  would have come by now,"  Warin retorted. "It
seems he has more important things to do."
     "Luthias does what  he has to," Myrande retorted,  her black eyes
snapping at the insult.  "If he could be here, he  would be here." She
tossed her head proudly. "He will come to get me as soon as he can."
     "Well, he isn't  here, and I think he'd rather  see you dead than
married to that monster Oleran."
     "Maybe  so," Myrande  returned calmly,  still brushing  her hair.
"And, barring no  other solution, I would rather be  dead than married
to a man who will beat me and rape me." Myrande rose, set the brush on
a table, and  faced Warin. "But I won't kill  myself. Luthias has lost
too many people already. The Duke of Dargon and Ittosai Michiya may be
dead by now. I'll be the only person he has left."
     "Your life will be hell," Warin warned her seriously. "You should
see what Oleran does to the horses and the servants!"
     "Better my life is hell  than Luthias'," Myrande said firmly. She
went to the mirror,  picked up the brush again, and  began to pile her
hair on  the back of  her head.  "Luthias will overturn  the marriage,
assuming  I can  somehow  be  tricked into  accepting  Oleran. If  I'm
dead--" Myrande remembered how Luthias  had been when Roisart died. If
she were dead, would  he then love her? There was no  way to know, and
no way she  would leave Luthias. She had promised,  on that night when
he had kissed her  and she had pushed him away,  that she would always
1be there for him. Married or single, she would be.
     "Take it away,  and let me dress," Myrande  ordered Warin gently.
Stiffly, Warin bowed and took the wine away. As the door shut, Myrande
slipped the chop sticks into her hair.

     Alarm  bells  were  clattering  as  Luthias,  Count  of  Connall,
Clifton, Duke of Dargon, the  High Mage Marcellon, and Ittosai Michiya
arrived  on horseback  at Shipbrook  Keep. Luthias  was armed,  as was
Michiya; the Duke had said that he  didn't expect a fight, but the two
warriors thought  it best to be  prepared. Michiya had even  brought a
crossbow.
     Luthias and Michiya were different  than the other men. Marcellon
was serene,  if somewhat amused;  Clifton seemed grim but  placid. The
men-at-arms that  had come from Dargon  were grim, as was  their Duke,
but  they were  somewhat jovial  about it,  as if  the rescue  of Lady
Myrande Shipbrook were  nothing but an excuse to celebrate  at a later
time. But Luthias was insanely  worried and furiously angry and deeply
frightened. Ittosai  was also worried  and as hell-bent as  Luthias on
revenge if  Myrande had been  hurt. Riding to Shipbrook  Keep, Luthias
had idly wondered  aloud, a bent smile  on his face, "Are  you in love
with her too, Michiya?"
     Ittosai looked away,  as if the matter were beneath  him. "Do not
be silly."
     Then  they arrived,  and the  warning bells  clanged to  announce
them. Frightened  guards of  Shipbrook Keep saw  the force  coming and
hastily shut  the main  gate. "Surround  the walls,"  Clifton ordered.
"Leave the  largest detachment here at  the gates with myself  and the
Count of  Connall." The  Duke of  Dargon turned  to his  cousin. "Here
goes, manling."
     "Hurry it up,  Clifton," Luthias snapped. "They  were supposed to
marry her to Oleran today! If the beast has touched her--"
     "Easy, Luthias,"  Marcellon ordered  with stern  equanimity. "All
will be well."
     "Who comes?" bellowed a man from the top of the walls.
     "The Duke of Dargon," Clifton  shouted his answer, "and the Count
of Connall.  I demand  to speak  with the Baron  of Shipbrook  and the
Baron of Oleran!"
     "I will fetch them, your grace," the man promised.
     "Hurry!" Luthias screamed at him.
     "We could break  the gates," Michiya was suggesting.  "Do we have
a...how do you say it?...a battering tree?"
     "Ram," Luthias corrected. "It would  work, but we'd have to fight
our way through."
     "I am not afraid," the Bichurian said.
     "Nor I," Luthias  assured him, "but it wouldn't  be practical. It
would take too much time to find  Sable. By that time, they'd have her
out of the castle."
     "True," Michiya agreed.
     "Why do you come, Duke Dargon?" Shipbrook's voice echoed from the
walls. He  appeared as a shadow  above the gate. Two  other shadows, a
slight  one and  a  heavier  one, stood  with  him.  Next to  Clifton,
Marcellon murmured a spell, and a great  light shone on the top of the
walls.  Shipbrook,  Warin,  and--Luthias assumed--the  muscular  Baron
Oleran,  shielded their  eyes.  "You  are not  invited  to my  niece's
wedding."
     Luthias was about to shout something defiant, but Clifton held up
his hand.  "Quiet, and let  me handle this."  The Duke focused  on the
Baron of Shipbrook. "Open your gates and allow us to take Lady Myrande
away."
     "I have a right to marry  my nice to Oleran," Shipbrook returned.
1"I am her kinsman--"
     "I advise  you not to  resist," Dargon shouted angrily.  He waved
the sealed parchment  that Haralan had given him. "I  have orders from
the King for your arrest and Oleran's."
     "On what charge?" Shipbrook asked pompously.
     "Kidnaping, for  one," Luthias  shouted. He stared  at Shipbrook,
his  eyes burning.  Suddenly, he  realized that  Oleran was  no longer
there.
     "If you  resist," Clifton continued,  "you will be put  to death.
Allow us entrance!"
     "Never!"
     "I am quite serious, Shipbrook," Clifton emphasized. "I will have
you put to death if you do not allow us entrance peacefully."
     "You cannot enter by force," Shipbrook challenged.
     "Would you like to see us do it?" Luthias countered. "You have my
ward, Shipbrook; you have no claim on her. If you do not return her to
me, I am quite prepared to take her from you."
     "You  have  no  right  to  trespass  on  my  grounds,"  Shipbrook
returned,  his voice  veiling  a  warning that  scared  no one.  "I--"
Suddenly, he turned to Warin and shoved him away. "Let them in? You're
no son  of mine! Get  away from me!" Warin  stood still for  a moment,
then walked away, anger evident in  his step. Shipbrook turned back to
his unexpected guests. "You may also leave."
     "You defy the King's justice?" Clifton asked haughtily.
     "I'll defy anything opposed to my family's honor!"
     "Fool,"  Clifton muttered  to  his father-in-law.  He shouted  to
Shipbrook, "We  will force  ourselves in, then."  Again, he  turned to
Marcellon. "Can you open the gates?"
     "Line up the  men," Marcellon commanded, "and give  me room. I'll
take care of it."
     The men-at-arms shifted back and  drew their weapons. Luthias and
Ittosai  dismounted  and placed  themselves  at  the very  front  with
Clifton.  Michiya loaded  and cocked  his crossbow;  Luthias drew  his
sword. In front of the soldiers, Marcellon raised his arms.
     The  doors  slowly opened,  as  if  affected  by the  spell  that
Marcellon was about to cast.
     Puzzled, Marcellon lowered  his arms slowly. "Even I  am not that
good,"  he muttered.  He turned  to Clifton  and his  army. "They  are
letting us in!"
     Without further words, Luthias sprinted into the gates. Warin was
waiting with  the gate key.  "You opened  it?" Clifton asked,  not far
behind his cousin.
     Warin gave the  key to the Duke. "He is  a fool," young Shipbrook
admitted, "but I  have no wish to  see him dead. He is,  after all, my
father."
     Luthias snatched Warin's arms roughly. "Where's Sable?"
     "In the tower,"  Warin explained swiftly, casting  a hurried look
over his shoulder at five of Shipbrook Keep's towers.
     Furious  at the  ambiguity, Luthias  shook him.  "Which one?"  he
hollered. "Where is she?"
     "The  center one!"  Luthias  released him  abruptly and  sprinted
toward the  high, center tower  which bordered on the  courtyard which
the Ducal forces  were quickly filling. Michiya rushed  with his lord,
and Warin hurried to follow.
     "The highest room!" Warin shouted as Luthias threw open the door.
Without even acknowledging the direction,  Luthias began to fly up the
stairs, taking them two  or three at a time. It  was too important not
to waste any time. Those  monsters-- Slightly less frantic as Luthias,
Michiya followed slightly more slowly; his legs were shorter than tall
Luthias'.  Warin,  who   was  in  poorer  shape   than  the  warriors,
1accompanied them as best he could.
     Luthias was  bolting, the wind in  his ears. He didn't  truly see
where he was going.  All he knew was that he was  going to the highest
room. Sable would be there. The young Count strained to hear the sound
of Myrande's  voice. Was she  dead? What if  she were hurt?  Where was
Oleran? Oh, God, if she is hurt--if they have--Sable!
     Luthias collided with  the door. It was bolted  from the outside,
and it had a  heavy lock on it. With a bestial  cry, Luthias threw the
bolt off the door  and tried to open it. Locked.  The Count of Connall
grimaced briefly, then threw his  shoulder against the door. It didn't
budge. He battered it again, feeling no pain in his shoulder. The door
remained solid and  unmoved. Well, damn it, he'd break  the thing into
splinters  before  he  allowed  them to  hurt  Sable!  With  obstinate
determination, Luthias threw himself against the door. It better move!
     "Luthias-sama!" Michiya's voice called him. It didn't register in
Luthias' ears. He  assaulted the stubborn door  again. Ittosai grabbed
the Count's arms. "What are you doing?"
     "I'm breaking  the God-damned door down!"  Luthias screamed. "Get
out of my way!"
     "It is too slow," the  Bichurian complained. "Stand aside; I know
a better way."
     Luthias, blind  with fury  and purpose,  somehow managed  to move
aside. Michiya  backed up two or  three steps on the  landing and made
himself ready.
     "Wait!" Warin called, a dozen steps below. "I have the--"
     With a Bichanese war cry,  the Castellan of Connall raged forward
and landed a solid, powerful kick  directly beneath the lock. The door
flew  open.  Without  waiting,  Luthias  barreled  through  the  door,
thinking wildly  that he  would have  to have  Michiya teach  him that
trick. Ittosai nearly stepped on Luthias' heels in his haste to follow
the Count.
     "Key," Warin finished weakly.
     Luthias found himself in the top  tower room, a round, stone room
with a canopied  bed and some tables and a  fireplace. Across the room
was a stone staircase leading to  the flat, round ceiling of the room.
Being dragged up the staircase by an irate Oleran was--
     "Sable!" Luthias screamed, rushing  forward with his sword drawn.
She turned and stared at him, her black eyes wide, and then she smiled
at his very presence. Oleran saw  the grin and hit Myrande hard across
the temple with the pommel of a very large dagger which he held in his
free hand. Myrande  made no sound, but Luthias saw  a trickle of blood
flow, like a tear, down her cheek.
     "Oleran,  you son  of a  bitch!" Luthias  screamed. Sword  in his
right hand,  Luthias dashed across  the round  room to the  stairs and
proceeded  to take  them four  at  a time.  He saw  Oleran yank  Sable
through a  trap door,  then it slammed  shut, almost  hitting Luthias'
head. Without thought, he pushed through  to the roof of the tower and
rushed forward to make an end to Oleran.
     "I  suggest  that  you  stop where  you  are,  your  Excellency,"
Oleran's urbane voice  greeted him. Luthias, for  some unknown reason,
stopped in mid-step  and slid until he was still.  Oleran stood on the
edge of  the roof by the  waist-high crenolations. He held  that large
dagger's point at Myrande's breast.  "Thank you, your Excellency. I am
sure that  neither you nor  I wish Lady  Myrande harmed. But  I assure
you,  your Excellency,  that  I will  do  just that  if  you come  any
closer."
     Luthias  stared  at  the  man: Oleran  was  tall,  muscular,  and
handsome, despite the  fact that he more than twice  Luthias' age. His
left arm held Sable's waist  securely; the right hand confidently held
the dangerous dagger.  Uncertain of what action to  take, Luthias kept
1his body  still as his brother  Roisart's, but he did  not release the
sword. Behind  him, the trap  door crashed  open, but Luthias  did not
look to see who came.
     "Now, sir,"  Baron Oleran continued,  "you will make  it possible
for me to  leave here with Lady Myrande." Luthias  opened his mouth to
make a  scornful reply, but Oleran  added, "And I do  suggest that you
order your  Bichanese friend to  lower his  crossbow. By the  time the
bolt reaches me, your Excellency, Lady Myrande will be dead."
     Without turning or removing his  eyes from Oleran's, Luthias held
out  his hand.  Luthias felt  Michiya lower  the crossbow  behind him.
Luthias took a step closer; Oleran  pressed the point; a drop of blood
appeared on Myrande's  blue dress. Luthias halted.  Oleran removed the
dagger and pointed it at the Count.
     "Better, your Excellency," Oleran praised, smiling. "And now--"
     Myrande suddenly collapsed double  over Oleran's left arm. Angry,
the  Baron slammed  his dagger's  pommel into  the back  of her  neck.
"Stand!  What do  you think  you're doing,  woman?" the  enraged Baron
demanded.
     Myrande appeared  to retch.  "I'm afraid  of heights,"  she cried
pitifully,  putting her  hands  over  her dark  hair  as  if she  were
panicked  by  the  altitude.  Nervously, she  played  with  the  piled
tresses.
     Heights? Luthias thought wildly.
     "You will,  your Excellency," Oleran was  saying, holding Myrande
twice as securely, "procure for us horses--"
     "Let's see who  can climb highest," an  eight-year-old girl named
Myrande had  once challenged  the twins. She  had climbed  the tallest
trees in Connall. Sable, afraid of heights?
     Behind Luthias, Michiya smiled.
     Fast as a whirlwind, Myrande  turned, buried one of the Bichanese
chopsticks two inches deep in  Oleran's right side, and pushed herself
away from  him. "You  bitch!" Oleran screamed,  raising his  dagger to
murder her.  Luthias dove for  his ward, caught  her in his  arms, and
twirled away,  putting himself between  Sable and the  dagger. Myrande
screamed his name. There was a  burning in his back, and Luthias heard
the crossbow snap with deadly finality. Oleran cried out once.
     Luthias held Sable  tight, and she clutched  him desperately. She
was warm,  alive, all right.  Oh, God, she  was all right.  All right.
Luthias buried his head in her loose hair and whispered, "Marry me."
     Then  he  cursed himself.  Damn  it,  he  should have  been  more
romantic, more like Roisart, moonlight  and roses, something. He could
have done better for her. Sable deserved better.
     But she didn't seem to mind. "When?" she whispered back.
     Luthias tried  to laugh, but it  left him as a  shaky pant. "Next
week," he cried, "next month, tomorrow, I don't care. Soon."
     "Tonight?"
     Again, Luthias attempted laughter, but  it came out like sobs. "A
little too soon,  Sable." He held her away from  him a little, smiled.
She  smiled  back,  but  she  was pale  and  uncertain.  He  felt  her
unconsciously move  her hand  up and  down on  his back.  "You deserve
better."
     Gingerly, Michiya approached, the  crossbow empty and relaxed now
that it had done its work. "Myrande," he began, "Luthias-sama, are you
all right?"
     "Fine, Michiya," Luthias answered.  The Count Connall remembered,
belatedly, that  there was an  enemy to contend with.  Luthias scanned
the roof. "Oleran--?"
     Ittosai grinned  like a child. "I  shot him in the  neck. He went
right over the edge. If he was not killed by the bolt--"
     Suddenly,  Myrande gasped  and jumped  backwards, putting  a hand
1over her mouth. "Sable, what's wrong?" Luthias asked. Then he felt the
pain of  the wound  on the right  side of his  lower back.  Warm blood
dribbled on his skin.
     Ittosai and  Myrande sprang to  look at the wound.  While Myrande
inspected her  betrothed's injury, Michiya retrieved  the dagger which
had  clattered to  the stones  unheard. "It  cannot be  deep," Michiya
reported, scrutinizing the blade. "It has blood only on the edge."
     "No, it's not deep," Sable confirmed. She reached into her gown's
pocket and produced a handkerchief. She folded it and applied pressure
to the slash.
     "Don't fuss, Sable," Luthias  requested briskly. "I'm all right."
He was better than  he had been in weeks. He reached  back, put an arm
around her, then held out his hand to his friend. "Thanks, Michiya."
     The Bichurian smiled and took it. "Do not thank me, Luthias-sama.
What is it you say...that is what friends are for."

     Somehow (Luthias  was never  sure how, and  quite sure  he didn't
want to know) Marcellon got the  Count Connall and his bride, the Duke
of Dargon, the former Baron of  Shipbrook, and Ittosai Michiya back to
Dargon  Keep in  less  than  an hour.  There  the  High Mage  examined
Luthias' back  and Myrande's  bruises. He turned  Myrande over  to his
daughter and sent Luthias to bed with a sleeping potion. "You need the
sleep," the High Mage told him.  "You haven't slept well in weeks, and
there is much  to be done in this fortnight,  Count Connall." The High
Mage grinned, rejoicing in using the young man's earned title.
     Luthias went to  the guest bedroom in Dargon  Keep dutifully, but
he did not take  the potion. There was too much to  think about. For a
while, he stared  at the fireplace, holding the document  the King had
given him. Finally, he stood and walked to Myrande's room.
     He boldly knocked on the hard door. "Who's there?" Sable's voice,
muffled, inquired.
     "Luthias."
     "Come."
     The  Count of  Connall opened  the door  quietly and  entered the
room. Her dark  hair glowing from the light in  the fireplace, Myrande
waited  for  him, her  arms  hugging  her  knees.  She was  wearing  a
nightgown that was obviously intended  for the tall Duchess of Dargon;
the cuffs fell past Myrande's thumbs, and the bodice draped lower than
it should have. Gently, Luthias approached  her and sat on the bed. "I
hope I didn't wake you," he began.
     "No, I couldn't sleep," Myrande  confessed tiredly. "I'm not sure
I want to." She paused, stared  at the flames. "I've never hurt anyone
before."
     "You were  marvelous," Luthias praised her.  "You were wonderful.
I'm  proud of  you--and  so  is Michiya.  You  should  have heard  him
bragging to Marcellon."
     "How is your back?" Sable asked, touching his arm lightly.
     "Nothing serious," Luthias related.  "Oleran just sliced the skin
a little." The  Count Connall shrugged. "Marcellon  wasn't worried. He
just bandaged it. There won't be a scar."
     "You and your scars!" Myrande  laughed, touching the (now) small,
white one above his right eye. "You're so vain!" She stopped laughing,
touched his  cheek. "I'm glad you  came, Luthias. I didn't  want to be
alone tonight."
     Luthias took her  hand and pressed it to his  cheek in the manner
of the Court. "I need to talk to you, Sable."
     Myrande  smiled. "You've  been saying  that since  before the  Sy
tournament." She withdrew her hand. "What's wrong?"
     Unsure how  to begin, Luthias  looked away.  He was silent  for a
long moment; then,  he reached out and took her  hands. They were very
1small. "Sable," he started, "I don't know why you want to marry me...I
don't know why you agreed to it."
     "Because I want  to," she explained, happy but  confused. "I want
to marry you."
     "Look, Sable," he began again, "I want you to be happy. Here." He
handed her the parchment, heavy with the King's seal.
     Myrande inspected it dubiously. "What is it?"
     "It's  an order  from the  King," Luthias  told her  quietly, not
looking her in  the eye. "I--it's an order--look, Sable,  I don't want
you to  be trapped into a  marriage you don't want.  That royal decree
says that  the man you love  must marry you.  I--" God, why was  it so
hard to tell her he loved her? "I won't have you unhappy."
     For  a   moment,  Sable   stared  at   him  with   confusion  and
astonishment. "I thought...you knew,"  she said slowly, incredulously.
"I thought...when you asked me to marry you...I thought you knew..."
     "Know what?" Luthias demanded, looking  her in the eye. There was
pain in his face, but it was the  brave pain of a lover willing to let
his beloved go free. "All I know  is that I love you--" There. He said
it. "--but I also know that you're in love with someone else, and--"
     "No!" she interrupted him with  abrupt finality. Luthias shut his
mouth mid-word. "There is no one else."
     "What?" asked Luthias, gazing at her as if she had lost her mind.
     "There  is no  one  else," she  repeated,  gripping his  forearm.
"There never was  anyone *else*. Only you."  Myrande stopped suddenly,
timidly   reached  out   to  touch   his  face.   Her  hand   dropped.
"Always...you."
     "*What?*" Luthias  squeaked. Unbelieving,  he snatched  the paper
from her and  read the neat, formal words: "...We  decree by Our Royal
Hand and  Seal that  Our vassal,  Luthias, Count  of Connall,  take in
marriage  Our subject,  Lady Myrande  Shipbrook, on  account of  their
great love...."  He stared at  the paper, then  at his bride.  "It was
me?" he questioned. "Me? But, Sable..."
     "You," she confirmed. "I love you, Luthias."
     "But...all  these  years...four  years,  Sable!  And  I  never--"
Suddenly, he  was flooded with  memories of  exactly what he  had done
those four  years that Myrande  had loved him silently.  "The women--I
was with so many other--"
     "I know," Myrande reminded him  without bitterness or judgment in
her voice. "I mixed the contraceptive potions, remember?"
     "And  my   temper,"  Luthias  continued,  astonished.   "I  drink
when...Sable, you love me?"
     "It isn't hard,"  Myrande told him, smiling. "You're  a good man,
Luthias,  and I  don't  mind  your faults."  He  snorted in  contempt.
"Besides, I have my faults, too."
     "What faults?" Luthias made a dubious sound. "You're perfect."
     (Hadn't Clifton said that about Lauren once....?)
     "Well, for  one," Myrande chanted  as if  it were a  litany, "I'm
proud."
     "Oh, yes," Luthias agreed with utter and complete sincerity.
     "And stubborn."
     "Don't I know it!" Luthias concurred.
     "And I have one fault I know you never wanted in a wife."
     "What's that?" Luthias wondered, rolling the decree.
     "Virginity."
     Luthias let  the paper  drop and  stared at  her, stunned  for an
extended moment. Then, suddenly, he began to laugh. Chuckling, Myrande
watched as the Count laughed, the  sound of wedding bells, until tears
of mirth rolled down his cheeks, until he released all the ills of the
summer, until the halls of Dargon Keep rang with the homecoming of the
Count of Connall.
1     Still  laughing, Luthias  finally gripped  his bride's  shoulders
gently.  "Ah,  Sable, Sable,"  he  laughed  breathlessly, kissing  her
firmly  on the  mouth, "may  I  be able  to  cure all  your faults  as
easily!"

     The Duke of Dargon was  anxiously pacing the vestry adjoining the
chapel in Dargon  Keep. He stopped suddenly and glared  at his cousin.
"You could at least have the  decency to be nervous!" Clifton exploded
at the seated, composed Count of Connall.
     "But  I  don't  have  anything  to  be  nervous  about!"  Luthias
protested, laughing.
     "You're getting married," the  Duke growled, resuming his rounds.
"Most people consider that enough to be nervous about."
     Ittosai Michiya,  leaning against a chair,  chuckled and expanded
upon the  Duke's concern, although  his voice  showed that he  was too
jovial  to share  it. "After  all,  Luthias-sama, you're  going to  be
spending the rest of your life with her."
     "But I've spent all but six  months of my life with her already,"
Luthias countered. "It's been fine so  far." The young Count shook his
head. "I don't understand what all  the fuss is about, anyway. I don't
know why you and Lauren feel you  have to throw this huge wedding, not
to mention the feast and the ball. I don't want it; Sable doesn't want
it."
     "She deserves the fuss,"  Clifton grumbled. "Besides, it wouldn't
be right if she wasn't married off properly. You have to admit that."
     "Granted,"  Luthias  acknowledged,  "but  did  we  need  to  have
something this big?"
     "You are a Count, manling," the Duke reminded him. "We have to do
things properly. That means inviting half the Kingdom."
     "And receiving  gifts from  them," Luthias finished,  rolling his
eyes. His  town keep, two  hours from Dargon  Keep, was filled  to the
ceilings with wedding gifts.
     "Anything interesting?" Clifton wondered.
     "Lord Winston of  Gateway sent me some  beautiful silver arrows,"
Luthias told  him, admiration for the  weapons in his voice.  "He sent
Sable a  silver jewel box. And  we have this fine,  Freothold tapestry
from a Lord and Lady Thorne."
     "Who are they?" Ittosai Michiya wondered, feeling for the wedding
rings in his pocket. He was acting as Luthias' second in the ceremony,
and he took the privilege very seriously. "I do not know them."
     "Neither do I," Luthias admitted. He  paused. "The King sent us a
gift as well: our own house in Magnus."
     "He's  being very  generous to  you," Clifton  remarked. "And  to
Sable. He sent home with me twenty ells of indigo silk for her wedding
gown." The Duke of  Dargon grinned. "I think he wanted  to make up for
the fact that she has to give you up so quickly."
     "It didn't work," Luthias laughed. Myrande had been quite unhappy
when  she  discovered that  her  husband-to-be  would be  leaving  her
fourteen days after his return to the Duchy. "Sable's ready to rip him
apart."
     "Why do you not take her with you?" inquired Michiya practically.
     "I don't trust the Beinisonians," Luthias replied frankly.
     Michiya grimaced, but nodded. He  had as little reason as Luthias
to trust the Beinison Empire. Then  he grinned. "This reminds me," the
Bichurian began, "that I have not yet given you a gift." The Castellan
of Connall  reached behind him and  tossed Luthias a book.  With a sly
grin on his face, Michiya explained, "It is a pillow book."
     "A pillow book?" Luthias echoed dubiously. He opened the tome and
read a few lines.  His jaw dropped, and he threw the  book back to his
Castellan with somewhat mock indignance.  "What are you giving me this
1for? I don't need it! I'm not some amateur like Clifton!"
     "What is it?" the Duke  asked. Wordlessly, Ittosai Michiya handed
Dargon the  book. Clifton opened it  randomly, read a few  words, then
blushed  a fine  shade a  purple. "Who  are you  calling amateur?"  he
demanded gruffly,  shutting the  tome quietly.  "My wife  is pregnant,
isn't she?"
     "Accidents happen,"  Luthias quipped,  smiling. He looked  at his
still pacing  cousin, who scowled at  him. "How soon, Clifton?  Can we
get this performance over with?"
     "As soon as Lauren comes,"  Clifton assured him. The Duke stopped
mid-step. "You do have a wedding gift for her, don't you?"
     "Of course." Luthias didn't know  much about weddings, but he did
know that  bride and groom received  gifts from each other.  He handed
Clifton an old, velvet box.
     The Duke opened  it and smiled at the  sapphire necklace, broach,
ring, hair pieces,  and bracelets. "I helped your  father pick these,"
Clifton said.  Although he  had only  been four  at the  time, Clifton
Dargon could still  remember his uncle Fionn's  wedding. "They matched
your mother's eyes perfectly." Dargon  closed the musty box and handed
them to the bridegroom. "They'll look well on Sable."
     There  was a  quiet knock  on  the door.  "Clifton," the  Duchess
called him, "you have a bride to give away."
     Clifton smiled. Since Luthias, as  bridegroom, was in no position
to give his ward in marriage, his Duke had pre-empted him by reason of
rank and kinship. "Let's go, manling."
     The Count and  his Castellan left the vestry and  walked onto the
sanctuary. "What do we do now?"  Michiya wondered as Luthias nodded to
the High Priest of the Duchy of Dargon.
     "Wait," Luthias answered, handing his  second the jewels. Then he
leaned  close  and whispered,  "Did  you  get  the horse  ready?"  The
Castellan nodded, and  only then did Luthias take the  time to look at
the chapel.
     The  high  stone  walls  were   decorated  with  "all  manner  of
sentimental stupidity,"  as Luthias  had called it  earlier. Evergreen
branches, to  represent long  life, adorned the  walls and  the altar.
Blazing  torches, symbols  of  passion, burned  brightly  in the  wall
sconces. Apples  and bread, representing fertility  and security, were
piled on the altar. Rose petals  and autumn flowers were spread in the
aisle framed by the guests to  soften the bride's steps into marriage.
Sentimental refuse, Luthias groaned internally. Roisart would love it.
     Soon, Luthias  heard the sounds  of harps and  singing announcing
his Sable's approach. At a nod  from the High Priest, Luthias began to
walk the aisle  toward the door. He  glanced from side to  side at the
guests; although  they had invited  the entire Duchy, Luthias  had not
expected so many people to come. His Aunt Tornia, Duchess of Asbridge,
had sailed from  Magnus for the occasion. The Duchess  of Narragan and
Dame  Martis  Westbrook had  come  with  her. Luthias  almost  sighed,
wishing briefly  that Marcellon and  Sir Edward could be  here. Edward
couldn't  leave the  King, not  with a  possible war  on the  way, and
Marcellon, for the  same reason, returned to Magnus and  his duties as
High Mage soon after Myrande had been rescued.
     There were  other guests  missing, too,  a pair  of kinsmen...and
Luthias missed them most sorely of all.
     Slowly, the  heavy doors  of the chapel  opened when  Luthias and
Ittosai arrived.  Behind them was  the bridal procession:  Bartol, the
Ducal bard, Lauren, and finally,  surrounded by minstrels, Clifton and
Luthias' sable bride.
     Her well-fitting wedding gown was of the indigo silk the King had
sent; her  ebony hair, left  mostly loose, was bedecked  with sapphire
ribbons. Her  onyx eyes were glowing  softly, and she smiled  shyly at
1Luthias, who returned the expression.
     My God, she is beautiful.
     Clearly, and without warning, the Duke of Dargon spoke the ritual
words: "Count of Connall, I give my kinswoman unto thee for thy wife."
     "My lord," Luthias answered, "I thank thee." Confidently, Luthias
held out  his hand. Myrande  wordlessly put  her small hand  into his.
They turned  and traveled  the aisle, Myrande's  full skirt  and train
reaping rose petals. Michiya and Lauren followed.
     The High  Priest welcomed  them by offering  them his  hands. The
couple knelt.  "May the  blessings of  the Almighty  God be  upon you,
Count of Connall and Lady Myrande,  upon the day of your marriage." He
made a  sign of blessing above  them, then helped them  to their feet.
"Count of  Connall, Lady Myrande:  do you both  come here of  your own
volition?"
     "I do,"  Luthias and Myrande  answered. Luthias cast a  glance at
the  pompous priest;  Myrande  rolled her  eyes,  and Luthias  somehow
managed to stifle his laughter.
     "Do you  both seek the blessings  of God and of  the Church?" the
priest continued in a ritual voice.
     "I do," answered  the bride and groom. This was  taking too long,
Luthias thought. Couldn't that priest move any faster?
     "Then you  must both  ask, each  the other,  to accept  you," the
priest instructed.  He didn't have  to talk through his  nose, Luthias
thought. He saw Sable biting her  lip; she was stifling chuckles, too.
Luthias compressed his mouth. He knew he had to be serious.
     And  then the  priest  said something  that  surprised the  Count
Connall: "If any here can give cause why the Count of Connall and Lady
Myrande should not pledge themselves to each other, let him speak now,
or speak never!"
     So that was why Clifton wouldn't let him bring his sword! Luthias
tensed. If anyone tried to stop this--
     But  no  one  spoke,  and   Luthias  realized  that  it  was  his
turn--finally!--to recite the ritual. He had memorized it hastily, and
hoped he wouldn't forget anything. "My lady Myrande," he began slowly.
Please, don't let me forget the words. "I ask thee to accept me as thy
husband, as the man I am. I am a man imperfect and faulted, yet this I
will promise thee: I will be a faithful and true husband to thee until
God takes one of us to Himself.  With myself, I offer thee this gift."
Luthias  hated that  part;  it  seemed like  he  was  trying to  bribe
Myrande.  But  he  handed  her  the sapphires.  She  opened  the  box,
recognized the jewels, and smiled. "Wilt thou take me, Myrande?"
     "I will," she answered, smiling.  Luthias felt like laughing with
joy, but  it was his  bride's turn to  speak. "My lord  Luthias, Count
Connall, I ask thee to accept me as  the wife, as the woman I am. I am
a woman imperfect and faulted, yet this I will promise thee: I will be
to  thee a  faithful  and true  wife  until  God takes  one  of us  to
Himself."  Myrande  reached out  a  hand;  Lauren put  a  silk-wrapped
package into it. Sable offered Luthias her gift. "With myself, I offer
thee  this  gift." Luthias  undid  the  ribbons;  it was  a  well-done
portrait,  the size  of his  palm, of  Sable in  her wedding  gown. He
smiled  and  handed the  portrait  to  Ittosai.  "Wilt thou  take  me,
Luthias?"
     "I will," he  said firmly. Luthias was damned if  he was allowing
argument on this.
     The  High Priest  raised his  hands ceremoniously.  "May God  the
Almighty  bless and  sanctify this  union and  keep them  faithful and
true,  one unto  the other,  until the  day when  He brings  them unto
Himself." The High  Priest relaxed his arms and  looked expectantly at
Michiya.
     "The rings!"  Lauren whispered hastily. Ittosai  jumped, properly
1embarrassed, and handed the priest the two golden bands.
     The  priest made  a blessing  sign over  them. "May  these rings,
symbols of  your pledges, keep  you one  unto the other.  Confirm your
troth."
     As was  custom, Luthias picked  Myrande's ring from  the priest's
palm. "With this ring," he recited, "I thee wed." It would just be his
luck, Luthias thought,  to forget the words now. "This  golden ring to
thee I give. With  my body, I thee worship, and with  my goods, I thee
endow."  He touched  ring to  her  thumb, her  forefinger, her  middle
finger, then finally slid the golden  band onto her fourth finger. "So
be it."
     Her  voice strong,  Myrande took  his  ring from  the priest  and
recited  the words,  repeating the  ritual.  She touched  each of  his
fingers, then put  the ring on him.  It gleamed like her  eyes. "So be
it," she finished, smiling at him. Luthias squeezed her hand.
     "Do you, Lauren, Duchess of  Dargon, and you, Ittosai of Michiya"
Damn it, *no* one could say his name right! "witness this union?"
     "I do," replied the Duchess and the Castellan.
     "You  are now  in the  eyes of  God and  the Kingdom  husband and
wife," the High Priest finished  authoritatively. He looked at Luthias
with irate expectancy.
     Luthias gave him an amused look.
     "Kiss her, stupid!"  the Duke of Dargon called  without any trace
of dignity.
     Luthias laughed like  a boy, leaned forward, and  kissed his wife
firmly on the lips. As was custom, he suddenly took Myrande's hand and
dashed from the  chapel in the symbolic attempt as  escaping the feast
to be alone.  With a cheer, the wedding guests  followed in a confused
fashion.
     Luthias  was  pulling his  Countess  along  at a  terrific  rate.
Myrande was laughing like a girl.  "You're supposed let them catch us,
you know," she playfully chided her husband.
     "Like hell," Luthias responded. "Run!"
     Myrande's eyes  widened admiringly at Luthias'  audacity, grabbed
her endless  skirts, and  ran. Luthias pulled  her around  the corner,
pushed on a loose brick, and yanked her into the secret passage. "Now,
let's hope that Roisart and I were the only ones who ever found this,"
the Count  breathed, grinning at  his bride.  "Let's get out  of here,
Sable."
     Expertly, Connall  led his wife  through the dark  passage, which
led eventually  to the garden.  There, near the exit,  was Dragonfire.
"Thanks, Michiya," Luthias breathed. Abruptly, he took Myrande's waist
and lifted  her onto  the horse. He  gracefully placed  himself behind
her, took the reins, and galloped out of the courtyard.
     Sable leaned  against Luthias and  laughed. "I don't  believe you
did this!"
     The Count put one strong arm around her waist. "I don't like that
bedding ceremony." He paused. "I  don't want anyone undressing you but
me."
     "Well," laughed Lady Connall. She shivered in the cool autumn air
and leaned against Luthias for warmth.
     "Do you mind missing the feast?" Luthias asked her suddenly.
     "Not one bit."  Myrande twisted and kissed him. "I  only have you
for a week more; I want as much time as I can get."
     Luthias  glanced  behind him  for  pursuit;  there was  none.  He
reigned Dragonfire and kissed Sable  deeply. She pulled away, her arms
around his neck. "And  now, my lord," she began, "where  do we go from
here? The keep?"
     "No," the  Count Connall denied  firmly. "That's the  first place
they'll look." He  steered Dragonfire into the woods.  "We're going to
1Warin's town house, outside the city." His wife stared at him. Luthias
grinned. "Warin, Michiya, and I arranged this days ago. Don't worry."
     "I'm not worried. I trust you."
     "We'll go back  tomorrow," Luthias told her. "I  have some things
left to arrange with the trip and with the incorporation of Coranabo's
lands."  He looked  at her.  "You'll  be regent  as soon  as you  turn
twenty-one."
     "Whatever you  like. How long will  it take us to  get to Warin's
house?" Myrande wondered after a pause.
     Luthias grinned. "Afraid to be out after dark, Sable?"
     "Not with you," she returned the banter.
     "I won't let the ghosts get you," he promised playfully.
     Sable laughed merrily. "Why should I be afraid of ghosts? They're
only dead people. What dead person would want to harm me?"
     "Oleran?"
     "Inconsequential,"  Myrande asserted.  "There are  too many  dead
people who would want to protect me."
     "Like whom?"
     "My father and mother. Roisart. Your father."
     "Father..." Luthias echoed, halting the horse. He stared into the
darkness,  thinking something  he had  not allowed  himself to  ponder
before the wedding.
     Myrande gently touched his jaw. "What is it?"
     "My father wouldn't approve of this, Sable."
     She stared at him quizzically. "Approve of what?"
     "Our marriage."  Luthias looked  away. "He told  me to  stay away
from you, not to toy with you..."
     Myrande  looked as  if  she suddenly  understood something.  "And
that's  why you  never..." She  smiled,  turned his  face toward  her.
"Luthias, he  was only trying to  protect me. He wasn't  sure you were
ready to love me as I loved you. He..." Sable shrugged. "He told me to
wait for you. He planned on us marrying, eventually. He was hoping for
it."
     Luthias met her eyes. "Really?"
     "Truly. I wouldn't deceive you."
     The Count  kissed his wife,  then pulled  away and looked  at her
mutely. "Let's go," she whispered. "I only have a little time with you
left."
     "I'll be  back to  dance with  you at  the Melrin  Ball," Luthias
vowed, starting the horse forward slowly. Sable leaned tiredly against
him. "You're beautiful, Sable," Luthias  told her, watching her in the
moonlight.
     "Watch where you're going," she returned harshly.
     Luthias halted  Dragonfire abruptly and  put his arms  around his
wife.  "Easy, Sable,"  he soothed  her, "I  won't be  gone for  long."
Myrande  held  his  arms as  if  she  never  wanted  to let  go.  "I'm
ambassador, Sable. No one's going to hurt me."
     Myrande's eyes  were hard. "If  you believed that, you'd  take me
with you."
     Luthias cursed internally.  Sable knew him too  well, always had.
The Count  turned his  wife to  face him.  "Listen, Sable.  Nothing is
going to keep  me from returning to  you. Do you hear  me? Nothing. No
one." He then repeated, "I'll be back  to dance with you at the Melrin
Ball."
     "Even  as a  ghost?" she  tried to  play, but  her voice  sounded
choked.
     "Don't be silly," Luthias  quipped. "Ghosts don't dance." Myrande
smiled, and the Count hugged her tightly. "Better?" he inquired.
     "I still  don't want you to  go," she said. "But  there's no help
for it, I suppose."
1     "No," Luthias  agreed, "and there's  no use staying out  here all
night in the chill when we should be home in bed."
     Sable laughed  gratefully and kissed  her husband. "As  you wish,
your Excellency. I would not think to dispute you."
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             ______________________________________

             A Journal of Fact, Fiction and Opinion
             ______________________________________

Quanta is an electronically distributed magazine of science fiction.
Published monthly,  each issue contains short fiction,  articles and
editorials by authors around the world  and across the net.   Quanta
publishes  in  two  formats:   straight  ascii and  PostScript*  for
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Quanta is a relatively new magazine  but is growing fast,  with over
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Electronic publishing is the way of the future.  Become part of that
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******   *****        of Amateur Creative Writing         ************
                      ---------------------------

 >> What is Athene?

    Athene is a free network "magazine" devoted to amateur fiction
    written by the members of the online community.  Athene does not
    restrict itself to any specific genre, but will publish quality
    short stories dealing with just about any interesting topic,
    including (but not limited to):

                 science fiction,           fantasy,
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                 psychology,                sports,
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 >> Distribution

    Athene is published monthly (assuming stories come in at a
    reasonable rate), and comes in two formats -- ASCII and PostScript.
    For those who don't have access to a PostScript-compatible
    printer, the ASCII distribution is a text-only file much like
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    magazine is identical across both formats.

    The ASCII version usually runs about 1300 lines, and the PostScript
    edition typically generates about twenty pages.

    To subscribe, send mail (no interactive messages, please)
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    you would prefer to receive.

 >> Miscellaneous

    Back issues can be ordered on request by sending mail to me at
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   (C)   Copyright    November,   1989,   DargonZine,    Editor   Dafydd
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--   DargonZine Volume 3, Issue 1        01/26/90          Cir 934    --
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--                            Contents                                --
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  Conflict of Interest I     John Doucette          Ober 31-Nober 1, '13
  DargonZine Index (Vols 1 & 2)
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1                       Conflict of Interest, Part I
                            by John Doucette

Magnus, Royal Duchy, Baranur
30 Ober, 1013 B.Y.

     The  column  of horsemen  rode  south  towards the  city,  having
crossed the  river the previous  day. The soldiers' spirits  had risen
upon leaving behind the seemingly endless mountains for the forest and
grasslands  that  were  so  much   like  western  Galicia.  Then  they
remembered  that for  all  that it  looked like  Galicia,  this was  a
foreign country  and they  would answer with  their lives  if anything
happened to  the ambassador or his  party. Their smiles and  grins and
good-natured banter were  replaced with grim looks  and wary, watchful
attention to all that took place around them.
     The  peasants  working the  fields  around  Magnus looked  up  in
surprise,  and not  a little  fear,  at the  strange horsemen  heading
towards the  Crown City. Granted, fifty  or so horsemen were  no great
threat, but  the crest they bore  and the standard they  flew were not
those of  Baranur or King Haralan,  and that was sufficient  cause for
worry in and of itself.
     The peasants were not the only ones who noticed the column making
its way south. A detachment of cavalry was riding north from Magnus to
investigate. Jordaan saw  them approaching and barked an  order to his
troops. The Galician horsemen formed  a protective cordon around their
charges  while  Jordaan  himself  rode  to inform  his  liege  of  the
approaching Baranurian cavalry.
     "My lord," he said, "a small  force approaches from the city." "I
should hope so," Myros replied. "We  are strangers in this land, after
all. Halt the column here. We'll wait for them to come to us."
     "Yes, my lord."  Jordaan galloped to the front of  the column and
gave  the order.  A single  note  sounded on  a bugle  and the  column
halted. Baron Myros  and Sir Grange Rarrack, one of  Myros' oldest and
most  trusted advisors,  rode forward  and waited  for the  Baranurian
horsemen to arrive.
     The Baranurian  leftenant halted his twenty  men line-abreast one
hundred yards  from the  strangers. The leftenant  was no  herald, but
garrison  duty  in  Magnus  does  expose one  to  a  large  number  of
foreigners. In all his five years in the Crown City, he had never seen
a standard resembling the one these strangers flew.
     "Well, I'd best get this over  with," he said to himself and rode
forward.  When he  got to  within twenty  yards of  the strangers,  he
stopped and  called out,  "Who are  you and what  is your  business in
Baranur?"
     The old  man leaned  towards whom the  leftenant assumed  was the
leader  and  said  something  inaudible.  Translating,  the  leftenant
thought.  After receiving  a  reply,  the old  man  spoke in  accented
Baranurian, "May  I present His  Lordship, Baron Myros,  Ambassador of
His Imperial Majesty, Emperor Nyrull  of Galicia. His Imperial Majesty
has heard  much of the Kingdom  of Baranur and desires  relations with
His Royal Majesty, King Haralan."
     Galicia? the leftenant thought. I've never heard of such a place.
Oh well, not my problem. "Welcome  to Baranur, Ambassador. If you will
permit, my men and I will escort you and your party to Crown Castle."
     The old man again leaned over and translated. "His Lordship shall
be most honoured," the old man replied.
     The leftenant  turned to  his squadron  and barked  out commands.
"Squadron! Squadron will  turn to the right in column  of two's. Right
turn!" The  squadron sharply  executed their officer's  command, backs
ramrod straight,  eyes looking straight  to the front,  their thoughts
1focused only on  their next command. The Royal Horse  Guard would have
been  hard-pressed to  emulate  them. "Squadron!  At  the trot!  Right
wheel!  Forward!" The  leftenant brought  his squadron  onto the  road
leading  south and  led  the Galician  embassy  towards Magnus'  outer
fortifications.
     Magnus had originally  occupied only the west bank  of the Laraka
River. Due to its increasing prosperity, Magnus attracted new citizens
like  a magnet.  In time,  Magnus' population  had doubled  to 20,000,
making for crowded living conditions. The tide of immigrants showed no
sign of stopping,  so the decision was made to  expand to the Laraka's
east bank.
     A wall, similar to the wall around Magnus' Royal District but not
as massive, was constructed to protect Magnus' New District, which was
designed to house  10,000 people. In time, New District  was filled to
capacity and a  second district was constructed. When  that was filled
to capacity, another was built.  All told, Magnus housed 50,000 souls,
20,000 in  the Royal District  where Crown Castle, the  Bardic College
and  the  homes of  the  nobility  were  located,  30,000 in  the  New
Districts, home of the infamous Fifth Quarter.
     Myros was impressed with the Royal District's fortifications. For
a minor  power, Baranur had  done well  in fortifying its  capital. Of
course,  the Imperial  capital's defenses  far out-shone  Magnus', but
Myros would still not relish attempting to reduce Magnus.
     The  walls protecting  the Royal  District stretched  for leagues
around the  perimeter of the  city's west  bank. The fifty  feet high,
twenty feet  wide walls  were adorned every  hundred yards  with fifty
feet diameter, eighty feet high  round towers. Each gate was protected
by a barbican  consisting of two forty feet diameter,  sixty feet high
round towers. The gatehouse at each  gate was twenty feet wide, thirty
feet long and twenty feet high and was set into the wall itself.
     Access to the  gatehouse was barred by two ten  feet wide, twenty
feet high,  five feet thick  reinforced oak  doors. Once past  the oak
doors, anyone wishing to gain entry had to pass through the gatehouse,
its walls  lined with arrow slits,  its ceiling with murder  holes. If
the person wanting to gain entry was hostile, an iron portcullis could
be dropped down to block exit into the city.
     Myros  and  his  party  passed   through  the  massive  gates  of
Northgate.  There were  three other  gates in  addition to  Northgate;
Eastgate, Westgate, and Southgate. Eastgate and Westgate both provided
access to the Merchant's Quarter;  Eastgate opened onto the waterfront
and Kheva's Bridge. Kheva's Bridge  joined the Royal District with the
New District across the river. The Bridge was named after the engineer
who supervised its construction over a millenium ago.
     Northgate,  Eastgate,  and  Westgate  all saw  a  great  deal  of
traffic.  Southgate was  not witness  to  the volume  of traffic  that
flowed through  its sister Gates  however. Southgate was  for military
use only, as  it gave direct access to Crown  Castle. It differed from
the other Gates in one other way. Southgate was more heavily defended.
If an  invader managed to  breach the Outer  Gate, there was  an Inner
Gate that  remained to  be forced.  Southgate had  never fallen  to an
enemy,   not  even   after   King  Caeron's   army   was  crushed   by
Insurrectionist forces during the Great Houses War of 97-98 B.Y.
     Jordaan felt uneasy passing through the gatehouse knowing that at
least twenty  archers were  manning the arrow  slits and  murder holes
ready to  fill the passage with  death. Myros' party emerged  into the
daylight of Magnus' Royal District.
     Apparent  chaos reigned.  Everywhere,  people  were shouting  and
jostling with one another. It was market day. Every manner of item was
up for sale. Animals, cloth, jewelry, food of every description traded
hands in the large open marketplace. The Galician embassy threaded its
1way slowly through the throng, aided by its Baranurian escort.
     They  made their  way slowly  out of  the marketplace,  gradually
working their way through the Merchant's Quarter. This Quarter, one of
two in  the Royal District,  housed the wealthier merchants  and lower
classes of  nobles. It was also  the site of three  large markets that
saw a never-ending stream of goods, even in the dead of winter.
     The column  began making its  way uphill,  a sign that  they were
about to  enter the second Quarter  in the Royal District,  the King's
Quarter.  Ahead, they  could  see Crown  Castle,  its battlements  and
snow-capped towers dominating the Royal District. The famed College of
Bards could  be glimpsed above the  rooftops of the elegant  houses of
the middle and upper-class nobles.
     Celeste stiffened slightly when she  caught sight of the College.
Those within could  pose a threat to her mission.  She must be careful
to avoid bringing undue attention to herself.
     Her attention  was drawn from  the College to Crown  Castle. More
fortress than castle,  its many walls and towers were  situated on the
hill that  dominated Magnus' landscape. The  complex of fortifications
that was  Crown Castle occupied  an area  roughly three quarters  of a
league north-south and one half league east-west. It was almost a city
unto itself.
     To reach the King's Keep and the Inner Courtyard, one had to pass
through three gates  in walls that dwarfed the  Royal District's outer
defenses. The first wall was sixty  feet high and twenty feet wide and
boasted sixty feet diameter, eighty feet high round towers every fifty
yards. The  barbican defending  the gate consisted  of two  sixty feet
high, forty feet square towers and a twenty feet wide, sixty feet long
gatehouse thirty feet high. There  were massive bronze gates at either
end of the  gatehouse, each door ten feet high  and fifteen feet wide.
An iron portcullis could be dropped at either end as well.
     The second wall was thirty feet  farther up the hill and was even
more massive than the first. The  wall was eighty feet high and thirty
feet wide. Instead of towers, this wall had fifty feet square bastions
every one hundred yards equipped with light catapults. The gate in the
second wall was one hundred yards east  of the gate in the first wall.
The  gate was  not  defended  by a  barbican.  Instead,  the gate  was
incorporated into a sixty feet square keep eighty feet high. The outer
gates  themselves were  bronze; twenty  feet high,  twenty feet  wide.
There were also  two lesser gates inside the keep;  ten feet high, ten
feet wide  oaken doors. Unlike  the Gates on the  outer fortifications
and the gate  through the first wall, this gate  had no portcullis. On
the  outer  fortifications  between  the second  and  third  wall  was
Southgate.
     The third  and final wall barring  access to the King's  Keep and
the Inner Courtyard was on the summit, one hundred feet farther up the
hill. The wall  was one hundred twenty feet high  and fifty feet wide.
It had  one gate situated  in the middle of  the wall, placing  it one
hundred yards  west of  the second  wall's gate and  in line  with the
first wall's gate.
     Of the  seven gates in the  Royal District, the gate  through the
third wall of Crown Castle was  the most formidable, even more so than
Southgate. Unlike  the other gates, this  gate was not made  of oak or
bronze, nor  did it have a  gatehouse or keep defending  it. This gate
was made of stone and was, in fact, part of the wall itself. Each door
of the gate was forty feet high and twenty feet wide and opened onto a
passage with  the same  dimensions through  the wall  that ended  in a
similar gate.  Each gate was  operated by  huge winches. If  the gates
were to be closed against siege, they would not be barred as is common
with  most gates.  Instead, a  mechanism would  be tripped  that would
prevent the  gates from swinging  on their massive hinges.  Shut tight
1thus, the only way  to gain entrance to the Inner  Courtyard was to go
through the gates. Not an easy task.
     Once into the Inner Courtyard, one  would then have access to the
King's Keep. The name was misleading, however. The King's Keep was not
one building, but  a group of fortified buildings,  the most prominent
of  which was  the  original keep  upon which  the  Castle grew.  Each
building was  connected so that  once inside any given  structure, one
never need see daylight in one's travels throughout the King's Keep.
     But perhaps  the most unusual  aspect of the Inner  Courtyard was
the  series of  buildings to  the  west of  the King's  Keep known  as
Barracks Row. There  were fifteen two-story buildings  in three groups
of five  along the west portion  of the inner wall.  Each building was
the headquarters  for one of  the fifteen  Regiments that made  up the
Magnus  Garrison.  There was  nothing  unusual  about that.  What  was
unusual was that the barracks for  the soldiers were located under the
buildings. Fifteen thousand  men lived in an  underground complex that
stretched throughout the hill upon which Crown Castle was constructed.
The underground  quarters came complete with  recreational, eating and
medical  facilities as  well as  stables for  the cavalry.  There were
dozens of entrances to the King's  Keep to allow a rapid deployment of
men and horses from their barracks.
     About half of the garrison was on duty at any given time with the
rest  engaged  in  the  off-duty activities  for  which  soldiers  are
well-known no matter what sovereign they serve.
     The Ambassador and his party were escorted through Crown Castle's
defenses and taken  to the King's Keep. The embassy  was given several
rooms in  the Diplomatic  Wing where  other embassies  were quartered.
They were given  time to settle in and then  Myros, his wife, Jordaan,
and Rarrack were taken by Coridan to an audience with the King.

     King Haralan and Sir Edward Sothos, Knight Commander of the Royal
Armies and Haralan's close friend,  were in Haralan's study discussing
matters  related to  the recent  trial of  Duke Dargon  on charges  of
treason. The Duke had been framed by elements within Baranur supported
by  Beinison. The  scheme to  start a  war between  Baranur and  Bichu
nearly worked. If  not for the Count (then Baron)  of Connall's belief
that  his  cousin was  innocent,  Baranurian  and Bichanese  would  be
slaughtering each other  due to foreign meddling. When  it was learned
that Beinison was behind the plot,  a large group of nobles called for
war.
     Thus far, cooler heads had  prevailed. However, those who did not
share  Duke Dargon's  views  on war,  or the  lack  thereof, had  been
clamoring for action. In response, the  King called a Council to begin
the first week in Nober. Already, several nobles had arrived with more
expected within  the next  few days. For  Coridan, the  Falcon Herald,
Ober was a  very busy time. And with the  probability that the Council
would last  all winter, it  looked like Coridan  would have to  wait a
very long  time before  he could  relax. As Haralan  put it  to Edward
earlier that day,  "What with my birthday only three  days ago and now
this Council, it's a wonder Coridan doesn't go mad!"
     "Since you chose to see me wearing full uniform, can I assume the
news you bring is not good?" Haralan asked.
     "Yes, Sire. As you are  aware, I've asked certain merchant houses
to instruct  their caravan captains to  keep their eyes and  ears open
during their  journeys in Beinison.  The first reports have  just come
in."
     "And?"
     "There  is   evidence  of  increased  military   activity  within
Beinison. I can't say with total assurance that it is directed against
us, however--"
1     "However, you think we should be on our guard."
     "Yes, Your Royal Majesty. In light of the discovery of Beinison's
interference in our affairs, the Beinisonians will be forced to act. I
can't see them doing anything until spring, but one never knows."
     "What is it you want done?"
     "First, we  should put the  Royal Army  on an increased  state of
readiness. Second,  we have to give  serious thought to whom  we shall
have as field commanders."
     "The first is easily enough accomplished. Who do you have in mind
for the second?"
     "Jan is out on  an inspection tour now. I told  her to single out
those officers  that have potential. If  war comes, I want  to promote
those officers to major commands, even if it means promoting them over
the heads of more senior, more noble officers."
     "Isn't that somewhat drastic, Edward?"
     "Perhaps, my friend, but consider this. These promotions are only
going to affect the Royal Army,  not household troops. And if war does
come, it will  be life or death  for Baranur. We can't  afford to have
incompetent commanders."
     "We don't know that war WILL come, Edward."
     "Maybe so,  but one of the  first things my father  taught me was
that a soldier must prepare for the worst possible case. If it doesn't
come to pass, so much the better. But if it does, at least you have an
even chance."
     "Very well. Now, are there any nobles that seem promising?"
     "Quite a few. I'd like to put Duke Dargon in command of the Navy.
He is more familiar with naval warfare  than I. As for the Army, there
is one  in particular that I'd  like to have. Lord...Morion  I believe
his name is. Is something wrong?"
     "I  don't  think  you  should  count on  Morion.  He  prefers  to
administer  his own  lands and  not  become involved  with the  King's
tasks. Remember  when Kyle Bluesword  and his bandits were  raiding in
the south?  I had to  send Coridan  to Morion to  get him to  agree to
help."
     "He's the one Commander Rian spoke of?"
     "The same."
     "Then he'll make  a valuable commander. If he  refuses, why don't
you just order him? You are the King, after all."
     "I  can't. You  see, my  uncle gave  Morion's lands  to him  as a
reward for  personal service to the  Crown. Morion holds fealty  to no
one. My father re-affirmed the dispensation  and I confirmed it: it is
irrevocable. I can only ask, not order."
     "You can't be serious!? You are! I know I've been in Baranur long
enough to know the customs, but by Nehru, Haralan! This Morion's lands
are in effect  a separate country! How could you  have allowed this to
happen!?"
     "I  didn't  'allow'  anything,  Edward.  Understand.  Morion  was
granted his status for extraordinary loyalty to my uncle. Unless there
was good reason, my father and I could not have refused to confirm his
status. Lord Morion has served  Baranur well. He deserves his reward."
Haralan paused, trying  to think of some way to  explain the situation
from Edward's viewpoint.
     "Edward," he said, hoping he had  found the right words, "this is
not Galicia. The  attitudes are not the same here.  You are accustomed
to Imperium,  with all the benefits  and obligations that go  with it.
That's part of your Galician heritage  and you should be proud of it."
Haralan paused  briefly before continuing. "Don't  forget that Baranur
is a younger nation. We don't  have the legacy of history that Galicia
does.  Galicia has  had  six hundred  years that  we  here in  Baranur
haven't.  That  in  itself  goes  a long  way  toward  explaining  the
1differences between us."
     Edward persisted.  "I just find it  hard to accept the  idea of a
noble owning independent landholds inside Baranur."
     "Lord  Morion's lands  are  NOT independent,"  Haralan said  with
frustration. "He depends on Baranur just  as much now as when my uncle
ruled.  Call it  semi-autonomy. It's  not  such a  bad thing,  Edward.
Morion may not help me with some  matters, but I think we can count on
him to support Baranur IF war comes."
     "Yes, Sire." Edward sounded unconvinced.
     Haralan decided  to change  the subject. "Now,  who else  did you
have in mind?"
     Edward sighed. "I would have liked to give Luthias a command, but
you sent him to Beinison."
     "Don't you think he's rather young?"
     "Granted,"  Edward conceded,  "he is  young. But  he has  talent,
Haralan. He reminds me--"
     "He reminds you of you at his age?"
     Edward smiled sheepishly, a rare  occurrence for Edward. "Yes, he
does. I don't  think he's ready for a major  command. What I'd planned
was to give him the Cavalry Wing. Luthias likes freedom of action. The
cavalry would have given him that."
     "If he were here."
     "Yes, if he were here. Still, if  he makes it back before the war
starts I think we should consider him."
     "Alright. Who else?"
     "I can't think of  anyone else off the top of my  head. Give me a
day to go through my records?"
     "Done. There,  that's finished. I  don't know about you,  but I'm
famished."
     "And I as well. Why don't we  go down to the kitchen and see what
we can scare up?"
     "Excellent idea," Haralan said humorously. "Where do you ever get
them?"
     "I'm  gifted, Your  Royal Majesty,"  Edward replied  in the  same
tone.
     "Gifted my eye!" Haralan said in mock anger. "I ought to--"
     At that  moment, Coridan, the  Falcon Herald, entered  the study.
"Forgive me for disturbing you, Sire," the young man said. "An embassy
has arrived from Galicia. Shall I show them in?"
     Edward  turned and  went to  the window,  suddenly overcome  with
emotion. Haralan glanced  briefly at his friend,  knowing something of
what Edward must  be thinking. Edward hardly needed a  reminder of his
exile from his homeland. He turned to Coridan. "Yes," he said. "By all
means, show them in."
     Coridan  bowed slightly  then turned  and  went to  the door.  He
opened it and announced the  embassy. "His Lordship, Baron Corneilious
Myros, Ambassador of His Imperial  Majesty, Emperor Nyrull of Galicia.
Her Ladyship,  Baroness Elaine Myros.  Sir Grange Rarrack,  Advisor to
His Lordship. Captain Jordaan, Captain of the Guard to His Lordship."
     "Welcome to Baranur, Ambassador," Haralan said. "I'm sure that--"
     "Myros!"  Edward shouted  in Galician,  his gaze  fixed upon  the
Ambassador.
     "Edward?!" Elaine burst out. The shock  on her face was plain for
all to see.
     "Temper, temper, Edward," Myros replied. "Is that any way to talk
to the Baron of Alphoria?"
     "Edward!" Haralan said forcefully. "What is the meaning of this?"
Haralan asked. The King's guards were getting nervous. So was Jordaan.
     Edward paid  no attention to  Haralan's query. All  his attention
was focused  on Myros.  "You lie!"  he nearly  shouted. "My  father is
1Baron of Alphoria!"
     "Not any more. He was tried  and executed for treason a year ago.
Duke Markin gave me your father's lands as a reward for loyal service.
I don't know why someone didn't  reveal your father sooner. How's that
saying go? Like father, like son?"
     "Corneilious!" Myros' wife said, a  hint of outrage in her voice.
"How can you say that?"
     "Because it's the truth, Elaine," Myros replied.
     Edward  went white  with rage.  "GET  OUT!" he  roared. "GET  OUT
BEFORE I  KILL YOU!!!"  His hand  flashed to the  hilt of  his bastard
sword. Jordaan  leapt in front of  his liege, sword drawn.  Edward and
the King's  guards drew steel  immediately. Myros moved Elaine  out of
harm's  way but  did  nothing  more. He  stood  his  ground, his  calm
exterior hiding his uneasiness.
     Haralan interposed  himself between the two  would-be combatants.
Edward had taught  Haralan enough Galician to get by,  but the accents
and the rapidity  with which Edward and Myros were  speaking meant all
he knew was that  Edward and Myros appeared to be  enemies and that he
had to calm the situation down before  it got out of hand. "Enough the
both of you!" Haralan said in passable Galician. "Sheath your weapons!
Now!"
     Jordaan looked to  his lord and Myros nodded  his assent. Jordaan
reluctantly sheathed his sword, but remained in a protective position.
The King's guards relaxed visibly.
     "You  too, Edward,"  Haralan  said, returning  to Baranurian.  He
could barely hear Rarrack translating in the background.
     "I cannot,"  Edward answered,  also returning to  Baranurian. "My
family and  my honour have been  insulted. That is something  I cannot
ignore."
     "Edward," Haralan said coldly, "as  your sovereign I order you to
sheath your sword. If you do not comply, I shall have you arrested for
treason."
     Edward  looked  his friend  imploringly  in  the eyes,  a  pained
expression on  his face.  The look he  got back told  him that  he was
talking to  his King,  not his  friend. Slowly,  he complied  with his
sovereign's wishes.
     "Sir  Edward," Haralan  said,  speaking  formally, "your  actions
today were inexcusable.  Go to your quarters and remain  there for the
duration of this day."
     Edward bowed  stiffly and walked  mechanically out of  the King's
study.  After  he had  gone,  Rarrack,  translating for  Myros,  said,
"That's all? He isn't to be punished further?"
     Haralan turned to face Myros and said, "Ambassador, I know enough
Galician to know that  Edward was not entirely to blame.  As I see it,
you were as  much to blame as he."  Haralan held up a hand  to cut off
Myros' protest. "Whatever the reason  for this conflict, it is between
you  and  Sir  Edward. When  you  came  in  here  today, you  came  as
Ambassador and  you insulted  the Knight Commander  of my  Armies. See
that it does not happen again.  The audience is ended. You may leave."
With  that,  Haralan  turned  his  back  on  Myros.  Coridan  led  the
Ambassador and  his party out  of the study  and showed them  to their
quarters.
     Haralan stood gazing  out the window for long hours.  As his mind
re-played his dressing-down of Edward, Haralan's thoughts drifted back
to  the day  he met  the man  who  was to  become one  of his  closest
friends...

     ...Haralan  parried a  thrust meant  for his  throat and  slashed
clumsily at  his attacker.  The eight remaining  bandits had  formed a
semi-circle about their target.  The four knights comprising Haralan's
1bodyguard lay  contorted in death about  the man they had  given their
lives to protect. Nine bandits lay on the ground also, having paid the
price for their attempt to ambush Haralan and his party.
     The  King  of  Baranur  estimated his  chances  of  surviving  as
somewhere between slim and non-existent.  He was bleeding from a score
of wounds and knew  that he would be unconscious from  blood loss in a
short time. From the looks on  their faces, his assailants had come to
the same conclusion.
     The  bandit on  the right,  bigger  and stronger  than the  rest,
signalled with his saber and the rest moved in. Haralan braced himself
against a tree and prepared to sell himself dearly.
     One of the eight moved in from the left, wielding a double-bladed
battle axe. Haralan saw the swing coming and did his best to parry it.
He  succeeded, but  at  the  cost of  losing  his  sword. The  bandit,
grinning, raised his axe. He never brought it down.
     A iron-tipped  crossbow bolt made  of black teak  punched through
the back  of the man's  skull. He fell without  a sound. As  they were
turning  to face  their  unknown  foe, another  bandit  fell, a  black
crossbow bolt in his heart.
     A man dressed  in black and armoured in chainmail  charged out of
the forest on a warhorse, yelling  a battle-cry in a foreign language.
The suddenness of  his attack surprised the  six assailants. Haralan's
unknown  benefactor opened  the  throat  of a  third  bandit with  his
bastard sword before any of them could react.
     While Haralan  struggled to reach  his sword, the  five remaining
bandits surrounded  his would-be rescuer.  Whomever he was,  he didn't
seem concerned. His horse reared,  striking out with its front hooves.
Brains splattered  everywhere as the  horse's hooves connected  with a
bandit's skull.  The horse's rider used  the momentum of his  mount to
put  extra force  behind his  downward swing.  The result  was that  a
fourth  bandit lost  that portion  of his  sword-arm below  the elbow.
While he was staring  dumbly at the bloody stump that  was his arm, he
was dispatched with a thrust to the chest.
     The bandits' leader rushed at his enemy from the flank, hoping to
catch him unawares. He almost  succeeded. At the last moment, however,
the unknown rider turned, taking the  blow upon his left arm. Ignoring
the  blood flowing  from the  deep gash,  he delivered  a stroke  that
nearly hacked  the bandit's  arm off.  The three  unwounded attackers,
seeing their leader seriously wounded, fled.
     The rider let them go. He bandaged  his arm and then got down off
his horse and  came over to Haralan. To Haralan,  everything seemed to
be happening in slow motion. How strange, he thought, then collapsed.
     When he  awoke, he found  his benefactor watching  him anxiously.
The man's  helm was removed, revealing  dark black hair with  beard to
match and deep brown eyes. He also  had a scar that ran from his above
his right eye down to his right  cheek. Obviously he had seen his fair
share of combat. "Thank you," Haralan said. He tried to get up and was
abruptly halted by  intense pain coming from just about  every part of
his body.
     The  stranger said  something in  a foreign  tongue that  Haralan
wasn't familiar with. He's not from Baranur, Haralan thought. I'd best
be  careful  until  I  know  more  about  him.  "I'm  afraid  I  don't
understand."
     The  man frowned  in concentration.  "Who  you are?"  he said  in
Merctalk, a hodgepodge of several  different languages that was common
among  mercenaries. Haralan  had learned  the language  as a  boy from
listening in on his father's  conversations with some of the mercenary
officers serving  in the  Army. When Arenth  finally found  out, young
Haralan couldn't sit down for a week.
     "Sir Haralan I be," he replied, not wanting this stranger to know
1who he was until the time was right. "Who you are?"
     "Sir Edward," the man replied. "You travel able?" he asked.
     "Little,  yes," Haralan  answered. "Village  that direction  is,"
Haralan said, pointing in the direction of Dyunill, a small village to
the northeast.
     "How far?"
     "Fifteen leagues it is."
     "Rest you till tomorrow. Morning, take you there I will."
     "Grateful I am."
     Sir Edward nodded and offered  his hand to Haralan. Haralan shook
it, closed  his eyes  and slept,  determined to  convince this  man to
journey to Magnus with him...

     ...That was almost six years ago.  Edward had indeed proved to be
a true and caring friend and a loyal subject. I've never seen him this
way, Haralan thought.  He's usually very reserved  in public. Whatever
this is, it must  be serious. It's getting late. I  should go see him.
We must get this out in the open.

     Edward sat in  the dining area of his quarters,  staring into the
fireplace, lost  in memories of  the past. The  events of the  day had
shaken  him, particularly  the news  of  his father's  death. A  large
snifter of brandy sat untouched on the table beside him. A knocking at
the door brought him out of his reverie.
     "I  don't want  to  be  disturbed," Edward  said  to his  unknown
caller.
     "It's me, Edward. I want to talk to you."
     "Come," Edward said.  He rose from his chair and  faced the door,
bowing as the  King entered. "Forgive me, Sire. I  wasn't aware it was
you."
     "There's no need for formality, Edward," Haralan said. "I come as
your friend, not as your King."
     "You  want  an explanation  about  what  happened today,"  Edward
stated.
     "Yes I do. Edward, we've known  each other for close to six years
now, and not once have I ever seen you act like this. What's wrong?"
     "It is...personal, Haralan," Edward replied. "I'd rather not talk
about it."
     "I told you that I come as your friend. As your friend, I want to
know. I want to help you."
     "And for that I am grateful, believe me. It's just that--"
     "Edward," Haralan  interrupted, "I had  hoped I wouldn't  have to
resort to this, but I have no choice."
     Edward looked  his friend  in the  eyes. "What  do you  mean?" he
asked.
     "As your King, I must know.  If this conflict between you and the
Galician ambassador is going to ruin  any chance I have of reaching an
agreement  with him,  I have  to know  why. Please,  Edward," he  said
indicating the chairs by the table.
     Edward sighed.  "You are  right, of course."  Edward took  a seat
opposite Haralan. "Do you remember what I told you of how I came to be
here?" he asked.
     "You were exiled  from Galicia for killing some noble's  son in a
duel, wasn't it?"
     "That's most of  it," Edward replied, looking down  at his hands.
"I didn't tell you everything, Haralan," he said.
     The King sat back in his chair. "Go on."
     "When I was seventeen, my father sent  me off to Count Janos as a
squire." Edward's  eyes lost all  focus and  he even smiled  a little,
lost in  the days of  his youth. "How proud  I was. Janos  had trained
1some of the best knights in the  Empire. If I impressed him, there was
a chance  I might have  been recommended  for service in  the Imperial
Guard! Only the best serve in The Legion. It was my dream."
     "I spent  the next five  years trying to  bring myself up  to his
standards. I was beginning to think I would never become a knight when
Janos gave me a gift for my twenty-second birthday. He said that I was
ready, that  my training  was over,  that I  was now  a knight!  I was
speechless. He smiled and told me to  get some rest, and that we would
talk the  next day. Then  I realized that I  would soon be  leaving. I
might never see Janos or his daughter again. I wanted very much to see
both of them. You see," he said,  looking at Haralan, "I was very much
in love with his daughter."
     "She did not love you?" Haralan gently asked.
     "I wasn't  sure. I never  had the courage to  speak to her  of my
feelings. Not  even when Duke  Markin's son Giles began  courting her.
When I received my knighthood, I knew I had to act or I would lose her
forever. So, that night I told her  I loved her." Edward paused in his
recollections. His expression was grim and he radiated tenseness.
     Edward rose from  his chair and began pacing back  and forth. "It
was  then that  Giles  came into  the garden.  He'd  overheard me  and
challenged me to  a duel then and  there. I refused. I  could see that
Giles was  in no condition to  fight. I suppose he  thought Elaine was
about to  declare her  love for  me, and  simply couldn't  accept that
possibility. He was too agitated to  be a worthy opponent. That's what
I thought, anyway." Haralan had wanted to ask Edward several questions
during his recounting, but thought better of it. Edward seemed to need
to talk about his experience, to get it out in the open.
     Edward stopped pacing and went to  the window. A storm was coming
on. "Giles  called me  a coward,"  he continued,  gazing out  onto the
courtyard below, "and attacked. I had  no choice but to defend myself.
He was  quite good, actually. He  almost had me twice  before I struck
him. The  duel should  have been  over. Even though  Giles only  had a
superficial cut,  blood had been drawn  and I was the  victor." Edward
sighed. "But  Giles would not  yield. He came at  me like a  madman. I
didn't want to kill him, damn it! I just wanted to disarm him!" Edward
stopped, calming himself.
     "Giles rushed  at me, and before  I could halt my  attack, he had
impaled himself on  my blade. Elaine screamed and  within moments, her
father and his  guards had arrived. I told Count  Janos the full story
and surrendered myself for judgement.
     "My trial  began in Rhylon,  the capital, two weeks  later. Janos
defended me, risking reprisal from Duke Markin, Janos' liege-lord. The
Duke wanted my  head on the block,  but Janos pointed out  that it was
Giles who  was responsible for his  own death. Janos said  I should be
acquitted of any wrong-doing.
     "Markin  wouldn't hear  of it.  He DEMANDED  that I  be executed.
Clearly,  I  was   in  the  right,  but  the   Emperor  couldn't  risk
antagonizing a powerful  noble such as Markin. And so,  I was exiled,"
he said bitterly.
     "I was given  twenty days to leave Galicia. The  next morning, we
rode out,  bound for  Janos' castle.  We arrived  two weeks  later. My
parents  were waiting.  So  was  Elaine. What  followed  was the  most
difficult thing I have ever had to do.
     "As soon as  we rode through the gate, the  verdict was plain for
all to see." Edward paused for a moment, remembering the pain he felt.
"In Galicia,  if a  knight is  convicted of any  offense he  must wear
black whenever he  dons his armour. I still wear  black today, even in
Baranur.
     "Janos and  I rode  over to  my parents while  a servant  went to
fetch my belongings.  Mother and Elaine were crying,"  he said softly.
1"I said good-bye to both of them. Mother didn't take the news well, as
I  expected." Edward  stopped and  drew in  a shuddering  breath. "But
Elaine. She's  a strong woman. I  hadn't seen her like  that since the
night her  mother died,"  he said  in a  pain-filled voice.  "She kept
insisting it was all her fault. I  told her that was nonsense. I am an
adult. I'm responsible for my own actions.  I said that if I had to be
exiled, there was  nothing I would rather be exiled  for than fighting
for her love and affection.
     "I made her  promise not to hold herself  responsible. She agreed
and then her father led her away to calm her down. I was appreciative.
I couldn't bear to see her that way.
     "Lastly, I said good-bye to  Father. I...couldn't look him in the
eyes.  I  was  sure  he  was  about  to  disown  me."  Edward  paused,
momentarily  overcome.  "Do  you  know what  he  did?"  he  continued,
speaking reverently.  "He gave me  his sword. He didn't  say anything,
just unbuckled it and gave it to me.
     "Emperor Nyrull  presented Father that sword  himself! Father had
had it for thirty years, Haralan, thirty years! It was his most prized
possession.  I looked  up at  him, not  knowing what  to say."  Edward
turned  from the  window, tears  streaming  down his  cheeks. "He  was
crying!  My  father, the  strongest,  bravest  man  I ever  knew,  was
crying."
     Haralan, his own eyes watering, went  to Edward, laying a hand on
his friend's shoulder.  "I--I'm sorry, Edward. I didn't  know it would
be so painful for you. I had no right to put you through this."
     "Yes you did," Edward said,  trying hard to regain his composure.
"You are my King as well as my friend." He blinked back his tears, and
drew himself  up to his  full five feet ten  inches. "And as  King and
friend, it is time you learned everything about me."
     Four hours later, Edward had  almost finished filling in the gaps
of  Haralan's knowledge  of  Edward's past.  Edward  had explained  to
Haralan why he had become a mercenary, for lack of a better word, when
he could  as easily have sworn  allegiance to any number  of more than
willing nobles. His conviction had  weighed heavily upon him. The fact
that he  could never go  home, and that he  would never again  see his
loved ones  was a  painful burden.  Edward felt  empty inside  when he
began his wanderings.
     Edward  went  from  war  to   war,  from  skirmish  to  skirmish,
unconsciously  looking to  re-establish a  place for  himself. In  the
three years  during which he  was a mercenary, his  fighting abilities
improved remarkably.  As his reputation  built, he was  offered higher
and higher positions. He rose from being just another wandering knight
temporarily in someone's service, to becoming one that any noble would
gladly have command his  troops. In time, he came to  be known as 'The
Wanderer'. Many a noble learned to fear that name.
     "Where does Myros fit in all of this?" Haralan asked.
     "He and I were opposing commanders in the infighting so prevalent
in Alnor. I was  in the service of the Duke of  Valencia. Myros was in
service to the Duchess of Dreknor.  We had been maneuvering for weeks,
Myros trying  to catch and destroy  my force, myself trying  to find a
place to fight on my terms."
     "And did you succeed?"
     "In a  way, yes. But  then so did Myros.  I had found  a location
where the  terrain was clearly  in my advantage.  Unfortunately, Myros
found me before  I had time to  prepare. I remember that day  as if it
were yesterday..."

     ...Edward  stood  on  the  grassy knoll,  surveying  his  troops'
dispositions. He'd anchored  his left flank to  the forest surrounding
the  clearing, and  moved his  front rank  up to  the stream  that ran
1through the center  of the meadow. His right flank  he anchored to the
knoll. I wish I had more time, he thought. He turned to Justarius, his
second-in-command. "Well, what do you think?" he asked.
     "I would have preferred more time," the grizzled veteran replied,
unconsciously echoing  Edward's thoughts,  "but all  things considered
we've done all we can."
     "All we have to worry about now is the enemy."
     "Aye. That  and the fact  that all we've  got in those  woods are
pickets."
     Edward sighed. He and Justarius had argued about this until early
in the morning. "Justarius, you know we can barely cover what frontage
we have.  I don't like it  any more than  you, but a thousand  men can
only do so much."
     "I know, sir, I know. At least we still have a reserve."
     "If only it wasn't so small. Oh well, time for--"
     "Listen!" Justarius said. "Do you hear that?" he asked.
     "What?  I don't--"  Edward stopped  in mid-sentence,  cocking his
head to one side. "Wait. Now I do." He stood quietly still for several
seconds, trying to determine what the  sound was. Finally, he gave up.
"What is it?" he asked his second-in-command.
     "An army," he said matter-of-factly.
     "How can  you tell?  I can't  even make  that out,"  Edward said,
indicating the direction the sound was coming from.
     "I've  campaigned  for  thirty  years,  sir,"  Justarius  replied
somewhat defensively. "I've heard a good deal more armies on the march
than you.  And believe  me, that's  an army."  He paused.  "There," he
said. "You can feel it now."
     He was right. Edward could feel the dull pounding of the drums as
well as hear it. And it was growing louder.
     "Aye," Justarius  said, again voicing Edward's  thoughts. "It's a
good bet they've found us." As if  on cue, rank upon rank of Dreknoran
soldiers  emerged from  the  tree  line at  the  opposite  end of  the
clearing,  sunlight  glinting off  armour  and  weapons. The  clearing
reverberated to the sound a thousand drums beating out a cadence.
     "Nehru's Blood!" Edward  exclaimed. He had to shout  to be heard.
"They outnumber us at least three to one! Perhaps more!"
     "You  didn't think  this was  going to  be easy,  did you,  sir?"
Justarius  adjusted his  sword  belt  and loosened  his  sword in  its
scabbard. "I'd best get down there."
     "Good luck, my friend."
     "Thanks," Justarius replied. "I'll need  it." He hurried off down
the slope, bellowing  commands to his men. "Move you  lazy louts! What
do  you worthless  whoresons think  this is,  a picnic?  Close up  the
distance between the ranks! Look alive, look alive!"
     The Dreknoran commander arrayed his force in line-of-battle about
halfway to the stream. The force of the drums set teeth chattering and
made  weapons and  armour  vibrate. Then,  quite  suddenly, the  drums
stopped.  Everywhere, ears  rang, protesting  the punishment  they had
been forced to endure.
     Edward surveyed his line, looking for that one small mistake that
could spell disaster. Hard as he tried, he couldn't find one. That did
not comfort him though. He had  a thousand men to face three thousand,
perhaps more. And  of his thousand, he  had pulled a tenth  out of his
battle-line to form a small reserve  which he stationed on the reverse
slope of the knoll, hidden from view.
     Then Edward had  no more time to study his  dispositions, for the
enemy was on  the move, marching slowly toward his  line, their spears
like a moving forest.
     Edward moved  his line up to  the edge of the  stream's bank, and
prepared to receive the enemy. He didn't have to wait long.
1     The Dreknorans charged the last  hundred and twenty yards. Had it
not  been for  the  fact that  the heavily  armoured  spearmen had  to
struggle  through  knee-deep  water,  Edward's line  might  well  have
broken.
     Edward's  troops, the  best  Valencia could  field,  were not  as
heavily armoured as their Dreknoran counterparts. In the first minutes
of battle, the Valencians took a  heavy toll of the Dreknorans as they
floundered in the water.  Eventually, however, the Dreknorans' numbers
began to tell.
     Several Valencians in the center fell at the same time, opening a
gap in  the front rank. Raising  a great shout, the  Dreknorans poured
into the breach. Justarius led a Quarter against the Dreknoran line in
a desperate counter-attack. Justarius slowed,  but could not halt, the
Dreknoran advance. The buglers trumpeted an alarm and in response, two
Quarters of  the third  rank moved  forward to  deal with  the growing
Dreknoran wedge.
     The situation on  the left was not going well  for the Valencians
either. Edward's  line had been pushed  back from the stream,  and was
sagging badly.  Every available Quarter  on the left had  already been
committed. Edward was forced to take two Quarters from the right flank
and send them to reinforce the left.
     The  right flank  was the  only place  the Valencians  held their
ground. The  Dreknoran spearmen  lumbering up the  slope of  the knoll
were easily dispatched.
     Edward judged the overall situation, while not pleasant, was much
better than  it could  have been.  He was confident  that if  he could
shore  up  the sagging  left,  he  might  be  able to  inflict  enough
casualties on the Dreknorans to force them to retire.
     In the center, Justarius finally managed to contain the Dreknoran
break-through, and was in the process  of slowly reducing it, when the
buglers' trumpets sounded in high alarm.
     A badly decimated Quarter on the left, desperately trying to hold
back  the Dreknorans'  inexorable  advance, finally  succumbed to  the
overwhelming numbers of  the enemy. The Dreknorans  poured through the
hole  and fell  upon  the other  Quarters.  All but  one  of the  nine
Quarters on the left simply  disintegrated, attacked from in front and
behind.
     The voice  of doom whispered in  Edward's ear as he  led the four
Quarters of the  reserve towards his shattered left,  shouting to what
remained of  his front lines  to form circle. Somehow,  Edward's small
force held  off the Dreknorans  long enough for  him to build  a shaky
all-around defense.
     The Dreknorans gave no quarter. They attacked from all sides, but
the Valencian troops  showed their mettle. Their  ring contracted, but
wouldn't break. Edward side-stepped a  spear thrust at him, and neatly
hacked off the Dreknoran's arm  at the elbow. Another Dreknoran rushed
him. Edward tried to side-step this  one's thrust as well, but tripped
over the body of the soldier he had slain only moments ago.
     The Dreknoran paused, lifting his  spear. Edward prepared for the
end, but it never came. Just as he was about to finish Edward off, the
enemy  soldier was  struck  from behind.  The spear  fell  out of  his
nerveless fingers as he toppled backwards.
     "Are you alright, sir?" Justarius asked with concern.
     "Fine,"  Edward said  somewhat  shakily. "Thanks.  I  owe you  my
life."
     "Think nothing  of it, sir,"  Justarius replied. "After  all," he
said with a grin, "if you died, I'd be left in charge of this mess."
     Edward smiled. "Wouldn't want that, now, would we?"
     "No, sir," Justarius agreed.
     "Dreknor can't have had this many troops," Edward said. "She must
1have gotten help from somewhere," he commented.
     "We'll worry about that later," Justarius said. "If we get out of
this bloody mess, that is."
     Edward nodded in solemn agreement.
     "Time to get back at it," Justarius said and was gone.
     The Valencian  circle was now  so compressed that  the Valencians
were fighting almost back-to-back. Of his thousand men, Edward thought
it a miracle  if there were two hundred still  alive. Edward could see
no hope  of surviving. He  decided that, at  the very least,  he would
kill the Dreknoran commander. Or die trying.
     He made  his way to  Justarius and  told him his  plan. Justarius
didn't even  flinch. Long  years of campaigning  had hardened  him and
prepared him for anything.
     Fate had other ideas. Before  they could implement Edward's plan,
the inevitable  happened. The  Dreknorans shattered  a portion  of the
Valencian line and in they came.
     Edward barely had time to return Justarius' hand-shake before the
enemy was upon them. Edward  and Justarius fought back-to-back against
the  Dreknoran tide.  Edward deflected  a thrust  with his  sword, and
killed his opponent with his riposte.
     A second  Dreknoran attacked him. Edward  parried the Dreknoran's
thrust, then pursued him as he  backpedaled for his life. The luckless
Dreknoran tripped over  a body and Edward finished  him. Edward paused
for a moment to catch his breath and to assess things.
     Everywhere, the  battle had degenerated into  individual combats.
Valencians and  Dreknorans intermingled in  their efforts to  kill one
another. Edward looked  around for Justarius. They  had been separated
when Edward  had pursued the  second enemy soldier that  attacked him.
Edward finally located the  man he had come to think of  as a dear and
close friend  fighting a one-sided  duel with an opponent  whom Edward
assumed  was   the  Dreknorans'  commander.  Justarius   was  bleeding
profusely from several wounds.
     Edward went  to the  aid of  his friend, but  was blocked  by two
enemy soldiers. He feinted  towards the first Dreknoran's mid-section.
The  Dreknoran tried  to parry  Edward's thrust,  but Edward's  actual
target was  his opponent's throat. The  Dreknoran staggered backwards,
vainly trying to stem the blood gushing from his wound.
     The second enemy soldier  succeeded in disarming Edward. Thinking
quickly,  Edward  grasped  his  shield  in both  hands  and  beat  the
Dreknoran to death with it. Edward retrieved his sword just in time to
see Justarius fall, mortally wounded.
     "NO!" Edward screamed.  He threw himself at  his opposite number,
letting the  battle-rage take him.  Edward put everything he  had into
attack, giving no thought to defense.
     His opponent was hard-pressed  to defend himself against Edward's
wild  onslaught.  Edward landed  several  blows,  but  at a  price.  A
particularly vicious swing that the  Dreknoran barely managed to avoid
left Edward  vulnerable. The  enemy commander  lashed out  blindly and
struck Edward a hard blow to  his helm that sent it flying, staggering
Edward. The Dreknoran aimed a  downward slash at Edward's head. Edward
lurched  backwards just  far enough  to  avoid being  killed, but  not
enough to avoid being struck.
     The Dreknoran's  sword cut  diagonally across Edward's  face from
the right  portion of  his forehead  to his  left cheek.  Edward fell,
unconscious.
     This  last was  the final  straw.  The sight  of their  commander
falling, coupled with  the enormous casualties they  had suffered, was
too much. The seventy-five or so remaining Valencians surrendered.
     The  Dreknoran commander  called  for a  physician  to attend  to
Edward. The physician slapped a bandage on Edward's wound and gave him
1something to bring him around. "Will he live?" the Dreknoran commander
asked the physician.
     The  physician  shrugged.  "The  next  few  days  will  tell.  If
infection doesn't set in, he should survive."
     "Good," the enemy commander replied.  "Ah," the Dreknoran said at
Edward's groan, "you're awake."
     Edward  sat  up groggily,  every  movement  painful. Through  the
pain-clouded vision of his right eye,  he recognized the figure of the
Dreknoran commander. "Who are you?" he asked.
     "Corneilious Myros,"  he replied.  "Captain of  the Guard  to Her
Grace, the Duchess  of Dreknor," he said formally. "And  who might you
be?" he inquired "I want your real name, not that alias you go by."
     "Sir Edward Sothos," Edward replied.
     "Well,  Sir Edward,  you've  been causing  quite  a stir  lately.
You'll bring a fine ransom."
     "What of my men?"
     "We can't afford  to take prisoners," Myros  replied. He gestured
to two of his men. "Take him away."
     "No! You can't!"
     "I can and I will. We've wasted enough time. Take him!"
     Edward's guards  led him  away, his  weak struggles  nothing more
than a nuisance. He felt  himself sliding towards unconsciousness. The
last  thing he  heard  before the  blackness took  him  was the  dying
screams of his men...

     ..."I swore vengeance on Myros for what he did that day."
     "So long as he is Ambassador, I  must ask you not to do anything.
Can you do that?"
     "I'll try. For Baranur's sake, I'll try."
     Haralan smiled. "Good." As he turned  to go, he noticed the first
streaks of daylight breaking through the clouds. "Morning already," he
commented.
     "I apologize," Edward said. "I shouldn't have kept you so long."
     "Nonsense. We both  needed our discussion. Now, I  think the both
of us should get some sleep."
     "I couldn't agree more, Sire," Edward said with conviction.

Duke Markin's castle, New Valencia, Duchy Valencia, Galician Empire
1 Nober, 1200 G.Y. (1013 B.Y.)

     Garog pulled  his cloak tighter  about him  in a vain  attempt to
keep out the rain. Just my luck,  he thought. As if drawing guard duty
tonight, of all nights, isn't bad  enough. He sighed. Time for another
round.
     He left the  minimal shelter of the doorway and  proceeded on his
sentry-go of the battlements of Duke Markin's castle. He paused before
one  of the  many  braziers positioned  along  the battlements.  Their
normal function was  to allow the pots  of oil to be  easily lit. This
night,  they performed  a second  role;  they allowed  the sentries  a
modicum of  comfort against  the chilling rain.  Garog glanced  to his
left and saw  two other sentries trying to warm  themselves by another
brazier ten  yards away. He chuckled  and continued on his  rounds. He
got no  more than ten  feet before he  stiffened in shock.  "Two?!" he
said aloud. There's supposed to be only one!
     He turned  to see the  other two  sentries moving towards  him in
such a manner that told him they had to have weapons drawn. Garog drew
his sword and was about to sound the alarm when something slammed into
him from behind, knocking  the wind out of him and  forcing him to his
knees.
     There was a dull throbbing pain in his back. He tried to rise, to
1defend himself, but his strength was  fading. He just couldn't seem to
summon the effort  necessary. He tried to cry out  but he couldn't get
his lungs to work right.
     The two  people he had  mistaken for  sentries were no  more than
five feet away. He willed his sword arm to rise, but nothing happened.
Again something struck him from behind.  He felt his lifeblood well up
and choke him.  He toppled forward, blood flowing down  his front. His
last conscious  thought was that  he was going  to be in  big trouble.
Then everything went black.
     Tarn bent  over and wiped his  dagger clean on the  guard's back.
"The poison usually takes effect a lot sooner than that."
     "I just wish there was a better way than this," Julia said.
     "As  do I,"  Justin said  with regret.  "But I  can see  no other
choice.  Help me  move him,  Tarn." Tarn  replaced his  dagger in  its
scabbard and  helped Justin  carry the dead  guard's body  through the
tower door the guard had been  sheltering in only moments ago. The two
hid the  guard's body amongst some  crates of crossbow bolts  and then
exited the tower.
     "I think I  can see the shed  from here," Julia said  as Tarn and
Justin rejoined her.
     "Where?" Justin asked.
     "Over  there,"  she  replied,   pointing  to  a  large  two-story
structure with  dozens of lighted windows  in the middle of  the outer
courtyard.
     "That's the inn."
     "No, not there. Just to the right. You can barely make it out."
     "I think I see  it now," Justin said. "It's so  hard to tell with
this rain."
     "Now all we need is a way down."
     "I believe I can solve  that problem," Tarn said. "There're steps
on the other side of the tower leading down to the courtyard."
     "Good," Justin said. "Let's go."  The three companions made their
way cautiously down the steps to avoid being seen. Once at the base of
the wall, they paused while studying the sentries' pattern.
     "The  next time  the closest  sentry  comes to  a brazier,"  Tarn
whispered, "we'll go." Justin and  Julia nodded their assent. Tarn was
intently watching the  vague shape of the nearest sentry  when a flash
of lightning  illuminated the  courtyard. The  three sentries  in view
were clearly visible for several brief seconds. In those seconds, Tarn
saw that the nearest sentry was warming himself over a brazier. "Go!"
     The trio sprinted across the  muddy ground toward the black shape
of the equipment  shed next to the inn. Tarn,  in his leather cuirass,
made it to the shed with no great difficulty. In their heavier armour,
Justin and Julia found the going more difficult.
     When they were  about three quarters of the way  to the shed, the
courtyard was again illuminated by  the lightning dancing in the night
sky. Justin and  Julia were both quite visible, and  both expected the
alarm to be raised immediately. But it was not.
     Providence, luck, Fate, call it what you will, was with them, for
the thunder that  followed the lightning masked the  clinking of their
armour. The sentries, intent on trying to see outside the walls, never
heard the  sounds that would  have caused them  to look down  into the
courtyard and see the two intruders.
     Tarn picked  the lock  with ease, and  soon all  three companions
were  inside the  equipment  shed.  Tarn lit  a  torch, revealing  the
contents of the shed. The shed,  perhaps thirty feet square, was piled
high with saddles, saddlebags, and  the usual equipment that travelers
own. From the look  of some of the items in the  shed, the owners were
very well-off. Tarn sighed contentedly.
     "No, Tarn," Justin said. "Don't even think it.
1     "Can't a man have  any pleasure? I mean if this  Duke Markin is a
traitor, the Emperor won't mind if  we 'acquire' a few souvenirs, now,
would he?"
     "Perhaps  later," Julia  said. "Right  now, let's  concentrate on
finding the entrance to the passage that wizard told us about."
     "You know,"  Tarn replied,  "you two  have got  to get  out more.
Gamble, carouse, that sort of thing."
     "Tarn," Justin  said while checking  the walls for  the entrance,
"stop yapping and start looking."
     "Okay,  okay. Some  people." Tarn  started checking  the southern
wall for  the entrance, or  rather the  mechanism that would  open the
entrance. Justin and  Julia were doing the same for  the east and west
walls respectively. After about an hour of painstaking search, nothing
was found and the trio were getting frustrated.
     "The mage said  the mechanism was located in  here," Justin said.
"So where is it?"
     "We've checked all four walls," Julia said. "Maybe this isn't the
right shed?"
     "No, it's the right shed," Tarn replied. "The wizard specifically
said the equipment shed next to the inn."
     "Well  where is  the mechanism  then? It's  certainly not  in the
ceiling and we've checked all the walls."
     "The walls yes, but not the floor!" Julia said triumphantly.
     "Where do we start?" Justin asked.
     "The first thing  we do is check under these  piles of equipment.
If it was  somewhere else, we would  have stepped on it  by now," Tarn
answered.
     The three began carefully moving equipment and checking the floor
for something, anything.  Tarn was checking the  northwest corner when
he noticed an impression  in the floor about the size  of a hand. Tarn
applied pressure to it and the  impression sank about three inches. An
audible 'click' was heard, and a  portion of the floor near the center
of the  shed dropped  away to  reveal a shaft  fitted with  iron rungs
leading down into darkness.
     "Shall we?" Justin asked.
     "You first," Tarn said.
     "Thanks."
     "Don't mention it," Tarn said cheerfully.
     Justin  leading the  way, the  companions descended  about thirty
feet. There the  shaft ended. The trio found themselves  in an ancient
passage about ten  feet wide and fifteen feet high.  The air was stale
and the floor covered in a thick layer of dust centuries old.
     "There's the lever," Julia said,  pointing to a bronze lever five
feet to the right of the shaft.  She walked over to it and pulled. All
three very clearly heard the entrance to the shaft closing.
     "After seven hundred years it still works," Tarn said with awe.
     "Let's go," Justin said and led off down the passageway, lighting
the torches  on the wall  as he went.  Two hundred feet  later, Justin
stood in front of a wall with  another bronze lever next to it. Justin
passed his torch to Tarn and drew his sword. "Now!"
     Tarn pulled  down on  the lever  and the  wall slowly  slid aside
revealing a storage area piled high with crates and barrels. The three
adventurers moved  into the room.  While Justin and Julia  conducted a
brief inspection, Tarn  went to a section  of wall to the  left of the
secret entrance and twisted a certain stone. The secret door slid back
to become a nondescript portion of the room's west wall.
     "Tarn," Justin called. "Is the entrance closed?"
     "Yes."
     "Good. We found  another storage room to the east,  and there's a
door over here on the north."
1     "Is the hallway outside lit?"
     "I think so," Julia responded.
     "I can leave the torch then," Tarn commented. He extinguished the
torch and threw  it in a corner.  Given the amount of  items stored in
the  room, the  torch wouldn't  be  found unless  someone conducted  a
deliberate search.
     Justin opened  the door  and stepped out  into the  corridor. The
corridor was ten  feet wide with a fifteen-foot  arched ceiling. There
were  sconces bearing  lit torches  every ten  feet of  the corridor's
thirty-foot length.  "That's more like  it," Justin said.  "Julia, you
watch the rear. Tarn, you stay in the middle."
     Justin leading,  the trio made  their way to the  intersection at
the end of the corridor. "Which way?" Justin asked. "East or west?"
     "One way is just as good as the other," Julia answered.
     "East, then,"  Justin said. The  three walked carefully  down the
east corridor,  Julia turning around  and walking backwards  every few
feet. All three  were getting nervous. They had  penetrated the castle
some time ago, and had not encountered any guards thus far.
     The corridor turned south, leading  to a narrow stairway going up
about thirty feet. A small oak door  at the top of the stairs had Duke
Markin's crest  carved on  its face.  "At least  we're heading  in the
right direction," Tarn said.
     Justin carefully  opened the door  and surveyed what  was beyond.
"There's another  corridor that ends  in a  door," he reported  to his
comrades.
     "How long is the corridor?" Tarn asked.
     "About fifty...sixty feet. No other doors, either."
     "Okay, let's go. But be careful. I don't like this."
     Sword drawn,  Justin proceeded down  the bare stone  corridor. He
halted ten feet from the door and  let Tarn ply his trade. Tarn handed
his bow and  sword belt to Julia so that  nothing would interfere with
his task. He advanced cautiously on  the door, eyes scanning the floor
for trip  wires or pressure  plates. Finding none, he  began examining
the door itself, making sure to leave  the handle for last. He ran his
hands gently along  the edge of the door, checking  for some mechanism
that might trigger a trap, if there was one. He found nothing. Lastly,
he checked the handle. As far as  he could tell, nothing was amiss. He
turned to  Justin. "As well  as I'm able  to tell," he  said, "there's
nothing wrong with the door."
     "Okay,  we'll go  through," Justin  said. Julia  handed Tarn  his
weapons and Tarn took up a position behind and to the right of Justin.
Julia  again  watched  the  rear.  "Everybody  ready?"  Justin  asked.
Receiving nods of assent, he opened the door.
     The  corridor  continued beyond  the  door  for ten  feet  before
opening into a larger area. The  beginnings of a large staircase could
be seen. "It looks like a hall of some kind," Julia said.
     "Could be the entrance hall," Tarn suggested.
     "If it  is, it's bound  to be well-guarded," Justin  said. Justin
paused for  a moment, considering  possible courses of  action. "We'll
proceed," he  said a few minutes  later. "Julia and I  will handle the
guards closest to us. Tarn, you take out any guards out of our reach."
     Julia  moved to  stand beside  Justin while  Tarn moved  back. At
Justin's signal, the three of them rushed into the hall. It was indeed
an entrance hall,  though not the main entrance hall.  There were four
guards in view,  all armoured in chainmail and all  carrying sword and
shield. One  guard was posted  at the top of  the staircase next  to a
large  alarm-gong. Two  guards were  posted near  double doors  to the
west. The  fourth guard  was posted near  the entrance  the companions
came through.
     Justin and Julia fell upon  the startled guard before anyone knew
1what was  happening and  cut him  down. Tarn loosed  his shaft  at the
guard on the  staircase. The luckless guard was half-way  to the alarm
when the arrow punctured his armour  and found his heart. He staggered
for a moment, then tumbled down the staircase.
     Justin and Julia  were both running at the  two remaining guards,
who were also charging at Justin and Julia. Julia and her opponent met
in the middle of  the hall. Julia swung at the  guard's temple, but he
parried easily. He countered with  a low swing intended to disembowel,
but  Julia deflected  it with  her shield.  Julia lunged,  drawing her
opponent out of position and unable  to do anything as her sword swung
upward and found the guard's throat.
     Justin found  his man to  be a tougher, more  experienced fighter
than his fellow guardsman. The two thrust and parried, neither able to
find an opening. The fight was  ended when Tarn, having managed to get
around behind the guard without  being noticed, buried his short sword
in the guard's back.
     "Let's get moving!" Justin said.
     "Shouldn't we hide the bodies?" Julia asked.
     "No time," Justin replied.
     "The stairs?" Tarn inquired.
     "Sounds good," Justin answered. He  led the way cautiously up the
staircase.  Another  corridor,  this   one  decorated  with  expensive
tapestries, led south for twenty feet before turning east.
     After following the  corridor for a hundred  feet, the companions
came to  a four-way  intersection. After  only a  moment's hesitation,
they continued east down a hallway with three oak doors. "Shouldn't we
investigate?" Tarn asked hopefully.
     "Tarn,"  Julia said,  "I  know it's  hard for  you  to curb  your
'curiosity',  but  we're here  to  obtain  information  on a  ring  of
traitors. The best way to do that is to find Duke Markin's rooms."
     "And how  do you  know that  any one of  these three  doors isn't
Markin's?"
     "I  think it's  safe to  assume  that Markin's  quarters will  be
guarded," Justin said in response.
     "Oh really?"  Tarn said as  they rounded a corner.  "Just because
you  think that  his quarters  will  be guarded  doesn't mean--"  Tarn
stopped short, nearly  running into two of  Markin's soldiers standing
guard at  a reinforced oak  door. Everyone froze for  several seconds,
surprised at encountering each other.
     Tarn was  the first  to break  the spell.  His hand  flashed like
lightning toward his dagger. In one  fluid motion, he threw the dagger
at the nearest guard and drew his short sword. The dagger thudded home
under  the guard's  chin strap.  He  fell, blood  spurting around  the
dagger's hilt.
     Tarn rushed the remaining guard.  The guard was just beginning to
draw his own weapon when Tarn  slammed his short sword into the guard,
thrusting  upward under  the rib-cage.  The guard's  body slid  to the
floor without a sound.
     "You were saying?" Justin said as Tarn recovered his dagger.
     "Okay  so maybe  Markin's rooms  were guarded  after all.  If you
consider two  guards as 'guarded'." Tarn  walked over to the  door and
opened  it. Or  tried to,  at any  rate. "Craanor's  Coins!" he  said,
referring to a  previous Emperor whose 'gold' coins  were so worthless
that the mere mention of them came to be a curse. "It's locked!"
     "Can you pick it?" Julia asked.
     "We'll soon see," Tarn replied. He pulled a set of lockpicks from
his pack  and set  to work  trying to  pick the  lock while  Julia and
Justin stood guard.
     Ten minutes later, an increasingly irritable Tarn was starting to
swear at  the lock. Justin tapped  him on the shoulder.  "Don't bother
1me!  I'm thinking,"  Tarn snapped.  Justin  again tapped  Tarn on  the
shoulder. "What?!"
     "I think this might help," Justin said, handing a key-ring he had
gotten off one of the guards' bodies to the thief.
     "Well why  didn't you give  me that sooner?" Tarn  asked angrily.
"Never mind," he said, cutting off Justin's response. Tarn turned back
to the door and  began trying keys. On the fifth  try, he was rewarded
with a click as the lock opened.
     Justin moved forward and kicked  the door open, Tarn covering him
with his bow. "Nobody home," Justin stated.
     "Go  in then,"  Julia  said somewhat  anxiously.  "We're kind  of
exposed out here."
     The three  entered the room and  shut the door behind  them. Tarn
lit  a torch,  revealing  the room's  details. It  was  a large  room,
roughly thirty  feet by forty  feet. From the exquisite  furniture, it
was obvious that this room was a reception area. Two doors, one on the
south wall, one on the east, led from the room.
     The companions  crossed the room  to the east door.  Tarn grasped
the knob and twisted. As he feared,  it was locked. He reached for the
key-ring and went to work. As soon as he applied pressure to the door,
it swung open.  Whomever had locked it had failed  to shut it properly
before leaving.
     Tarn stepped back,  allowing Justin and Julia to  enter the room.
This new room appeared to be a  study. A fireplace was set against the
north wall,  a desk in  front and  to the side  of it. The  walls were
lined with  books, approximately  one hundred in  total. A  table with
four expensive looking chairs sat in the middle of the room.
     "What we're  looking for has got  to be somewhere in  this room,"
Julia stated.
     "We'll each take a wall," Justin  said. "But remember, be sure to
put everything back in its exact place."
     The three friends began going through every book in the study. An
hour went  by fruitlessly. Justin  pulled another book from  its shelf
and began examining it. It was then  he noticed the oddity in the wall
behind  the  shelf.  "Julia!  Tarn!  Come here.  I  think  I've  found
something."
     "What is it?" Julia asked.
     "Help me  move this  shelf," Justin  replied. All  three wrestled
with the  shelf for several  minutes before  managing to move  it away
from the  wall. What the shelf  had been concealing was  a ten-foot by
ten-foot stone door with no handles or other similar accoutrements.
     "Well?" Tarn asked. "What do we do?"
     "I don't know," Justin responded.
     "Why don't we try pushing it?" Julia asked.
     "Might  as well,"  Justin said.  All  three leaned  on the  door,
pushing with  all their might.  Slowly, reluctantly, the  massive door
began to move. The door came to rest against the north wall of a small
corridor extending ten feet east where it opened into a twenty-foot by
twenty-foot room completely bare of furnishings.
     Or almost bare. In the center of the room stood a stone pedestal,
a small wooden chest sitting on top. Tarn slowly and carefully entered
the room,  stepping over the  ankle-level trip-wire strung  across the
entrance.  He  moved cautiously  toward  the  pedestal, eyes  intently
scanning the floor for anything out of the ordinary.
     Five feet  from the pedestal  he noticed an  almost imperceptible
change in the stone tiles on the floor. The tiles immediately in front
of the  pedestal lacked the  rough texture  evident in the  floor thus
far. Tarn bent down to examine the tiles in question.
     The  "tiles" were  not  tiles  at all.  They  were very  cleverly
disguised pressure plates. Tarn began examining the floor more closely
1in  order to  determine just  how large  an area  the pressure  plates
covered.  After ten  tense  minutes of  study, he  moved  back to  the
entrance where Justin and Julia were calmly waiting in the corridor.
     "The  floor is  covered with  pressure plates,"  he told  his two
companions, "but there  is a way to avoid them.  Stay within five feet
of the south wall and you should have no trouble." Tarn turned and led
the way into  the room, being careful to stay  near the southern wall.
The trio  made their way  along the perimeter  of the room  until they
came to  a position on the  east wall directly opposite  the pedestal.
Tarn briefly  examined the floor.  The pressure plates  apparently did
not cover the area behind the pedestal, allowing access to it. "Nicely
done,"  Tarn murmured  to  himself. Instructing  Justin  and Julia  to
remain where they were, Tarn proceeded  to the pedestal where he began
examining the chest.
     The chest was  made of teak, a rare wood,  rarer still in western
Galicia. There were two locks on the chest, one of which was obviously
false.  The trick  was, which  one? And  more importantly,  what would
happen if  the wrong lock were  opened? Tarn pondered the  problem for
many minutes.  He reasoned that the  correct lock was the  lock facing
the entrance, not the lock facing him now. Unfortunately, there was no
way  to test  his hypothesis  without opening  a lock.  If he  guessed
wrong, the consequences could be deadly.
     Taking a deep breath, Tarn leaned over the chest and inserted his
lockpick in  the lock.  Silently sending  a prayer  to the  gods, Tarn
twisted the  lockpick clockwise.  An audible click  sounded throughout
the chamber. Tarn tensed, waiting for the trap to spring. When nothing
happened, he opened his eyes and gently lifted the lid of the chest.
     Inside were  three gold  scroll cases  approximately one  foot in
length.  "We've  found it!"  Tarn  exclaimed.  Justin and  Julia  came
forward, intent on examining what Tarn had found.
     "GOLD scroll cases?" Julia asked incredulously.
     "I think this is what we were sent to find," Justin said.
     "We should take them and get out of here," Tarn suggested. "We'll
read them later when we're in safer surroundings."
     Justin nodded his assent. Tarn handed him a scroll case, grunting
with the  effort. Justin stepped  back and carefully began  making his
way out of  the chamber. Julia took possession of  the second case and
followed Justin.
     Tarn lifted  the final case  out of the chest  and set it  on the
floor next to  the pedestal. As he closed the  chest's lid, he noticed
that his  two friends were  almost out of the  room. He picked  up the
scroll case and started to follow them. He was almost to the east wall
when he heard it.
     A grating  sound like stone on  stone could be heard  behind him.
Apprehension seized  him as  he turned  to face  the pedestal.  It was
sinking  into  the floor.  "Craanor's  Coins!"  Whoever designed  this
chamber did their work well.  Tarn hadn't even suspected anything like
this. "Run!" he shouted to his comrades. "The pedestal's sinking!"

Crown Castle, Magnus, Royal Duchy, Baranur
1 Nober, 1013 B.Y.

     Commander Jan  Courymwen ("Coury" to her  friends), personal aide
to Sir  Edward Sothos, strode through  the halls of Crown  Castle. She
had just arrived in Magnus that morning after completing an inspection
tour of  the Southern Marches. Her  weary body cried out  for rest but
she had a preliminary report to make.
     The  guards on  duty outside  her office  came to  attention upon
seeing her round the corner. She  acknowledged their salute with a nod
and  went  in.  Seated  behind  her desk  was  Captain  Daniel  Moore,
1temporarily filling in for Jan while she was away.
     Moore  looked up  as the  door opened,  a harsh  comment for  not
knocking  on the  tip of  his  tongue. When  he  saw who  it was,  his
expression  changed remarkably.  He got  up  from his  chair and  came
around the desk, his  frown turning to a warm smile  as he greeted his
friend. "Coury! You're back!"
     "Just barely," she said with a tired smile. She removed her helm,
allowing her fiery red hair to  flow freely over her shoulders. "Is he
in?" she asked, referring to Edward.
     "Yes he is," Moore replied. Jan  started for the door to Edward's
office. "Coury, wait."
     Jan stopped  and turned to  face her  friend. "Yes, Dan,  what is
it?"  she asked.  Then  she  noticed something  in  his eyes.  "What's
wrong?"
     "Coury,"      he      began      hesitantly,      "there      was
an...incident...yesterday afternoon involving Sir Edward."
     "What  kind of  incident? Is  Edward alright?"  An icy-cold  ball
materialized  in her  stomach  at  the thought  that  Edward might  be
injured.
     "He's fine," Moore reassured her. "An embassy arrived yesterday."
     "So? What has  that got to do with anything?  Embassies arrive in
Magnus all the time."
     "This embassy is from Galicia."
     Jan was  silent. Both she  and Moore  knew that Edward  came from
Galicia and that he left under less-than-ideal circumstances. "Why are
they here?"
     Moore shrugged.  "Who knows?  What I  do know  is this:  for some
reason,  Sir  Edward threatened  to  kill  the Ambassador.  He  almost
attacked him."
     Jan's jaw  dropped. For  a moment, she  couldn't speak.  When she
finally regained  her composure all  she could manage was  a startled,
"What!?"
     "You heard me," Moore said. "His Royal Majesty confined Edward to
his quarters  for the rest  of the day. Last  night, the King  went to
Edward's quarters and  the two of them stayed up  all night discussing
things. Edward came in two hours  ago with instructions for me to pass
on to General Wainwright. Edward said  he has some things to finish up
and then he's going to go to his quarters and get some rest."
     "Thanks for telling  me, Dan. Well, I have a  report to deliver."
With that,  she turned  and knocked  on the  door to  Edward's office.
Receiving assent, she opened the door and entered.
     "Jan!" Edward  said, pleasantly  surprised. "It appears  this day
won't be a total waste after all. How did the inspection go?"
     "Better  than I'd  hoped, Your  Excellency," she  said, taking  a
seat.  "My main  concern is  Pyridain.  King's General  Tegran, in  my
opinion, is not capable of commanding our forces there in the event of
hostilities. We  do, however, have several  good regimental commanders
in Pyridain. One or two may be capable of handling the duchy."
     "Good.  You look  tired, Jan.  Get some  rest. We'll  finish your
report later."
     "If you don't mind my saying so, so do you, Edward."
     "Yes. Well, it was a long night."
     "Dan told  me what happened,  Edward," she said. She  leaned over
and touched him lightly  on the arm. "If you need  someone to talk to,
don't hesitate to call on me."
     "Thank you, Jan. I always could count on you."
     "Part of being a friend. I suppose  I should go. We both need the
rest." She  stood and went to  the door. "I'll have  a complete report
ready for tomorrow."
     "Good night. Or perhaps I should say good morning?"
1     Jan smiled briefly, then left.

Duke Markin's castle, New Valencia, Duchy Valencia, Galcian Empire
1 Nober, 1200 G.Y. (1013 B.Y.)

     "Run!" Tarn shouted. "The pedestal's sinking!"
     Justin  and  Julia didn't  ask  questions,  they just  ran.  They
stopped outside Markin's quarters to  wait for Tarn. Tarn came running
through the door and collided with his friends.
     "What are you waiting for?" he practically screamed.
     "You!" Justin shouted back. Just  then, a gong sounded. All three
friends took one look at each other and fled down the corridor.

Stormhaven, exact location unknown, Galician Empire
1 Nober, 1200 G.Y. (1013 B.Y.)

     Sehrvat  Primus  Derek entered  the  Primus'  private study.  The
Primus  was seated  at a  table with  his back  to Derek.  He appeared
engrossed in a  large book lying on  the table in front  of him. Derek
approached the Primus silently, cowl drawn over his head.
     "Thou hath some matter to bring to my attention, Sehrvat Primus?"
     "Yes, Primus," Derek replied uneasily. The man's awareness of his
surroundings was uncanny! Derek  thought. "The three adventurers hired
to  investigate  the  cabal  hath succeeded  in  penetrating  Markin's
stronghold, Primus.  They hath succeeded in  obtaining the information
we seek and even now are attempting to effect an escape."
     "Excellent," the  Primus replied without stopping  his perusal of
the tome.  "Thou art dismissed, Derek,"  the Primus said in  a neutral
voice.
     "Cha loth, Primus," Derek said. He bowed once to the Primus' back
then turned and exited the room.
     After Derek had  gone, the Primus stopped reading  long enough to
address one of  his guards. "Go to Markin's stronghold  and assist our
agents in making  their escape. If their  situation proveth untenable,
thou art  to eliminate them. Take  care that thou doth  not reveal The
Order's involvement in this affair."
     The  silent   black-robed  figure  nodded  its   head  in  almost
imperceptible acknowledgement then vanished on the words of a teleport
spell. The Primus  went back to his reading as  if the entire incident
had not occurred.

Duke Markin's castle, New Valencia, Duchy Valencia, Galician Empire
1 Nober, 1200 G.Y. (1013 B.Y.)

     Justin, Julia, and Tarn pounded  down the long corner. They could
hear sounds of pursuit coming from the direction of Markin's quarters.
"If we can  reach the entrance hall far enough  ahead of them," Justin
panted, "we should be able to lose them."
     "I hope  so," Julia commented. "There're  far too many for  us to
fight."
     "We won't have to," Tarn said. "The hall is just up ahead."
     The trio  rounded the corner that  led to the entrance  hall at a
dead run. A startled guard began  drawing his weapon while at the same
time shouting for the three to halt.
     Justin never  paused, nor did he  try to draw his  own weapon. He
simply hurtled forward, slamming the  guard into the alarm-gong at the
top of the  stairs. The three companions ran past  the dazed guard and
down the stairs.  That's when they noticed four other  guards near the
bottom of the staircase.
     Halfway down the  stairs, Justin leaped for the  nearest guard on
1the left. The two collided with a great clangor of metal-on-metal. The
guard lay on his stomach,  unconscious. Justin wasn't much better off.
He tried  to use his left  arm to raise himself,  but stopped abruptly
when  pain lanced  through his  shoulder.  Giving a  strangled cry  of
agony, he fell back to the floor.
     The three guards still active were  rushing up the stairs to meet
Tarn and  Julia. Tarn removed  his longbow  from his back  and hastily
loosed a  shaft at the  right guard. His  target saw what  was coming,
however,  and brought  his shield  up at  the last  moment, harmlessly
deflecting the arrow from its intended path.
     Tarn  notched his  last arrow,  took  careful aim,  and with  his
target only eight  feet away, let fly. The arrow  covered the distance
in a fraction of a second. The guard literally never saw it coming. It
struck  the guard  in  the left  eye, sending  him  crashing down  the
staircase. His  comrade, following behind,  tripped over the  body and
tumbled to the bottom as well.
     Julia threw her shield at  her opponent, sending his blade flying
from his nerveless hands. She drew her sword and thrust it through the
back of the guard's throat before he  had time to bring his shield up.
He died without a sound.
     Julia  rushed down  the  staircase  and went  to  Justin. He  was
conscious, though  in great pain  from his dislocated  shoulder. Julia
gently helped him to his feet, taking  great care not to move his left
arm. She was so intent on helping  Justin that she never saw the guard
behind her.
     The guard  had finally managed  to wrestle  the dead body  of his
comrade off him. Burning with rage,  he leaped to his feet and focused
his fury  on his nearest  opponent. The fact  that his opponent  was a
woman  didn't matter.  The fact  that  she had  her back  to him  only
increased his satisfaction. He approached  Julia, raising his blade to
strike.
     Tarn shouted a  warning, but Julia couldn't do  anything with the
burden  she was  carrying. She  tried  to interpose  her body  between
Justin and the guard, knowing she was about to die.
     Tarn knew he was too far away to use his sword. He reached for an
arrow, remembering too late he had  used his last one to dispatch this
guard's comrade. In desperation, Tarn  drew his dagger and balanced it
for throwing. It was a difficult  throw and Tarn wasn't at all certain
he could  hit a vital spot  at this distance. Silently  saying a quick
prayer, he threw  the dagger, aiming for the guard's  neck. Just as he
was releasing the dagger, however, he  slipped on a step, throwing his
aim off.  The dagger hurtled through  the air and struck  the guard on
his left knee-cap, lodging between it and the joint. The guard let out
an enormous  bellow of pain  and dropped  to the floor,  clutching his
ruined knee.
     Tarn  could  hear  the  sounds of  many  running  armoured  feet.
"They're coming!" he said to Julia. "Hurry!"
     "What about our shields?"
     "Leave them! We have no time!"  Tarn opened the northern door for
Julia as  she helped  the still-dazed Justin  down the  corridor. Just
before he closed the door, Tarn saw the first of their pursuers arrive
at the top of the staircase.
     Reaching the small oak door at the end of the corridor, Tarn took
charge of Justin,  thus freeing his more  combat-oriented companion to
practice her  trade as the  need arose.  The three continued  down the
narrow stairs and  moved as quickly as possible  toward the store-room
and the  secret passage. As  yet, their pursuers hadn't  deduced where
the quarry had gone; there were two possible directions the trio could
have  taken. According  to what  their employer  had said,  Markin was
unaware of  the secret passage's existence.  Therefore, the companions
1could expect a slight reprieve before the chase resumed.
     Finally they  arrived at  the store-room.  What had  taken twenty
minutes before  took an hour  due to Justin's  condition. Fortunately,
Justin had, by this time, recovered  his faculties. He was still in no
condition to fight, be he no longer needed assistance walking.
     "I think  we can  relax now,"  Julia said.  "It should  take them
about ten  to twenty minutes before  they discover we didn't  take the
double doors. Figure another twenty to thirty to make it down here. We
should be gone long before then."
     "We'd better be,"  Justin said, struggling to keep  the pain from
his voice.
     Tarn walked  over to  the west  wall and  twisted the  stone that
would open the secret entrance. A portion of the wall to his left slid
back. The  torches the  trio lit  in the  passage were  still burning,
illuminating the  seven hundred year-old  corridor meant as  an escape
route for the original builder of the castle.
     The  three made  their way  down the  passage, going  as fast  as
Justin could manage.  Tarn paused at the entrance only  long enough to
pull the bronze lever that would shut the door.
     The companions reached  the shaft at the end of  the passage. The
pain in Justin's shoulder had grown worse. Beads of sweat stood out on
his forehead,  the only outward  sign of  his struggle to  control the
pain his injury was causing.
     "Justin, can you climb?" a concerned Julia asked.
     "I'll have to,  won't I?" he answered in  clipped tones, fighting
to keep the pain from his voice.
     Julia reached out and put her hand on his uninjured shoulder in a
show of  support for her friend.  "Tarn," she queried, "why  don't you
open the trap door?"
     "It already is," Tarn replied in a grim voice.
     "It can't be! We closed it! I'm sure!"
     "Take a look for yourself," he said, standing by the ladder.
     Julia came over  to the ladder and looked up.  There, thirty feet
above, was an unmistakable circle of  light where the trap door should
have been. "Gods! They must have discovered the passage."
     "We certainly can't go this way," Tarn stated.
     "What  other choice  do we  have?" Justin  commented from  behind
them. He walked over to join his friends. "I don't know about you, but
if I'm going to die, I'd much  rather die up there in battle than down
here like a starving rat." With that, he reached out with his good arm
and began hauling himself up the  ladder. Julia and Tarn hesitated for
a moment and then followed.
     Justin climbed  steadily, painfully  toward the circle  of light,
fully expecting to die. He paused to regain his strength ten feet from
the top. The effort of climbing with  one arm was beginning to tax his
endurance. Just  a little farther, he  thought, and then it'll  all be
over.
     He  resumed  his climb,  all  thoughts  focused on  reaching  the
flickering light  above. As he neared  the top, he forced  his injured
arm to  adjust the  dagger on his  belt so that  he could  more easily
reach it with his functioning arm.
     He was only a few inches from  the top now. He paused again, this
time in  preparation for exiting  the shaft.  He gripped the  top rung
with his good arm and, hauling  mightily, vaulted out of the shaft. He
landed on his stomach but quickly  rolled to a crouch beside the hole,
his dagger out of its scabbard and ready to throw.
     "Greetings," said a voice from the shadows.
     Justin  whirled, his  arm coming  down in  one quick  motion. The
dagger flashed  toward the sound of  the voice. A word  was spoken and
the  dagger seemingly  deflected off  air. A  figure attired  in black
1robes strode  out of  the shadows toward  Justin and  the now-emerging
Julia.
     "What are you doing here?" Justin asked.
     "It is my  task to see that thee and  thy companions successfully
escape from this  stronghold," the figure replied in  the same archaic
form of  Galician that  the wizard  that hired  them spoke.  Only this
wizard was not the same one who hired them.
     "Who are you?" Julia asked.
     "That is none of thy concern." He paused, not speaking until Tarn
had emerged from the shaft. "I shalt take thee to the Sehrvat Primus,"
he  stated. He  spoke  the words  of  a teleport  spell  and all  four
vanished.
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 ******   *****            The Online Magazine              ***********
 ******   *****        of Amateur Creative Writing         ************
                       ---------------------------


     Athene is a free network "magazine" devoted to amateur fiction
written by the members of the online community.  Athene is not limited
to any specific genre, but will publish quality short stories dealing
with just about any interesting topic.

     The magazine is published monthly, and comes in two formats --
ASCII and PostScript.  The content is identical across both formats, but
the PostScript version is designed for printing on laser printers while
the ASCII edition can be read online as well as printed.

     To subscribe, send mail (no interactive messages, please) to:

                               Jim McCabe
                          MCCABE@MTUS5.BITNET

     Please indicate which format (ASCII or PostScript) you prefer to to
receive.  Back issues, an index, and submission information are also
available upon request.
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             ______________________________________

             A Journal of Fact, Fiction and Opinion
             ______________________________________

Quanta is an electronically distributed magazine of science fiction.
Published monthly,  each issue contains short fiction,  articles and
editorials by authors around the world  and across the net.   Quanta
publishes  in  two  formats:   straight  ascii and  PostScript*  for
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1   (C)   Copyright    January,  1990,    DargonZine,     Editor   Dafydd
. All rights revert to the authors. These stories may
not be reproduced  or redistributed save in the case  of reproducing the
whole 'zine for  further distribution without the  express permission of
the author involved.






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  D    D  AAAA RRR  G GG O  O N N N   Z     I N N N E     || Issue 3
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--   DargonZine Volume 3, Issue 3        02/16/90          Cir 964    --
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--                            Contents                                --
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 Materia Medica I            Max Khaytsus           Ye. 3 - Yi 19, 1013
 Sons of Gateway III: Death  Jon Evans              Yi. 7 - No. 2, 1013
 When the War-God Weeps      M. Wendy Hennequin     26 Deber, 1014
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1                            Materia Medica
                                Part 1
                            by Max Khaytsus
             

     Liriss  looked out  the window  at the  people rushing  about the
street. It was  late afternoon and the traffic of  midday shoppers and
travellers filled  Dargon's streets as  always. He sipped at  the wine
from the  glass in his hand,  wondering how to deal  with the problems
that surround  his life.  Rebellious workers  were becoming  the norm,
rather than  exception and he worried  greatly about how to  get order
reinstated in his ranks.
     Ever since Kera  left without being brought back,  it seemed that
discipline had become lax and the  activities of the men centered more
and more around pleasure, instead of work. Liriss turned around at the
sound of  the door  opening. "Kendall,"  he hurried  to greet  the man
walking in.
     Kendall  nodded in  acknowledgement and  pulling up  a chair  sat
down, knowing full  well that Liriss would consider it  rude. "What do
you want?"
     Kendall was quite right in his assumption and Liriss stood in the
middle of the room, staring at him for a long moment, before returning
to the window. He took another  sip from the glass, wondering just how
much he should try the assassin's patience, then sat down at his desk.
"Do you remember Kera?" Liriss asked.
     "Quite well. She was popular among your men for a time."
     That time, a  little over a year before, Kendall  did another job
for Liriss, one  that forced Liriss to swear that  he would never hire
this man  again, but as  circumstances would  have it, the  town guard
forgot the incident  and the need for reliability  once again exceeded
cautious instincts. "A  little under two months ago  she joined forces
with a man  who has caused me  much grief," Liriss said.  "I'd like to
arrange a termination."
     "My fee hasn't changed," Kendall hinted.
     Liriss  pulled a  pouch  from  a desk  drawer  and  tossed it  to
Kendall. "Take  a look  at the  coins. Kera stole  these from  the man
before joining him."
     Kendall drew the  strings on the pouch open and  poured the coins
into his hand. "Very old. Expensive. He could certainly buy her."
     "At least two  centuries old," Liriss said,  ignoring the remark.
Kendall was  a professional assassin  and as  such he could  often get
away with comments  that would cost a mere worker  a good flogging. Of
course even Liriss  believed that there was  a limit of what  a man in
his employ,  no matter  how temporary,  could get  away with  and this
temporary hire was  approaching it fast. "Kera  stole fifty-seven from
that fellow," Liriss  continued. "I am sure these five  will more than
cover your fee..."
     "They are  sufficient," Kendall answered, returning  the coins to
the pouch. "Give me a description of the man."
     Liriss nodded. "I got one from the  survivor of a party of four I
sent after them." His gaze became hard. Tilden was a reliable man, but
a bad job  forced him to snap. He hardly  deserved the punishment, but
failure should be discouraged in a  business such as this. "The guy is
about six foot, blond with grey eyes. Somewhat muscular."
     "That's all you know? Where?"
     Liriss  honestly didn't  know.  "They were  headed  out of  town,
towards Tench, but that was almost two months ago."
     Kendall stood up. "I'll let you know."
     Liriss stood  up as well. "Kill  him, bring Kera back  alive," he
gave his final instruction and Kendall stopped.
1     "No. I  am not a chaperon.  Once the money is  down, they're both
dead."
     "Whatever,"  Liriss slumped  back in  his chair  as the  assassin
left. It wasn't really that important  to get Kera back alive, but for
the sake of self indulgence, Liriss  wanted to kill her himself. Maybe
kill her, maybe not. There might still be a use for her...

     "...Maari's death does not trouble me," the old warlock Natay was
saying. "I don't know anyone whom she  could call a friend and I doubt
she knew anyone  well. What I see  as a problem is  that strangers may
know our secrets."
     An old woman on his right whispered in his ear and he nodded. "My
judgement," Natay  continued, "is  that the book  must be  located and
returned and those who took it, killed." He stood up, casting one last
glance  around the  table, challenging  the  members of  the coven  to
comment, then,  when the  room remained silent  long enough  to assure
that there would  be no descent, disappeared through a  doorway at the
back of the room.
     Other members  of the coven  started getting up,  quietly talking
among themselves and  leaving. "Mija, Alicia," the  old woman, Tsazia,
called.  The two  young witches  approached. "I  will instruct  you on
executing your job. Be prepared to go tomorrow morning."
     Mija and  Alicia waited for the  room to empty, then  sat down at
the table again.
     "So much for that job Maari had for us," Mija said.
     "My heart  wasn't set  on it anyhow,"  Alicia answered.  "I could
never stand the  way she looked at me. Come  tomorrow we'll be hunting
people for her."
     "That's stupid," Mija said. "We're going to be killing people not
for killing  Maari and not for  stealing, but because we  suspect they
may know something, which is down right stupid! Most people can't even
read!"
     "Maari always  wrote in Old  Script," Alicia added. "I  doubt too
many people can read that. Maybe  a few mages and scholars... Maybe we
won't have to kill..."
    "We'll have to kill," Mija reassured her.  "You know how it works."
     The two fell  silent as Tsazia returned and placed  a sack on the
table. "What are you sitting around for?" she asked. "I told you we're
leaving in the morning. Go get ready!"

     "Didn't I tell you not to come here?" Taishent demanded of Rien.
     "You did," Rien admitted, "but  that does not lessen my necessity
of speaking with you."
     Taishent stepped outside and closed the door behind him. "I don't
want my  granddaughter exposed  to either your  disease or  the people
looking for your friend. Go or I'll call the town guard."
     "Sir, I don't  think that anything you or the  town guard will do
to me can be worse than what I've been through this past month."
     "Why are you  so stubborn?" the old wizard shook  his head. "What
is it you want?"
     Rien looked  about and although  the street was  almost deserted,
said, "You might want to step inside for that."
     Taishent shook his head. "I don't think so."
     "Very well," Rien produced a thick black leather covered book and
handed it over.
     The mage looked  at the cover, then opened it  to the first page.
The book instantly snapped shut. "Where  did you get this? Do you know
what it is?"
     Rien nodded. "A shadow book," he said, not changing his tone.
     Taishent looked about. "Step inside for a minute."
1     Rien calmly followed the old man into the house.
     "Where did you get it?"
     "That old woman  you sent me to find. She  wasn't very friendly,"
Rien said.
     "So you killed her?"
     "No. Someone who had a much older conflict with her did that."
     "Do you know what this is worth?"
     "I can imagine," Rien said. "A cure most definately."
     "So you came back to me?"
     "I came to you," Rien said,  "because it's written in Old Script,
something my education  did not provide. I want to  trade the contents
for a translation."
     Taishent thought for  a while. "All right, it's  worth the risks.
Leave the book here, come back in a week."
     With a slight hesitation, Rien thanked  the mage and left. It was
somewhat of a risk  to leave the book behind, but it was  no more of a
risk that  he took  with Terell  and at this  point promptness  was of
great importance.  As he walked  down the  street, a small  dark shape
jumped off the roof and followed him in silent flight.

     "Rumor has it Liriss brought in an  out of town sword for you and
your friend,"  Ellis whispered to  Kera. "He's been nosing  around the
market place,  asking questions. Lot's  of people are willing  to sell
you, if only they knew where you are.  Most have no more to go on than
a bad description."
     "I was hoping  to learn more," Kera said. "Who  is he? Where does
he stay?"
     "Sorry," Ellis responded. "He asks  a lot of questions, but keeps
a low  profile. I don't  think anyone has  really seen him.  Each time
it's a different person that asks."
     "What else's new in Dargon?"
     Ellis shrugged.  "The Duke got  married to some girl  from Magnus
just a few  days ago. Luthias Connall was made  Baron...have you heard
about the war?"
     Kera shook her head.
     "There are rumors of a Bichuese  invasion by the end of the year.
Everyone's ready  to panic.  Everyone except Simon,  that is.  He said
they'd be  crazy to  come this  far. There's  plenty of  good pickings
elsewhere."
     "An invasion..." Kera repeated.
     "Don't  worry about  it," Ellis  hurried to  say. "I  don't think
anyone's coming before winter."
     "Like there  aren't enough problems  as it is," Kera  sighed. She
glanced around to make sure no one  was too close. "I don't know where
I'll be in  the mean time, but  keep your ears open, huh?  I'll try to
stop by again soon."
     "No  problem," Ellis  answered. "There's  plenty of  talk on  the
streets."
     "Great," Kera smiled. "I really appreciate what you're doing. See
ya." She  turned away  from the  cart and  quickly disappeared  in the
crowd.
     As a city of over ten thousand souls, Dargon had plenty of crowds
to  assist people  in need  with  escaping the  unwanted attention  of
others. As the crowd thined out  towards the edge of the market place,
Kera took a side street off Traders' Avenue and made her way down back
alleys to the docks. She spied a  crowd gathering as a large ship made
its way into  port and stopped to watch. The  ship swung around wildly
in the heavy current at the mouth of the Coldwell and to the cheers of
the sailors on shore, neared the dock.
     In the moment of anticipation of watching the ship dock, Kera was
1startled by  a hand landing  on her shoulder  and throwing her  to the
ground at  the mouth of  the alley. The hood  of her cloak  fell back,
completely  revealing her  face. Above  her stood  a muscular  sailor,
smiling, holding up a belaying pin.
     "Don't reach for  anything," he said, noticing the  dagger in her
belt. "Keep  those arms spread out."  He reached down to  grab hold of
the dagger  and brought it up  with a jerk, without  releasing it from
the belt.
     The blade cut completely through  the belt and the sailor's smile
became vicious. "So what would you be  good for? Or should I just turn
you over to someone?"
     The dagger went  flying across the alley and  Kera pushed herself
back, a little  closer to the wall.  She still had a  second dagger at
her side, currently hidden by the folds of the cloak.
     "I think  you've got the  wrong person," Kera said,  knowing full
well this man  knew she was bluffing. Even in  Dargon accusations like
this would not happen so casually.
     "No, I'm  pretty sure  it's you they're  looking for,  bitch. You
think the  town guard or  Liriss would pay  more for you?"  the sailor
continued asking.
     "Suppose someone offers  more than either of  them?" Rien's voice
sounded from behind the sailor.
     Kera was grabbed by the waist  band of her pants and remainder of
the belt  and shoved  up against  the wall. "I  don't think  you could
afford it," the sailor eyed Rien.
     Rien flashed  a few gold coins.  "How much would it  take to make
you forget you ever saw her?"
     The grip  on Kera  increased as  the sailor  eyed the  coins. She
quickly pulled the second dagger from beneath the cloak and planted it
squarely in his side.
     With a  scream the sailor brought  his staff around to  strike at
Kera, only  to have  it blocked  by Rien's  arm. With  a twist  of the
staff, the sailor's arm was forced back down.
     Kera, in the meantime, pushed  the dagger forward, cutting almost
a quarter circle on the sailor's  body, before pulling it out. Another
strike at his arm convinced the man to let go of her as he sank to the
ground.
     "How much  do you  think you're  worth to  the town  guard?" Rien
knelt before  the sailor. "That's  what I thought," he  said, watching
the man's face  contort in pain. "Here," he tossed  a coin. "Give this
to the healer if you manage to make it to one."
     Rien got up  and pushing Kera ahead of himself,  hurried down the
alley. "We're not splitting up in this town again."
     As they ran down the alley, a small black creature jumped down on
the dying  sailor and picked  up the gold  coin. The seaman  stared in
horror at  the grotesque  little man with  wings standing  before him,
then fell to the ground, gasping from the loss of blood.

     "What do you think?" Kera spun about, showing off her new belt to
Rien.
     "We're in more trouble than a few coins could take care of."
     "Relax! No one saw us!"
     "It's not that  we may have been seen. We  have a bigger problem.
This town looks to have a bounty out on you."
     Both fell  silent as they approached  the store clerk to  pay for
the belt. The man eyed Kera suspiciously while making change, but said
nothing.
     "I found  out Liriss brought in  an out of town  assassin to kill
me," Kera  said as  they left  the counter.  "He's been  asking around
about me. Bad strategy, I'd say."
1     "Is it?" Rien asked. "Looks like the whole town is on the lookout
for you. If  he is being paid to  make sure the job is  done, the best
thing for him to do is spread the  news, then lean back and wait for a
return of the information on where you are."
     "There  isn't anything  we can  do then,"  Kera said.  "Sooner or
later someone is going to recognize me again."
     "We have to keep you hidden," Rien agreed. "Perhaps there is also
a way to lure the assassin out into the open..."

     "Pardon  me,"  Taishent  pushed  his way  between  Thuna  and  an
apparently potential costumer into Corambis' market place booth.
     "Hey! Wait your turn, geeb!" the  girl shouted after him, but the
door slammed shut  before the girl could follow.  "Old geezer...!" she
started  on a  lengthy  string of  explicatives,  making the  customer
retreat to the street.
     "You'll never  believe what  I have!"  Taishent said  to Corambis
breathlessly inside the small casting room.
     "What?"  Corambis  stood up,  surprised  at  the intrusion.  "You
didn't pick up another orb from that crazy old gypsy, did you?"
     "No, no! Look!" Taishent unwrapped  a large cloth bundle, pulling
out a thick leather tome.
     Corambis  picked up  the volume  and carefully  opened it  to the
first page. "Esch  ed aur. Er ols,  er kalt," he read.  "Where did you
get this?" His stern gaze focused on Taishent.
     "That young man who was bit by the wolfling I found brought it to
me. Do you realize what we could learn?"
     Corambis thought for a  moment, mumbling "the risk...the risk..."
then, putting  the book on the  table, went to the  door. "Thuna, make
sure no one disturbs us. I'm closing shop for the day."

     "If we keep this  up, I might as well wear a  sack over my head,"
Kera complained to Rien.  "Why don't we just go to  the city guard and
tell them there's an assassin after me?"
     "Announcing this to the guard would only disclose your location,"
Rien said. "If this assassin is as good as you said, he is waiting for
us to seek outside help as well."
     Kera sighed,  staring at the plate  of food before her.  "I'm not
really hungry. Let's go do something."
     "Like what?" Rien asked.
     "You're not planning to spend a whole week at this inn, are you?"
     "Is there something else we need to do?"
     "I've done things more exiting than eat wrapped in a cloak."
     "Don't think  I'm comfortable," Rien  said. "And I  haven't heard
any better ideas.
     "We can go look for the assassin," Kera suggested.
     Rien shook his  head. "That would only call more  attention to us
and alert him."
     "I don't want to spend another evening watching you stare out the
window," Kera protested.
     "I was meditating," Rien explained.  "The assassin is waiting for
someone to announce  that you have been  caught. I could do  it, but I
expect he is looking for me as well."
     "Then why don't  we go upstairs, relax, have some  fun and forget
about all this?" Kera asked.
     Rien smiled,  but caught himself.  "I already told you;  not when
someone is hunting us."
     Kera smiled too, remembering the episode in the forest. "We're in
an inn that has locks on the doors," she laughed.
     "No," Rien  said sternly. "I am  not willing to take  a risk like
that." He turned to  face the common room door and  froze looking at a
1man who was looking at him. "Oh, not now..."
     The man, dressed in chain armor and carrying a sword at his side,
started towards the table and Kera pulled out her dagger.
     "Put that away," Rien said as the man approached.
     The warrior was  young, clean shaven and  noticeably both excited
and in a hurry. "My Lord," he saluted Rien and handed him a parchment.
     "The seal is broken," Rien noted, unrolling the paper and staring
at the man sternly.
     "I am sorry, my Lord," the  man answered. "It was to be delivered
to you before  the first of Melrin,  but because I was  unable to find
you, I was forced to read it to see how urgent it was."
     Rien did  not respond. He read  the message, then returned  it to
the messenger. "Can you find someone  else to take care of this? There
is no indication of urgency."
     "I was told to deliver this to you specifically, sir."
     "You indicated you  were willing to deliver this  to someone else
if you ran  out of time," Rien  said. "Take it to Sharks'  Cove -- the
trip should take about a month."
     "Are you sure, my Lord?" the courier asked.
     "Positive," Rien nodded. "I came here on vacation and haven't had
much rest  yet. I shall  forward a  message as soon  as I am  ready to
resume my duties."
     The courier bowed and hastily departed.
     "You want to tell me what's going on?" Kera asked.
     "Not really," Rien  said and Kera frowned. "My work  caught up to
me in an inopportune time."
     "What  do you  do?"  Kera  asked. "Even  a  lord  makes a  living
somehow."
     Rien sighed,  beginning to  tell a story  which would  not reveal
much. In  the rafters above him  the little black man  with wings bent
forward to hear better and somewhere across town three witches watched
a pair of water filled cups displaying the common room of the inn.
     "See the cheek  bones?" Tsazia asked. "The  straight forehead? He
is elven."
     "He  looks  normal  to  me,"   Alicia  said.  "I  don't  see  the
difference."
     "Neither do I," Mija said. "I think he looks as human as anyone."
     The old witch  shook her head in disappointment  at her students'
blindness. "It may be a good idea to take him alive so you can examine
him closely. You watch. I'll begin the preparations."

     Back at the inn Kera looked at Rien with a confused expression on
her face. "You're a mercenary? Bounty hunter?"
     "Not really,"  Rien said  after some thought.  "I don't  have the
authority to  transport criminals.  I have to  deal with  them through
other means."
     "Like what?"
     "Kill them, give  them something new to worry about  so they keep
out of the way. Even set them up to be arrested. Any means to keep the
peace."
     Kera still  looked confused. "But  that's what the town  guard is
for. Why  would someone do something  like that? Most people  are just
happy with  their money  and take  care of  problems when  they affect
them. I can't imagine anyone paying for something like this."
     "As you can see," Rien  answered, "someone does invest money into
it. To be  more precise, my employer  found it would cost  him less in
the  long  run  to  invest   money  in  troubleshooters  and  practice
preventative measures rather than wait for the problems to mature."
     "Who do you work for?" Kera asked.
     "I can't  tell you, but you  can easily eliminate all  the people
1who would not be able to afford my services."
     Kera was, again, dissatisfied with the answer.
     "If you're done playing with  your food," Rein prompted her, "I'm
more than ready to go."

     Alicia tapped  one of the cups  to disturb the image  of Rien and
Kera walking  upstairs in the  inn. "Go find  the two old  mages," she
instructed.
     The  view in  the two  cups dropped  down and  concentrated on  a
partially open shutter  high above the bar. The  window quickly neared
and bright blue sky and white clouds rapidly came into view.
     "Let's get  the book back tonight,"  Mija said. "We can  kill the
mages and have  only the elf left  to worry about. I want  to see just
how different these creatures are."
     "What about the girl?" Alicia asked.
     "I  don't know.  Kill  her, experiment  on  her. Whatever  Tsazia
says."
     "You know," Alicia  said after some time of  watching the running
image in the  cups, "I never killed anyone. I've  watched it done, but
I've never done it..."
     Mija looked away from the image in the water as well. "I did only
once. Just don't think about it.  Treat it like sacrificing an animal.
As a matter of fact, it's just a sacrifice without a ceremony..."
     "I have problems sacrificing animals too. They all look so cute."
     "But you've done it."
     "I didn't like it."
     Mija thought for a moment. "If you start on a job and whoever you
are going  to kill knows you  will kill them, they  will retaliate and
only one side will survive. Does that make it easier?"
     Alicia nodded, although deep down inside it still felt wrong.
     In the two  cups an enclosed booth in the  market place became an
obvious destination as it rapidly grew in dimensions.

     The  dark creature  swooped  over the  wooden  shingled roof  and
catching  itself on  the edge  tried forcing  itself inside  through a
narrow crack between the roof and the wall.
     "Bah!  How do  you expect  to finish  this in  a week?"  Corambis
looked at Taishent.
     The old mage looked up from the book. "If we work quickly and..."
     "Fifty  years and  your  handwriting hasn't  gotten any  better!"
Corambis grumbled.
     "Do you want to read mine or Maari's?" Taishent asked.
     "Yours," Corambis answered after shuffling some notes before him.
"I've been working on reading it for too many years to give up now."
     The two men returned to work  in silence as their uninvited guest
made his way along  a fold in the cloth that  protected the booth from
rain and settled comfortably by the main beam.
     Another  few  minutes  of  silence  and  Corambis  spoke  "What's
`laht'?"
     "I think it's seaweed," Taishent said.
     "Indeed," Corambis acknowledged. "Seaweed soup?"
     "What?" Taishent looked up.
     "You tell me.  You copied it. Two quarts water,  pinch of garlic,
four carrots, laht, two live mice, pinch of ginsing..."
     Taishent  madly flipped  a few  pages back  as Corambis  went on,
"...birch bark, poplar leaves..."
     "Sorry," Corambis  interrupted him. "Four carrots,  half pound of
potatoes, beet  juice...that must  be the soup."  He turned  the page.
"Then here it  talks about flying potions. Water  parsnip, sweet root,
cinquefoil, laht, two  live mice, pinch of ginsing,  poplar leaves and
1250  drams  of cannabis  Indica.  Boil  for  half  an hour  and  drink
immediately."
     Corambis frowned. "The mice too?"
     "Doesn't say,"  Taishent answered.  "This sounds pretty  bad, you
know."
     "It's bound to make one crawl before flying," Corambis noted. "If
Thuna gets out of hand again, I may have her try it."
     Silence fell in the room again. The two men continued to work and
their uninvited guest to watch. The view of his eyes still appeared in
the two cups  of water as the witches studied  their targets. "They're
learning far too much," Mija said. "Let's go dispatch them now."
     "No," Alicia stopped him. "Not in broad daylight in the middle of
the  market. It  will keep."  Secretly she  hoped it  would keep  much
longer.

     Kera  lay horizontally  across the  bed,  staring at  Rien as  he
undressed. "You sure you won't change your mind?" she asked.
     "Positive,"  he answered,  laying his  tunic and  pants across  a
chair. "Don't you have any will power?"
     "Sure," she said. "I can go all night long."
     Rien  sat down  on the  bed. "That's  fine. I  intend to  rest. I
suggest you do the same."
     Kera got  up and started  removing her clothing. "Are  you sure?"
she asked again.
     "Positive,"  Rien  repeated  himself. "What's  gotten  into  you,
anyway?"
     "What if  there is nothing  in that book  to help us?  Maari said
there was no cure..."
     "Then we'll have to work on  an alternative. A little quicker and
more to the point."
     "What  about  whoever you  work  for?"  Kera asked.  "Aren't  you
supposed to be a good investment?"
     "We don't  have the time to  reach Magnus," Rien said.  "We never
did. Besides, in Magnus solving this problem would be a lot easier due
to the sheer number of doctors and sages."
     "But shouldn't your employer at least know?"
     "He is aware  that I can die  at any time because  of the dangers
involved in my job. My profession is filled with risks."
     With a sigh Kera finished undressing  and got into bed. "At least
you're warm," she said, blowing out the candle.
     Rien picked up a pillow and  muffled his companion. "I don't want
to hear it," his voice sounded in the dark.

     It was  a little past  midnight when  the two young  witches made
their way  to the  market place.  They observed a  dim light  from the
cracks in Corambis' booth, indicating that work was still going on.
     "I was worried we'd be too late," Mija said. "Let's hurry and get
this over with." He produced a pearl from a leather pouch on his belt.
"This is one expensive spell. I hope it works."
     He started walking  down the street, when Alicia  grabbed his arm
and pulled him into the bushes.
     "Wha...?" Mija begun  to say as her hand clamped  over his mouth.
She pointed  in the  direction of  the booth,  not twenty  yards away.
Before it now stood a half dozen armored men.

     Lieutenant Kalen  Darklen looked at the  shimmering light dancing
on  the ground  through a  crack in  the wall.  "This is  strange," he
commented to the guard next to him. "Come along. You four wait here."
     Kalen and his  men started their shift a short  while before, and
as usual, having taken the road from the main gate up Traders' Avenue,
1they were planning  to check out the market place  and proceed down to
the docks.  For the last  few days, due to  unrest in the  local crime
organization and  an outpouring of bloody,  sometimes viciously killed
corpses,  the patrols  were  raised from  three or  four  people to  a
minimum of six.
     Kalen and  his assistant made  their way  to the entrance  of the
booth and knocked.  After a second, louder knock, the  door was opened
by  Corambis. "Yes?"  he looked  at the  Lieutenant of  the Guard.  "I
regret to  say, sir, I  am unable  to make a  casting for you  at this
hour, but if you come back during the day..."
     A smile  spread on  Kalen's face.  "I was  checking to  make sure
everything was all right, sir," he explained. "It's very late."
     "Well, yes,  yes," Corambis  said. "We,"  he gestured  to someone
inside,  "we're working late.  Everything  is  just fine,"  and  began
closing the door.
     "May I offer you an  escort home?" Kalen asked, stopping Corambis
from shutting the  door completely. "I'd prefer not to  have people to
worry about this close to the docks at night."
     "Dyann,"  Corambis called  inside, "this  young man  wants me  to
close up the shop for the night."
     There was a shuffling of  papers before the response. "Let's call
it a night. I was beginning to fall asleep anyway."
     "I'll leave two men to escort  you home," Kalen said. "I am sorry
for the intrusion."

     Off in the bushes Mija released an aggravated growl. "Damn them!"
     "Be glad  we came  late," Alicia whispered.  "We could  have been
caught." As Mija got up to return to  their inn, she let out a sigh of
relief -- there would be no blood spilled tonight.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                           Sons of Gateway
                            Part 3: Death
                       by Jon "Grimjack" Evans
                      (b.c.k.a. v047kfz7@ubvms)

     The summer sun  shone brightly on the clearing in  the woods. The
four  huts of  the Nar-Enthruen,  Qord's, Ne'on's,  Jordan's, and  the
horses' stable,  radiated the green  of summer grass. Qord  smiled. He
always enjoyed the sight of  new-weaved roofs in the summer. "Jordan's
been keeping up with the chores," he said.
     "So I  see," said Ne'on, frowning  while he shaded his  eyes from
the sun. "I suppose it's time we returned to ours."

     Much happened  in the following  months. Ne'on's power  and skill
grew as  the voice held more  and more sway  over him. It grew  to the
point where Ne'on  almost could not distinguish his  own thoughts from
those of, he believed, his darker side.

     In Yuli, "Ne'on" decided poison was the best way to kill Kald. He
chose oberum  for its quick, yet  painful, results. Also, he  found it
amusing to employ a drug of the  same name as the month he intended to
use it.

     Come Sy, Ne'on was tested for  his "Branch". This time, it was an
illusory battle between Qord and himself. The battle raged for an hour
and  Ne'on glimpsed  several  moments when  he  could have  triumphed.
However,  these opportunities  lacked  a certain  something Ne'on  was
looking for, a certain . . . malice. Finally, Ne'on found his victory.
Qord conjured a halberd and flew it  toward Ne'on to put him off guard
for Qord's next attack. Instead  , Ne'on increased the halberd's speed
until it was just upon him.  At the last instant, Ne'on teleported the
polearm from  directly in  front of himself  to directly  behind Qord,
striking   him   brutally   in   the  spine.   Qord   collapsed   into
unconsciousness.

     By  mid-Seber, the  south-western winds  began to  blow, and  the
forest floor  was covered  with leaves, acorns,  and twigs.  Ne'on had
collected the oberum,  but he was unsure of its  exact effects, or the
time required for it  to work. He decided to test it.  Not on Qord, he
rationalized, for Qord  still had much to teach him.  It would have to
be Jordan, and it would have to look natural.
     It was,  and it did.  Late one  night, Ne'on snuck  into Jordan's
room and  "fed" him the  root. For  a few moments,  Jordan experienced
great pain, then shuddered and died. Ne'on thanked the gods Jordan was
mute from his Draining, for no normal human could help but scream from
the pain Jordan had evidently  experienced, then "cleaned up" Jordan's
quarters for Qord  to discover the next morning. It  is truly a crime,
the way people can die of natural causes in the prime of their life...

     At sunrise,  on the twentieth  day of  Ober, in the  one thousand
thirteenth Year  of Baranur, two men  awoke at exactly the  same time.
One was an ambitious young student  of the arts arcane with visions of
power and conquest; the other was  a master of those same arts, having
studied under the single most powerful mage since the Fretheod Empire.
One of them was deeply troubled.
     He had just  had a dream; a very disturbing  dream. An old friend
had been ferociously  murdered by a being of pure  evil. If this dream
was another vision . . .  His countenance changed from one of distress
to one of strict concentration. He must remember the dream.
     Hurling the heavy  blankets aside, he stepped out of  the bed and
1onto the warm, carpeted floor. Sitting with his legs folded under him,
he tried, once more, to recall the dream. Images flickered and flashed
across his mind's eye: scenes of grass huts, fire, and death.
     "Qord," he murmured. "My crystal ball."

     Ne'on awoke quickly, feeling none of the morning drowsiness which
usually accompanied the cold winter's  dawn. Of course, the first snow
had yet  to fall, but  it wouldn't be  long before Lady  Winter solved
that problem. He looked about his meager hut and re-checked, mentally,
everything which was packed. Today he would leave for Gateway.
     Gnawing on a slab of day-old bread, he pulled his robes about him
and  stepped out  to  the well  for some  water.  After quenching  his
thirst,  he filled  the nearest  bucket with  the ice  cold water  and
entered Qord's hut.  'Nothing like a cold  wash to wake you  up in the
morning,' he thought,  and dumped the contents of the  bucket all over
his slumbering instructor.
     "AAAHHHHH!!" Qord's  scream echoed through  the trees as  the old
mage leapt  to his feet,  eyes bulging,  soaked to the  gills. "Hppht!
Wha- What  in Rise'er's Feast was  that for, boy? Do  you realize it's
winter?  Hellfire! I  could catch  my death  of cold!  Fetch me  a dry
blanket before I freeze!"
     "No." Qord's  eyes bulged even farther  out of his head,  if that
was  possible.  With a  thought  and  a  gesture, Ne'on  silenced  the
disbelief of  the old mage.  Surprized by  the audacity of  his pupil,
Qord attempted  to dispell the  bond of  silence only to  find himself
further bound by rings of force emanating from Ne'on's hands.
     "Master,"  Ne'on  sneered,  "I  come  seeking  the  answer  to  a
question. If one wizard defeats  another in mystical battle, the first
is obviously more  powerful than the second, yes?" Ne'on's  face was a
mask of bitterness  and contempt. He had learned all  Qord could teach
him and more, and now it was time to be rid of the eccentric fool.
     At the moment,  Qord could not speak,  but he was not  sure if it
was from Ne'on's spell or his own fright. Before him stood Ne'on, more
powerful, more evil, than Qord  had ever dreamed, hell-bent on causing
some  nastiness to  Qord's being.  In answer  to Ne'on's  question, he
nodded: yes.
     "So  I  supposed.  Which   means,"  continued  Ne'on,  his  chest
beginning to swell with power lust,  "after I slaughter you, I'll have
passed my Leaf!" Ne'on grinned. Red flames licked the edges of Ne'on's
hands as he reached  for Qord. "You're going to be  much more fun than
Jordan. Much more."

     The image  faded with his  disbelief. He slouched; his  lips grew
taught  and his  eyes  closed tight.  A  lone tear  wet  the cheek  of
Marcellon Equiville.

     The hard  ground crunched  under Koros' hooves  as he  bore Ne'on
home. The  farmlands about the keep  were stark and barren,  pale grey
with frosted  flora. The  first snow  had yet to  fall, but  the cool,
crisp air bit harshly with the wind at the river's edge.
     Where the Laraka  turned west from its northward  flow, joined by
its tributary from the mountains to the east, stood Gateway, the stone
manor of the Winstons. For the second  time in only half a year, Ne'on
entered the house of his father. This time, he would not be leaving so
soon.
     "Welcome home, Lord Winston," one  of the guards greeted Ne'on as
he entered  the first gate.  "I'll take your  horse from here,  if you
like."
     "No, I do  not like!" Ne'on's reply caught the  sentry off guard,
and now  he stood there,  unsure of what to  do next. "No  one touches
1this horse besides me. Do you understand? No one."
     "I- I-I-I-I'm sorry, milord," stammered  the shaking guard. "I- I
didn't mean-"
     "Enough! Stop your  quibbling, you over grown  river weasel." The
guard fell silent  and lowered his head, fearful of  his lord's anger;
he had  spent the last several  months working hard trying  to get off
the night shift,  and he wasn't looking forward to  returning to it. A
thought danced across Ne'on's mind.  This time, he spoke gentler, more
aloof. "Actually, there is one thing you could do for me."
     The  guard raised  his head,  eyes wide  and mouth  hanging open.
"Yes, milord. Anything! I-"
     "Do you know where Luke McLeod is stationed, at the moment?"
     "Sergeant McLeod? Yes, milord! He-"
     Again he was  cut off by Ne'on.  "Tell him to gather  his men and
join me  in my study.  I'll expect  him before dinner."  Ne'on spurred
Koros on to the inner keep as the guard raced off with his assignment.

     His grey  stone room was  almost as  large as his  father's; but,
with  much less  trappings, it  looked  more expansive.  A desk,  bed,
closet, and a large  bookcase on the west wall was  all he needed. The
rest of the room was bare, and easily accommodated the twelve men when
they arrived. Luke stood in front, the other eleven behind him.
     Ne'on walked about the men,  inspecting them while he thought. It
was time to be  rid of Luke. Bartholemew was ready  to take his place,
and he served  only Ne'on. He had  his guard; soon, he  would have his
title.
     Ne'on stood face to face with Luke, the men at Luke's back. "Turn
about and look at the men, Luke." As he did so, Ne'on quietly drew his
knife from  its sheath. Speaking  to the group,  "take a good  look at
Luke, men. Do you desire his  position?" Ne'on's hand raised the blade
behind Luke's back, ready to strike. "Now, watch."
     Ne'on's hand fell,  the setting sun glinting red  off steel. Luke
fell in  a pool of  red, struck just above  the neckline of  his chain
armor. Ne'on shut his eyes and  summoned the power within him. A black
cloud emitted from his mouth and nostrils and settled over the corpse.
As it absorbed the  blood and flesh and bone of what  used to be Luke,
it turned from black, to maroon, to  a deep red. Ne'on raised his arms
and the cloud came to him, settling on him, and seeping into his skin.
Then, it was gone.
     "Obey me," spoke Ne'on, his green eyes glinting with malice, "and
you'll not share his fate."

     "My lord!" The page's cry  rang through the empty stone corridor,
easily  reaching  Goren as  he  stepped  out  of his  room.  Sprinting
forward, Thomas reached his lord before Goren finished turning the key
in  the lock.  "Lord Goren,  Lord Keeper  says to  hurry or  you'll be
hunting for  your dinner." Goren  answered the boy's statement  with a
look of  surprise. "My apologies,  my lord.  Such was I  instructed to
tell you."
     Goren  smiled and  looked  down  at the  boy.  Thomas was  Marcus
Ridgewater's son  in every respect.  Only thirteen, he knew  enough to
treat his  elders with  respect without  fearing to  speak on  his own
accord. Nor  did he  count on  his father's  influence to  lighten his
duties; he worked as  hard, if not harder, than the  rest of the young
servants in the keep. Soon, he  would begin training as a guardsman in
hopes of one day assuming  the responsibilities of Castellan, like his
father before him.
     "Hunt for my own dinner? I  hunted for THIS one. Inform my father
my arrival shall be swift. I have only just discovered where the flask
he gave me for my fourteenth birthday was hiding all these months, and
1I intend to drink from it this evening."
     With a quick "Yes, milord.", Thomas was off and running. Down the
hall and  to the right,  through the  iron reinforced doors,  into the
main hall, and narrowly missing Sylvia, the serving woman. He informed
Kald of  Goren's reply, but  was not himself dismissed.  Tonight, Lord
Keeper Winston had a surprise for him.
     "Thomas, my boy,"  Kald began, his huge grin forcing  its way out
from behind  his thick black  beard, "I want you  to sit down  and eat
with us, tonight.  Your father and I have been  talking, and we're not
entirely satisfied with the quality of  the work you've been doing. We
think  you might  be  slacking off,  a  bit -  maybe  relying on  your
father's position to help you through the ranks?"
     Thomas looked  up at  the Keeper of  Gateway in  utter disbelief.
"Oh, no, my lord! I would never- I didn't- what do you mean?"
     This time it was Marcus, Thomas' father, who spoke to Thomas from
his  seat at  the  hall  table. "We  mean,  Thomas,  you haven't  been
accepting enough responsibility around here. Personally, I thought you
should be  sent to  one of the  farms in  the area to  work for  a few
months. That  would teach you  discipline and  build a few  muscles on
those  arms of  yours, as  well! However,  my Lord  Winston has  other
ideas."
     "Aye! I've  always believed  fighting was the  best way  to build
strength, and  there's nothing like a  few years in the  town guard to
build discipline! Seeing as you're  fourteen, now, I can recommend you
for  a position  in the  guard. Starting  tomorrow, you'll  be eating,
sleeping, and training with your sword."
     Thomas had  been very excited  when he  heard he would  begin his
training. Then  it occurred to  him he  wasn't fourteen, and  his tone
changed from  one of excitement  to one of disappointment.  He lowered
his eyes. "But  my lord, - father  - I'm only thirteen!"  A heavy sigh
escaped his chest as he lowered his head. "I can't believe..."
     "Only thirteen!"  Kald's voice  raged through the  hall. "Marcus!
You  said he  was  fourteen! No  one  - absolutely  no  one! -  begins
training as a guard before their  fourteenth birthday! Now what are we
going to do?!"  Kald's smile began to show through  his mock anger; he
quickly pulled his flask to his  mouth to hide his amusement. After he
regained  his composure,  he  looked  squarely at  the  boy. "Ah,  the
trouble you put me  in. Gateway is going to need  more officers in its
town guard, and  I can't wait another year.  Unfortunately, there's no
other boys  good enough  to begin  training, now.  What do  you think,
Marcus? Shall we make an exception?"
     Thomas' eyes pleaded with his  father, but Marcus played his part
better than Kald. "I don't know, Kald... I couldn't be responsible for
the boy,  at his age...  on the other  hand, Gateway does  need him...
well, alright! Just  don't come yelling to me when  he arrests his own
captain!"
     Thomas let  out a shriek of  joy as the two  men laughed. Calling
Sylvia  to them,  they had  a place  set for  Thomas at  Marcus' side.
Marcus sat two  seats to the right  of Kald, and Goren  arrived to sit
between the two. Ne'on sat at Kald's left, lost in his own thoughts.
     As Goren performed the ritual to Osiniana, Thomas looked from his
father, to  Goren, to Kald, and  settled his gaze on  Ne'on. There was
something different about Ne'on; but,  whether it was his longer white
hair or  his wisened  green eyes,  Thomas could  not tell.  His father
called for a toast, then, and everyone reached for their flasks.

     Goren  sat at  the dinner  table and  stared at  the food  on his
plate. It was  good meat, taken off  an eight point buck  he had spent
half of  yesterday tracking.  He hated  to kill  the aelofin,  but his
father had decreed  there would be fresh meat tonight,  so Goren found
1himself trudging  through yesterday morning's  grass with his  bow and
quiver. It wasn't easy. This late in the winter, it was difficult even
to stumble across old tracks, let alone fresh ones. But Goren knew how
and where to look, and it was no accident he spotted the small pack of
wolves following the trail of a  large dinner. The difficult part came
when he had  to convince the wolves  to search for other  prey. He was
not unkind,  however, and had  brought along the carcasses  of several
small animals he  had picked up along the way.  Unfortunately, he soon
discovered the wolves thought him an  easier target than the deer, and
he was  forced to kill  the three of them.  He hoped their  fresh meat
would serve the purpose of some other hungry hunters.
     Looking up from  his plate, he watched Sylvia pour  red wine into
his old flask. Nine years he  had drunk from that flask, excluding the
past  few months  where it  lay  hidden beneath...  what? He  couldn't
remember. He had just found it  today, after all these months, and now
he  couldn't  remember. Well,  no  matter.  Tonight  was a  night  for
celebration, for his father and for Thomas, if not for his mischievous
brother who sat opposite Goren, lost in his own world.
     Ne'on seemed to  sense Goren's eyes on him and  slowly raised his
own.  There  was  something   different  about  them,  now;  something
fascinating.  Goren  lost his  awareness  of  the people  around  him,
something inside him  screamed but he couldn't hear.  He heard someone
call for  a toast -  was that  Marcus? - but  he didn't move;  he just
looked deeper and deeper into Ne'on's eyes...

     "Welcome, Goren Winston," spoke a deep voice, "I have waited some
small time for this moment."
     Goren blinked  and looked about  himself. He was stunned;  not by
the blank, frozen faces of his father and friends, nor the ghastly red
shade which  flushed his  brother's cheeks, giving  him color  for the
first time  in his  life, but  by his new  environment. The  table was
standing - how? -  on a monstrous slab of black  rock, darker than the
deepest woods, which  floated impossibly on a sea of  flames, the heat
licking at  the edges, crumbling  the stone  away piece by  piece, the
stone somehow reconstructing itself where the flames retreated.
     "What the- where?"
     "Home, my  lord," the voice sneered,  and Goren saw that  it came
from Ne'on. "This is Cintralu. Or rather,  it was, until I was born. I
have brought you  here to show you  the fate of your  world because it
please me to do so. It pleases  me also to inform you of your father's
impending death."
     A smile broke out on Ne'on's face - it was unlike any human smile
Goren had ever  seen, more as the  smiles of the hungry  wolves he had
slain while tracking the deer. Goren  looked at Kald's frozen form and
studied him,  noting his father's  extended arm, hand  reaching toward
its destiny.
     "Yes, young  fool. You have  seen the way.  I once vowed  to slay
Kald Winston  while you  stood helplessly  by- aargh!"  Ne'on twitched
violently, his head  bowing to the table. Gasps of  breath escaped his
lungs; he looked up at Goren, pitifully.
     "Goren," spoke  Ne'on, his voice  no longer deep  and thunderous,
but painful, faint.  "Goren, you must stop him... stop  me, befo- no."
Again, a  violent jerk racked  Ne'on's body. His jaws  clenched tight,
his teeth  ground. A dribble  of blood  touched the corner  of Ne'on's
mouth; and when he spoke again, it was the first voice which addressed
him.
     "No,  Goren Winston.  I  do  not believe  I  shall  give you  the
opportunity."
     The world  swirled around  him again, his  disorientation lasting
only  long enough  to find  him back  at the  dining hall,  his father
1reaching for the flask. Goren knew what he must do.

     "Wait!" Everyone  stopped reaching  and stared at  Goren, looking
slightly confused and unsure of himself. He was breathing very quickly
and his usually  dark skin had turned pale beneath  his two day beard.
He glanced  around for a moment  to make sure of  his surroundings and
then he spoke,  "Father, I have a  proposition to make -  one only for
our family.  I mean you  no discourtesy,  Castellan, but I  would like
this toast to apply strictly to my family. May I, father?"
     Kald stared  expressionlessly at  Goren. Goren  knew he  need not
make such a scene simply for a common dinner toast, and Kald could not
fathom  the  reason Goren  placed  such  importance on  its  immediate
action.  Indeed,  the  entire  group  viewed  Goren  with  an  air  of
uncertainty. However,  this was  Kald's eldest son,  and heir,  and no
matter how extraordinarily  he behaved, Goren would get  his wish. "If
you wish it, Goren, then do so," he replied.
     Goren  continued, a  weight  visibly lifted  from his  shoulders.
"Thank you,  my lord." Raising  his cup,  he smiled pleasantly  at his
father, then  nervously over  his brother.  "Father, brother,  for the
first  time in  many moons  we are  together, again."  The words  came
sluggishly  from  his  mouth,  stumbling   out  like  a  newborn  pony
attempting  to stand  for  the  first time.  "Let  us remain  together
always, no matter how far apart we  may be." He reached out and traded
cups first with  Kald, then with Ne'on, so that  each might have given
their cups  to the  the person  on their  left. "To  make show  of our
unity, let  us drink from  one another's  cups; I from  Ne'on's, Ne'on
from  father's, and  father from  mine." He  held aloft  his brother's
flask and smiled a sad smile. "To Life!" he cried, and they drank.
     Kald bolted upright  out of his chair, his face  red and bulging.
He grasped desperately  for his throat, seeking to  confine some inner
pain with the strength of  his hands. He stared confusedly, pitifully,
at Goren  and gasped, "Why?" His  breath gone, he collapsed  face down
upon the table; Goren's flask dropped loosely from his hand.
     Goren stood by, shocked with  the others, watching the quick, yet
obviously painful expiration of his father. For a moment no one moved,
then everyone reacted at once.  Sylvia screamed, dropping the tray she
was serving, as Goren, Ne'on, Marcus, and Thomas pushed each other out
of the way to reach Kald. Several  guards burst into the room: ten men
and their captain.
     "Haven't you  done enough already?"  Ne'on, who had  reached Kald
first, shoved Goren  away. "Keep away from  him. I may yet  be able to
save him." As  Ne'on began conjuring a spell, Goren  stood behind him,
stammering.
     "No, don't touch him," Goren cried, lunging forward just as Ne'on
finished. Marcus grabbed Goren, restraining him.
     Ne'on  looked down  with eyes  full  of sadness.  "Too late,"  he
murmured. Looking  up at  Goren, the  true hatred  in his  eyes struck
deep. "Your  poisoned cup killed  him. And your interference  has just
betrayed you, murderer."
     Marcus  released Goren  and  stepped back.  "Thomas,  go to  your
room," he  said, his  voice think  and heavy. "None  of your  lip now,
boy... go."  When Thomas had  left, Marcus stared at  Goren. "Goren...
what reason...?" But  there was no reply, only the  cold, hard face of
the man he had loved for so many years staring back at him.
     Goren  stared at  Ne'on,  still unable  to  believe his  father's
death.  His vision  began to  close in,  to cloud  with water,  but he
refused to  cry. His mind went  numb. He stared at  Ne'on's cold, pale
face,  his triumphant  green eyes,  and never  resisted when  he heard
Ne'on's command:
     "Guards, take him away." Goren didn't even notice the long blonde
1hair of  the captain as they  removed him from the  hall. Ne'on's eyes
stayed with him  all the way to  the cell, and when  he finally spoke,
several hours later, his words were unheard:
     "They're green."

     "My  Lord Keeper  Winston," began  Bartholemew, and  Ne'on smiled
again at the minor pleasure it gave him to hear the phrase. Only three
days had  he been ruling Gateway,  and with protests from  no one. His
brother still  stared at  the four  corners of  his dungeon  cell; and
Marcus, having lost  his oldest, best friend at the  hands of one whom
he considered his  son, stood behind Ne'on simply because  he knew not
what else  to do. It  was bound to  stop sometime, however,  and Ne'on
knew it.
     "My  Lord  Keeper," Bart  repeated,  fully  aware of  his  lord's
ability  to lose  himself  in  thought. This  time,  Ne'on replied  by
raising his head and barely  glancing in Bart's direction. Bartholemew
handed Ne'on a  long dry parchment, rolled up and  sealed with wax. "A
message from Lord Equiville, of Magnus," he informed Ne'on.
     Ne'on took the scroll, unsealed it, and read it. It read thus:

              "My Lord Keeper Winston, of Gateway Keep,
         greetings from Lord Marcellon Equiville. It is with
         heavy heart I must inform you of your son Ne'on's
         treachery - the murder of Qord, Leaf of the
         Nar-Enthruen - and request your immediate assistance in
         confining Ne'on Winston until a trial of his peers can
         be arranged. In light of recent circumstances at court,
         of which no doubt you have become aware, it may be some
         time before the royal duchy can send forth its
         tribunal. It is the will of His Royal Majesty that you
         respond promptly to this request, and fulfill His
         wishes with all your ability.
                         Respectfully,
                               Lord Marcellon Equiville"

     Below his name was the symbol of a cup, horizontally crossed with
a  single line.  It  was identical  to  the seal  which  had held  the
parchment together.
     Ne'on stared  blankly at  the stiff, rolled  sheet in  his hands.
"And who is this lord Equiville? What might he have to do with me?"
     These  were more  personal  thoughts than  questions, but  Marcus
offered up  an answer that  would be sufficient for  public curiosity.
"Marcellon  Equiville  is the  King's  High  Magician, or  Wizard,  or
whatever you  call yourselves. If he's  askin' ya ta come  study under
him, forget it.  You've got responsibilities here."  Marcus folded his
arms under his chest resolutely,  adding, "Squirmin' waste of time, if
ya ask me."
     Ne'on stared  at the wall  with deep concentration. "I  think you
are right, Castellan. Captain Clay, summon the scribe."
     Bart repeated the command to a  younger guard, who then left in a
hurry.
     "I don't see why you just don't write your own reply, Ne'on. Your
mother  taught  you  how  to  read and  write,  didn't  she?"  Marcus'
expression was quizzical, but soon  turned to embarrassment when Ne'on
stared  back at  him, painfully  remembering his  mother's death  in a
boating accident when he was just a few years old.
     "Castellan," Ne'on  replied in  his most  haughty voice,  "need I
remind you to  whom you are speaking?  In this hall, I  am Lord Keeper
Winston; not  your best friend's  son, but  your superior. And  it was
Goren," he  added, "the treacherous  dog who poisoned my  father, your
1aforementioned best friend,  whom my mother taught to  read and write,
not I."
     "Kald's Scribe, my lord." The  guard's voice rang out. The scribe
stumbled forward,  quills, inks,  waxes, parchments, and  scroll cases
filling his arms, and bowed before  Ne'on. When Ne'on nodded his head,
the scribe stood and took a seat next to Ne'on.
     Ne'on  studied  the  scribe  carefully, as  he  did  all  people.
"'Kald's  Scribe?'" The  small, thin  man nodded  his agreement.  "Why
hasn't  your name  been changed?  Captain,  why hasn't  his name  been
changed?"  Bartholemew  merely  shrugged  his  shoulders,  and  Marcus
answered Ne'on's question.
     "My lord,"  Marcus struggled  with the  phrase. "his  title shall
always be 'Kald's  Scribe.' Your father decreed it so  when he founded
Gateway.  All  the best  scribes  who  live  in  our domain  shall  be
addressed  so  for  years  to  come, as  will  Kald's  Healer,  Kald's
Blacksmith, Kald's-"
     "Enough, Castellan."  I believe I understand."  Ne'on looked hard
at the scribe. "Your first duty then, after I compose my reply to this
Equiville person,  shall be to  formally rename each of  the employees
who's  title begins  with  'Kald's-'. I  wish them  to  be named  'The
Ruler's... whatever.'" Ne'on  looked through the scribe  for a moment,
then continued. "As  far as that letter is concerned,  take this down.
'My Lord  Equiville, of Magnus,  Lord Keeper Winston  sends greetings.
Thank you for your message. We are already aware of the situation, and
Kald's son is now sitting in  our deepest dungeon, preventing him from
harming anyone  further.'" At this,  Marcus turned away. He  still had
great trouble  believing Goren  was guilty, but  there was  only proof
against him.  "'Unfortunately, my father was  murdered brutally before
we could stop him. Please notify  milord Cameron Winston, my uncle, of
Kald's death.  His ashes have been  scattered to the wind,  as per his
request. Sincerely, Lord Keeper Winston.'"
     Marcus  excused himself  and  left the  room,  leaving Ne'on  and
Bartholemew laughing to themselves. The scribe, once finished, excused
himself to send out the message.  Ne'on's smile grew broader, his eyes
a little greener.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                      When the War-God Weeps
                       by M. Wendy Hennequin
             

                            Prologue

     "Where's the  Duke?" Myrande demanded,  her face ashen.  The blue
ball room of Dargon Keep was in chaos; the body of Roisart Connall lay
in state  across the  room, where dancers  would have  rather stepped.
Next to  Roisart's corpse  was a  golden box  inlaid with  jewels. The
Countess  of Connall  felt tears  on  her cheeks.  That box  contained
Luthias' head.
     Myrande was tired; she had ridden  in haste from Connall when she
heard the news that the twin lords of Connall had been murdered at the
Melrin  Ball. She  would  see Roisart  and  Luthias--oh, God,  Luthias
dead!--buried this before the next sunset.
     "Here, Sable,"  said Clifton, Duke  of Dargon. He reached  out to
hold her.  His wife,  Lauren, stood  by his  side. She  put a  hand on
Myrande's shoulder in an effort to comfort her.
     "How did it happen?" she  asked incoherently, clinging to Clifton
as if he were her only link to life.
     "I don't know. When we looked, Luthias' head was cut clean off."
     "Myrande, quickly!"  the Countess  of Connall heard  someone call
her.  Suddenly,  it  became  Marcellon's voice.  "Your  husband  still
lives!"
     Myrande hastily severed Clifton's  embrace and followed the voice
of the High Mage, Marcellon.
     She found herself in a white-washed  room. She was seated next to
a  large, four-poster  bed. Sir  Edward, the  Knight Commander  of the
Royal Armies, stood at the foot of the bed, looking gravely concerned.
The shocked Duke  of Pyridain, whom she  had met once or  twice at the
war council, stood across from her.
     In her  bed lay her  husband, as she  had never before  seen him:
haggard, bearded,  and pale  as death. But  he was  breathing, shallow
noisy breaths. He was breathing!
     "But  the Count  of Connall--"  the Duke  of Pyridain  began, his
voice incredulous at the miricle.
     "Is he  going to be all  right, Marcellon?" she heard  Sir Edward
say, as if he  were quite a distance from her and as  if he had spoken
underwater. "Will he live?"
     Myrande awoke.  She stared into the  darkness of the room  in her
townhouse in Magnus where she had been sleeping, then abruptly sobbed.
Her husband, she knew, was dead, and the only chance of her seeing him
alive again was in her dreams.

     I  spread the  maps before  the Duke  of Pyridain  and Marcellon.
"These are the fortifications, your excellency," the Duke explained to
me, pointing. "Beyond them are farms, a few villages."
     "They'll be in danger once Beinison invades," Marcellon murmered,
running his finger  along the lines of the  fortifications. "We should
do something about that."
     "I have some  of my men out training the  militia," I assured the
High Mage. "I've  set every blacksmith for miles to  making swords and
armor. We'll see  if we can't get some better  defenses, however. This
Duchy will be the first attacked."
     "Indeed, your excellency," Pyridain agreed sadly. I felt for him,
that  his home  would be  the  first place  ravaged by  this war.  No,
second: Connall was the first,  losing father and sons, making orphans
and widows before the war even  started. "My castle shall of course be
difficult to take, but the countryside..."
1     "I shall  do all I can,"  I promised. "The army  under my command
here  should suffice  until spring.  We don't  expect an  attack until
then."
     Marcellon laughed  at me, the wisdom  of a teacher in  his tones.
"We did not expect many things  that Beinison has already done. Expect
everything, Edward. It is better to be disappointed than suprised."
     "As you  say, old man,"  I replied, and Marcellon  laughed again.
Although old  enough to have  been my  father, the High  Mage appeared
close  to  my  own  age.  "A winter  attack?  It  would  be  extremely
difficult, but it  is possible," I conceded. "I shall  send out scouts
when they arrive next week."
     One of my younger squires burst  into the room without so much as
a knock.  "Courtesy!" I  shouted at  him angrily.  "Knock on  a closed
door, sirrah. Knights do not burst into closed rooms."
     "Your pardon,  Sir Edward," the  boy apologized. "A sick  man has
just arrived at the castle--"
     "In this storm?" I challenged, motioning to a window shaking with
wind and sprayed with driven snow.
     "Aye, Sir Edward. He's very ill,  and we need the High Mage. He's
half-frozen and speaks like a madman."
     "Bring him to  the guest room," Pyridain ordered.  "The High Mage
will see him there."
     "I shall  go fetch my  things," Marcellon promised,  rising. "And
start  water heating.  He'll be  cold," the  Royal Physician  surmised
dryly, listening to the high winds of the blizzard.
     "Who is he?" I  asked my squire as the High  Mage rushed from the
room.
     "I do not know  him, my lord. But even in  his madness, he speaks
as an educated man."
     "Our language?"
     "Yes, my lord."
     "A noble?" Pyridain speculated.
     "He would have to be one of your barons, then," I replied.
     "One of  my barons?" echoed  the Duke.  "In such a  blizzard?" He
looked toward  a window, where snow  whirled as if caught  in some mad
dance. "It would be terrible news, then, to warrant sending a nobleman
out on this day."
     Terrible news,  indeed. I thought  about what Marcellon  had just
said about winter attacks. "We'd best go see him, your grace."
     I followed Pyridain  through the chilly halls of  his castle. The
corridors twisted like heat-crazed snakes; no enemy would find his way
easily in  this keep!  Finally, I caught  sight of  Marcellon slipping
into a room. Pyridain motioned me toward the heavy door.
     I was greeted by a mumbling voice, hauntingly familiar, and I saw
Marcellon slowly set his leather bag  on a bedside table. He looked at
me, and in his eyes was a  rare thing: absolute suprise. The High Mage
glanced at  the servants and  my squires,  who had brought  the water.
"Send them away," he ordered me.
     I am first and most a soldier;  I know a command when I hear one.
Marcellon's voice  had forbidden  arguement or  question. I  jerked my
head toward  the door,  and my squires  bowed and  removed themselves.
After a gesture from Pyridain, the servants did the same.
     "Edward," Marcellon  called me,  his voice odd  as he  sat slowly
next to the patient, "come here and see him."
     The Duke  of Pyridian and  I approached the  bed. At the  foot, I
caught glimpse of the man. He  seemed tall, though it was difficult to
tell with  the blankets, and thin,  although he could have  been quite
muscular  if  he hadn't  been  underweight.  His  face was  gaunt  and
bearded, his skin  grey, and his hair  dark with a hint  of red racing
through it. Abruptly, he opened his eyes and stared, unseeing, at me.
1     I gasped and took  a step backwards. I knew this  man; I knew his
face.  I had  last  seen  it lifeless  and  disembodied. "Luthias?"  I
breathed, staring at  first at the man who would  have been my squire,
then at my friend the High Mage.
     It  was impossible  that he  could be  alive! Impossible  that he
could be alive  like this! But then, the gods  granted miricles, and I
was  glad  to  see  him.  Luthias  was  a  brilliant  fighter--a  good
strategist. When I first saw Luthias, so long ago when I visited Lucan
Shipbrook, I knew Luthias was going  to be invaluable to the army. For
that--and for what he could  have been--I regretted his death--or what
I  thought  was his  death.  But  he was  here,  alive,  and I  needed
brilliant fighters.
     Pyridain  went around  the other  side of  the bed.  "I recognize
him," he muttered  at Marcellon, who was, like me,  gazing at the man.
"Did I meet him at the War Council?"
     "I  believe  you  met  him at  Duke  Dargon's  trail,"  Marcellon
confirmed. "He is the Count of Connall."
     "The Count Connall?" Pyridain denied incredulously. Marcellon was
staring at  young Luthias.  He held up  his hand, as  if to  quiet the
Duke. "But the Count Connall--"
     I knew  what he was thinking;  the Count Connall's head  had been
sent back to the King in a  golden box. I knew, for Marcellon had told
me,  that head  was  false, but  I had  never  suspected that  Luthias
somehow had lived. Still, alive he was, and I needed him. "Is he going
to be all right, Marcellon? Will he live?"
     "Damn it! I cannot reach her!" Marcellon exploded abruptly.
     "Who?" Pyridain demanded.
     "Myrande." At Duke Pyridain's confusion, the High Mage explained,
"The Countess.  She surely  has a  right to know  that her  husband is
still alive."
     "How?" Pyridain made his second demand. "I saw that head."
     "Yes, and I knew it to be a fake," Marcellon revealed to him. The
High Mage reached  out and felt the Count's sweaty  forehead. "This is
Luthias,  the Count  of  Connall, and  he is  alive."  He reached  for
Luthias' thin hand and searched for his pulse. "Quick and thready. Not
good." Marcellon continued  his examination, looked up,  and asked me,
"What's that in the corner?"
     "His  clothes, I  suspect,"  I answered,  looking  myself at  the
haphazard pile that I supposed my squires had created.
     "Search them. Perhaps--" I nodded  and began. "There is no reason
for this,"  Marcellon was muttering.  "He has  no fever. There  are no
chills. He does not have the Plague or the ague or..."
     "Could it be something rare?" the Duke suggested.
     "I have only eliminated the Red Plague," Marcellon told him. Then
suddenly: "Good God!"
     I turned  from the  ragged pile  to look. In  order to  listen to
Luthias' breathing, I suppose, Marcellon  had pulled the blankets from
his chest. A den of serpents,  burn scars, squirmed on Luthias' chest.
I  grimaced, but  shrugged. "If  you  think they  didn't torture  him,
you're an old fool."
     Marcellon  frowned, but  nodded  and  continued his  examination.
"Yes,"  the mage  muttered. "I  should have  known. I  had hoped...but
then, I know that Empire. They are not a gentle people."
     I returned to the clothes, dirty  and frozen with snow. "Look," I
said, holding up the cloak. "It's a Beinison soldier's."
     "He had  to escape somehow," Marcellon  returned briskly, without
pausing in  his examination.  "I do not  like this. It  looks to  be a
reaction, but I can find no reason for it. He isn't injured--"
     A heavy pouch  dropped onto my feet as I  held Luthias' too small
tunic  high. From  it seeped  some  blue powder.  "Marcellon," I  spat
1angrily, "perhaps I have found your  reason." The High Mage whirled; I
lifted the bag. "Could this be ardon?"
     Marcellon ripped the leather pouch from  me and opened it. "It is
ardon!" he cried. "He's withdrawing."
     I  scowled  and marched  toward  the  fireplace. I  hadn't  known
Luthias Connall long, but I thought  I had known him better than that.
Ardon robbed  one of control over  mind and body. Luthias  surely knew
this.  Why a  warrior of  his  calibur and  his sense  of honor  would
indulge in  taking ardon I  didn't know, nor  could I comprehend  if I
knew it. I needed him. And yet he does this!
     I heard Marcellon mutter something, and  my hair stood on end. As
if he had heard my  thoughts--and sometimes, Marcellon could--the High
Mage said,  "Don't hold him  responsible, Edward. Luthias  would never
take ardon of  his own will. And this," he  indicated the bulging bag,
"is magicked.  There is  no way  he can cease  taking this  and live."
Marcellon frowned, but his face  seemed more confused than displeased.
"There is only one  living being besides me who has  the power and the
knowledge to do this."
     "Styles?" Duke Pyridain asked, naming Marcellon's teacher.
     "Styles is long dead," Marcellon corrected. "It was he who taught
me..." The High  Mage sighed heavily. "It was he  who taught my fellow
apprentice, Mon-Taerleor."
     "The Beinisonian High Mage," I accused.
     Marcellon put a little of the  ardon on his finger. "The same. My
friend, Alexander Mon-Taerleor." Gently, he put his finger in Luthias'
mouth. "Easy," he soothed the Count quietly. "Easy. You will live."
     The Duke of Pyridian was shaking  his head. "What is happening to
our  young men?"  he asked  sorrowfully. "First,  my son  and Princess
Lysanda. Now, the young Count."
     I clenched my jaw. I agreed with Marcellon: Luthias Connall would
never take  ardon--magicked ardon at  that!--of his own  volition. But
what had  happened to Cydric Ariosto  was Cydric's--and Lysanda's--own
doing. They did not deserve to be compared.
     Marcellon glanced at  the Duke. "The Count Connall  will need hot
food, broth  if we  have it, and  quickly. Would you  see to  it, your
grace?"  The Duke  looked  confused,  but nodded  and  left the  room.
Marcellon  watched the  Duke leave,  then he  answered my  questioning
face. "I do not want strangers here when Luthias awakes."
     "There  is nothing  we can  do to  free Luthias  from the  ardon?
Marcellon," I coaxed,  squatting next to him, "I need  him. I need him
to be a Knight. The war--"
     The High Mage looked at me sadly. "Edward, there is nothing."
     I snorted with contempt. "You cannot make me think that the great
wizard Styles  would teach you how  to make this poison  and not teach
you to cure it!"
     "That  is exactly  what he  did," Marcellon  returned curtly.  He
grinned with a trace of bitterness. "I suspect he was keeping the cure
to himself, in case he ever needed to use it on me or Mon-Taerleor."
     "There must be a way."
     "If there is, I do not know it."
     The bed  shook as Luthias  coughed. I stood. Marcellon  turned to
his patient. The Count Connall slowly  opened his eyes and stared into
the face of  the High Mage. "Marcellon?" I knew  that Marcellon smiled
at  him, although  I  couldn't  see it.  Luthias  looked  at me.  "Sir
Edward."
     "I am here," I replied, although that much was obvious.
     "Where are we?  Magnus?" the Count Connall  asked weakly, closing
his eyes.
     "No, Pyridain," I told him. "You are in the Duke's castle."
     "Thank God," he groaned. "I'd die if Sable saw me like this, with
1the--" He  abruptly turned to Marcellon,  and his eyes were  angry and
accusing. "You gave it to me, didn't you!" he screamed. "You bastard!"
And the young Count began coughing again.
     "I saved your life," Marcellon snapped.
     "I would be better off dead!"
     "Don't say that!" I admonished him quickly. "Never say that."
     "It's true," Luthias argued bitterly. "Do you know what they have
done to me? Do you know what I have done? Do you know what they did to
me in Beinison?"
     "That's a  good place to  begin," placid Marcellon tried  to calm
him. "Tell us. What happened when you arrived in Cabildo?"
     "They threw me into prison. They took Sable's portrait."
     Marcellon shot a  concerned glance at me. I had  an awful feeling
in the pit of my stomach. A man with the power of Mon- Taerleor, a man
who would  torture another  with a  magicked drug,  in possesion  of a
portrait of Lady Myrande?
     Marcellon composed his face instantly  and quipped, "What a novel
way to receive an ambassador. How long did they torture you?"
     Luthias looked away. "You're so certain they did?"
     "I saw the scars," Marcellon answered, his voice level. "How long
did they torture you before giving you the ardon?"
     "Ardon?" Luthias asked mildly, looking  the High Mage in the eye.
"So that's  what it is. I  had wondered." The Count  of Connall sighed
deeply. "They tortured me a few  weeks, perhaps...I'm not sure. I lost
the time in the prison." A shadow  filled his eyes. "And then they put
the blue  spice in my food.  It drove me mad,  and I knew I  would die
without it."
     "Unfortunate," Marcellon muttered.
     Luthias  looked sad  and  scared and  stunned,  then he  abruptly
stared at me. "Sir Edward,"  he began urgently, "They were questioning
me about  the fortifications  along the Laraka  River. I  didn't break
under  the torture.  Of that  I can  give you  my word.  But the  blue
spice--the ardon--I was going mad--I  don't remember what I told them,
whether it was  fact or fiction, but  I told them anything  to get the
blue spice."
     The Laraka? Damn! That means--
     And Luthias  finished my thoughts: "They're  probably planning to
come down the river into Magnus."
     "I'll send  Sir Ailean,"  I promised, swallowing.  Beinison would
attack Shark's Cove and send ships  down the Laraka! The High Mage had
been right:  expect the  unexpected. Now  we would  have two  lines to
fight: one in Quinnat, one here in Pyridain.
     Luthias turned his face from me. "I am sorry, Sir Edward."
     "There  was nothing  you could  have done,  Luthias," I  tried to
comfort him. Something in his eyes made me think that nothing, no one,
could console the young Count.
     "I  don't know  how  I  managed to  get  out  of there,"  Luthias
continued, shaking his head. "I don't  remember very much at all." His
jaw twitched,  and he dully held  out his hands. "There  was a man...I
murdered him...for his gold...and the ardon." He stared blankly at his
hands, hands  that had murdered. "My  wedding ring is gone,"  he noted
without feeling. "I wonder what happened."
     "Luthias," I choked.  This man was to have been  a Knight! In its
truest sense, Luthias Connall would have  been a Knight. And now this!
Marcellon closed his eyes.
     "And there was  a woman, later," the Count  of Connall continued.
"I don't  remember her name, nor  her face. But if  I didn't--she kept
the ardon away until I did, until I couldn't help it."
     The High Mage's eyes snapped  opened angrily. "There's a name for
that, you know," he snarled, fury in his voice.
1     Luthias didn't  face him.  "I know:  adultery," he  supplied, his
voice hollow and devoid of interest.
     "No," Marcellon corrected crisply, "I'd call it rape."
     The young,  sick Count  looked at  the wizard  with shock  in his
eyes, and then  he continued. "I don't remember what  happened after I
managed to leave her." Connall sighed. "I remember running."
     "You're safe  now," I assured  him, taking a step  closer. "We'll
take you back to the King, back to Myrande--"
     "What? Sable?  No!" he cried out.  "Go back to her?  Go back?" He
stared at me, bewildered and pained. "My God, Edward! I've betrayed my
country,  betrayed my  wife--Oh,  God--oh, God--  why  didn't I  die?"
Luthias screamed finally, burying his head in his hands. "Why didn't I
die?"
     I could stay  no longer. I am  a warrior, bred and  raised, and I
have seen death more  times than I can remember. I  know death; I have
watched my  friends butchered  and bleeding in  battle, and  when they
finally expired,  there has been  rejoicing in the heavens  to receive
their valiant spirits.
     But  when a  man  such as  Luthias,  a man  young  and brave  and
honorable, is trapped in a living death such as this, even the war-god
would weep.

                          Epilogue

     Marcellon watched Sir  Edward quietly leave, then  he reached out
to young  Connall. "Easy," whispered  the High  Mage. "All is  not yet
lost."
     Luthias slowly lifted his head.  He coldly demanded, "How can you
say that?"
     "I can enchant the ardon. I can keep you alive."
     Luthias leaned back on the bed. "I need it, then, to stay alive?"
Marcellon looked  at the  bare white  wall. "That woman  told me  if I
stopped  taking the  blue spice  I  would die.  I hoped  that she  was
lying."
     It was several moments before the  High Mage returned his gaze to
Luthias. "She spoke truth," Marcellon admitted heavily.
     "There is no cure?" Luthias asked.
     "None that I know. But I will search for one."
     Luthias  sighed once,  then looked  in the  wizard's eyes.  "Then
promise me something, Marcellon."
     "What do you want?" the physician inquired compassionately.
     The young  Count took a  deep breath.  "If after a  fortnight you
cannot find a cure for me,  I want..." Luthias closed his eyes, unable
to face the High Mage, and took a  deep breath. "I want you to give me
poison."
     "Poison?"  Marcellon  leapt  from  the bed.  "You  wish  to  kill
yourself? What about the war? What about Myrande?"
     "How can I  face Sable after what I've  done?" Luthias countered.
"How could  I ever face  the King? God only  knows what I've  told the
Beinisonians! No, Marcellon,  I'd rather die than live  like this. And
Sable deserves  much better than  me." Luthias stared into  space. "If
you only knew  what it was like,  Marcellon, to be like  this. I don't
know when my mind will leave me,  when I'll do something I would never
even  consider doing  when  I'm sane.  I'll murder...I'll..."  Connall
faced the High Mage. "I'm not...I'll  never be a Knight now. How could
Sir Edward ever knight me? How can  I be a decent husband for Sable? I
can't even control myself anymore, Marcellon."
     The High Mage took a deep breath and exhaled it through his nose.
"All right," he conceded. "I do not believe in keeping people in pain.
No more can I let you live in hell."
1     "A fortnight, then."
     "A fortnight," Marcellon confirmed.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
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1------------------------------------------------------------------------
   (C)   Copyright    February,   1990,   DargonZine,    Editor   Dafydd
. All rights revert to the authors. These stories may
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the author involved.






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  D     D A  A R  R G    O  O N N N     Z   I N N N E     || Volume 3
-=========================================================+|)
  D    D  AAAA RRR  G GG O  O N N N   Z     I N N N E     ||  Issue 4
  DDDDD   A  A R  R GGGG OOOO N  NN  ZZZZZZ I N  NN EEEE  ||
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--   DargonZine Volume 3, Issue 4        03/09/90          Cir 966    --
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--                            Contents                                --
------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Materia Medica II           Max Khaytsus           Yuli 19-21, 1013
 Some Snatch of Honor        M. Wendy Hennequin     13 Janis, 1014
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                              Materia Medica
                                 Part 2
                            by Max Khaytsus
             

     Kera rolled  out of bed  with a long  yawn and looked  around the
room.  Rien  sat at  the  small  table  by  the window,  reading  `The
Realities of Myths'.
     "It's about time," he looked over. "It's almost noon."
     "Being jailed isn't  as harsh a reality when  I'm sleeping," Kera
said. She walked over  to the table and sat down  on the second chair.
"How many times have you read that book now?"
     "Thrice," Rien said. "And I learned something new every time."
     "Doesn't look like any of it is of much use to us."
     "It's not,"  Rien said.  "Most of it  is disputed  facts disputed
once again."
     "We've been  locked up  in this  inn for two  days now.  Let's do
something."
     "It's dangerous out there."
     "I know," Kera said, "but I can't  take much more of this. I need
to see different walls."
     "All right," Rien said after a  moment of thought. He wasn't used
to this much  indoor living either. "I'll make you  a deal. Instead of
eating here we'll go outside of Dargon, hunt and eat there."
     Kera's eyes brightened. "Let's go!"
     "Get  dressed," Rien  stopped her.  "I  don't think  we need  the
attention."
     "I was going to anyway!" she stuck her tongue out at him.

     "There's a rabbit," Kera pointed to a patch of dark grass off the
path.
     Rien turned  his horse to look.  "Yes, it is," he  said, spotting
the rabbit.
     "Aren't you going to shoot it?" Kera asked.
     "No. I got you a bow so you could do it."
     "Rien!"
     "It was your  idea to become my apprentice. How  do you expect me
to teach you if you don't do anything?"
     Kera pulled out her bow, strung it and took aim at the rabbit.
     "Loosen up  your arm," Rien  instructed, "and don't pull  back so
far. It's only a rabbit. It won't take much to kill it."
     Kera  loosened   up  and  reaimed.  "It's   moving  around,"  she
complained.
     "Should I ask it to hold still?"
     "Please," Kera said.
     "Just shoot it!"
     The arrow passed well to the left  of the rabbit and stuck in the
ground. The startled animal darted off into the bushes.
     "It was too far anyway," Kera said. "Now what?"
     "You retrieve  the arrow and  either track  your prey or  go find
another."
     "There's a guy at the market who sells rabbits," Kera said.
     "You find it in the forest and you kill it."
     "Can I do it my way?" Kera asked.
     "Go  ahead," Rien  answered, "but  you'll have  to learn  the bow
anyway."
     Kera jumped off  her horse and started examining  the bushes. Ten
minutes later she found what she was looking for and returned to Rien.
"If there's anything there, I'll have it in a minute."
     Rien nodded  in anticipation  and loaded  his crossbow.  "Just in
1case," he smiled.
     Kera got the  flint and steel off her horse,  scooped up some dry
moss and  returned to the bush.  She cut off some  branches for easier
access, spread the  moss at the entrance  to the burrow and  lit it. A
moment later thick smoke descended into the hole.
     "What if there's more than one exit?" Rien asked.
     "Then it will get away. It happens sometimes."
     "Do you know why?"
     Kera shrugged.  "Just the way  it is,  I guess. Some  rabbits are
smarter than others."
     "Rabbits don't dig  their own burrows," Rien said.  "If they find
an abandoned one, they tend to  move in and depending on what creature
built it, there may be multiple exits."
     Kera  brushed the  smoldering  moss aside  and  prepared for  her
catch.  "All I  know is  that  when they  live in  burrows they  leave
scratch marks in the ground, looking for roots."
     "Good method," Rien said.
     Kera proceeded  to kneel by the  hole a while longer  and finally
swung her dagger, then triumphantly produced a rabbit.
     "Very nice," Rien approved.
     Kera  was about  to pick  up her  dagger as  a second  grey shape
appeared at the  opening and darted for freedom. She  lunged after it,
falling across  the first  rabbit, but  managed to grab  a leg  of the
escaping animal. A high pitched squeak indicated the catch.
     "Two," Kera stood up, holding a  rabbit by its ears in each hand.
"You can cook them."
     "I am  sure I  can, but  I prefer  mine raw  and yours  might get
burned in the fire."
     "That's not fair."
     "Is it  fair to  ask my  apprentice to  prepare the  catch?" Rien
asked.
     "I don't  think I want  to answer  that question," Kera  said. "I
suppose I'll do it. Are you sure you want yours raw?"
     "I'll take it cooked this time," Rien said.
     Kera placed her catch on the ground and started laying a fire pit
when Rien suddenly jerked his horse to the side and fired his crossbow
into a tree.
     A small black creature fell to the ground.
     Drawing his long knife and dismounting, Rien approached with Kera
behind him. On  the ground lay what  appeared to be a  cross between a
bat and a man, no more than four inches tall. A large round hole gaped
in its wing and part of its side was torn open.
     "I thought  I saw something like  this yesterday at the  inn," he
said, scooping up the creature.
     "Is it dead?" Kera asked.
     "I imagine  so," Rien said. "See  why so much force  shouldn't be
used?"
     Kera nodded. "What is it?"
     "I don't  know. An  enchanted creature,  I'd imagine."  He pulled
open a small  pouch he got off  the horse and placed  the body inside,
securely  drawing the  strings closed.  "Go make  lunch," he  reminded
Kera.
     She looked back at the two rabbits by the fire. "I'm not sure I'm
all that hungry any more..."

     "What happened?" Tsazia demanded of Mija.
     "The imp was killed," he said in a low voice.
     "How?"
     "The elf," he feared to raise his eyes. "The elf shot it."
     The old witch calmly turned to leave. "Get the book back tonight.
1I will personally see to the elf tomorrow."
                             *     *     *
     Rien knocked  on the  door frame  to Corambis'  shop and  a young
dark-haired girl  hurried to  meet him. "Master  Corambis will  not be
doing readings today," she said.
     "I  was  told I  might  find  Dyann  Taishent here  today,"  Rien
explained.
     "I'm  sorry,  sir,  but  I  was  told  to  permit  absolutely  no
disturbances."  She stepped  directly in  front of  Rien to  block his
path.
     "I got  the horses secured!"  Kera's voice sounded outside  and a
moment later she appeared behind Rien, wrapped in a cloak.
     "Kera?" the brown haired girl asked, trying to look around Rien.
     "Hi Thuna!" Kera  answered and Rien used the  distraction to step
aside. The two  girls embraced as long lost friends  and Rien used the
opportunity to sneak in through the second door.
     "What  happened to  you?"  Thuna asked  Kera.  "The whole  town's
looking for  you! Liriss'  guards stopped  by to  ask about  you three
times already!  If Corambis knew, he'd  throw me out on  my rump!" She
turned to look around the room. "Where'd that man go?"
     "He's inside," Kera said. "He needs to talk to Taishent badly."
     "Who is he?" Thuna asked.
     "My lord and master," Kera said sarcastically, because he did not
seem to be that  at all times. "I got caught stealing  from him and he
made me his apprentice instead of turning me in." That was pretty much
the whole story.
     "Are you  saying you got  lucky or it  would have been  better in
jail?"
     Kera smiled. "He's not all bad.  A little demanding at times, but
has a better heart than Liriss."
     "Did you know Liriss hired some guy to kill you?" Thuna asked.
     "I heard," Kera admitted. "Hopefully we'll be leaving town soon."
     "What are they doing in there anyway?" Thuna asked. "Corambis and
Taishent have been working on something for three days solid now."
     "Rien, the guy I'm apprenticed to, hired them to translate an old
book," Kera  said. "I'm not too  clear on it. It's  some magical work.
What about you? How did you come around to work for this old geezer?"
     "He saved  my life  last year,"  Thuna said.  "I was  working the
corner of Thockmarr Street and  Red Avenue, near the marketplace, when
this really  disgusting geeb comes  up to me  wanting to roll.  I said
fine, but then he wanted me  to do some completely sickening things to
him, so I told  him to scrazz off, but he got mad  and pulled a blade.
He would've cut me bad if Corambis hadn't come by and torched him off.
After the man  scrazzed, Corambis didn't want to just  leave me on the
streets, so he offered  to hire me as his assistant --  and here I am.
He also got me  a job at Belisandra's in exchange  for room and board.
It's really not all  bad working here; the pay is  good, even if there
is less excitement."

     "Thuna!" Corambis looked up as Rien shut the door behind himself.
"Can I help you, sir?"
     Taishent looked up as well. "Why  do you make my life miserable?"
he complained.
     "Good afternoon,  gentlemen," Rien answered,  ignoring Taishent's
remark. "I apologize for the intrusion, but I need a consultation with
you. I am  under the impression that this creature  has been following
me around..."  and with  those words,  he dumped  the contents  of the
leather pouch onto the Wheel of Life.
     The two old men stood up to look at the dead form on the table.
     "Defenately a conjured thing," Taishent said.
1     "Probably someone's familiar," Corambis added.
     They broke into an exchange of  magical jargon which Rien did not
fully comprehend, then turned to face him. "It probably belongs to one
of the witches in Maari's coven," Taishent said.
     "Could it be Maari's?" Rien asked.
     "No,  no,"  Corambis  said.  "Familiars  are  released  upon  the
conjurer's death. If it was actively watching you, it still belongs to
someone."
     "That means  the witches want the  book," Rien said. It  was half
statement and half question.
     "Probably," the two men answered in tandem.
     "Then I  feel I  should offer my  services for  your protection,"
Rien said.
     "Most  defenately  not!"  Taishent  exclaimed.  "You're  far  too
dangerous to have around!"
     It was  an insult, but  it was also  true. Trouble found  Rien at
least as often  as he found it.  He thought for a  moment, then placed
two  gold  coins  on  the  table.  "I want  you  to  hire  guards  for
protection. Your success is very important to me. Good day."
     The last was said very dryly and  he left the room before the men
could respond.
     "Kera," he called out. "Let's go."

     Kera sat  up on  the bed  with a  loud scream.  Next to  her Rien
stirred at the noise.
     "What?"
     Kera sat with her hands covering  her face, shaking and when Rien
touched her, he realized she was in cold sweat.
     "What is it?" he asked again.
     "I can see,"  Kera whispered. "Everything is red or  black, but I
can see." She broke into quiet sobbing.
     "It's all  right," Rien  said, pulling her  close. "We'll  go see
Taishent in the morning."
     "No...let's go now...please."
     Rien did not move. The development of night vision in Kera was an
indication  that  the  disease  was  steadily  progressing  and  there
wouldn't  be much  time.  There  were maybe  a  few  more weeks  until
physical  transformations would  become  obvious to  observers...maybe
even days. He thought that he himself had little time and a feeling of
helplessness began to set in.
     "Rien?"  Kera tried  to break  his embrace.  "Can you  see me  as
clearly as I see you?"
     He nodded. "I imagine so."
     "And all the furniture in the room?"
     He nodded again.
     "I'm scared," Kera whispered and embraced him.
     "My night vision is natural," Rien  said, knowing all too well it
would  make things  worse. "I  see things  in darker  shades of  their
natural color." He released Kera and got up to light a candle.
     Kera tried to follow him, but when the candle was lit, she gasped
and covered her eyes.
     "I am  sorry," Rien was  startled. "I didn't realize  light would
hurt you." He returned with her to the bed and sat down.
     After a  few seconds  Kera removed  her hands  from her  face and
looked around the room.
     "How does it look?" Rien asked.
     "It's normal," Kera sighed and turned to face him.
     "Your eyes are grey," Rien said, looking her in the face.
     Kera's eyes watered and she placed her head on his shoulder. "I'm
sorry," Rien  stroked her hair,  trying to  stop her sobbing.  After a
1while Kera relaxed.
     "Can we see Taishent tonight?" she asked.
     "Come on," Rien answered, getting up. "Get dressed."

     Taishent grumbled loudly, going to unlock the door. He pulled his
robe tightly  around himself before  pulling open the bolt.  What sane
man would disturb him  at this hour of the night?  To his surprise, he
was  faced with  a  young couple  as  he opened  the  door. His  angry
expression dissolved in confusion.
     "We heard you  have a shadow book in your  possession," the young
man stated, not waiting  for a greeting. "We are ready  to offer you a
high price fo it."
     "Do you  realize what time  of the  night it is?"  Taishent asked
gruffly.
     "Yes, we do, but our business is urgent," Alicia responded.
     A stiletto flashed  in her companion's hand.  "It's urgent enough
that we shall bypass payment," he finished for her.
     "Let's have the book, old man," Alicia said producing a dagger of
her  own. She  didn't intend  to  use it,  but  it would  be good  for
appearances' sake.
     As Mija stepped forward, an arrow hit him in his forearm, pinning
it  to the  door frame.  Taishent  used the  distraction to  disappear
inside. Mija, ignoring  the pain of the puncture, with  his free hand,
pulled out the pearl he intended to  use the night before and flung it
into the darkness of the street. He had no way of knowing the location
the arrow came from, but in this  darkness the archer could not be too
far away. Mija  hoped that between his estimate and  the radius of the
spell's effect the problem would be solved.
     A bright blue  globe quickly filled the middle of  the street and
exploded, filling the air with crackling noise and an overabundance of
light.  In the  flash  both Alicia  and  Mija saw  Rien,  with a  bow,
standing by the  wall of Taishent's house. The power  of the explosion
threw  him  against the  wall,  the  half  readied arrow  flying  off,
harmlessly falling on the ground.
     Alicia, forgetting  that she  did not intend  to kill  anyone ran
down to where  she saw Rien stumble, to challenge  him and perhaps, if
luck would have it, dispatch him before he had a chance to get up.
     Mija attempted to  remove his arm and arrow from  the door frame,
but at that time Taishent stepped  back out, drawing a heavy old sword
from its  sheath, one that he  probably used as a  young man. Expertly
holding the heavy weapon, he warned the young warlock not to stir.
     Alicia, in the meantime, stumbled down the street, realizing that
she had  no way of  identifying her target  in this darkness  and more
importantly, probably would not be able  to kill him if she could find
him, stopped in mid-stride. A noise behind her warned her to turn, but
before she  could, a sword dug  into her side. Alicia  grabbed for the
wall, to prevent  herself from falling, crying out "Wait!"  as she had
no intention to fight, but the  sword struck her a second time, making
her drop her dagger and crumble to the ground.
     Hearing  the  scream,  Mija  again struggled  against  the  arrow
holding him,  but was hit with  the flat of Taishent's  blade. It took
the old wizard  some effort, but he again readied  his weapon and Mija
relaxed. Footsteps could be heard in the alley and a moment later Rien
and Kera  appeared in the light  cast from Taishent's half  open door.
Rien had his bow in hand and  Kera was wiping blood off her sword with
a rag.
     "Murderer!" Mija  lashed out, startling Taishent  and tearing his
arm off the arrow's shaft, as he charged at Kera.
     Rien took the  initiative of Mija's charge  and stepping forward,
reduced the young man to an unconscious heap with two deft swings.
1     "Do you  want to  kill him?"  Kera asked, pausing  in the  act of
putting the rag away.
     "No," Rien said,  stepping over the body.  Kera remained watching
Mija while Rien went up to Taishent.
     "For once  I can't say  I am disappointed  to see you,"  the mage
uttered.
     "What  where  they  after?"  Rien asked  and  then  assuming  the
obvious, quickly added, "the book?"
     Taishent nodded.
     "I asked you to hire protection," Rien said.
     "Yes, yes,"  Taishent answered,  "but what good  is a  mere guard
against magic? You were lucky not to get caught in that explosion."
     "A mere guard is better than nothing," Rien pointed out.
     "It's all beside the point now," Taishent said. "Why are you here
this late?"
     "The disease is progressing. Kera can now see in the dark..."
     "And you?"
     "I haven't noticed any changes..."  Rien said and paused. Perhaps
after all this time the old mage had  a right to know the truth. "I am
half elven," Rien finally decided to go  on. "No one knows how it will
effect me."
     "Elven?" Taishent echoed. "Ljosalfar?"
     Rien nodded.  Very few people  knew there  were two races  in the
species and  even fewer  cared, even  though their  individual members
were very different.
     "Well, your case is certainly a special one," Taishent said, "but
you are still a carrier. Come back tomorrow at sunset. I may have news
for you then."
     Rien nodded a silent thanks and turned to leave.
     "And please  take that  young man to  the guard  house," Taishent
added. "I shall stop by there tomorrow morning and give my report."

     "What could he tell  us tomorrow that he has not  come up with in
the last two months?" Kera asked.
     "I don't know," Rien shrugged. "Apparently he believes he will be
able to help..."
     The pair  were walking  down one  of the  streets of  Dargon, not
bothering  to cover  themselves with  their cloaks.  The darkness  and
absence of people permitted them a certain freedom they hadn't had for
almost a week and even with the  hunting trip the day before, this was
a luxury that forced them to slow their pace a number of times.
     "Let's go  this way,"  Kera pointed  to a  street leading  in the
direction away from the inn.
     Rien stopped, looking down both streets, then nodded and took the
street Kera suggested. Although they were  on their way from the guard
station to the inn,  some freedom and fresh air could  do no more than
good. At  the guard house  the guards  hassled Rien somewhat  over the
unconscious body  he brought in  and asked  to be held  until Taishent
would stop by in the morning, but  just then one of the night patrols,
headed by Lieutenant Darklen, stopped by and after a discussion of the
events of  the night, Darklen took  down Rien's name and  where he was
staying  and said  that  he  would visit  Taishent  personally in  the
morning.
     During all this time Kera nervously  paced up and down the street
a block over, jumping at the slightest noise, fearing to encounter one
of Liriss' men  or a city guard  and for that matter,  anyone else who
might,  by chance  take this  particular street  at this  hour of  the
night.
     After  what seemed  like a  half  night of  pacing, Kera  finally
decided to sit down by the wall  and wait. She knew that Rien would be
1questioned as to what he was doing with an unconscious, injured person
in the middle of  the night and why exactly he  would want his captive
held by the guards, but the amount of time it was taking was beginning
to worry her more and more.
     She  spent her  time sitting  there thinking  about the  girl she
killed. It  struck Kera as  the only  thing to do  at the time  it was
happening, but on  the way to the  guard house Rien asked  her why she
didn't stop when  the girl she was attacking called  out a yield. Kera
explained that  she continued attacking  because her opponent  did not
drop her weapon and backing off could force her to lose the advantage.
Yet, in spite  of this seemingly sound explanation,  Kera now wondered
if there was  something else. At the time of  the attack, Kera thought
she felt  something different.  It was  a feeling  of great  anger and
wanting to see  her opponent crippled on the ground.  She now wondered
if this has some relation to the disease and the change in her vision.
The whole  thought of turning into  a four legged beast  forced her to
break  into sobbing  again. The  development of  night vision  was the
factor that had finally made her realize just how real this was.
     Just then  something unexpectedly took  hold of her  shoulder and
Kera let out a yelp loud enough to have Rien jump back. Kera looked up
and recognizing  her companion smiled  through her tears.  "Sorry. You
startled me."
     "Are you all  right?" Rien bent down in front  of Kera. She tried
to  pull herself  together. "Don't  say `yes',"  Rien added.  "I won't
believe you."
     "I'm scared,"  Kera said. "It's stupid.  I know I won't  die, but
I'm scared. I don't want to go to  the inn. I'm afraid that if I go to
sleep, I'll change..."
     "You  won't," Rien  put his  arm around  her. "Nothing  more will
happen. We'll  go see Taishent tomorrow  and I'm sure he'll  give us a
good lead."
     "You don't believe that any more than I do!" Kera insisted. "He's
a foolish old man. I bet you he hasn't cast anything in years. He even
had to get that old sword to fight with today."
     "Perhaps," Rien said, "but if we  don't have hope, what use is it
for us to fight?"
     "Didn't you tell  me a while back to always  expect the worst and
leave the good things to be pleasant surprises?" Kera asked.
     "Sort of  makes me a  hypocrite, doesn't  it?" Rien asked  with a
smile and  Kera laughed.  "And I'll  do it more  often if  it provokes
reactions like this one."
     He helped her up and they left  in the direction of the inn, both
enjoying the night air.
     "How could Taishent help us?" Kera asked again.
     "I don't  know," Rien said.  "Your guess  is probably as  good as
mine. I've come to learn early  on that those who understand magic are
usually more  able than they  appear and if  a real need  arises, they
will be able to do what needs to be done."
     "You think he was holding out on us?" Kera asked.
     "Could be,"  Rien answered.  "Maybe he  was. He  should certainly
have a reason to be grateful now."
     They turned off the street they had taken at the docks and walked
up onto an empty  pier. Off to the east a red  line was cracking along
the horizon and the couple stood watching it for a few minutes.
     "Come," Rien finally said. "It will be light soon."
     Kera stood frozen for a  moment longer, then reluctantly followed
Rien. "Do we have a few more minutes?" she asked, catching up.
     "Why?" Rien asked.
     "I have something to show you."
     "All right, but let's hurry."
1     Kera led Rien a few blocks  down along the docks, then stopped at
an empty pier. "We need to go down," she said.
     Together  they made  their way  down  a narrow,  creaking set  of
stairs that were in desperate need of repair. It was going to low tide
and the  sand of the beach  was still wet and  swamp-like, making Rien
glad they had not worn their armor.
     Kera guided  him beneath  the pier  to a  spot where  large rocks
could be seen  emerging from the water. Something was  lying on one of
the further  ones, just barely  sticking out above the  lowering water
level.
     Rien and Kera  waded into the cold water until  it reached almost
to their  waists. The  shape on  the rock was  a human  body, securely
chained down and gagged. The man was dead.
     "What a way to die..." Rien sighed. "How did you know he would be
here? Who is he?"
     "I never saw him before," Kera said. "I didn't even know he would
be  here. This  pier belongs  to Liriss.  These are  the blocks.  When
Liriss wants to dispose of someone  slowly, he has them tied down here
at low tide and  a few hours later they're dead.  I just thought you'd
want to see  it. Thuna told me something was  happening and Liriss was
purging his staff. He must be very upset."
     "Thanks for the warning,"  Rien nodded. "It's certainly something
to be aware of. Come, now. We need to get back to the inn."

     Taishent opened the door almost immediately after the first knock
and stepped outside.
     "I found someone  who may be able  to help you and  is willing to
try,"  Taishent said  to  Rien and  Kera. "Corambis  used  to be  King
Haralan's personal astrologer and has worked with Marcellon Equiville,
the High Mage of Baranur..."
     Rien begun to say something, but decided to keep his mouth shut.
     "...we went  to see him today,"  Taishent continued. "Marcellon's
daughter, Lauren,  married the Duke two  weeks ago, you see,  so he is
currently in Dargon. Anyhow, he said he  is willing to see what he can
do."
     Rien  remained speechless  for a  bit longer.  "Where? When?"  he
asked with great anticipation.
     Taishent  could  not help  but  smile  at  the reaction.  "He  is
expecting you tomorrow morning at the  Connall Keep east of here. Take
the River  Road some five leagues  along the Coldwell, then  turn east
for a league or so more. The road will lead you directly there."
     Rien  and  Kera  remained  silent and  Taishent  chuckled  again.
"Marcellon is not only a wizard. He is also a physician and a good one
at that. If anyone can help you, I am sure he can."
     "I'd like to thank you whether  this works out or not," Rien said
finally.
     Taishent nodded. "I expect to be done with the book by the end of
the week. You may pick up the translation then."
     "Hopefully by then I shall not need it..."
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                          Some Snatch of Honor
                         by M. Wendy Hennequin
               

     For a moment, Luthias stared into the cup, wondering if his death
or his  life lurked  within. He  glanced up at  the High  Mage's blank
face,  and without  further hesitation,  Luthias quaffed  the purplish
wine. Then, he and the High Mage waited.
     Luthias had  changed in the  two weeks  since he had  returned to
Baranur. He had  arrived in Pyridain haggard and  ill; Marcellon cured
his winter sickness, and  the good food that the Duke  sent to him had
brought  Luthias near  to  his normal  weight.  Practicing with  heavy
wooden weapons, Luthias  had regained much of his  strength. Two signs
only remained  to mark the  Count's stay  in the Beinison  Empire: the
addiction to ardon, for which Marcellon hopefully had just given him a
curative, and the beard.
     Luthias had not wanted to retain the straggly beard, grown in the
hectic,  half-remembered days  when he  had been  running. Soon  after
Marcellon cured  his winter sickness,  Luthias began to shave  it off,
but  he found  a  long knife  scar, running  along  the jawline,  from
beneath his  left ear to  his chin.  The Count, resigned,  settled for
trimming the  beard neatly, and  later he was  glad; it made  him look
older.
     After a  minute or so, the  Count of Connall wondered,  "How soon
will I be affected, Marcellon?"
     Luthias was  discomforted by the  stare that Marcellon  gave him.
"It should work immediately."
     "Then I'm cured of the ardon  addiction?" Hope began to seep into
Luthias' heart  after a hard fortnight.  The young Count had  found it
hard to  hope when  his body  was irrevocably  addicted to  a magicked
drug.  He would  have  stopped taking  it alone,  he  would have  even
allowed himself  to be restrained,  but the  lack of ardon  would kill
him. Now, at last, he would be free. Marcellon had promised him a cure
or death.
     The  High  Mage  found  it  necessary  to  swallow  twice  before
answering. "You  should be  dead by now,"  he muttered,  shocked. "The
poison was  immediate. I've never known  a case where a  man has drunk
ardonatus and lived!"
     Ardonatus? Now Luthias stared. He  had taken ardonatus, a lethal,
magical concoction  derived from the  same spice that he  was addicted
to,  and he  lived? "Ardonatus?"  the Count  questioned indredulously.
"You're sure?"
     "I'm certain,"  the High Mage  answered, fascinated. "I  made it.
There is can be no doubt. You are immune to ardonatus."
     Fury flooded  the world  of the Count  Connall, and  he, enraged,
hurled the  golden goblet against  the stone wall of  Pyridain Castle.
"Those bastards!" the  young Count screamed. "They've robbed  me of my
life, and now of my death as well!"
     "You're immune  to ardonatus," Marcellon  repeated incredulously.
"You cannot be immune to ardonatus."
     "I'm alive, aren't I?" Luthias yelled irrationally.
     "Perhaps there is  a cure to this," the High  Mage was murmering.
"This should not  be happening. No one is immune  to ardonatus. Let me
have some time..."
     "Time?" Luthias echoed furiously.  "Marcellon, I thought you said
you didn't like your patients to live in Hell!"
     The High  Mage's eyes  focused abruptly.  "I don't,"  he snapped.
"But this is extrodinary, Luthias. If  you are immune--if there are no
effects--how do you feel?" the physician finished unexpectedly.
     The Count  blinked. "I don't  feel any different, if  that's what
1you're asking."
     "Never,"  Marcellon repeated,  "has any  man taken  ardonatus and
lived to speak of it!"
     "Well," Luthias quipped, "there's always a first."
     "This   is  important!"   the  mage   emphasized.  "Immunity   to
ardonatus...incredible!"
     Luthias replied, "This is insane. It's never going to end, is it?
I'm living in Hell and I can't even die!"
     "That's the definition of Hell," Marcellon told him, chuckling.
     "This isn't funny," the Count snapped. "I can't die--"
     "You can die any time you wish," the High Mage's voice dropped to
a deadly,  quiet level  as he  corrected the  young nobleman.  "Take a
sword and  put it through  your heart. But I  won't keep your  death a
secret, not if it comes about in that way."
     "You were willing to poison me," Luthias argued.
     "That was before I thought you had a chance," Marcellon retorted.
"You have one now, perhaps."
     "There's no cure,"  the Count reminded the mage  hotly. "You told
me so yourself."
     "I  told  you  I  did  not know  of  one,"  the  Royal  Physician
corrected. "I  didn't. I  still know  no cure. But  you are  immune to
ardonatus,  Luthias.  That means  something."  The  High Mage's  voice
became  coldly calm.  "Now, you  may take  the cowards'  way and  kill
yourself if you wish, but I am  going back to my laboratories and find
out what  is happening to  you." Luthias' mouth twitched  angrily. "Do
you really want death, Luthias, son?"
     "I want  this to  stop," the  Count spat thickly.  "I want  to be
freed. I won't be a slave, Marcellon! I won't!"
     "Easy," the High Mage counseled. "Let me try."
     "Do I have a choice?" Luthias rued rhetorically.
     "I won't  give you  more poison, if  that's what  you're asking,"
Marcellon decided. "Take a knife to your heart."
     The  young Count  smiled ruefully.  "Sir Edward  has suspected  I
might harm  myself. He hasn't  let me near  any edged weapons  since I
arrived." Luthias came close to laughing. "He won't allow me near high
towers alone, either."
     Marcellon smiled  at the  wisdom of his  colleague. Edward  was a
shrewd man. "Come with me, my boy. Let me see what I can do for this."
The older  man held out  his hand to  the despairing younger  one, who
would have taken it, had his attention not been stolen by the slamming
door.
     The youngest  of Sir Edward's  squires rushed into the  cold room
and slid  to a  stop. "Thanks  be to God  I have  found you!"  the boy
exclaimed  with breathless  drama.  "Please,  your Excellencies,  come
quickly."
     "What's wrong?" Luthias asked sternly, immediately on the alert.
     "Oh, your Excellency, the Beinisonians are in Pyridain!"
     Marcellon's  eyebrows rose  with appreciative  curiosity. Luthias
expelled a  word that the squire  was too young to  hear. Blushing, he
escaped the room with urgency which equaled his entrance.
     "It  seems  we  must  attend  the  Knight  Commander,"  Marcellon
observed mildly.
     Luthias had already left the room. "Come on!" he urged as he sped
toward the Duke  of Pyridain's office, which had been  made into a war
room.
     "What's  happening?"  Connall demanded  as  he  opened the  door.
Marcellon, serene but concerned, stood behind him. "They're here?"
     "Twenty  Beinisonians,"  the   tall  Knight  Commander  supplied.
"Perhaps more. The scout just returned."
     "Through this storm?" asked the mage.
1     "How close?" the warrior inquired.
     Sir  Edward solemnly  shook his  head. "Very  close." The  Knight
Commander  frowned.  "I  was  not prepared  for  this,"  he  admitted,
sitting. "Marcellon, you warned me to expect the unexpected."
     "You  should have  expected it,"  Luthias said  without blame  or
rebuke. "The Beinison  Empire is trained to attack at  any time of the
year; they've staged winter invasions before."
     "Have they?" Edward smiled. "My history is not the finest."
     "When are we repelling them?"
     "As soon as I can assemble the army," Edward answered the younger
warrior. "As soon as possible."
     "That will take a day and a half," Luthias surmised.
     The Knight Commander considered  the problem. Finally, he nodded.
"At least that," he confirmed Luthias' guess. "A day and a half--after
the snow  storm stops and  if the snow  is shallow enough  to mobilize
without blazing trails."
     "Where are they?" young Connall  demanded, pulling the map toward
him. "Show me, Sir Edward." Silently, the Knight Commander indicated a
nearby area. "That's  damn close," the Count concluded.  The young man
gave the  Knight Commander of  the Royal  Armies a serious  look. "You
don't have a day  and a half. After the storm, they'll  be here at the
castle within a half a day."
     "As usual," Sir Edward admitted after a moment's thought, "you're
right, Luthias."
     "Can you  delay them  somehow?" Marcellon suggested.  "If nothing
else, I can--"
     "Not unless it's  absolutely necessary," Sir Edward  cut him off.
"Using magic  is unchivalrous, and I  won't allow you to  do so unless
there is no other solution."
     "In this  case, there is  another way," Luthias assured  the High
Mage. "Send a distraction. Send a single fighter there."
     "It  won't  delay  them  much,   not  one  fighter,"  the  Knight
protested.
     "It  will be  enough," Luthias  argued,  "if the  fighter is  any
good."
     "A squad perhaps--"
     "Perhaps  nothing," the  Count of  Connall interjected.  "One man
will be  enough. You can't  risk an  entire squad, Sir  Edward. You're
here in Pyridain.  You won't receive any  reinforcements until spring.
One man is all you can risk."
     Omninously, the Knight Commander rose to face the younger man. "I
will not order a lone man to  his death, Luthias. And I will not--nay,
cannot--ask any fighter to--"
     "You needn't  ask anyone," Luthias  told him, his stance  and his
voice becoming serious and firm. "I'll go."
     "I won't allow it!" Sir  Edward declared violently. "No, Luthias.
I need you too much."
     "You don't need  me," the Count opposed him. "I'm  an addict, Sir
Edward. I'm of no use to you. Let me go."
     Edward  took  Connall  by  the shoulders.  "You'll  die,"  Edward
predicted, fear in his voice. "I won't be made to tell Lady Sable that
I allowed you--"
     "Don't tell her anything," Luthias  commanded. "Let Sable think I
died quickly  in Beinison. I  will die;  that's fine, Sir  Edward, but
this way, at  least, I'll die with  some snatch of honor,  like a man,
not a beast. Let me go."
     "Let him go," Marcellon pleaded softly. "You cannot win, Edward."
     "The ardon will  have you in fits by the  time you fight," Sothos
made one more effort to deter him.
     "All the better," Luthias, with bitter joy, assured him. "I'll be
1fiercer. Let me go, Edward."
     With regrets, the Knight Commander  agreed, "As soon as the storm
ends."

     Tired by the short ride (how  his father the great horseman would
be ashamed  of him!), Luthias  neared the end  of the woods.  Soon, he
would  reach  his destination  and  fight,  he hoped.  Fight?  Luthias
smiled; it was  almost a joke. How could he  fight, wearing old armor,
and bearing  a battered shield and  bent sword? Knowing that  he would
soon die and that the Beinisonians  would loot his body, Luthias would
accept nothing else. Yet he would fight, and fight his best, before he
died, old armor or no.
     Through the  trunks of the bare  trees, he could see  a farmstead
with a weathered barn and an old  house. Near the barn were at least a
score of horses.  Unless there was some sort of  meeting, this was the
place. These were the men that he would have to delay.
     Luthias was  suprised by  how easily he  could remember  what Sir
Edward had told him about the force. Usually the ardon had him in fits
by now.  Well, maybe Marcellon had  slipped some in his  food, to keep
him going during the past few days.
     "There  will be  about  twenty or  twenty-five  men," the  Knight
Commander  had  told  him.  "They  are led  by  a  personage  of  some
importance; he has an elaborate device on his shield."
     Luthias didn't see  the man or his shield. He  didn't see anyone,
anything, except  the horses. How  odd, the Count of  Connall thought.
They must be hiding. Carefully, Luthias edged his horse forward.
     Like  a strike  of lightning,  a  girl's scream  split the  dawn.
Luthias  reined  the horse,  listened  frantically  as another  scream
issued, then spurred his horse toward the barn.
     With  old grace,  Luthias  leapt  from the  horse,  and with  old
strength, he  threw open the door  to the barn. Oh,  yes, indeed, this
was the place!  Inside, twenty men were abusing a  girl of perhaps ten
years  (an  old  voice  called   within  him,  Sable!),  and  one  was
threatening an older boy with a pitchfork.
     Luthias evaluated  instantly and acted. He  plucked the pitchfork
from the brute  threatening the boy, swung it, and  contacted. The man
fell. Luthias  set the pitchfork  on the  floor, leaned it  toward the
boy, and  let it fall.  The boy  caught it, and  Luthias instinctively
turned his attention toward the screaming girl.
     There was a crash behind him. Although Luthias looked, he had his
sword out and flashing by instinct.  He kicked a man in leather armor,
wounded  another, and  saw a  man in  a blue  tabbard enter  the barn.
Luthias paid him no attention, and continued his defense of the girl.
     "Get back, you  animals!" the man shouted  in strong Beinisonian.
"What sort of men are you,  attacking children? Have you no honor? Get
back!"
     Amazingly, the men went back.
     The armored man turned to him. Luthias could see him clearly now:
he was a dark-haired man, with blue eyes and a moustache, about thirty
years of age. Over his mail, he wore a sky-blue tabbard of silk belted
with leather. On the  belt hung a jeweled sword of  fine quality and a
silver drinking horn. Draped over his shoulders, the man wore a silver
chain, the  universal symbol of  Knighthood, from which hung  a silver
star--the symbol of the Beinisonian order of Knights. "Well done," the
man  began in  Beinisonian. "I  see you  have taken  my lessons--"  He
paused, reached out  and raised Luthias' face shield. "You  are not my
squire," the  Knight concluded. He  peered at Luthias' face.  "Who are
you?" he demanded sternly. "Why are you here?"
     "I  am  not  important,  sir,"  Luthias  answered  carefully  but
respectfully. "The  girl--" Luthias stopped,  kicked the brute  he had
1killed off her, and bent to examine her.
     No! The head  was bent in an impossible direction.  Her legs were
covered with blood. Luthias pounded the floor in frustration.
     "We were too late," concluded the Knight behind him.
     The boy  rushed over, sobbing,  toward the girl.  Luthias reached
out  and closed  her  eyes.  "I'm sorry,  kid,"  Luthias breathed.  "I
tried."
     The  Knight  was boxing  a  man's  ears  as Luthias  stood.  "You
bastards! Can't you barbarians leave even children alone?"
     "We were sent here to get information. The general didn't say--"
     "I command!" the Knight  reminded him harshly, delivering another
blow. "You are under my orders, and while you remain under my command,
you will comport yourselves with some honor. Do you understand?"
     The man looked away sullenly. "Yes, your lordship."
     "Go back  to your business,"  the Knight ordered, then  he turned
back to Luthias. "Now, you, sir, answer my questions. Who are you, and
why are you here?"
     At a  loss for  a moment,  Luthias found  himself staring  at the
man's silver chain. Suddenly, he smiled. "I challenge you, Sir Knight.
I am here to  stop you. You are invading my  homeland. I challenge you
to a duel."
     The  men around  the Knight  laughed wickedly  as the  boy sobbed
behind Luthias. Poor boy. Luthias knew what it was to loose a sibling.
The laughter continued. Luthias stood straight and proud.
     "Let us kill  him, Lordship," the leader of  the rabble chuckled.
"He's only  a boy, little older  than your squire. By  the Masked God,
we'll teach him to interefere with his Imperial Majesty's troops!"
     "Silence!" the Knight commanded angrily. "He has challenged me as
a Knight;  as a Knight,  I alone will  answer. Do not  interefere with
me!" Calmly, the man turned back to Luthias. "To the death?"
     Luthias nodded. "As you wish, sir. I only ask that your men leave
my country, should I win."
     "That is  fair," the Knight  agreed. "I accept. Call  Rience," he
commanded.  One of  the men  ducked  out of  the barn.  "Rience is  my
squire.  He will  ensure that  my word  is kept."  The Knight  stepped
forward and offered Luthias his hand. "It is unchivalrous to fight one
who is unknown. I am Sir Lawrence of the Silver Horn."
     Luthias took his hand and bowed slightly. "I am Luthias Connall."
     "I noticed that you do not wear the badge of Knighthood."
     "I am not yet Knighted," Luthias informed him, "but I give you my
word to behave as one."
     "I will  accept that," Sir  Lawrence said. "Now, sir,  break your
fast with me. I do not fight well on an empty stomach."
     "Thank you,  Sir Lawrence," Luthias replied  graciously, "but no.
You know  as well as  I that eating  right before combat  enhances the
injuries and makes them harder to cure."
     "You are right, Luthias Connall," Lawrence admitted. "Come out to
the yard. If you are agreeable, we shall begin immediately."
     "Very well, sir."  Luthias moved to sheath  his sword. Lawrence's
hand suddenly stopped him.
     "You will fight me with that?" he asked disdainfully.
     Luthias again looked  at the pitiful sword. It  was bent, rusted,
almost dull. "It is what I have, sir."
     "Rience!" Sir  Lawrence bellowed.  A young  man with  dark, curly
hair entered  the barn.  He looked  enough like Sir  Lawrence to  be a
brother. "Fetch my  silver sword." Lawrence smiled at  Connall. "If we
are to fight as equals, you will, at least, have a decent weapon. Come
now, Lord Connall."
     Luthias followed  Sir Lawrence silently  to the field  before the
house.  Rience,  whom  Luthias  supposed was  one  of  Sir  Lawrence's
1brothers, rushed forward with a  well-made sword. With a brief, polite
bow, the boy offered the weapon  to Luthias. Luthias granted the boy a
brief smile and inspected the weapon.
     Warily,  the Count  of Connall  swung  the sword  and tested  its
balance.  It cut  the air  smoothly,  and it  balanced perfectly.  The
sharp, steel  blade, beautiful  in the  cloudly winter  light, gleamed
with care.  The workmanship,  Luthias judged,  was excellent,  and the
taste of  the artisan was  superb, for  the only ornamentation  on the
weapon was delicate etching in the silver hilt.
     "It is a fine weapon," Luthias declared his admiration.
     "I  thank you."  The Beinisonian  Knight paused.  "Are you  ready
then?"
     Luthias  nodded and  pulled down  his  face shield.  "I am,  sir.
Begin."
     With graceful  ferocity, Sir  Lawrence of  the Silver  Horn leapt
toward Luthias,  his long,  jeweled sword flashing  with death.  For a
wild moment, Luthias' mind panicked; it  had been so long since he had
fought against an  actual person of his own  calibur...since Sy, since
he fought Michiya. This time, Luthias thought, he would not be allowed
to win. But despite his doubts,  Sir Lucan's training was still in his
arm  and in  his  heart,  and Luthias,  without  thought, blocked  Sir
Lawrence's blow  and struck  his own.  The Knight  of the  Star jerked
backwards as Luthias' attack struck.
     For a moment,  Sir Lawrence paused, staring at the  drop of blood
on the  muddy, slushy snow.  "First blood  to you, Lord  Connall," the
Knight of the Star  said with surprise. "I had not  expected a man not
yet a Knighted to strike so well."
     "Have at you," Luthias replied, and struck again.
     But Sir  Lawrence knew this  time whom  he was fighting,  and the
jeweled long sword raced to meet  Luthias' wrapped blow. The Knight of
the Star twisted and struck over the old, battered shield.
     Luthias retreated  as his  shield dropped with  the force  of the
blow.  His shoulder,  just at  the joint  of the  arm, stung.  Luthias
spared it a  glance. The plate protecting the  shoulder was shattered,
and his flesh was cut, not deeply.
     "Recover your armor," Sir Lawrence allowed politely, but he stood
ready to fight.
     "I have nothing to repair it with," Luthias confessed. Within his
helm, the Count of Connall smiled. "I simply shall have to prevent you
from hitting me again, Sir Lawrence. Lay on."
     Lawrence raised his  sword to strike. Luthias  readied himself to
block with sword and shield. They moved toward each other--
     A  crashing  sound,  like   wooden  thunder,  shattered  Luthias'
concentration. Instinctively,  he stepped  back, as did  Lawrence. The
dull boom  sounded again, and  Luthias' head jerked toward  the sound.
The boy  from the  barn was  beating the  structure with  a pitchfork.
Luthias  stared  a moment,  then  saw  a man  in  the  loft above  the
sorrowful boy.
     "What in the name of Gow--" Sir Lawrence started.
     And   then   Luthias   understood.   The   man-at-arms   in   the
loft--crossbow--And even as Luthias'  shield was instinctively rising,
he thought, my God, Roi, we'll even die the same way.
     And the bolt  impaled itself in the shield and  halted. Unable to
think, Luthias stared at it.
     "That   dishonorable  whoreson!"   Sir   Lawrence  was   cursing.
"Followers of Amante in my own--" He whirled. "Rience! Bring him here!
By Gow, I'll teach him to interfere with a Knight's combat!"
     "He shot me," Luthias, stunned and staring, stated. "He shot me."
     "Aye, that  son of  Erida," Sir Lawrence  muttered. "Dishonorable
whoreson. Interefering--I apologize, Luthias  Connall. I did not order
1or condone this."
     "He shot me," Luthias said again. They shot Roisart, too. Roisart
died. How did he escape?
     "You are white  as the Moon-Jewel," Sir Lawrence  noted. "Are you
all right?"
     "Fine,"  Luthias  assured  his  opponent quickly.  The  Count  of
Connall shook  his head to  clear it of the  memories. He took  a deep
breath and explained, "My twin  brother was murdered by crossbowmen--"
Anger crept into his voice. "Assasins hired by your Emperor's spies!"
     "I am  vowed to  say nothing against  the Emperor,"  Sir Lawrence
replied, but he was scowling. "Let me say that the Knights of the Star
have no truck with activities of that sort."
     Luthias calmed. "I know." And he did; Luthias was well acquainted
with the honorable reputation of the Knights of the Star.
     Rience, the young  squire, the boy from the barn,  and several of
the men  at arms then  came forward, dragging the  struggling crossbow
man. They  threw him into  the slushy snow in  front of his  lord. The
archer looked at the knight defiantly.
     Sir Lawrence was not a man to be defied, however. "How dare you,"
the Beinisonian Knight  began ominously. "How dare  you interfere with
my combat? This is my fight, mine alone!"
     "The Masked God teaches us to win by any means," the crossbow man
reminded his lord.
     "Fortunately," Sir Lawrence of  the Silver Horn answered loftily,
"I am a follower of Gow."  Without warning, the Knight swung his sword
hand and  hit his man-at-arms with  the hilt of his  weapon. The man's
temple began  to erupt  blood. "Take him  away," Sir  Lawrence ordered
angrily. "I'll deal with him later, and  be warned: the next of you to
try something of this nature shall pay with his life!"
     The Knight of the Star turned back to his enemy. "Remind me never
to cross you," Luthias breathed, but he smiled.
     Sir Lawrence  returned the  gesture and  hefted his  swords. "May
Sanar help you if you do," laughed the Knight. "Lay on."
     Luthias delivered a quick blow  to the head. Sir Lawrence blocked
with speed bordering on panic.  Without pause, Luthias swung his sword
again, this time at the Knight's arm. Sir Lawrence dodged and moved to
strike, but  found himself  blocking Luthias'  next attack  instead, a
blow aimed at the left leg.
     Connall couldn't stop, wouldn't stop. He was in the rhythm again,
the heartbeat  of fighting that  Sir Lucan  and his uncle  Clifton had
instilled in him since he could walk. Luthias was blind to everything,
except the  focus of the battle,  except the rhythm of  the combat. It
had  been so  long since  he  had fought,  since he  had so  naturally
delivered  blow after  blow  after blow,  as if  it  were a  graceful,
well-remembered dance.
     For the first time in months,  Luthias felt good. With energy and
skill, he contined the blows.
     Sir Lawrence was slowing, and it was no wonder; the Knight of the
Star  had had  a longer  ride than  Luthias and  he hadn't  yet eaten.
Lawrence stepped  back and paused  a moment, resting.  Luthias waited,
refusing to fight a tired opponent. When Lawrence nodded, the Count of
Connall  attacked again.  Lawrence blocked  the blow,  but it  was too
strong. The  Knight fell in the  snow, his sword flying  away. Luthias
nodded to the squire Rience, who ran and fetched the blade and brought
it to his master.
     "Are you ready?" Luthias asked courteously.
     "Begin," Sir Lawrence answered.
     Luthias struck  again, furiously, like  the god of  war. Lawrence
parried  brilliantly, but  again,  the blow  was  too strong.  Luthias
quickly followed with a wrap to the head, which rang on Sir Lawrence's
1strong helm, but  did not cut it. Lawrence wavered,  then collapsed to
his knees.
     Luthias quickly held  the sword in front of  Sir Lawrence's eyes.
He could rise  any moment. Sir Lawrence did not  move. Luthias relaxed
slightly. "Do you yield, Sir Lawrence of the Silver Horn?"
     Mutely, Lawrence held out his  sword in defeat. Luthias looked at
the heirloom incredulously. "I will not take your sword, sir. Stand."
     Confused, Sir  Lawrence rose.  "My life is  forfeit to  you, Lord
Connall. That was the term of our combat."
     "I don't want your life," Luthias  told him. "I want your men out
of my country. You promised me that, should I conquer. I have. You are
an honorable man,  and you will keep  your word. I have  what I want."
Luthias smiled and raised his face  shield. "I won't kill an honorable
enemy without need, sir. Return to your home."
     Sir Lawrence of the Silver Horn doffed his helm and stared at the
Count of  Connall. "Whoever your teacher  was, he trained you  well in
the ways of fighting--and in  the Knightly Code." Sir Lawrence offered
Luthias his hand.  "Would to Gow we weren't  enemies, Luthias Connall;
this day, you would have your Knighthood from me."
     Luthias smile  grew, and content  calm flooded his eyes.  "I have
never  been so  honored,  Sir Lawrence,"  he said,  and  he shook  the
Knight's hand.
     "I believe, Sir Lawrence, that I can fufill that office." Luthias
whirled to see Sir Edward and  the High Mage, surrounded by troops, on
the edge of the woods. When  had they arrived? Luthias wondered. Still
suprised, Luthias  watched as  the Knight  Commander, who  had spoken,
dismounted and  approached the Knight and  Luthias. Marcellon followed
him. "Honor given  by an enemy is a high  complement, one that Luthias
has well earned. Count Connall, kneel."
     Confused, Luthias knelt in the snow. Edward unsheathed his sword.
"I, Edward Sothos--"
     Panic struck  Luthias hard when  he realized what Sir  Edward was
intending, and he  instantly reached out and  snatched Edward's wrist.
"Sir Edward,"  he protested desperately,  "you can't! You know  what I
need!" How could the Knight Commander  make a drug addict a Knight? He
would be weak, unpredicatable...
     "You no  longer need  it," the High  Mage announced,  smiling. At
Luthias' confused stare, he explained, "The drink I gave you...I cured
you. By accident, I cured you."
     "I don't believe  it." Luthias scorned the  very idea. Ardonatus,
curing addiction? The Mage was mad.
     "How long since the last time, then?" Marcellon inquired.
     Luthias thought about it. Too long. He released Edward's hand. He
was cured. Good God.  Oh, Sable, I'm going to be  a Knight. I'm coming
home.
     "I, Edward  Sothos," continued  the Knight Commander,  "Knight of
Baranur, have been  called upon to convey upon Luthias  of Connall the
office of Knighthood.  Who asks this charge for  him?" Edward inquired
in  the ritual,  then stopped  uncertainly. It  was tradition  for the
master of the candidate to answer, or the father, or the noble.
     Luthias  saw  Marcellon  open  his mouth,  but  behind  him,  Sir
Lawrence answered, "I so ask."
     "You know him worthy?" Edward continued.
     "I so know."
     "So  be it.  I, Edward  Sothos,  Knight of  Baranur, charge  you,
Luthias of Connall, to take up the office of Knighthood. Do you accept
the charge, with all its honors and obligations?"
     "I so accept,"  Luthias replied, his voice  strong and confident.
He had known the ceremony by heart for years.
     "Do you  vow to protect and  serve your homeland, your  lady, and
1your King?"
     "I  so vow,"  Luthias replied  steadily,  but his  body began  to
shake. He  was tired,  and his  knees were cold  from kneeling  in the
snow.
     "Do you vow to  be in and above all things,  a Knight, a follower
of Chivalry and Honor?"
     "I so vow."
     "How do you so vow?"
     "Upon my honor, my sword, and my life."
     "Then I, Edward Sothos, Knight of Baranur, with this silver chain
do  convey upon  you, Luthias  of  Connall, that  office." Again,  the
Knight Commander paused, for he did  not have the symbol of Knighthood
to give to Luthias. Marcellon smiled, held out his hands, and murmered
something.  A fine  silver chain  appeared on  his wrists.  The Knight
Commander  smiled,  took  it,  and  placed it  on  the  Count's  broad
shoulders. Then Sir Edward lightly struck Luthias' cheek with the flat
of his blade. "Let that be your last unrequited blow." Edward sheathed
his sword. "Rise, Sir Luthias, Count Connall."
     Sir Luthias  did so, laughing.  "I am  proud of you,"  the Knight
Commander said, and that was all.
     The Count  of Connall  turned to  his opponent  and held  out his
hand. "Return now, Sir Lawrence. You will have safe passage out of the
country. You have my word, as a Knight."
     Sir Lawrence of the Silver Horn grinned. "Thank you, Sir Luthias.
May you and I live to laugh about this someday."
     "I'll treat you to a drink," Luthias promised.
     "I  drink to  you  now," Lawrence  announced,  taking his  silver
drinking horn from his  belt. He put it to his  lips, drained it, then
offered  it to  Luthias. The  Count  Connall took  it uncertainly  and
drank. He found the horn full of  sweet, hot liquid that made him feel
better immediately.
     "Thank you," Luthias said, returning the silver horn. He suddenly
remembered  the fine,  etched sword  he had  been allowed  to use.  He
offered it. "Again, thank you."
     Sir Lawrence took it from him, but  did not sheathe it or hand it
to his  squire. "This sword was  given to me  by my master when  I was
made  a Knight,"  he told  Luthias. "Today  I took  the place  of your
master; today you became a Knight."  He held out the sword to Luthias.
"I have had no student more worthy than you."
     "I am deeply honored," Luthias accepted.
     Sir  Lawrence bowed.  "Let us  ride!"  he ordered  his men.  They
grumbled,  but  mounted. Rience  brought  his  master his  steed.  Sir
Lawrence mounted and  rode around his men to organize  them. He paused
when  he faced  the south,  then turned  and drew  his jeweled  sword.
Quickly,  he saluted  Sir Edward  and Sir  Luthias. Both  returned the
salute, and the invaders charged back into Beinison.

     Epilogue

     Luthias watched the Beinisonians leave with satisfaction. "Well,"
he said, "that's settled."
     "Indeed," Sir  Edward answered,  smiling. "Welcome back  to life,
Luthias. Well done."
     "Thank you."
     "No more  talk about  abandoning your  wife," ordered  the Knight
Commander. "No more talk about abandoning the country and the King. We
all need you, as you have so aptly proven."
     "Yes,  Sir   Edward,"  Luthias  agreed,  chuckling   at  Edward's
mock-scolding. "I'm  back to--" Luthias  felt a  tap on his  upper arm
where his armor had shattered. He turned to see the boy from the barn,
1the boy who had warned him about the crossbowman.
     With an earnest look that  Luthias didn't understand, the lad put
his hand  over his heart,  touched his  lips, then extended  the hand.
Confused, Luthias  frowned. The boy  made an abrupt,  frustrated face,
then pointed toward the barn and began  to swing his arms and point to
his legs.
     Luthias  didn't  understand  the   pantomime,  but  the  boy  was
obviously not  playing a game.  Unwilling to hurt the  lad's feelings,
Luthias nodded.
     The boy's expression became anguished.  Once again, he placed his
hands over his heart and then offered them to the Count Connall.
     His voice wry, the High Mage interrupted gently, "He is trying to
thank you, Luthias."
     Luthias sent  the mage an  angry look; it always  annoyed Luthias
that Marcellon  pointed out  mysteries as if  they should  be obvious.
Then the Knight turned to the boy and remembered the ugly scene in the
barn. The boy had a familiar grief in his eyes.
     "You are welcome," Luthias replied to  the gestures as if the lad
had  spoken.  "I am  truly  sorry  about  your sister...she  was  your
sister?" The boy nodded. "Had I  arrived a few moments sooner, I might
have been  able to  save her..."  Luthias looked  down, ashamed  for a
moment, and caught sight of  the ugly crossbow bolt protruding nastily
from his  battered shield.  His heart wrenched.  "But I  couldn't save
Roisart, either."
     The boy withdrew,  as if sensing the Count's sorrow,  but after a
moment, he approached the Knight again. Luthias watched him curiously.
Abruptly, the boy  touched the Count's chain of  Knighthood, then laid
his hand on his own chest where a similar chain might fall.
     For  once,  Luthias  needed  no interpretation,  and  he  smiled.
Turning to Sir Edward, the Count  of Connall wondered, "Since I am now
a Knight, I will have need of a squire, won't I, Sir Edward?"
     "At least one," the Knight Commander confirmed.
     Sir Luthias  returned his attention  to the eager lad.  "Will you
become my squire?" the Count wondered, his eyes certain of the answer.
In reply, the boy nodded violently enough to decapitate himself.
     Marcellon had never seen Edward so suprised. "You can't make this
boy your squire! He isn't of  noble descent; he isn't even close! He's
a farmer's son, Luthias!"
     The  Count of  Connall gave  the Knight  Commander an  astonished
look. "What  difference does that  make?" Sir Luthias argued.  "I know
'noble" sons  who are  dishonorable cowards.  This 'farmer's  son' was
brave enough to try to rescue his sister from twenty armed men--alone!
That in itself  shows this boy's worthiness. Social  class has nothing
to do with it!"
     The Knight Commander frowned  mightily. "I understand your point,
Sir Luthias, but it is still unheard of to make a peasant a Knight. He
will  have to  be Knighted  someday if  you allow  him to  become your
squire."
     "That is the general idea," Marcellon agreed with a dry smile.
     "Look, Sir  Edward, he's  already displayed  knightly qualities,"
Luthias reminded the Knight Commander.  "He tried to rescue and defend
a lady. He faced the danger with bravery." Edward still maintained the
awful frown.  "Look, Sir Edward,  I'd rather  Knight a peasant  with a
noble heart than a coward with a noble name."
     "Again," Sir Edward admitted with resignation, "you have a point.
I'm not certain I  approve, but I can't stop you. To  a degree, I even
agree with you."
     "So," Luthias began,  returning his attention to  the boy, "would
you  like to  squire  to  me?" The  boy  grinned  joyously and  nodded
enthusiastically.  "Good. We'll  have the  ceremony later  this week."
1Count Connall grimaced. "But I  can't keep calling you 'boy,' though."
Not even in my head. "What is your name?"
     With a  sudden feeling  of stupidity, Luthias  winced at  his own
question. The boy  couldn't talk, or else he would  have warned of the
crossbowman verbally. And he probably  couldn't write, either; he was,
after all, a peasant.
     Well, he  would be a gentleman,  a Knight, someday, and  he would
have to be literate. And he would have to have a name.
     The  announcement,  "His  name  is Derrio,"  saved  Luthias  from
further  embarassment. Behind  the  dumb lad  stood  the farmer,  whom
Luthias presumed was the boy's father. "Is it true?" the man asked the
Count and the Knight Commander. "Is there a war coming?"
     "It is already  here," Sir Edward answered with a  grim nod. "The
Beinison men  that were here  were an  advance scouting force  sent to
find the  locations of  our forces.  As it  appears, they  will invade
through this area. Your farm is no longer safe."
     "Let us  leave this place," a  pale woman at his  side suggested.
Tears flooded her eyes. "I no longer have a desire to stay."
     The farmer paused. "Could your armies use another archer, my lord
Knight? I  may not be  as good  as your regulars,  but I have  won the
region's archery contests  for the last two years. My  wife could cook
or care for the wounded."
     Kindly, the Knight Commander smiled. "We can always use archers."
Sir Edward glanced at the woman who lowered her eyes.
     Luthias laughed. "And  a cook, a real cook,  would probably boost
moral more than anything else!"
     With unusual nervousness, Marcellon  glanced over his shoulder at
rising, dark  clouds. "Come.  We should be  getting back  to Pyridain.
Another storm is  coming." The High Mage approached  Derrio slowly and
looked at him oddly. "And I find  myself curious as to why this boy is
unable to talk."
     "Let's go,"  Sir Luthias began,  but his new squire  dashed away.
"What--"
     "Be  patient," Marcellon  advised, mounting  his steed.  "He will
return."
     Luthias shrugged his large shoulders, a feat and a half in rusted
armor. "My horse," he suddenly muttered, and quickly, he recovered the
beast from behind the barn.
     By the time he returned,  Sir Edward and Marcellon had remounted,
and the boy, holding a miniature  harp, had reappeared. The boy looked
around. "Your parents will join us  later," the High Mage assured him,
and Derrio nodded. Marcellon reached out and gently touched the harp's
tiny strings. "A goodly  instrument," Marcellon muttered. "Your sister
would approve."
     Derrio  smiled,   then  proferred  the  intrument   for  Luthias'
approval. Lacking Marcellon's  insight, the Knight could  only nod and
smile. "Is there  anything else you want to  bring?" Derrio considered
briefly, then shook his head. "Let's  go then, squire. We have work to
do."
     The boy  smiled; Luthias swung him  onto the horse; and  with the
Baranurian army, they rode back to Pyridain.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
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1------------------------------------------------------------------------
   (C)   Copyright     March,    1989,   DargonZine,    Editor    Dafydd
. All rights revert to the authors. These stories may
not be reproduced  or redistributed save in the case  of reproducing the
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  D     D A  A R  R G    O  O N N N     Z   I N N N E     || Volume 3
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--   DargonZine Volume 3, Issue 5        03/23/90          Cir 971    --
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--                            Contents                                --
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 Two Bits and a Silver I      Michelle Brothers      Yuli 17, 1013
 Materia Medica III           Max Khaytsus and
                              Michelle Brothers      Yuli 22-23, 1013
 Be Careful What You Wish For Bill Erdley            Janis 13, 1014
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1                        Two Bits and a Silver
                               Part 1
                         by Michelle Brothers
             

     The street-lamp  lighters had just  emerged to begin  doing their
jobs when  Eliowy slipped  out from behind  the glass-blowers  shop on
Atelier Street.  The purse she had  just lifted was heavy  in her hand
but would  just barely cover the  amount she was supposed  to bring in
for the  night. The purse  was heavy not just  from the weight  of the
coins within,  but the  girl had  no time to  address the  feelings of
regret she  had in taking  the coins from  their owner. At  the moment
keeping her  own skin  intact was  of more  importance than  the moral
considerations involved.
     Eliowy hurried down the street as quickly as she could without it
being obvious that  she was in a  hurry. She was supposed  to have her
day's wages, if  they could be called that, in  by sunset, and already
the burnished disk of the summer sun was sinking below the horizon.
     She was running  a little late because she had  been trying, over
the course of the  last few weeks to steal enough  extra money so that
she  could buy  a  horse to  facilitate her  escape  from Dargon  and,
incidentally, Liriss.
     Eliowy picked up  her pace. The memory of her  tall, hulking boss
made her slightly sick.
     The deal that he had offered  her at first hadn't seemed too bad.
He had  set her up  in a boarding house  until, according to  him, she
could get back on her feet. This would have been fine, except that she
hadn't really needed  any help but she wasn't able  to convince him of
that. He  had insisted. Not  seeing any  immediate harm in  it, Eliowy
accepted.
     A few days later, just as she was about to tell Liriss `thank you
very much,  but I have  to be going', the  man had suggested  that she
might like to repay him for his kindness in putting her up for a time.
     Eliowy hadn't been able to refuse.
     It took  her a few weeks  to realize that she  wasn't getting any
closer to paying Liriss off. He still  paid for her room and board and
just a week ago had purchased her a new tunic and cloak for winter.
     Frightened at the implications of this, Eliowy had given him more
money, in hopes  of erasing the debt faster. This  plan backfired when
she was unable  to produce the same amount the  next night. Liriss had
warned her in a  low, cold voice that if she didn't  bring in the full
required donation the next night, he would turn her over to his guards
for a night  to teach her a  lesson. He had added, in  a much gentler,
honey sweet  voice, that there was  no place in Dargon  that she could
hide that he  couldn't find her, so she'd better  not even think about
trying to run out on him.
     Eliowy had left that interview profoundly disturbed. She believed
everything that Liriss told her, less  one. She believed that he could
find her  in Dargon, but doubted  that his reach extened  much further
than that. Besides,  she had out run and out-foxed  Teran for the last
ten months:  Liriss, a  man she  had never seen  to leave  his office,
should be much less of a challenge. The next night she brought him the
exact amount  that she was supposed  to and saved the  difference in a
small ceramic jar to put towards a horse.
     The thought  of her old mentor  made Eliowy walk a  little faster
yet. According to Liriss, he had left Dargon two days after Eliowy had
been taken into the crime lord's `care'. Whether this was true or not,
she didn't  know, but she  did know that  sooner or later  Teran would
make his  way back to  Dargon and  if she was  still here by  then, he
would find her. She had to put as much distance between both Teran and
1Liriss as possible as soon as possible.
     Full night had fallen and the  last of the merchants had left the
market square leaving only the rats  and other night prowlers out when
Eliowy  arrived  at the  building  that  housed Liriss's  office.  The
building was a  three story affair made of wood  and solid red bricks.
Windows were  scattered all about the  face of the building  along the
wall that  had the best view  of the market place.  Liriss, Eliowy had
learned, was a great people watcher.
     The auburn-haired girl shuddered as she climbed the stairs to his
office because lately that watching had included her.
     The door that  let her out onto the third  floor opened on silent
hinges and Eliowy walked the  distance down the hallway slowly. Liriss
was still having  her deliver her daily take to  him directly, instead
of giving  it to one  of his lieutenants as  the other girls  did. She
wasn't quite sure  why, although the intimidation  factor probably had
something to do with it.
     She opened the office door.  Liriss's latest secretary, the third
in the last month, was seated at the small desk set to one side of the
entrace to  the crimelord's inner  sanctum, carefully applying  a pale
green powder to her eyelids. She looked up as Eliowy closed the door.
     "You're late," she observed quietly. "He's waiting for you. Go on
in." And  she turned back  to peering  in the polished  bronze mirror,
wielding her eyebrush with care.
     Eliowy swallowed  and stepped up  to the last door.  She composed
herself, knocked sharply, and entered.
     As usual, Liriss was standing with his back to the door holding a
glass of some  dark liquor, staring out his prized  picture window. He
turned slightly  as Eliowy entered.  She stopped  a few feet  from the
polished oak desk he stood behind, leaving the door open at her back.
     "You," he  said flatly,  returning his gaze  to the  window, "are
late."
     "I  have the  money," responded  Eliowy promptly,  to change  the
topic. She had  gotten a lecture, not too long  ago, about the hazards
of being late  with one's required payment. The  alternatives to being
prompt that Liriss had chosen to mention had not been pleasant. Eliowy
had mentally prepared  her lines of defense for the  next time she was
late, because she knew there would be a next time, and wanted to avoid
the consequences. Dodging the question was the first line.
     "That does not alleviate the fact that you are bring it in late,"
snapped  Liriss, turning  to  face Eliowy  fully,  brown eyes  blazing
angrily.
     "I brought in a little extra," added Eliowy quickly. "I got lucky
today." Second line -- bribery.
     "You  know  the penalty  for  delivering  payments late,"  Liriss
continued,  as though  Eliowy  hadn't spoken.  "You  were warned  once
before--"
     "I had to out run the guard!"
     Last line  of defense.  Lying or  honesty. Whichever  sounded the
best at the time, coupled with prayer. Liriss stopped talking abruptly
and the glare in his eyes  became darker. Eliowy forced herself not to
cringe under his gaze.
     "You  had to  out run  the  guard," he  repeated. With  deceptive
casualness he  set his glass  down on the desk.  "Just how is  it that
you're earning  this money, young  lady, that  you should need  to run
from the guard?"
     Eliowy swallowed hard, not liking the look in the man's eyes.
     "Pickpocketing,"  she  said. "How  else  should  I get  it?"  She
couldn't understand the look of  utter disbelief that covered Liriss's
features.  How else  was she  supposed to  earn the  money he  wanted?
Granted, he could,  like Teran, disapprove of stealing,  but it wasn't
1as though she had many options. No one would hire her for honest labor
and she  really doubted that Liriss  cared that she was  thieving. The
look on his face was one of surprise, not disapproval.
     "Pickpocketing. How  else could  you earn it!"  said Liriss  in a
brittle voice. "Since you don't seem  to know, I think tonight will be
very--"
     "Sir!"
     Liriss turned  with a  black look  to the open  door to  face his
first lieutenant, Kesrin, who held one of his employees by one arm.
     "My  Lord,"  said  Kesrin   with  a  significant  look,  silently
reminding him that he had other business to deal with that evening. He
had been  Liriss's second lieutenant  until the disappearance  of Cril
over two months ago, and was allowed a certain amount of familiarity.
     "Kesrin," Liriss  acknowledged him  with a  sharp nod  and turned
back to the young  woman before his desk. "Eliowy, you  may go. Do not
be late again, or you will be visiting the barracks. Am I clear?"
     "Yes sir!"
     Eliowy didn't  bother to  question her luck.  She ducked  out the
door.

     Liriss took  a deep breath and  forced his temper down.  He could
deal with  the girl and  her education later.  This was just  a little
more important.
     "Come in, Kesrin. Tilden."
     Kesrin closed the door with a brief glance out, and shoved Tilden
into a position before the desk while Liriss seated himself. The crime
lord took a  swallow from his glass, narrowly studying  the man before
him. Tilden stared at the desktop.
     "Rumor has it, Tilden, that you've been complaining about my work
policies," said Liriss  after a suitable interval of  time had passed.
"According to some of  my men, you seem to have  this quaint idea that
you deserve better than you've been getting from me. Is this correct?"
     After being the sole survivor of a party of men sent out to bring
back  Kera, a  thief in  Liriss's employ,  and returning  without her,
Tilden had  been removed from his  cushy position as one  of the crime
boss's scouts  and put to  work as simple  guard, watching one  of his
gambling  establishments. Tilden  was  a little  upset  about his  new
position.
     "I'm the best damn scout you've got, Liriss," said the man hotly,
looking up. "I shouldn't be doing a job that you've got muscle for!"
     "I see,"  said Liriss, sounding  regretful, "I wish that  you had
expressed your displeasure to me earlier, Tilden. Then I wouldn't have
to  deal with  the seeds  of discontent  that you  have sown  among my
troops." Tilden shifted  uncomfortably and Liriss took  another sip of
wine. "Kesrin, take Tilden here to the blocks--"
     "NO!"
     "--I have no use for disloyal and incompetent men in my ranks."
     Tilden lunged  suddenly for  Liriss's throat  but was  caught and
pinioned by Kesrin before his hands  made it halfway across the table.
Carefully, almost gently, Kesrin knocked him out.
     "And when you're done with that, Kesrin," added Liriss. "See what
you can  do about whipping  the men back into  shape. I don't  want to
have to make any more examples of this sort."
     "Of course, Lord Liriss," Kesrin  pulled open the door. "And I'll
send Hollis in to you."
     "You  do that,"  said  Liriss, distractedly.  He  stared out  his
window for a long while before  designing to notice the woman standing
there, crafting plans to tighten his grip on his people to make future
repetitions of the month's incidents unlikely. People failing in their
assigned tasks and having deserters did  not make for a smooth running
1operation. Liriss hated it when things didn't run smoothly.
     With a sharp gesture, he beconed Hollis to his side.

     "Don't do this  to me, Kesrin! Kesrin, you can't  do this. Let me
go!  Please, you  can't just  leave me  here to  die, Kesrin!"  Tilden
struggled futilely against  the chains being locked  around his wrists
and ankles.  His voice  raised to  a paniced  scream. "You  can't just
leave me!"
     "Yes, I  can, Tilden," said  Kesrin calmly.  He stood a  few feet
away, holding a torch, and watching  calmly as the guards manacled the
ex-scout to the granite slab that Liriss used for his executions. "You
were warned. You did not heed that warning."
     "Let me go, Kesrin," repeated  Tilden frantically as the men left
his side.  They walked  quickly away as  the scout  jerked frantically
against the chains. "You hate him as much as I do. Let me go and we'll
kill him together!"
     "No," said Kesrin, just loud enough to be heard over the pounding
of the waves.  "You cannot hate him  as much as I do."  He stared past
the block to  the narrow stairs that the guards  were slowly climbing.
"I  will deal  with my  Lord Liriss.  When the  time comes."  His cool
reguard refocused  on Tilden's  sweaty, spray covered  face. "Goodbye,
Tilden. May you  gain wisdom in your next incarnation."  And he turned
and walked away, feet splashing softly in the rising tide.
     "Kesssrriiinnn....!"

     Two torches were  left burning in salt encrusted  brackets on the
handrail of  the stairs  that led to  Lord Liriss's  private execution
grounds. The  light reflected eerily  off of the slowly  rising water,
turning the sea foam to silver.
     Liriss's lieutenant,  Kesrin, had  been gone  for some  time when
Eliowy made her  way down the slippery stairs. The  water had risen to
almost thigh  level as  she waded  out. As  she splashed  towards him,
Tilden jerked in his bonds.
     "Did you  come back to  gloat, Kesrin?"  he demanded, in  a voice
cracked raw from screaming. "Or is it you, `Great Lord Liriss', to see
if your oh so faithful servant did his job properly!"
     "Neither, actually,"  said Eliowy. "And  if you hold  still, I'll
try and get your wrists free."
     "Rescue! You're here to rescue me!" Tilden's hoarse voice dropped
to a whisper  of desperate hope, unwilling to question  his luck. "Did
you get the keys?"
     "No. I have to pick the lock. Now hold still."
     Tilden held,  while Eliowy  swore softly  to herself.  Before she
left Rubel,  she had been  in the process  of learning to  pick locks,
under  the friendly  tutelage  of  her friends  the  twins, Piper  and
Skeeter. The  two were  first rate cutpurses  who had  developed their
lockpicking skills for those rare times  when one or the other of them
was caught.  They had just started  to teach her the  dubious art when
she left. As a  result, progress was slow. By the  time Eliowy had the
scout's ankles free, the ocean had crept up to her thighs.
     "Hurry," hissed Tilden.
     "I'm doing my best," retorted Eliowy.
     "Why  are  you doing  this?"  asked  Tilden abruptly,  as  Eliowy
fumbled with the lock. Each wave, as it came, nearly lifted her off of
her  feet,  making  the  effort  to pick  the  locks  that  much  more
difficult.
     "Because," said  Eliowy, shaking sea  water out of her  face. "No
one deserves to die like this. And  I owe you one. Your timely arrival
saved  me from..."  Eliowy broke  off, then  began again.  "I followed
Kesrin out and when  I figured out what he planned to do,  I had to go
1find a lockpick. That's what took me so long. Sorry."
     `I  can't believe  it,' thought  Tilden in  shock. `Liriss  hired
someone with  a conscience. And  when I'm done  with him, he  won't be
able to corrupt any more young people like her again!'
     "It's  all right,"  he said  to Eliowy,  forcing himself  to calm
down. "You're here and that's something."
     Eliowy didn't reply. After what seemed like an eternity to Tilden
she said, "Jerk your arm. I think I got it far enough."
     Tilden yanked on the chain  and felt resistance; he pulled harder
and fell to one  side, almost off the block, as  his arm came abruptly
free. "Give  me the lockpick,"  he ordered.  Eliowy handed it  to him;
little more than  stiff wire twisted and curved to  try and strengthen
it. Tilden  didn't bother to comment.  He was able to  unlock the last
manacle with deft ease.
     "Let's go," he said, levering himself up, off of the slab.
     Together they waded over to the  wooden staircase that led to the
top of Liriss's private pier.
     "Can you think  of anyplace I can hole up?"  asked Tilden as they
climbed. "I can't exactly go back to the guards barracks and they know
all of my hideouts."
     "I think I know a place where you can stay," said Eliowy, after a
pause. "You  plan to take  on Liriss,  don't you?" she  added, knowing
that that was the only reason the man would need a place within Dargon
city limits to hide.
     "I plan to  make him pay for trying to  kill me," replied Tilden,
eyes gleaming with  hate. "That man has lived far  too long and ruined
too  many lives..."  He  continued ranting  about  Liriss and  Kesrin,
laying out in detail the plans he had for each.
     Eliowy said nothing else as she led  the man to one of the places
she had staked out as a  potential hiding place for herself. While she
agreed with  Tilden that the crimelord  had to go, she  didn't want to
get involved with  trying to assassinate him. After she  got the scout
to safety, she planned to leave him. He could take care of himself and
the time to leave Dargon was running out fast for her.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                            Materia Medica
                               Part 3
                             Max Khaytsus
             
                        and Michelle Brothers
             


     A ten foot grey stone wall  came into view, appearing suddenly in
the green of the  forest, after the bend in the road.  The gate to the
courtyard was open and Rien and Kera were able to simply ride in. They
did  not go  unnoticed,  however.  A lone  guard  looked  up from  his
restless   pacing  and   after  straightening   his  tabard,   quickly
approached.
     "Is this the Connall residence?" Rien  asked as the man strode up
to him.
     "Yes, it is, sir," said the man politely. "May I help you?"
     "High  Mage Marcellon  Equiville  should be  expecting me,"  Rien
said.
     The guard seemed to be taken aback for a moment. "Your name?"
     "Rien Keegan. I was sent by Dyann Taishent."
     "If you'll wait, sir, I'll go see if the High Mage is available,"
the guard  responded and  turned smartly and  headed towards  the main
house. Another guard  appeared to replace him in  the courtyard before
he made it inside.
     "Well rehearsed," Rien commented to Kera as they dismounted. They
remained standing next  to each other, holding onto  the horse's reins
and looking over the noble's estate.
     The stone wall  went on for a good fifty  yards, forcing the road
outside to turn deeper into the forest, while inside a large courtyard
with trees and green,  well cared for shrubbery led up  to a two story
stone house.  Other than  the single  man at the  gate, there  were no
other guards or servants visible.
     The  first guard  reappeared at  the  house's front  door with  a
young, dark haired  woman who could not be much  older than Kera. They
were speaking  quickly to each other  as they walked over  to Rien and
his edgy apprentice.
     "Good morning," the  woman said, inclining her  head politely. "I
am Myrande Shipbrook, the senechal  of Connall Keep. I understand that
you are here to see the High Mage."
     "We were  told he would  be expecting  us," Rien answered.  "I am
Rien Keegan and this is my apprentice, Kera."
     "Please follow  me," Myrande  said, smiling. "Marcellon  will see
you in the Baron's study. Sergeant, please see to their horses."
     Leaving their  mounts, Rien  and Kera  followed Myrande  into the
house where they were taken down a  corridor and asked to wait for the
wizard in  a large room. It  was the Baron's study,  filled with books
and decorated with  weapons on the walls. By the  window stood a large
desk, with a  disorganized stack of papers  on top. An ink  well and a
nearly new  quill stood beside the  untidy stack of pages  and a large
padded chair sat behind the desk, turned to face out the window behind
the desk. Four  other comfortable looking chairs  were scattered about
the room.
     "High Mage  Marcellon will be  with you  in just a  few minutes,"
said  the senechal,  walking  to the  door.  "Please, make  yourselves
comfortable.  I will  send  for refreshments."  And  she stepped  out,
closing the door behind her.
     Rien walked over  to the bookshelf to take a  look at the titles.
Most  dealt with  war and  weaponry,  but there  were quite  a few  on
tactics, law, and a couple of histories as well.
1     "Rien,  I'm  sick  of  these wizards  and  witches,"  Kera  said,
prowling the room.
     He  turned around.  "We  seem to  be  lacking alternatives.  What
troubles you more? The disease or the people who can cure it?"
     Kera sighed and  sat down. "They both bother me,  but look at how
much more trouble looking for a cure caused..."
     "Are you saying you'd rather have the disease take its course?"
     "Damn it, Rien! This is all my fault!"
     "Is it?" Rien asked. "How could it be?"
     Kera burst  into tears.  "I led  you down  that alley!  I stabbed
you..."
     Rien embraced  her. "You  did not lead  me. I  followed...and you
wounded me  in self  defense. That  dog could  have been  anywhere, as
could I..." He stroked her hair back. "We got into the trouble looking
for  a cure.  We have  to  look for  it together.  It's not  something
magical that will find us on its  own. I don't want you feeling guilty
or thinking that it's all your fault, because it's not."
     Kera didn't reply, merely buried  her head in Rien's shoulder and
shook.

     Marcellon  and Myrande  stood outside  the study  door, patiently
waiting for the sounds inside to stop.
     "How could  I go in there  right now?" Marcellon asked  no one in
particular. "Can you imagine what they are going through?"
     "I don't even know why they came here," Myrande answered.
     "What?" Marcellon snapped around.
     "I  said I  don't know  why they  are here  in the  first place,"
Myrande said again.
     "Come along," Marcellon said,  leading Myrande down the corridor,
away from the door.  "The two mages who came to  see me yesterday sent
them  over.  This   couple  was  attacked  by  a   dog  diseased  with
lycanthropy...or perhaps a man diseased with it."
     "You mean like werewolves?" Myrande asked, eyes wide.
     "My Lady Myrande," Marcellon  smiled kindly. "Werewolves are only
a myth. This  is a real disease  that, over the course  of time, makes
severe alterations on the diseased body. I have a book on the subject.
I may have brought it with me from Magnus..."
     "Are they dangerous?" Myrande asked. "Maybe I should have a guard
posted."
     "Unless  they   bite  someone  they  are   not  dangerous,"  said
Marcellon, the seriousness  of his tone belaying the  lightness of his
words. "I doubt that there will be any problems."

     When the door opened and Marcellon walked in, Rien and Kera stood
with  their arms  around each  other  by the  window. "I  am sorry  to
intrude," he  said, not expecting to  walk in on something  like this.
The pair separated. "I am Marcellon Equiville."
     "I'm sorry, sir," Rien answered. "It was not proper on our part."
     "It's  quite   all  right,"  the  wizard   replied,  smiling.  "I
understand your situation."
     Once again Rien introduced himself and Kera and Marcellon invited
them to sit down, after taking a seat behind the desk. "I will be more
than happy to  see what I can  do for you," he went  on after everyone
had seated themselves. "I am not very familiar with the disease, but I
am a  doctor and from what  I understand, you have  never approached a
physician."
     "No, sir, we have not," Rien said, "but it was your reputation as
a wizard that made the final choice for us."
     Marcellon  smiled   good  naturedly.  "It  is   a  much  stronger
reputation, I agree, but I intend to be a doctor. Magic does not solve
1all the world's problems."
     "Before you  agree to help us,"  Rien said, "I'd like  to discuss
the matter of the fee."
     "I will not  charge you any money," Marcellon said.  "I have more
than I know  what to do with as  it is. I simply request  that you, at
some future  time, perform  a task for  me that I  will require  to be
done."
     "I've  taken  that path  before--"  Rien  began warily,  but  was
interrupted by Marcellon.
     "I can guarantee that it will in no way compromise your morals."
     Rien paused to think. "You do realize that we need two cures?"
     "Yes."
     "And that I am Ljosalfar?"
     "Yes," the  wizard said again.  "The price I named  accounted for
all that."
     Rien looked at Kera, expecting approval  or at least some sort of
comment but she said nothing. Realizing that it was to be his decision
entirely, he  turned after a  long pause  and nodded to  Marcellon. "I
accept."
     "Good," Marcellon  said. "Myrande will  give you rooms here  as I
will need  you around  while I do  my work. We  can begin  right after
lunch."

     Rien  walked  into the  room  Marcellon  converted into  a  small
laboratory. Kera sat on a chair,  holding a cloth compress against her
arm. Next to her stood Myrande  and Marcellon. The wizard was cleaning
the side of a small glass tube filled with blood.
     "This is good," the wizard said, handing the vial to Myrande. The
senechal took  the glass over to  another table as he  turned to Rien.
"Have a  seat," he said. "You're  next." He returned his  attention to
Kera, as Rien pulled up a chair, and removing the cloth on Kera's arm,
cast a quick spell. "Go wash the blood off. It will be fine."
     Kera got up,  looking suspiciously at her arm and  went over to a
basin of water and began washing the blood off.
     "Now, you," Marcellon  walked over to Rien.  "Elves are naturally
nocturnal, is that correct?"
     "Yes." Rien's  expression darkened at  the use of the  slang term
for Ljosalfar.
     "Then you haven't noticed any  changes in your vision?" continued
Marcellon, oblivious to the change in expression.
     "No."
     "Any other changes?" Marcellon asked.
     "I'm afraid not," Rien said.
     "Nothing  to be  afraid about,"  Marcellon answered,  selecting a
sharp instrument off  of the array on  the table. "It could  be a sign
that your organism is putting up a  good fight or that you are immune.
We'll see."  He looked at Rien's  arm and frowned. "Someone  had drawn
blood before  and not too  many months  ago," he said,  indicating the
lattice of thin scars below the inside of his elbow.
     "Yes," Rien said  with distaste. "I expect that you  will be more
sparing with my blood than the other was." He smiled crookedly to take
the sting out of his words.
     By this  time Myrande finished  with the  task that she  had been
occupied  with  and came  back,  holding  a  clean, empty  vial  which
Marcellon took  from her. "I wish  I could tell you  this won't hurt,"
said Marcellon,  "but purposely desecrating flesh  almost always tends
to be painful. Are you ready?"
     Rien nodded and  Marcellon made a small incision  in his forearm.
Blood slowly dripped into the waiting vial.
     "There,"  the wizard  said after  a short  while and  removed the
1container, moving  quickly over to  the table where Myrande  had taken
the first vial.
     Myrande quickly took his place and instructed Rien on how to hold
the cloth compress to stop the bleeding until Marcellon could heal the
wound, then went over to the wizard to help with the collected sample.
     Kera came over  to Rien and sat  down in a chair next  to his. "I
was hoping  you'd be squeamish,"  she sighed and he  playfully swatted
her.
     "You're hoping for the wrong things," was his quick retort.
     Marcellon came back. "Let me see your arm," he told Kera.
     She stretched it out, palm up  to display that there was no trace
of the incision, not even a scar.
     "Good," Marcellon approved his own  work and turned to Rien. "Let
me see yours."
     Rien stretched his  arm out, removing the  compress. The bleeding
had stopped, but a bloodied cut remained.
     Marcellon examined it and cast his healing spell again. He looked
over the arm  again and then said,  "this is the first  time I've cast
anything on a member of your species.  It's good to know that magic is
a universal doctor."
     "You had doubts about the spell working?" Rien asked.
     "Small ones,"  Marcellon admitted, "but  it appears as  if nature
makes us all of the same dough. Go ahead and wash up."
     After cleaning  his arm, Rien  came over  to the table  where the
others stood. In the  middle was a deep dish with  ice chips and water
in which  stood the two  vials of blood.  Around the dish  stood other
vials and  jars and medical  instruments, neatly arranged  by category
and size.  Myrande was  quietly preparing  a solution  while Marcellon
chatted with Kera. He turned as Rien approached.
     "What now?" Rien asked.
     "Now I  study the  blood," Marcellon  answered. "Actually  I will
only study  Kera's for now,  as I am  vastly more familiar  with human
physiology. You're free for the rest of the day. I will see you two at
dinner." And the mage turned away and, picking up an empty vial, moved
purposefully towards the other end of the table.

     Kera pulled at  her new tunic, trying to settle  the stiff fabric
around her shoulders to her satisfaction.  It was a deep shade of red,
decorated on the  hem and collar with gold thread,  and quite becoming
on her. Kera couldn't stand it.  Dressing up to have dinner wasn't her
idea of a good time, no matter  who the hosts were. The fact that they
were  nobility  just  made  the situation  worse.  Frowning  into  the
polished brass mirror, she tugged again at her collar.
     She turned at a knock on the door.
     "Come in."
     "Are you ready?" Rien asked through the door.
     "Yeah. Come on in."
     Rien  stepped into  the  room and  looked Kera  over.  She was  a
contrast to him, with his dark blue and silver trimmed tunic and blond
hair. He nodded approvingly.
     "You look nice," he complimented.
     "I don't like  this," declared Kera, pulling at the  front of her
tunic to emphasize her point.
     Rien shrugged. "You don't wear  travel clothes when you dine with
the Baron."  He looked narrowly  at her. "Be  glad I'm not  having you
wear a skirt." Kera shuddered at  the thought and Rien smiled faintly.
"Now, if you're ready to go?"
     Kera sighed,  nodded, and followed  Rien out into the  hall. They
had been given rooms in Connall Keep proper, along the outside wall so
that their windows over-looked the main courtyard and gave a wonderful
1view  of the  forest  over the  wall. Despite  the  simplicity of  the
furnishings, Kera found herself a little in awe of the place.
     They  turned into  the  main  hallway and  walked  down the  main
staircase. At the  foot of the steps, Rien paused,  trying to remember
the directions he  had been given to  get to the dining  hall. After a
moment he  moved off to  the right. A short  walk brought them  to the
doors that  led to the  smaller of the  Keep's two meeting  halls. Two
guards, in the  livery of House Connall pulled the  doors open as they
approached.
     "You look nice, too," said Kera suddenly.
     "What?"  Rien turned  his  attention from  studying the  tapestry
decked hall to his apprentice.
     "I said  `you look  nice, too'," repeated  Kera. Her  eyes darted
nervously to the table in the middle of the room where four people sat
talking. The hall was  lit with many candles and a  large fire was lit
in the hearth  behind the table and the added  illumination made their
shadows  dance eerily.  Kera  grinned  weakly up  at  Rien who  smiled
reassuringly.
     "Welcome to Connall  Keep," declared a tall dark  haired man from
the head of the table. He rose and bowed slightly. "I am Baron Luthias
Connall. This  is my  Senechal, Myrande," he  indicated a  dark haired
woman seated to his left.
     "We  met earlier  today," said  Rien, inclining  his head  in the
woman's direction. "A pleasure to see you again, Lady."
     Myrande smiled  at him  and Luthias continued  his introductions.
"Ittosai Michaya, my Castellan," a  black haired man with narrow brown
eyes to  his right, "and I  believe that you already  know Marcellon."
The red  robed wizard smiled and  inclined his head from  his place at
the foot of the table.
     Rien  bowed politely  and  Kera quickly,  if  a little  awkwardly
followed his example.
     "I am Rien Keegan, and this is my apprentice, Kera."
     Kera bowed again as the senechal smiled at her.
     "Have a seat," said Luthias,  gesturing to the empty chairs, "and
we'll start dinner."
     Rien gestured  for Kera to  sit next  to Myrande while  he seated
himself next to Ittosai.
     After they had settled themselves, servants brought out the first
course of dinner, a hearty soup.
     "You are  here, I understand,"  said Luthias, after  everyone had
had a chance to begin their meal,  "seeking the cure to a disease that
you have."
     "Yes," confirmed Rien. "We managed to contract an illness that is
rather difficult to cure and were  directed here by a mage who thought
that Lord Marcellon might be able to help us."
     "I'm certain that I can  help you," said Marcellon. "Besides, you
present me with  a rare opportunity. I've never had  a chance to study
an elf before." He smiled, taking  some of the clinicalness out of the
statement.
     "You  mean  that  elves  aren't a  myth?"  said  Luthias  vaguely
surprised. "I've heard the stories but..."
     "Not the last time I  checked," smiled Rien. Kera concentrated on
her soup, hiding a smile.
     "Pardon," said Ittosai  in a strangely accented voice.  "But I am
unfamiliar with the term. What is an `elf'?"
     "A pointy  eared human," said  Kera. Rien  shot her an  icy glare
from across the table.
     "Except  for culture,  there  are few  other differences  between
ljosalfar," he emphasized the name, "and humans. Your social structure
is much more rigid than ours is," said Rien to Ittosai reluctantly. He
1disliked casually discussing his  heritage. "My apprentice is correct,
however. Our ears are somewhat pointed." He did not offer to show them
and no one asked.
     "Where do you come from?" Kera asked Ittosai suddenly. Everyone's
attention shifted  abruptly back to  her and she suddenly  wished that
she had kept her mouth shut, but she pressed on. "You don't look quite
like anyone I've ever seen in  Dargon before. Sir." She didn't feel it
was polite to mention his accent.
     Ittosai smiled, his dark eyes sparkling.
     "You are correct. I am not from here," he said. "I am from Bichu,
it is an island in the ocean of Valenfaer."
     Kera's eyes widened a little as  the rumors she had heard about a
Bichuese  invasion  gained  a  bit more  credibility  because  of  his
presence.  A  servant appeared  at  her  elbow, distracting  her  from
further questions.
     The soup dishes were removed and replaced with the main course, a
roasted fowl  with vegetables  that was finer  than anything  Kera had
ever tasted. Finer,  even, than what Liriss was  accustomed to having.
The thought of Liriss almost ruined her appetite, so Kera concentrated
on  the conversation  to get  the thought  of the  crime lord  and his
assassin out of her mind.
     "What sort of business are you in, Rien?" Myrande was inquiring.
     "I am an adventurer, Lady,"  replied Rien. Kera looked sharply at
him as he continued. "I am still young. I want to see the world before
I settle down to a trade."
     "Ah,  the restlessness  of youth,"  said Marcellon  with a  sigh.
Again Kera's attention  was distracted. Youth indeed!  The mage looked
no older  than a  thirty year  old man  and Kera  knew that  Rien, who
looked  younger than  Marcellon, was  at  least fifty,  if not  older.
"There is  much to see  in the world,"  continued the wizard,  "and so
little time to see it in."
     `You're telling  me,' thought  Kera ruefully, thinking  about the
disease coursing through her veins. Time  was short and if the old man
couldn't cure them...Kera's musings were interrupted by Myrande asking
her: "And how did you meet Rien, Kera?"
     "By accident, my  Lady," returned Kera promptly,  and, taking her
cue from  Rien, did some  hasty adjusting of  the facts. "He  saved my
life in  an alley and I  offered to...keep him company  after that. It
does  get  kind   of  lonely  adventuring  alone.   He's  teaching  me
sword-craft so I don't end up in that sort of situation again."
     "You're a swordsman?"  Luthias asked Rien eagerly,  laying down a
bone from dinner.
     "Yes, Lord,"  said Rien  carefully. "I have  some skill  with the
weapon. Every adventurer should, don't you agree?"
     "Of course,"  supported Luthias immediately. "It's  a skill every
man  should  have."  Ittosai  nodded   in  agreement.  "Would  you  be
interested in a sparring match tomorrow?"
     "No, Luthias," said Marcellon, as  Rien cast about for a suitable
reply. "I  don't want you  beating on my patients.  I need him  in one
piece tomorrow."
     "There is  no honor in  taking on an opponent  who is not  at his
best," said Ittosai quietly.
     "Perhaps some  other time,  Lord Luthias," Rien  said, graciously
inclining his head.
     "Yes, some other time," sighed Luthias.
     Myrande also sighed and the sound almost seemed to say `men!'.
     "Lady Myrande,"  said Rien, looking  over at the woman.  "You are
the senechal of this house. Are you a doctor as well?"
     "I am  simply helping Marcellon,"  replied Myrande with  a smile.
"And I have some experience with mixing potions." An unreadable glance
1was exchanged between her and Luthias.
     Rien nodded and concentrated on finishing his meal.
     Again servants appeared to clear  away the plates and dessert was
served. There was  little discussion during this last  course and what
was said was limited to sincere compliments to the cook's skills. Kera
was  surprised  to  learn  that  the the  dessert  confection  was  an
imitation of a Bichuese delicacy.
     As the last dished were cleared away, Marcellon turned to Rien.
     "I would  appreciate it,  Rien, if you  and your  apprentice," he
smiled over  at Kera,  "would stay  around the keep  for the  next few
days. I may need you for tests at odd hours."
     "That won't  be a  problem, Lord Marcellon,"  said Rien.  "I will
need  to go  back to  the inn,  however, to  pick up  the rest  of our
belongings if we are going to be staying here."
     "There's no problem  with that. Now, if you will  all excuse me,"
he pushed  his chair back.  "I'm going to  retire to my  laboratory to
begin my research."
     Everyone rose, paid their respects  to each other, and went their
separate ways. Kera followed Rien out of the hall.
     "Why didn't you  agree to fight Lord Luthias  after we're cured?"
she asked as they climbed the stairs to Rien's room.
     "Other than  not being  positive about  being cured?"  said Rien.
"It's considered bad form to beat your host in a fight."
     "Are you so sure that you'd win, then?"
     "I am  not sure, but  I have many  more years of  experience than
he," said  Rien, opening  the door  and pulling his  cloak off  of the
chair he had tossed it on. "The odds are in my favor to win."
     "Just how old are you?" asked  Kera curiously as Rien swirled the
cloak around his shoulders.
     "Wouldn't you like to know," said Rien. Kera glared at him. "I am
going for a walk.  I will be back later this evening.  You stay out of
trouble, understand?"
     "Of course  I'll stay  out of  trouble," Kera  replied, offended.
"Where are you going?"
     "For a walk. I will be back soon."
     "Where? We're in the middle of a forest!"
     "Precisely."
     And Rien  walked back into  the hall  and down the  corridor with
Kera trailing after him, muttering unkind phrases at his back.

     The following morning  Rien went directly north  from the Connall
Keep,  wanting to  enter Dargon  from a  point where  he would  not be
particularly noticeable.  After over two  hours of travel  through the
forest he  reached the ocean, about  ten leagues west of  the city. He
turned east, the horse slowly  trudging through loose sand which began
a few feet past the edge of  the forest, creating a few yards of beach
before being swallowed by the sea.
     The horse  slowed its pace on  the new terrain and  Rien relaxed,
enjoying the ride and the crisp ocean  air. To one side, as far as the
eye could see,  a broad leaf forest slowly turned  into evergreens and
on  the other  side the  ocean ran  off into  the distance,  somewhere
meeting with the horizon and becoming one with the sky.
     After  another hour  of  gentle riding,  the  forest thined  out,
giving way to  cultivated fields and harder, open  ground. Rien guided
the horse off the sand and nudged  it into a trot, towards the line of
buildings visible a  league or so ahead. By the  time he reached town,
the  red  disk  of the  sun  was  hanging  low  over the  ocean.  Rien
dismounted, leading  his horse up  to the  pier, deciding to  walk the
rest of the way, both so he could watch the sunset and give darkness a
chance to cover the city.
1     Daily  life on  the docks  was coming  to a  stand still  and the
transition to the  night-life was beginning. Loading  conducted on the
few ships currently in port had been halted long before sunset and now
crews  were lighting  lanterns  to illuminate  the  decks before  they
retired to the ale-houses for the night.
     Rien paused at the pier that Kera showed him a few days before. A
ship was now docked at it and  a lone guard patrolled on deck. Leaving
his horse, Rien  came closer to examine the vessel.  It wasn't a small
craft.  A good  sixty feet  long, but  nothing to  compare to  the one
hundred foot giant  about a league back. Rien circled  forward to read
the  ship's name,  out of  curiosity.  Large red  letters spelled  out
_Ocean_Lady_ across the bow. Nothing  unusual about that, despite what
he knew about the owner of the ship. He was about to turn back when he
heard a commotion from beneath the  pier, followed by a splash. Noting
that the guard was now on the far side of the ship, Rien went down the
stairs beneath the pier.
     Two men  with swords  stood with  their backs  to him,  facing an
unarmed young woman. From their  stances it wasn't difficult to deduce
that they  meant nothing good  for her. Rien  was about to  rush them,
when he noticed a third man getting  up in front of him. The other two
were backing  the girl into deeper  water. Not giving the  situation a
second thought, Rien kicked the man getting up and, drawing his sword,
advanced after the other two.
     One of the men turned to  the sound of his companion falling back
into the  water and decided to  change the subject of  his attack. His
swing was parried by Rien and  the man's companion became aware of the
new opponent as  the sound of their swords  clashing echoed underneath
the pier. The girl,  now waist deep in the water  and no longer facing
an armed opponent, stopped backing into the ocean.
     Rien parried two more swings, before  trying to disarm one of his
opponents. The  swords met with a  loud clank, locking together  for a
moment. In the dim light the soldier observed Rien's eyes change color
and involuntarily took half a step  back. Rien took the opportunity to
groin him and shove him into the water. So much for chivalry.
     Ducking the swing  of the other man, who was  finally able to get
close enough  to engage  him, Rien  made a half  turn and  swung back,
catching his opponent on the arm. The man's sword went flying into the
water with a  dull splash, next to the girl.  She hesitated, wondering
whether or not to pick it up, then deciding against it, ran out of the
water past the two fighting men.
     Rien's opponent produced a stiletto to continue his fight, but it
was knocked from his grasp with  a quick slash from Rien's blade. With
another swing Rien finished the man and turned back to the one who was
again raising  himself from the  water. A quick, deadly  thrust caught
him in the chest and the man submerged one more time.
     Rien waited patiently, knee deep  in the rising water. Neither of
the men rose again. The first one, the one Rien kicked, was lying face
down in  the water, not far  from the shore line.  Rien resheathed his
blade, ready to leave, when another man appeared on the stairs. He was
wearing chain mail and carried his  sword in hand. Rien recognized him
as the guard from the _Ocean_Lady_.
     The guard  looked around, spotting  Rien and the body  in shallow
water. "You! Who are you?"
     Rien backed up to one of the  rocks sticking out of the water and
climbed up. The  guard entered the water, sword at  the ready and Rien
stood up.
     "I asked you a question!" the guard barked.
     Rien remained  silent, attempting to  lure the guard  deeper into
the water. In spite of chain mail  not being excellent armor, it was a
lot more  than what Rien  had to depend  on and some  compensation was
1needed. As  soon as the guard  waded into hip deep  water, the padding
under his armor  started absorbing water. Rien jumped  one stone back,
out of the guard's reach and drew his sword again.
     Seeing that his armor was weighing  him down, the guard was about
to retreat, but  Rien's drawing of his sword was  an open challenge he
could not turn his back on.  He proceeded further into the water after
Rien, taking a swing when he was close enough.
     Rien parried and swung at  the guard's torso, changing his attack
at the last moment. The guard tried to parry the attack, but the feint
caught him  off guard  and Rien's  sword impacted at  the base  of his
neck, cutting half way through the  chain and flesh. The guard dropped
his sword  and spasmodically grabbed  at Rien, missing his  target and
sinking into the  water. Rien stayed perched on the  rock. It was dark
now and  only the  splashing of  the waves  disturbed the  night. Four
people killed to save a girl from...what?
     Rien tried to reconstruct the scene  in which he entered. Back on
the pier he had heard a commotion  and a splash. The girl had probably
attempted to escape and in the process of doing so, knocked one of the
men to the  ground. By the time  Rien made it down, the  two other men
had the girl cornered. It all made sense, except for who the girl was.
Her amber eyes reminded  him of someone he once met,  but he could not
place the  person or  the event.  And why was  she here?  Perhaps Kera
would be able  to identify the girl and her  conflict with Liriss, but
that would have to be solved at a later time.
     With two leaps Rien made it to the first of the stone pillars and
jumped off into the  water to return to the pier.  The only thing that
could happen here now would be for someone to find the bodies and Rien
did not want to wait around for  that. He returned to the pier only to
find that someone had appropriated  his horse. He wasn't too concerned
about the  loss of the animal  itself, but the loss  of transportation
annoyed him  greatly. It  upset Rien  enough to want  to rough  up the
first person in sight,  but luckily no one was around  and by the time
Rien finally saw  a person wandering the streets,  he was sufficiently
cooled off.
     It took him three times longer than  it should have to get to the
inn, but he  finally arrived, with his temper more  or less intact. At
the inn, as he  made his way to the stairs, the inn  keeper came up to
him. "Sir, a woman stopped by  yesterday evening asking about you. She
didn't want to  leave a message, but  I thought I'd mention  it to you
anyway."
     "A woman?" Rien asked, wondering who in the world it could be. He
knew few people in Dargon and to his recollection, an old woman wasn't
one of his acquaintances.
     "An elderly  lady, on the  plump side,  with grey hair,"  the man
answered.
     "She didn't say what she wanted?"
     "No, sir. Just asked if you were in and then left."
     "Thank you for letting me know," Rien said. He dug into his purse
and produced  a few coins.  "See if  you can find  me a good  horse by
tomorrow   morning.  I   am  willing   to  pay   for  promptness   and
inconvenience."
     Promising he'd try,  the inn keeper returned to  his place behind
the bar and Rien  went up to his room. He took out  the key and put it
in the lock. He met resistance when  he tried to turn it. He applied a
little more pressure but neither the key nor the door budged.
     Removing the  key, Rien examined it  and the lock. For  the first
time in a  week there was a  problem with the door.  He reinserted the
key and  forced it about  in the lock  before turning it.  The locking
mechanism clicked and he pushed the door open.
     The first thing that caught Rien's eye when he lit a candle was a
1crescent,  sloppily drawn  in red  on  the opposite  wall. He  glanced
around  the  room,  but  nothing  else appeared  out  of  order.  Rien
approached the  wall to get  a closer look  at the design.  The symbol
seemed to be painted  in blood. He went back to  the corridor, to call
in the maid  who had been lighting candles while  he was fumbling with
the lock, but  she was no longer  there. Rien looked both  ways in the
corridor, then turned back to the  room. To his surprise, the wall was
clean. Closing the  door, Rien approached the wall  again and examined
it closely. There was no trace of anything ever having been spilled or
written there.
     Rien sat down  on the bed, wondering exactly what  he saw...or as
it stood,  what he thought he  saw. Footsteps behind him  alerted Rien
that he was not alone and he looked quickly over his shoulder, but the
room was empty. Somewhat shaken by the apparent failure of his senses,
Rien blew out the candle and sat down in the middle of the bed, trying
to free his mind  from all that seemed to be  cluttering it, but found
he was unable to concentrate.
     Rien opened  his eyes. The candle  was still burning, but  by the
time he made  it over to the  table, the room was once  again dark. He
sat on  the edge  of the  bed, wondering what  could have  caused this
madness.  Madness...was  lycanthropy  finally taking  its  toll?  Rien
looked at his hands. They were covered with short grey fur. "No..." He
dropped back onto the bed, ignoring the phantoms around him and forced
his mind to go blank. The world descended into darkness.

     It  was nearly  midnight when  Myrande made  her final  rounds of
Connall Keep. Luthias had long since  retired, but Myrande felt it was
her duty to  see that everything was settled for  the night before she
sought her bed.
     Ordinarily there  was nothing that  needed her attention  at this
late hour,  so when she entered  the minor dining hall  seeing a small
figure seated on a  bench in front of the banked  fire was a surprise.
As she advanced further into the room, the figure resolved itself into
the young  woman who  was guesting in  the Keep with  the man  who had
sought Marcellon.
     Myrande moved  around the  dining table,  her soft  leather shoes
making almost no  sound against the well worn stone  floor. She sat on
the edge of the  bench, on the side opposite of  Kera, before the girl
realized that Myrande was there.
     Kera's reaction to  what seemed to be the sudden  appearance of a
stranger was to  make a grab for  her dagger. It took her  a second to
realize that Myrande  was not a threat. Silently  she berated herself.
Myrande should not have been able to  sneak up on her like that. Being
with Rien so much must be causing her to lose her edge.
     "I'm  sorry, my  Lady,"  she mumbled,  releasing  the dagger.  "I
didn't realize that it was you."
     "It's all  right," said Myrande  softly. She paused for  a moment
then said, "it's late. I would have expected you to be asleep by now."
     Kera shrugged  noncommittally, staring into the  dying fire. "I'm
not really tired," she said.
     Myrande waited patiently.
     "He's  not  back  yet,"  said  Kera  abruptly,  turning  to  face
Connall's senechal. "It's almost midnight. He should have been back by
now and I'm afraid that something's happened to him."
     "Rien?"
     Kera nodded. Fear lurked in the  back of her dark grey eyes. Fear
that Liriss, or one  of his men, or the assassin  had gotten him. Fear
that the  disease had taken  an unexpected turn  in him. Fear  that he
might simply have left her.
     Myrande slid further down the bench to sit next to her.
1     "You're very  worried about  him, aren't  you," she  said gently.
Kera nodded again. "Have you known him long?"
     "Not very  long," replied Kera. "But...he's  different. Different
from all of  the other men that I know."  Myrande smiled knowingly and
allowed her to keep talking. "He's  the only person who's ever treated
me like a  human being and I  never really gave him much  reason to. I
haven't known him  for very long, but I think  he's pretty special and
yes, I  am worried." Her  gaze challenged  Myrande to laugh  or refute
anything that she had said.
     Instead  of  ridiculing her,  the  dark  haired woman  nodded  in
understanding and smiled.
     "I   do   understand.  I   feel   pretty   much  the   same   way
about...someone, too." she said softly.
     "What if  something happened  to him,"  cried Kera,  sudden tears
coursing down her  cheeks. "He could be  dead in some alley  for all I
know or the  disease could have..." she choked on  expressing the last
thought.
     Myrande wrapped her arms around  Kera's shoulders and let her cry
herself out. They talked a little, after that, about love and life and
death, then Myrande led Kera back  up to her assigned room, reassuring
her that if Rien wasn't back by  morning, a search party would be sent
out.
     She retired to her own room, hoping that he would make it back by
the next day. There were enough problems right now, without adding yet
another one to the list.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                      Be Careful What You Wish For...
                             by Bill Erdley
                       

     All I was supposed to do was feed the horses.
     It was my turn to do the  barnwork chores. Telia smirked at me as
I got  up from the  breakfast table. Last week  she had done  the barn
work; this week  she was helping Mother with the  house chores. It was
cold and wet outside; it had been snowing all night, and that made the
upcoming trip to the barn look even  worse. I don't think I would have
minded so  much if she wouldn't  have made a face  at me as I  took my
cape from the hook. She stuck her tongue out at me, and I replied with
the same.  As usual, I was  the one who  was caught by my  father, who
clouted me  in the head and  yelled and promised more  punishment if I
didn't tend to my  chores "right this minute." As I  made a hasty exit
from the house  into the cold morning air, I  vowed that someday, very
soon, she'd get what was she had coming to her.

                 Just because she's seen five summers less
          than my fifteen, Mother and Father treat her like a
          queen and me like a slave.  It's not fair.

     The snow that  had fallen the night before had  mixed with enough
rain to make the ground a slushy, sloppy mess. It was too warm for the
snow to  stay frozen for long,  and between the snow,  the puddles and
the mud, my feet felt frozen by the time I reached the barn.

                 One of these days, when no one else is
          around, I'll get her good.

     I grabbed the old, wooden  pitchfork and started cleaning the one
empty stall in the barn. Father still hadn't replaced the gelding that
had broken  it's foreleg in the  fields last year, but  I didn't care.
With an  empty stall  to move horses  into, I didn't  have to  clean a
stall that was occupied by a huge, smelly beast.

                 I should take some of these horse cookies
          and put them in Telia's bed.  That'd get her.

     As I pushed the first stall's waste out the barn's back door into
the pit, I thought I saw a couple  of horses at the edge of the woods.
They were probably neighbors headed to our house, to talk to Father or
to invite themselves  in for some of Ma's elderberry  pie. I went back
into the barn and closed the door.

                 They'll stop and I'll have to take care of
          their horses.  They'll be all wet and need to be
          brushed down and bedded in the empty stall.  I'll
          smell like a horse for days.

     I transferred Steos,  our stallion, into the bare  stall. I began
to clean  the now empty stall,  moving as fast  as I could, so  that I
could be  done before  those stupid  neighbors arrived.  Several field
mice, who  probably came in to  get out of the  rain, scurried quickly
away when  I disturbed their home  in the straw. I  finished the stall
quickly, and pushed  the refuse to the  back door of the  barn. When I
opened the  door, I could see  that the horses were  closer, and more!
There weren't a couple of horses;  there were at least twenty or more!
I stood there  and watched for a  moment, but they were  still too far
away to  see anything, so  I pushed the dirty  straw into the  pit and
1went back into the barn. There  had been rumors of war spreading among
the farmers  in the  area, but Father  always answered  the neighbors'
fearful musings with "There ain't  nothin' here worth fightin' for, so
calm yourselves."
     I moved the old mare, Yonda,  into the clean stall and moved Seh,
the other mare, out  of her stall. I put a halter  on her and tethered
her to a barn post. Now I could clean both stalls at the same time. If
Father came  out and  saw the  mare out of  her stall,  I would  get a
whipping, but I hoped that the weather  would keep him in the house. I
desperately wanted to get the stalls cleaned and the horses fed before
the men and the horses got here.

                 Maybe they are soldiers heading for a
          battle, dressed in armor and carrying huge swords
          and crossbows and pikes.  Maybe they will stay the
          night, and tell us stories of storming castles and
          skirmish lines.  That way I won't have to sit and
          listen to Telia practice on her stupid harp.  She
          sounds like a wounded cat when she sings, and her
          harp playing is horrible.  She'll never become a
          bard like Mother and Father say she will.

     When I was pushing the last of  the dirty straw to the back door,
I  thought I  heard  the sound  of horses.  The  travellers must  have
arrived more  quickly than  I had  hoped. I kicked  open the  door and
pushed the straw out toward the pit.  As the manure fell into the open
hole, I  saw the knight for  the first time.  I knew he was  a knight,
dressed in his magnificent armor. His  shield hung from the saddle, as
did his  sword and scabbard. A  second horse held a  smaller man, also
armored, but  by his face  I could tell that  he was younger.  A third
horse  was ridden  by an  ugly man,  who had  thick black  hair and  a
scowling face. The rest of the  horses were still a good distance from
the barn. My eyes were drawn back to the knight.

                 A real knight!

     Father used  to tell us  stories about knights. Telia  didn't pay
much attention, but I did. Father  used to say how knights were chosen
by the king to defend him and  his people against evil wherever it was
found. He  said that knights were  the greatest fighters in  the land;
that they fought with flashing swords  and shining armor, and that the
best knights were chosen to defend the king himself!

                 I want to run up and beg to see his sword
          and his armor and plead with him to tell stories,
          but that wouldn't be polite.  Oh, admit it, you're
          scared of him...

     The young man  saw me first, turned toward the  knight and spoke.
The knight immediately  looked in my direction and,  raising his hand,
brought the  men to  a stop. Then  he and the  young man  turned their
horses and rode toward me.
     "Boy," the  knight spoke  as he  reigned his horse  to a  stop in
front of me, "I would speak to your father. Take me to him."
     His voice rang with authority. It  almost felt like his voice had
the power to control my very actions. It was thick with an accent that
I had never heard before. I  found myself leading his horse around the
barn by the bridle, followed by the younger man. I turned to look back
at the  knight, and saw  him sitting  straight in his  saddle, looking
directly forward. The youth was looking around, as if he were watching
1for something to jump out from behind every tree and building. I don't
know what he expected to find, since our closest neighbors were a long
ways off, and Mother, Father, and Telia were all in the house.
     I held the  horse's halter while the  knight dismounted, assisted
by the youth  that I finally realized must be  his squire. Father said
that squires were knights-in-training and that  they had to do all the
chores for  the knight and  that I could never  be a squire  because I
hated  chores  so much.  The  squire  helped straighten  the  knight's
tabbard once the knight was on the ground, then accompanied him to the
door of  the house .  The knight turned  before he knocked  and looked
right at me:
     "You had better return to your  chores, son. I wouldn't want your
Father to be angry with me for taking you away from them."
     I turned and ran back toward the barn. I don't know why I ran; it
was as if  my legs just decided  that they had seen  enough and really
wanted to get away from there. I looked back before entering the barn,
the knight had already gone into the  house. I stood there at the barn
door, looking toward the house, straining to hear what was being said.

                 The house is too far way for you to hear
          anything, you dummy!  Besides, he's a knight.  What
          use would he have for you?  You can't even talk!

     When you live way out here,  away from other people, it's easy to
forget that you're not like other  people. Mother and Father and Telia
are used to  seeing what I wanted  to say in my gestures.  When I made
the trip into town with Father  a while back, people laughed when they
realized that I couldn't talk. They acted  like I was a dunce and made
fun of me. So I just don't go into town anymore.

                 They wouldn't dare laugh if I was a knight.
          They would stand and admire my armor and my sword
          and my horse.  It wouldn't matter that I couldn't
          talk.  I could just imagine myself on the knight's
          horse, riding into battle beside my squire and
          fighting the enemy, swords flashing and armor
          shining in the sun.  The battlefield would be
          filled with the shouts of victory as we fought our
          way from one end to the other, dispatching our foes
          with ease.  Other knights and their squires would
          be fighting, too; and soon all of the enemy would
          be gone and we would triumphantly ride into the
          city, to the cheers and admiration of all of the
          people...

     "Derrio, come here! Now!" My Father stood at the door and shouted
at me.

                 Great.  There's a knight in the house and my
          Father is standing outside the door and yelling at
          me like a little child!

     I  ran back  across the  yard, thinking  that perhaps  the knight
needed something and that I was to run and get it for him.
     "Derrio, go  out to the barn  and move the horses  into the lower
pen. Then make sure that each  stall is bedded with fresh straw. After
you've done that, make sure that the loft ladder is up so that the men
in there can use the loft to rest. Go!"

                 Boy, does he look scared!  Why is he so
1          afraid of the knight?

     Seeing the fear  in his face made  me run all the  faster back to
the barn. I can't remember ever seeing  his eyes so big or hearing his
voice shake so much. That knight  must have said something that really
frightened him. I wonder what he said...

                 Maybe he needs another squire.  Maybe he
          just told Father that he is going to take me along
          with him and that Father would have to manage the
          farm on his own.

     I heard  men inside the  barn even before  I managed to  open the
door. I guessed  that they must be  the men that I saw  far behind the
knight, near the woods. I couldn't  hear what they were saying, but it
didn't matter. All of  a sudden I was scared; I  mean REALLY scared. I
couldn't figure out  why, but I knew  that I didn't really  want to be
anywhere near them. Father's orders were clear, though, so I knew that
I had to go in,  no matter what I wanted to do or how  I felt. So in I
went...
     The men  were scattered all  over the  barn and many  had already
taken to the loft. Most of them  were busy taking off their armor, but
there were  several by each  door and a  couple were in  Steos' stall,
checking him  over like I  had seen Father do  when the horse  threw a
shoe. The  two by the front  door watched me  as I went past  them and
headed for the stalls. I quickly untied  Seh from where I had left her
tethered, then opened  Yonda's stall and led her out.  I grabbed Seh's
halter as I  passed her and led  them both toward the  front door. The
men that were there opened the door  for me without saying a word, and
soon I had  both of the horses  in the lower corral. I  turned and was
surprised to  see two other  men leading Steos  out of the  barn. They
turned to come toward me, but  I pointed toward the upper pen. Putting
the  stallion in  with the  mares was  just asking  for trouble,  so I
decided to put Steos in the other  pen. As I closed the gate, I nodded
to the men in thanks, but they ignored me and went back into the barn.

                 Rude.  And mean-looking.  These men give me
          the creeps.  Boy, I wish Telia were out here doing
          this instead of me.  These guys would scare her
          silly.  That would serve her right for making fun
          of me this morning at breakfast.

     I re-entered the barn and headed for the loft ladder. I still had
to throw straw into the stalls, so  I grabbed the pitchfork on my way.
It  wasn't until  I was  heaving straw  into the  empty stalls  that I
realized how  much these men  stank! They were  all in the  process of
removing their  armor, and with each  piece that came off,  the stench
got worse. I never thought that men could smell worse than horses, but
these men...
     "Derrio, Mother and Father want you  to hurry an' get done so you
can come  into the house." Telia's  voice seemed a little  higher than
usual, like she was scared.

                 Good.

     "And Father said to make sure that you put Steos in the upper pen
and not in the lower pen with Seh and Yonda or they'll be fighting all
day."

                 Great.  Now he'll think that I put Steos in
1          the upper stall because he told me to instead of
          remembering it myself.  Why doesn't he ever let me
          do things myself?!

     I heard several  of the men start  to laugh and one  of them said
something about "having some fun with the young lady."

                 Tickle her.  She hates that.  Oh, if these
          smelly, ugly men start tickling her...

     Telia screamed.

                 I may not like my sister very much
          sometimes, and I've made her scream myself plenty
          of times; but I can tell the difference between an
          "I don't like this" scream of displeasure and a
          scream of sheer terror.

     I ran to the  edge of the loft and saw several  of the men around
her,  and one  was reaching  under her  skirt! She  was screaming  and
trying to get away, but two other men were holding her down.

                 Hey!  What are you doing!?  Leave her alone!

     I ran for the loft ladder. I  still had the pitchfork in my hand,
so I couldn't  climb down very fast.  I jumped the last  few rungs and
ran toward  the men. I  heard one  of the men  still in the  loft yell
something, but I was too busy running and hoping I could get my sister
out of there before they could catch me. I turned the pitchfork around
so that the prongs curved up; that  way it wouldn't stick the man that
I hit. I ran right toward the  kneeling man, looking right at the back
of his head.

                 You will be first.

     When I swung, he moved forward slightly, so that I hit him in the
back instead of in the head.  He groaned and slumped sideways, falling
into another of the kneeling men.  I raised the fork and turned toward
another man. Suddenly the fork was torn  out of my hands. The ugly man
that I  had seen  riding the horse  earlier had run  up beside  me and
grabbed  it. He  clouted me  in the  head with  his fist  and sent  me
sprawling.
     Telia screamed harder.

                 Telia!

     I tried to get  up but the ugly man swung the fork  at me and hit
me in the legs. Both legs buckled and felt like they were on fire.
     A man knelt over Telia and yelled at her, shaking his fist.

                 Telia, get out of here!

     I  rolled over  but I  couldn't stand  because my  right leg  had
cramped. The ugly man swung the fork again and hit me in the back.
     The man hit Telia across the face with his hand.

                 Leave her alone, you bastard!!

     I was trying to crawl backwards, but I found that I was against a
stall and I couldn't go anywhere.
1     The  man hit  Telia  again,  harder this  time,  and she  stopped
screaming.

                 Come on, Telia, fight!  FIGHT AND SCREAM!!!

     The ugly man raised the fork  again, then a hand came from behind
him and grabbed it. He looked  and saw another man, in horribly dented
and tarnished armor, take the fork away  from the ugly man and hit him
once  with it,  hard. The  ugly  man fell  to the  floor groaning  and
holding his head. The armored man turned toward me, but I couldn't see
his face  because of  his helm.  He dropped the  fork toward  me, then
turned and ran toward Telia.
     The barn door  flew open and the Knight came  in, sword drawn. As
soon as  he saw the  men around Telia, he  sheathed his sword  and ran
toward them.  The armor-clad man who  had saved me from  a beating ran
towards Telia also,  and got there first. One of  the kneeling men saw
the Knight coming and tried to stand, but the man that saved me kicked
him away from Telia while he swung his sword at the man who had hit my
sister.
     The  knight  roared  something  in a  language  that  I  couldn't
understand. All of the men, including  the one that helped me, stopped
instantly.
     I wanted to get back to my  feet, to run over and help Telia, but
my legs still  felt numb and didn't  seem to want to do  what I wanted
them to do.

                 Come on, legs.  I've got to get to Telia!

     I finally managed to get back to my feet, and I staggered over to
where Telia  lay. The armored  man pushed the  dead man off  Telia and
knelt beside her, but I managed to squeeze past him.
     Her head was twisted all wrong!
     She was lying on her back. Her skirt had been torn away and there
was blood all  over her legs and  on the ground. The  armored man slid
his hand over her face, then stood back and I knelt beside her.
     "I'm sorry, kid," the man said as I lifted her head into my lap.

                 You're sorry?!  YOU'RE sorry!  They've
          killed her!  She's dead and they've killed her!
          Kill them all!  KILL THEM ALL!  I'm sorry, Telia.
          I didn't mean it.  I didn't want them to hurt you.
          I didn't want this to happen.  Why did you come in
          here?  Why?  Why did Father have to send you out
          here?  It's not fair.  Damn them ALL!  I didn't
          really want you to get hurt.  I wished for it but I
          didn't mean it.  WHY DID I WISH FOR IT AT ALL?!?
          IT'S ALL MY FAULT!!

     I  knelt there  and cried,  not knowing  or caring  what went  on
around me. Nothing else mattered except  the fact that I had, somehow,
caused my sister's death  by the stupid wishes that I  had made. I was
finally drawn  from my self-pity  by a hand  on my shoulder.  I looked
around and saw my Father kneeling beside me.
     "Derrio, I will take her into the house." That was all he said. I
could tell that he was almost crying  himself, and for once I was glad
that I  couldn't speak; it  saved me from  having to say  something to
him. I  rose and  removed my  cloak, draping it  over Telia's  body as
Father picked her up.  He walked to the door, then  out into the yard,
but I couldn't follow.

1                 How can I face them?  It was what I said;
          those things that I wished for caused Telia to die.
          I never wanted her to get hurt.  I didn't want her
          to die.  I was angry and I thought some mean things
          and I wanted for revenge.  Now she's dead and I'm
          to blame.  And they will know; Mother and Father
          will know the minute that they look at me.  They
          can always tell my thoughts, even when I try to
          hide them.  They will take one look at my face and
          they will know.  How can I face them?  What am I
          going to do?....

     Many different thoughts ran through  my head as I wandered around
aimlessly in the strangely deserted barn.

                 I could run out the back of the barn and
          into the woods and as far away from here as I can
          go..., but where would I go?  I could jump off of
          the loft or out of the upper window..., but Mother
          and Father have already lost one child today.

     My mind ran  wild with possibilities, each too scary  or noo hard
or too stupid to  consider. At the end of it all,  I realized that the
only thing that I could do was to go and confront them; tell them that
it was my fault.

                 They will hate me.  Mother will scream and
          cry and Father will stand there and quietly tell me
          to leave and never come back.

     As I  walked toward the door,  one of the knight's  men came back
into the barn. He  ran past me without looking at me  at all, and went
directly to the ladder. I stepped  through the door and headed for the
house. It  was then  that I saw  the knight and  the armored  man that
saved me.  They were standing in  the yard, swords drawn,  facing each
other.

                 They are going to fight each other!

     I stopped dead in my tracks. They  were the two that had tried to
save Telia. Now they were going to fight!? It didn't make sense.
     I heard  the loft  door open and  I looked up.  The man  that had
passed me must have opened it,  but I couldn't see him, standing where
I was almost  directly beneath the door. I stepped  back into the barn
and walked into the first stall so  I could see him. He appeared to be
bending over, tugging  at something. He turned back  toward the window
and I saw that he held a crossbow!

                 He meant to shoot someone!  The knight!!  Or
          the other one!  Damn this stupid tongue!  How can I
          warn them?  If I try to run out there I'll be too
          late!

     I saw  the pitchfork lying near  the stall where the  armored man
had dropped  it. I  ran and grabbed  it, then ran  for the  door. Once
outside, I saw  the two fighting. They couldn't know  about the man in
the loft. I  turned and hit the  barn with the fork,  again and again.
When  I finally  stopped to  look, the  armored man  was lowering  his
shield, which now  had a crossbow bolt imbedded in  it! The knight was
pointing to the barn and shouting. Several men came running toward the
1barn. I stepped out  of the way, hoping that they  were coming for the
man in the loft and not for me.  I was right, for they ran past me and
into the barn. Very soon they  emerged, dragging the man from the loft
with them.  They took him to  the knight, who slapped  the man's face,
spoke to  him, then waved his  hand in dismissal. The  crossbowman was
dragged to  one side and  thrown to  the ground, his  captors standing
beside him. He didn't even try to get up.
     The knight  and the  other man resumed  their fighting.  I didn't
understand why they were fighting, but  I knew that they were serious.
Several times I saw the second man falter, but he recovered each time.
Then I saw the knight almost fall in the mud, but he recovered, too.
     I  was so  enthralled  by the  battle that  I  almost missed  the
movement out of  the corner of my  eye. Looking past the  house, I saw
something moving just inside the  forest's edge. When I looked harder,
I saw that there were men all  along the forest border. Several men on
horseback emerged and  galloped toward the house. I had  tried to warn
the two armored men, but several of  the other men grabbed me and held
me back. I tried  to tell the other men, but  they were too interested
in the fight before them.
     Then again, so was I.
     I turned back  toward the fighting men and saw  that they were no
longer fighting. Much to my amazement, it was the man in the tarnished
armor that was  standing over the knight, who was  kneeling on a muddy
patch of ground. The knight held  out his sword to the mysterious man,
who  shook his  head. The  knight stood  and removed  his helm  as his
opponent removed his  own. I had gotten close enough  to hear what was
being said...
     "... You promised  me that, should I conquer. I  have. You are an
honorable man, and you will keep your word."
     I looked for the first time at the speaker, the man who had saved
me. His face was drawn and haggard  and his hair was disheveled by the
helm; he was  almost as sorry a  sight as the tarnished  armor that he
wore. The voice, however, was strong  and rich; like the knight's -- a
voice of authority.
     "I have  what I  want. I  won't kill  an honorable  enemy without
need, sir. Return to your home."
     The knight stared at the man who had just defeated him and spoke:
     "Whoever your  teacher was, he  trained you  well in the  ways of
fighting; and in  the Knightly Code. Would to God  we weren't enemies,
Luthias Connall;  this day, you  would have your Knighthood  from me."
The knight offered his hand to the man named "Luthias Connall."
     Luthias' smile grew,  and content calm flooded his  eyes. "I have
never  been so  honored,  Sir Lawrence,"  he said,  and  he shook  the
Knight's hand.
     "I  believe, Sir  Lawrence, that  I can  fulfill that  office." A
mighty voice  boomed from behind me.  I turned to see  ANOTHER knight,
who was  dismounting from his  horse. He  was accompanied by  an older
man, much too old to be a squire, climbing down from a horse as well.
     "Honor given by  an enemy is a high compliment,  one that Luthias
has well earned. Count Connall, kneel."

                 A COUNT!!  Knights and Counts?!  What is
          going on here?

     Count  Connall knelt  in the  mud, and  the knight  who had  just
arrived walked over to him, drew his sword, and spoke:
     "I, Edward Sothos...."
     Luthias lunged forward  and grabbed the speaking  man's arm. "Sir
Edward, you can't!  You know what I need!" There  was a desperate look
in Luthias'  eyes, one  which I  have seen in  the eyes  of frightened
1animals. There was so much going on here that I didn't understand.
     "You no longer need it." The older man, who now walked past me to
stand near Sir Edward, spoke for the first time. His voice is strange;
soft and soothing, yet there is something about it that was out of the
ordinary. I couldn't  quite figure out what it was.  "The drink I gave
you... I cured you. By accident, I cured you."
     The look  on Luthias'  face changed  to a  look of  confusion. "I
don't believe it."
     "How long since the last time, then?" The older man, who wore red
robes, was smiling.
     Luthias' face changed.  He eyes went blank for a  moment, like he
was trying to  remember something. Then his eyes slowly  widened and a
smile took over his face.
     The knight named Sothos began once  again, as if taking the smile
on Luthias' face as a cue.  "I, Edward Sothos, Knight of Baranur, have
been  called upon  to convey  upon Luthias  of Connall  the office  of
Knighthood..."

                 A Knighting Ceremony!!  This is a real
          knighting ceremony, just like father described!

     "Who asks this charge for him?"
     The red-robed  man started to  speak, but the other  knight spoke
first.
     "I so ask." This seemed to surprise Luthias.
     "You know him worthy?" Sir Edward asked.
     "I so know."
     "So  be it.  I, Edward  Sothos,  Knight of  Baranur, charge  you,
Luthias of Connall, to take up the office of Knighthood. Do you accept
the charge, with all its honors and obligations?"
     "I so accept," Luthias answered,  his voice now stronger and more
confident.
     "Do you  vow to protect and  serve your homeland, your  lady, and
your King?"
     "I so vow."
     "Do you vow to  be in and above all things,  a Knight, a follower
of Chivalry and Honor?"
     "I so vow."
     "How do you so vow?"
     "Upon my honor, my sword, and my life."
     "Then I, Edward Sothos, Knight of Baranur, with this silver chain
do  convey upon  you, Luthias  of  Connall, that  office." Sir  Edward
turned toward  the older man,  who mumbled something, then  handed the
knight a  silver chain. Edward  turned back toward Luthias  and draped
the chain  across Luthias' shoulders.  He then slapped Luthias  on the
cheek with  the flat of his  sword. "Let that be  your last unrequited
blow." Sheathing his sword, Sir Edward  spoke loudly, for all to hear.
"Rise, Sir Luthias, Count Connall."
     Sir Luthias began laughing as he got to his feet.
     In a quieter voice, Sir Edward said "I am proud of you."

                 Strange.  I know that there are enemies
          here, but at this moment, I can't tell who is
          friend and who is foe.

     Sir Luthias  turned toward the  knight that he had  been fighting
only moments  before. "Return  now, Sir Lawrence.  You will  have safe
passage out of the country. You have my word, as a Knight."
     Sir Lawrence grinned. "Thank you, Sir Luthias. May you and I live
to laugh about this someday."
1     "I'll treat you to a drink," Sir Luthias said.
     "I drink to you now," Sir Lawrence answered, taking a silver horn
from his  belt. Without  putting anything  into it,  he raised  it and
pretended to drink. When he was finished,  he held the horn out to Sir
Luthias, who repeated the action.

                 I wonder what is meant by this ritual; or
          even if it is a ritual?

     "Thank  you," Sir  Luthias said,  handing  the horn  back to  Sir
Lawrence.  He hesitated,  then held  out  his sword  to Sir  Lawrence.
"Again, thank you."
     Sir Lawrence took it from him. "This  sword was given to me by my
master  when I  was made  a Knight.  Today I  took the  place of  your
master; today you became a Knight."  He held out the sword to Luthias.
"I have had no student more worthy than you."
     "I am deeply honored." Luthias  took the sword from Lawrence once
again.
     Sir Lawrence bowed to the other two knights and the old man, then
turned to the main group of men that had come with him. "Let us ride!"
Lawrence's squire brought  the knight his horse.  Sir Lawrence mounted
and rode  around his  men, shouting orders  to hasten  their progress.
When they appeared  to be ready to leave, Lawrence  turned back toward
the other two knights, who still  stood near the muddy patch of ground
where the  duel took place. He  drew his sword and  saluted Edward and
Luthias, who returned the gesture.
     While Sir Lawrence  gathered his men, I stood near  the older man
who had  arrived with Sir Edward.  He was dressed in  robes, much like
the  local Vicar,  but he  smiled at  me when  he noticed  that I  was
looking at him, which is something  that the Vicar would never do. His
gaze felt  strange, though, like  he was  looking inside me.  I turned
toward Luthias, who was watching the departure of Sir Lawrence and his
men.

                 How can I thank him for saving me and for
          trying to save Telia?  He is a stranger.  He will
          not understand me.

     I felt compelled  to speak, yet I knew that  the only sounds that
would come from my mouth would  be groans and grunts. I approached the
two knights and caught Luthias' attention.

                 Thank you.

     I put  my hand over my  heart, touched my lips,  then extended my
hand  toward him.  Mother  had taught  me a  few  symbols that  could,
hopefully, be understood by others.
     He looked at me questioningly.

                 I knew it.  He doesn't understand!

     I pointed toward the barn. I swung  my arms as if I were swinging
the pitchfork, then pointed to my legs.
     He  looked at  the barn,  then  back at  me. He  nodded, but  the
confused look remained in his eyes.

                 How can I make you understand.  You saved
          me!  You tried to save Telia!

     I clasped both hands over my heart, then extended them toward him
1once again.
     "He  is trying  to thank  you,  Luthias." The  older man's  words
startled me, but I nodded and made the signs once again.
     "You are welcome. I am truly  sorry about your sister. Had I only
arrived a few moments sooner, I  might have been able to save her...."
An old, haunting look crossed his  face. "But I couldn't save Roisart,
either."

                 Your eyes are so sad.  Are you going to cry
          for my sister, even though you didn't know her?  I
          wish I could be like you.

     I  hesitated for  a moment,  then knew  what I  wanted more  than
anything else in the world. I wanted to become a knight; a knight like
Luthias. Perhaps by becoming a knight,  I could clear my conscience of
my sister's  death. I  approached Luthias and  reached toward  him. He
didn't back away.  I touched the chain upon his  chest, the chain that
had been placed on his shoulders by  Sir Edward, then I touched my own
chest, tracing a line where the chain would fall across it.

                 Please.  Teach me.  Show me how to become a
          knight.  Please.

     Luthias seemed to  understand immediately. He smiled;  a warm and
genuine smile  which told  of compassion  and kindness  and, strangely
enough, of sorrow.
     He turned, grinning,  to Sir Edward. "Since I am  now a knight, I
will have need of a squire, won't I?"
     "At least one," Sir Edward replied.
     Sir Luthias turned toward me. "Will you become my squire?"
     Sir  Edward's  eyes seemed  ready  to  fall from  their  sockets.
"Luthias, you  cannot make this  boy your squire!  He is not  of noble
descent; he is just a farmer's son.
     "What difference does that make?" Luthias argued. "I know 'noble'
sons  who are  dishonorable  cowards. This  'farmer's  son' was  brave
enough to  try to rescue  his sister from  twenty armed men  -- alone!
This  display of  bravery by  itself is  an indication  of this  lad's
worthiness. Social class has nothing to do with it."
     Sir Edward frowned. "I see your  point, Luthias, but still, it is
quite rare  to make a  peasant into a Knight.  You do realize  that he
will have to be Knighted someday if he becomes your squire."
     "That is the general idea," the robed man observed dryly.
     "He's already displayed Knightly qualities," Sir Luthias reminded
Sir Edward.  "He tried  to rescue  a lady and  defend her.  He bravely
faced  the danger."  He paused.  "Look,  Edward, I'd  rather Knight  a
peasant with a noble heart than a coward with a noble name."
     "Again, you have a point,"  Sir Edward admitted. "I'm not certain
I approve, but I can't stop you. To a point, I even agree with you."
     "So," Sir Luthias began, "would you like to squire to me?"

                 Yes!  YES!  I'll learn, I promise.  I'll do
          all of the chores that you ask me to do, and I
          won't complain.  Thank you!  THANK YOU!

     "We'll have the  ceremony later this week. I  cannot keep calling
you 'boy',  though. What  is your name?"  Then he  winced, remembering
that I couldn't talk.
     "His name is  Derrio." My father's voice startled  me, although I
should have seen  Mother and him approaching. "Is it  true? Is there a
war coming?"
1     The grim Sir Edward nodded. "It is already here. The Beinison men
that  were here  were  an  advance scouting  force  sent  to find  the
locations of our forces. As it  appears, they will invade through this
area, so your farm is no longer safe."
     "Let us leave  this place," my mother said to  my father, holding
back the tears that  must be for Telia. "I no longer  have a desire to
stay."
     "Could your  armies use  another archer?" Father's  voice wavered
slightly. "I may  not be a good  as your regulars, but I  have won the
county's archery contest for the last two  years in a row. And my wife
could cook and care for the wounded."
     Sir Edward smiled. "We can always use archers." He then looked at
mother, who stood looking at the ground.
     Sir  Luthias laughed  loudly. "And  a  cook, a  REAL cook,  would
probably boost morale more than anything else!"
     The  robed man  looked over  his  shoulder. "Come.  We should  be
getting back to Pyridain. Another  storm is coming." He approached me.
"And I find myself curious as to why this boy is unable to talk."
     I suddenly  remembered Sir Lawrence's  silver horn. He  wore that
horn like a symbol; something that set  him apart from the rest of the
knights. I broke and ran for the house.  I knew what I needed to do. I
burst into the house and headed straight for Telia's room.
     When I  entered, I  saw Telia  on the bed.  She was  lying there,
under the quilts, as if she were asleep. On the other side of the room
I saw what I had come for. Her tiny harp stood on a table by itself. I
picked it up carefully. This was the first time I had ever held it.

                 You will never sing again, little harp.  The
          fingers that coaxed you to play are gone.  Your
          strings are silent, angry over what has happened.
          No, you will never sing again, but you will speak.
          You will speak to me every night when I lay you
          aside before I sleep.  You will remind me of what
          has happened here, and of what I have done.  You
          will remind me when I forget about her.  Her voice
          is stilled forever, so now I must be that voice.
          And I will speak for you, Telia; I promise you.  I
          will speak through my actions; through my deeds and
          through my presence.  One day, I will be a knight,
          and on that day, this harp will become my symbol.
          It will become a symbol of ... of ..."

     I had run  out of words, but  not tears. I watched as  a tear ran
slowly down one of the strings of  the little harp. I knew that it was
one of mine, but for that moment, the harp wept.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
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 ******   *****            The Online Magazine              ***********
 ******   *****        of Amateur Creative Writing         ************
                       ---------------------------


     Athene is a free network "magazine" devoted to amateur fiction
written by the members of the online community.  Athene is not limited
to any specific genre, but will publish quality short stories dealing
with just about any interesting topic.

     The magazine is published monthly, and comes in two formats --
ASCII and PostScript.  The content is identical across both formats, but
the PostScript version is designed for printing on laser printers while
the ASCII edition can be read online as well as printed.

     To subscribe, send mail (no interactive messages, please) to:

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receive.  Back issues, an index, and submission information are also
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             ______________________________________

             A Journal of Fact, Fiction and Opinion
             ______________________________________

Quanta is an electronically distributed magazine of science fiction.
Published monthly,  each issue contains short fiction,  articles and
editorials by authors around the world  and across the net.   Quanta
publishes  in  two  formats:   straight  ascii and  PostScript*  for
PostScript compatible printers.   To subscribe to Quanta, or just to
get more info, send mail to:

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Quanta is a relatively new magazine  but is growing fast,  with over
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1------------------------------------------------------------------------
   (C)   Copyright     March,    1989,   DargonZine,    Editor    Dafydd
. All rights revert to the authors. These stories may
not be reproduced  or redistributed save in the case  of reproducing the
whole 'zine for  further distribution without the  express permission of
the author involved.






1                                                             /
  DDDDD                              ZZZZZZ                //
  D    D  AAAA RRR  GGGG OOOO NN  N      Z  I NN  N EEEE  ||
  D     D A  A R  R G    O  O N N N     Z   I N N N E     || Volume 3
-=========================================================+|)
  D    D  AAAA RRR  G GG O  O N N N   Z     I N N N E     ||  Issue 6
  DDDDD   A  A R  R GGGG OOOO N  NN  ZZZZZZ I N  NN EEEE  ||
                                                           \\
                                                             \
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--   DargonZine Volume 3, Issue 6        05/04/90          Cir 984    --
------------------------------------------------------------------------
--                            Contents                                --
------------------------------------------------------------------------
 DAG                          Dafydd Cyhoeddwr       Editor
 Materia Medica IV            Max Khaytsus and
                              Michelle Brothers      Yuli 24-30, 1013
 Hunting of the Red Tiger I   Wendy Hennequin        Neber 1013
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                         Dafydd's Amber Glow
                  by Ye Olde Editor, Dafydd Cyhoeddwr
                 (b.c.k.a. )

     This editorial will be brief. I just wanted to make you all aware
that there is (finally!) a source  for back issues of DargonZine other
than myself. I had wanted to test out the access method before telling
you all about it, and just received the results of that test today. In
the interest of getting an issue out  (it has been over a month, after
all), I  decided not to  put a lengthy  description about this  here -
look for a longer DAG next  issue (out next Friday, if everything goes
well)  which will  describe everything  you  need to  know about  this
archive service  (or at least  as much as I  know). If you  are really
anxious to know,  you can send me  a mail message at  either the above
address  or the  one in  the  copyright notice  at the  end (they  are
equivalent in every respect) about it  and I will send you the updated
DargonZine Info file which has this information in it.
     Thanks for waiting and Enjoy!

                      Dafydd Cyhoeddwr

P.S. Wish me happy birthday - I break three decades on Sunday!
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                            Materia Medica
                               Part 4
                            by Max Khaytsus
             
                         and Michelle Brothers
             


     "I just  don't understand  why he didn't  come back  last night,"
repeated  Kera for  the fifth  time since  they had  started out  from
Connall Keep, less than two hours ago. "Or at least send a message. If
he was going to be late he would have sent a messenger back...wouldn't
he?" The nagging  feeling that something dire had  happened crept into
her worried commentary.
     "I am certain he is all  right," said Ittosai patiently, also for
the fifth time. "Merely detained."
     Dawn had just  broken when Kera went to Myrande  to tell her that
Rien hadn't made it back during  the night, declaring her intention to
go after him  as soon as her  horse was saddled. Sable  had managed to
convince her to wait long enough to have Ittosai go with her as both a
companion and  an escort in case  of trouble. Not for  the first time,
Myrande thanked god that the Castellan rose early.
     As the pair came within sight  of Dargon's walls, Kera pulled the
hood of her heavy cloak up so  that her face was hidden in its shadowy
folds. Ittosai gave her a questioning look.
     "There are some  people in Dargon who would be  happy to know I'm
back," Kera explained  evasively. "I don't have the time  to be making
social calls."
     Hiding a faint smile, Ittosai inclined his head in understanding.
A few minutes later they rode through the main gates of Dargon.
     Kera was able to get them to the inn that she and Rien had stayed
at in  record time. With  the strong, comforting presense  of Ittosai,
she felt  safe enough to take  a few short-cuts and  her companion did
not feel the need to ask how  she knew the routes, for which the thief
gave silent thanks.
     "Have you seen  my companion?" Kera demanded  breathlessly of the
innkeeper, as soon  as she was inside the inn,  while Ittosai tethered
the horses.
     The man  started and  looked quickly  up from  the ledger  he was
leafing  through. "Your  companion,  miss?" he  said,  looking at  her
blankly.
     "He was supposed to be here last night," continued Kera. "To pick
up our belongings. We were staying  in room three," she added when the
man continued to look questioningly at her.
     "Ah, yes, that  gentleman. Taller than him," the  innkeep waved a
hand  at Ittosai  as he  was  coming through  the door  to join  Kera.
"Blond, slender,  long blue  cloak?" Kera  nodded eagerly.  "Showed up
yesterday evening with plans to move out.  Asked me to get him a horse
and went upstairs, but  never came back down. I managed  to find him a
good horse, too," he hinted, but  before he finished, Kera was halfway
up the stairs with Ittosai hot on her heels.
     The door to the room she and Rien had shared was closed, but when
Kera tried to  push it open, it was unlocked.  Suspicious, because the
caution  she  and her  mentor  habitually  practiced included  locking
doors, Kera  pushed the  door open. Behind  her, Ittosai  loosened his
sword in its scabbard, anticipating trouble.
     The door opened with a low groan.
     Light peeked through  the cracks in the shutters and  Kera took a
second to  allow her eyes to  adjust to the dimness  before cautiously
entering  the  room. She  glanced  hastily  around, seeking  intruders
1before her gaze was caught by a figure lying sprawled on the bed.
     With a  soft curse, Kera  stepped over  and rolled the  body onto
it's back.  Rien's hand,  the fingertips stained  a dull  red, flopped
over the edge of the mattress.
     "How is  he?" asked Ittosai softly  as Kera checked to  see if he
was breathing.
     "Alive,"  she replied  after  a  moment. She  shook  Rien, in  an
attempt to revive  him, but got no reaction. She  tried again, harder,
with the  same result.  "He's alive," Kera  repeated grimly.  "But not
much else. We should get him back to Marcellon as soon as we can." She
pulled her pouch off of her belt and offered it to Ittosai. "Would you
please pay for the room and that horse? I'll get him ready to go."
     Ittosai accepted the money with a slight bow and a look of gentle
sympathy and disappeared down the hall. Kera stared at Rien's immobile
form and bit her lip to keep  the tears back. `This is hardly the time
to be losing control,' she thought  to herself firmly. `You said you'd
get him ready, so do it.'
     She gathered their possessions  together first and carefully tied
them into as compact bundles as she could, hoping that Rien would wake
up while she  worked. Yet, when she finished, he  still hadn't stirred
at all.
     With  a sigh,  Kera grabbed  Rien's arm  to attempt  to haul  him
upright so that when it came time to carry him downstairs, he would be
easier to pick  up. With a great  deal of effort, she was  able to get
him upright -- Rien was not nearly so light as he appeared -- and then
dropped  him as  a  low scraping  noise caused  her  to turn  quickly,
reaching for her daggers.
     Rien hit the  rough wood floor with a loud  crash, Kera's attempt
at grabbing him  coming too late. Ittosai, who had  startled Kera with
his return, ducked inside and joined  her at her mentor's side. Rien's
eyelids flickered and he slowly opened them to look up at the pair.
     "Rien...Rien! Are you all right?"  Kera asked, helping him into a
sitting position from behind.
     "I'm fine," Rien said  after a moment. He put a  hand to the back
of his head,  where it had hit the  floor. "Or rather, I will  be in a
bit."  His glance  was caught  by  the red  on his  fingertips and  he
studied them curiously as Kera let loose a flood of questions.
     "Why didn't you send back  a message?" she demanded. "Who knocked
you out? Why couldn't  I wake you up, what happened  to your horse and
are you sure you're all right?"
     Ittosai  simply  knelt opposite  him  and  observed him  quietly,
prepared to offer Kera a hand should Rien collapse again.
     "I didn't send a message because I hadn't planned on being late,"
Rien said sharply,  pulling his gaze away from his  fingers. "That's a
foolish question  to ask." Kera  flushed and Rien  continued. "Someone
stole my horse, just after I got into town," he said slowly. "I'm sure
I'll recall the  circumstances later. Did the innkeep  find me another
horse?" he asked suddenly, as though just remembering that he had made
the request.
     Ittosai nodded. "It is a fine animal," he said. "Light cavalry. I
have paid for  it and your room."  He offered Kera back  her pouch and
she absently took it back.
     `Cavalry?' Rien thought.  `I just wanted a  horse...' "Thank you,
Castellan," he said  aloud. Ittosai bowed and Rien looked  down at his
hands again. "You couldn't wake me, Kera, because I forced myself into
a jashch," -- she wondered how he  managed to get all those sounds out
without damaging his tongue -- "it's a trance like state that isolates
me from  normal bodily  control. I  assume I  was poisoned,"  he said,
looking up once again. "My senses failed me completely."
     "Are you all  right? Who would do something like  that? Where did
1it happen?" Kera burst into a string of questions again.
     "I told you already,  I'm fine. I don't know who  did it or where
or how. It just happened."
     "Could  it...could  it  have   been  the  disease?"  asked  Kera,
swallowing hard.
     "Possibly," Rien said, frowning. "I'm not sure..." He looked back
to his hand. "I'm sure this is somehow involved," he indicated the red
stain.
     "We need to  return to Lord Marcellon,"  said Ittosai decisively.
"He will know. Are you well enough to travel?"
     "Yes."
     "Then let's get moving!" declared Kera, grabbing the bundles that
contained her's and Rien's possessions. She headed for the door.
     With Ittosai's help,  Rien walked out of the inn  and mounted his
newly purchased horse. They left for Connall Keep immediately.

     "That  was indeed  nightshade," Marcellon  said putting  away the
beakers after pouring out the solutions he used. "You say your race is
immune to the effects of the plant?"
     Rien nodded. "They are. I am surprised it had this effect on me."
     "Have you tried it before? Was there a reaction?"
     "No, I  never tried it  before," Rien said.  "At least not  to my
knowledge and not deliberately."
     "But you are half human..."  Marcellon stroked his chin absently,
staring at nothing in particular. "You could have a different reaction
to it, especially  now that you have the disease  to worry about. This
is the most positive proof that some changes have taken place. Do your
people respond to it as a narcotic?"
     "No. It's a simple forest grass."
     "None the  less," the wizard went  on, "it was nightshade  and it
did affect you as a hallucinogen."
     "At  least it's  not  the  disease," Kera  sighed.  She had  been
seriously concerned  the entire morning, even  after Marcellon assured
her that it  could not be the  disease, and only now  was beginning to
relax.
     "Young lady," Marcellon looked over  at her. "What happened today
stressed the one  factor which we all should be  concerned about. Rien
is  neither human,  nor Ljosalfar.  In him  the disease  may take  any
course  imaginable. For  all  I  know, he  may  display more  symptoms
tomorrow morning than you will in the next month. He is one of a kind.
There is no precedent for what we are dealing with."
     Kera shuddered at  the images the wizard invoked  with his words,
as he  turned back to Rien.  Visions of Rien mutating  into a wolfling
were fore-most  in her mind as  the wizard continued talking  with her
mentor.
     "This still leave the question of who poisoned you."
     "Over all, I see Dargon as a friendly town..."
     "Any  people  in town  who  may  for  some reason  dislike  you?"
Marcellon persisted.
     "None that I could think of, sir," Rien answered.
     "Even the men you rescued Kera from?"
     Damn, he  had a good memory!  "I would imagine they  are still in
custody of  the guard. Penalties  for armed assault are  stiff...and I
doubt  they had  the knowledge  to  make the  poison or  the money  to
purchase it."
     "Very well," Marcellon  nodded. "One last question.  You said you
forced yourself to pass out. Could you elaborate on that?"
     Rien  gave the  question some  thought. To  him it  was something
natural, but  equating it to  human norms  would be a  difficult task.
"Sometimes after  sustaining injuries humans  go into shock,"  he said
1finally. "This reflex  is triggered by pain or perhaps  loss of blood.
Jashch is similar  to that. It protects from  unwanted sensations, but
it can be triggered by a conscious  effort. It is in a way opposite of
going into  shock. The action  is controlled  at the start,  but while
humans recover  on their own,  I would have  to be `removed'  from the
condition forcibly."
     Kera lowered her eyes as Marcellon looked at her.
     "And you dropped him. On his head."
     She nodded. "It was an accident..."
     "Otherwise  I would  probably still  be unconscious,"  Rien said,
feeling the lump on the back of his head, and grinning as Kera flushed
a deeper shade of red.
     "The condition isn't permanent, is  it?" the wizard asked. "There
must be other ways to regain consciousness."
     "Hunger would have woken me up,"  Rien said, "but that could take
a while."
     "Very  well,"  Marcellon stood  up.  "That  satisfies all  of  my
curiosity for  the moment. Let  me return to my  work and I  shall see
both of you at dinner."
     Rien and Kera stood up as well.
     "By  the way,"  Marcellon stopped  them before  they reached  the
door. "Rien, an old friend of  mine, someone I attended the University
in Magnus  with, will be stopping  by here in a  day or two. He  is an
archivist. I am sure he would be interested in meeting with you. Would
you object?"
     "Not at all," Rien answered and  promptly left with Kera. "I hope
his friend isn't as  strange as he is," Rien said  as they walked down
the hall. "He asks far too many questions."
     "You lied to him, you know," Kera said. "You said you didn't have
enemies in town."
     "Morality from  you? Is  profession of thievery  becoming moral?"
Rien jested.  "I did not lie.  I stretched the truth,  emphasized some
misleading facts,  but it  was not  a lie.  He suspected  someone from
Dargon attempted to  poison me. I believe it was  someone from outside
of Dargon."
     "Huh?"
     "I told him it was not an individual from Dargon who did this."
     "You know who it was?"
     "No, but I  suspect. The innkeeper told me an  elderly woman came
around  asking for  me. The  lock to  the room  was jammed.  Marcellon
established beyond doubt that the  poison was administered through the
hand." He  displayed for Kera the  still visible red stain.  "I assume
that  the old  woman, very  likely a  witch from  Maari's coven,  came
around and set up the `trap'  for me, most likely expecting the poison
to kill  me. It would  have to be  left on a  surface that I  would be
guaranteed to touch...such  as the door. The lock  was probably jammed
so that my exposure would increase."
     "Very convincing," Kera said.
     "So, as you can see, I did not lie. I simply did not tell him the
whole truth. If he  or the Baron were to learn  the truth about Liriss
or Maari, our position could  become compromised. In either case, this
convinced me  that Dargon is far  too dangerous for us.  The sooner we
can leave, the better it will be."
     "Could it have been Liriss's assassin?"
     "I doubt  Liriss would  hire someone's  grandmother to  kill us,"
Rien smiled. "Usually grandmothers are self-motivated."
     A laugh escaped from Kera's mouth.
     "I would imagine that the assassin  is looking for us in Tench by
now. He will track us here eventually, but we will be gone by the time
he figures out where we went...I hope."
1     They walked in silence  to the door of one of  the rooms given to
them, considering all  the dangers that waited  to present themselves,
then Rien  turned to Kera  once again. "I do  have a question  for you
about Liriss. When I made it to Dargon yesterday, I went by the docks,
including Liriss's pier. Three men were  trying to drown a girl there.
She was your age, perhaps a bit younger. About five foot, light frame,
light brown hair, amber eyes... She's  the reason my horse was stolen.
I stopped  to help her out  and I think  she took it. Does  that sound
familiar?"
     "Sorry. I never had a horse stolen like that." Kera grinned. "And
no one  I know is into  horse theft. It's too  hard to get rid  of the
goods."
     Rien glared down at her. "It's not funny. Do you know the girl?"
     Kera shook her head. "I was the youngest one. His ward, in fact,"
she added bitterly.
     Rien  continued,  not really  hearing  the  last part  of  Kera's
comment.
     "I've seen those eyes before..."

     "I'm very glad that you were willing to make this record with me,
Rien. It  will be invaluable  for future generations. Perhaps  we will
even stop fearing your people because of this."
     Rish Vogel  made himself  comfortable in  the Baron's  chair and,
placing an ink well with a goose  quill on the desk, pulled out a long
rolled up sheet of parchment.
     Rien watched  as the old  chronicaler set everything  up, opening
pots of ink, pulling out extra pens from a small box engraved with the
quill and  scroll of the Archivist  Guild, laying out a  blotter and a
large pile of  clean parchment. Vogel came across as  a man completely
dedicated to  his profession;  perhaps so  much so  that he  seemed to
forget  everything else,  although  he never  forgot information  that
applied  to  his craft.  He  even,  to  Rien's  mind, dressed  like  a
historian should --  long brown robe with the crumbs  of his last meal
clinging to the front, worn belt  with additional quills, a jar of ink
and several small rolls of parchment  dangling from it. Rien had asked
the reason for the extra equipment and had been told flatly that after
being caught without paper and having to record a very important event
on a napkin in wine, Rish had  vowed to never be caught without proper
tools again.  Hanging the items  from his belt  was his way  of making
sure that they were on hand at all times. Rien found this to be highly
amusing.
     He had  agreed to the interview  only because he believed  in the
chronicler's desire to have the unknown recorded for later generations
of  people. And  he  hoped,  like Rish,  that  this information  would
someday lead to friendly contact between the two races.
     "Now," Rish dipped the quill in  the ink well and poised his hand
over the page. "Your name?"
     "Could  we  set  a  few   `house  rules'  first?"  Rien  remained
motionless in the middle of the room.
     Rish looked  up, without  actually moving  his head,  then jotted
down a  few words.  The chronicaler was  actually writing  every word!
Rien frowned.
     "If  you insist,"  Rish said,  "but I  intend on  making this  an
accurate record."
     "First of all, this record is  for your and the Duke's reference.
No one else is to see it."
     Rish nodded and set his pen to the paper again.
     "You will not use my name  or make any specific descriptions that
relate directly  to me. After  today, you do not  know me. Nor  will I
make any specific references to names,  places, or dates to protect my
1tribe."
     Rish  mouthed the  last few  words as  finished writing  them and
looked up. "Understood. How old are you?"
     Rien hesitated. That was a very personal question, but it was not
something  that could  compromise him  in  the long  run. The  bookish
chronicaler was not breaking `the rules' and was still getting as much
information as he could. Rien could see why Rish was able to make such
complete  records --  he  knew  which questions  to  ask. Still,  Rien
temporized. "Over  a century," was  all he permitted the  historian to
write down.
     Rish  began writing  again. "I  understand that  your people  are
immortal," he said,  his pen scratching over the  paper, recording his
own question.
     "We are not  immortal," Rien said. "Not in the  true sense of the
word, anyway. We do have long lifespans and in our recorded history no
Ljosalfar  has died  of old  age,  but we  do die."  Rien's voice  was
somber. "We suffer from disease and accidents just like humans. And we
can be slain just as easily."
     Rish paused  to dip the  quill in to the  ink again. "How  do you
live?"
     "I personally?"
     Rish looked  up, irritated  that Rien could  not handle  a simple
question. "How does the society function?"
     "We  function  as  a  tribe  with  a  central  leader,  but  each
individual, once they come of age, has a voice in making the decisions
that effect the tribe as a whole. For example, the leader might settle
a dispute  between two people, but  if there is a  question of whether
the  tribe  should  move  elsewhere  to winter,  it  is  discussed  by
everyone." Rien  drew a deep  breath and continued as  the chronicaler
finished  writing his  last sentence.  "We  don't have  a money  based
economy. Barter is the usual  method of distributing goods and skills.
There are no  social classes. Everyone helps to take  care of everyone
else and no one goes hungry. We have no crime and--"
     "No crime?" Rish interrupted Rien, looking up sharply. From years
of ingrained habit he used the opportunity to get more ink on his pen.
     "There are very few of my race left," Rien said. "We can't afford
to hurt each other. There are plenty of outsiders who do that for us."
     "No crime at  all," Rish repeated musingly, jotting  down a quick
notation on  the bottom of the  page so that he  could cross-reference
the statement with other records at a later date.
     "Practically none,"  Rien conceded. "There are  recorded cases of
individuals being cast out, but they are few and far between, and none
of them recent.  The idea of consciously stealing from  your sister or
harming your  brother is as  foreign to us as  the concept of  lack of
crime is to you."
     Rish pulled  the ink  well closer, not  quite satisfied  with the
response, but knowing  that he would get nothing else  on the subject.
"From what you said, I assume your tribe is very closely knit...?"
     "Yes."
     "Were you cast out?"
     That hit a sensitive nerve.  "No," Rien said, forcing himself not
to snap. "My father was human. I wanted to explore his world."
     Rish  kept  scribbling  along, not  noticing  Rien's  discomfort.
"`Keegan' is a human name. Was that the surname of your father?"
     Rien did not answer and the  chronicaler looked up. "I am sorry."
he said,  looking a little abashed.  "We did have an  agreement..." He
was about to say something else, but Rien spoke.
     "It's the name  of the man who trained me.  He recommended I take
it as  two names are  expected in your society.  I was honored  by his
offer, so I accepted the name."
1     Rish nodded and bent his head to the page again. "Can you tell me
the early history of  your people? And do sit down.  This won't go any
faster if you stand!"

     Kera sat up  in bed with a  ear piercing scream. She  was in cold
sweat and  out of instinct  she tried to  dodge the arms  reaching for
her. She slammed into  Rien who was lying next to  her, to avoid being
grabbed.
     "A dream..." she muttered to  herself, realizing no one was after
her. She  tossed her hair back  over her shoulder and  wiped the sweat
from her face.  It was chilly in  the room, cooler than  usual for the
summer and  Kera pulled the blanket  up. It was strange,  she thought,
that Rien hadn't responded when she hit him. Usually he was more alert
than that...
     She turned to look at her  companion, expecting to find him still
asleep, but instead  found herself staring into  unfamiliar eyes. Next
to her lay a beast -- she could think of no better word to describe it
-- with grey-white  fur, extended dog-like jaws and large  ears at the
top of  the skull. The  jaws were  partially open, displaying  rows of
snow-white teeth, four  of which stood prominently at  the front, each
half the length of her index finger. The creature stared hungrily into
her eyes  and she realized that  one of its hands  was clamped tightly
around her wrist.
     Kera tried to  pull her arm back, but the  creature prevented her
from withdrawing.  Instead the grip  tightened further and,  using her
for leverage, it  sat up. Kera tried to scream,  but her voice refused
to obey her. Instead of a  shout, a small whimpering noise escaped her
throat. The  creature's lips  pulled back in  a viscous  smile, tongue
lolling out of it's mouth.
     "Let me go..." she managed to whisper.
     The creature responded by forcing her onto her back, its strength
so  great  that Kera  found  herself  unable to  struggle  effectively
against it.
     "You will be  like me," she heard Rien's voice,  issuing from the
creature's throat without accompanying jaw movement. "You will be like
me," she heard again and this time  the mouth moved, the voice a rough
parody of Rien's usually gentle voice.
     She felt its fur against her chest  as it moved to loom over her.
"No..." she screamed, fear finally forcing the words out.
     "Like me..." the phrase was  repeated again, the words distorted,
barely recognizable. The claws on the arms that held her dug deep into
her wrists, piercing the skin and  bringing up trickles of blood, even
as her hands went numb.
     "I don't want to be like you!" Kera shouted out at the top of her
lungs, twisting beneath the heavy body with a last burst of strength.
     "Be like who?" the form above her asked. The voice was strict and
concerned -- Rien's.
     "Like you!" she shouted again and continued to struggle. She felt
cold and wet  and angry at being restrained, but  above all lurked the
fear of the creature above her. She bit into the arm holding her right
wrist and it  was released immediately. Her next thought  was to punch
up and  she did.  The figure  over her  swayed from  the blow  and she
continued to  hit at it, to  drive it away.  "I don't want to  be like
you!"
     "Stop it!" Rien's voice sounded again, this time a lot closer and
a hand locked around her free wrist once more. "Kera! Wake up!"
     She stopped the struggle long enough to look up. Rien was leaning
over  her, holding  on to  her arms.  "It's only  a dream.  Relax." He
pulled  her up  to a  sitting position  and cradled  her protectively.
"It's going to be all right."
1     Kera stared to cry softly.
     "I wouldn't want you to be like me," she heard him say. "You'd be
boring."
     The door burst open and two  guards rushed in. One held a readied
sword and the  other a burning torch.  "Let go of her!"  the first man
ordered Rien.
     "She had a nightmare," Rien  responded, drawing one of the sheets
around Kera's shoulders. She was  cold, covered with sweat and shaking
from the dream she just had and on top of all that, clammy. It was the
last that Rien objected to the most, as he held her.
     "Let go of her," the guard repeated, not sure what to believe. "I
want to hear that she is fine from her."
     Rien  sat up  straight, holding  onto Kera's  shoulders. She  was
still sobbing. "Are you all right?" he asked softly.
     "I'm fine," she said, wiping the  tears from her eyes. "Really, I
am," she finished, turning to face the two guards.
     "We'll be  in the hall if  you need anything," said  the man with
the  torch while  the  other  glared at  Rien  and  they stepped  back
outside, pulling the door closed.
     Rien turned back to Kera who was still shivering.
     "Are you  sure that you're all  right?" he asked, holding  her by
the shoulders and staring intently into her eyes.
     "I'll be  fine," Kera replied.  She wiped  the last of  the tears
from her cheeks. "It was just a nightmare...I dreamed...I dreamed that
you had changed into a..." She choked on the last part of the sentence
and Rien pulled her close again.
     "It's all right," he said,  stroking her hair. "I haven't changed
into anything yet and Marcellon will find  a cure so see that I don't,
ever."
     "I hope he can," whispered Kera.
     Rien held  her until she finally  fell asleep, and stared  at the
wall for a long time afterwards.

     "Sir Keegan?  The High Mage  wishes to  see you right  away." The
summons came right  after a quick knock on the  partially open door to
Baron Connall's study.
     Rien frowned.  Rish must have already  let it slip that  he was a
knight. At least he hadn't tell the chronicler much more than that. He
closed the  book he was  reading and stood up.  "Thank you. I  will be
right there."
     The guard left  the room and Rien  got up to replace  the book on
the shelf.  Baron Connall,  it seemed, was  very preoccupied  with the
`art'  of war,  but then  again so  were most  other Humans.  For some
reason  the  society was  more  interested  in perfecting  methods  of
fighting, claiming all  the while that those preparations  did more to
insure  peace  than  any  other   occupation.  It  struck  Rien  as  a
hypocritical  view, but  how could  one argue  that a  whole race  was
misinformed?
     Rien  made his  way  to Marcellon's  laboratory.  The wizard  was
talking with Myrande  and Kera and there was some  sense of excitement
about. Rien closed the door and came  up to the group. He noticed Kera
trying to hold back a smile.
     "I believe that I have solved it," Marcellon told Rien and Kera's
smile finally burst free.
     "You did it?" Rien asked, just to make sure he heard it right, in
spite of Kera's  expression indicating the question  was useless. "You
found a cure?"
     "I  believe   I  did,"   Marcellon  said  again.   "Believe,"  he
re-emphasized the  word as Rein started  to develop a smile  much like
his apprentice's.  "Kera is still capable  of seeing in the  dark, but
1there is  no other  evidence of  the disease in  her body.  The change
appears to  be a permanent  physical alteration,  but just in  case it
decides to reverse itself, I would like  to observe her for a few more
days."
     Kera jumped  off the stool  she was sitting  on with a  laugh and
embraced Rien, eyes shining.
     "Ah!"  Marcellon grabbed  hold of  her arm  and pulled  her back.
"Stay away from him.  He's still sick. I want to  be positive that you
don't become ill again through contact with him."
     Reluctantly Kera returned  to the stool, the  happy sparkle still
in her eyes. Rien found her good  humor to be contagious and was still
smiling as Marcellon turned back to him.
     "Now," said the  wizard, leaning up against the  table's edge. "I
have a good idea what the cure is. We will definitely know tomorrow if
it is a hundred percent effective.  Meanwhile I would like to begin on
you."
     The High Mage began his work. Kera remained in her seat, watching
the  now familiar  procedure, until  Marcellon told  her to  leave the
laboratory, as contests  were the only spectator activity  of which he
approved.
     Annoyed, Kera left the laboratory  and wandered around the public
areas of the keep, trying to find  something to do. After five days in
the laboratory, wistfully thinking of all the things she would like to
do, she had no idea of what should actually be done with the free time
she  suddenly  gained.  If  nothing  else,  she  could  use  the  time
productively,  Kera decided  finally.  She  went up  to  her room  and
unpacked the bow that Rien had purchased  for her a week ago. Going to
the stables Kera told the servant she  was going for a ride and, after
saddling her horse, left the keep.
     She followed  the road as it  passed by the keep's  wall, turning
south-west,  then took  the road  that turned  sharply north,  heading
towards the coast line. In an hour  the evergreens gave way to a broad
leaf forest and  Kera turned off the  road to a small  side trail. She
dismounted a fair  distance from the trail, strung her  bow and, after
securing the horse, went in search of game.
     The  day was  warm and  sunny and  Kera had  no problems  finding
something to  shoot at.  She spotted  a fat magpie  perched on  a tree
branch and after a moment of aiming, released the arrow.
     The missile passed  just over the bird, crashing  into the leaves
in the  upper branches and finally  fell back to the  ground. The bird
took the hint  at the first sign of trouble  and flew away. Retrieving
the arrow  with a  muttered curse,  Kera went  further down  the path,
hoping the next shot she took would be more effective.
     Scrambling up  a small hill, she  sat down and looked  around the
forest. It was filled with life. Up above birds flew back and forth at
the tops of  the trees, but Kera  would not even dare  shooting one in
mid-flight. She spotted a squirrel and took aim, but immediately began
to  feel sorry  for the  little  animal, peacefully  nibbling on  some
forest fruit. What if she were to get lucky and hit it? She sighed and
replaced the  arrow she held in  the quiver on her  back. The squirrel
happily snapped  its tail and  kept on eating.  Kera smiled at  it and
climbed down the other side of the hill.
     The slope here was much rockier and steeper and it took Kera much
longer to  go the same  distance to the  forest floor. The  woods here
took a  darker appearance, the  broad leafed trees once  again merging
with pines.
     Kera looked around. On a second glance the forest wasn't all that
different. The birds were still high above  in the trees and a pair of
squirrels chased each other around a particularly large stump.
     Kera wandered  a little deeper  into the  forest. One pine  had a
1natural discoloration that looked like  a rabbit and Kera drew another
arrow, thinking  that an inanimate target  would be as good  as a live
one. She drew the  string back to her ear, as Rien  had taught her and
let the  arrow fly. Missing  its intended  target, the arrow  struck a
tree a few feet back.
     Kera threw the bow down in anger and marched over the the tree to
get the arrow  back. Rien ordered these arrows after  they returned to
Dargon a  week ago.  They were  normal except  for the  fletching that
permitted  the  arrow to  fly  straighter  and different  color  rings
painted around the shaft, each two finger breadth apart.
     The arrow was  stuck in the trunk  up to the third  ring and Kera
quickly realized that the arrow was  stuck in there for good, at least
as far as her strength was  concerned. She kicked the tree and stomped
off in anger. After some time of  pacing Kera once again picked up the
bow and  tried shooting  the tree  again. This  time the  arrow lodged
itself just  above the  target and  did not  go in  far enough  to get
stuck.
     Kera  practiced for  an hour  longer and  finally felt  competent
enough to shoot at reasonably large, stationary target.
     She  returned  to her  horse  and  continued north,  towards  the
Akmeron Ocean, in  search of large game. By  mid-afternoon she reached
the north shore without seeing anything  larger than a raccoon. It was
as if the  whole forest knew she  was ready to shoot  and was avoiding
her. Broadleaf  trees gave  way to  pale yellow  sand and  crisp waves
making their  way towards shore.  A faint  hint of salt  permeated the
air, distinct from the cool, earthy smells of the wood.
     She hopped off the horse and  lead it west along the sandy shore.
At first  the animal complained at  its hooves sinking into  the sand,
but soon got used to it and followed her obediently.
     Off in the distance  Kera noticed a man on top  of a horse coming
towards her. She  slowed her pace, moving closer to  the water line to
give  him room  to pass.  As  they got  closer, she  got the  dreadful
feeling that she knew the man approaching  her and drew up the hood of
the cloak, hoping she was not recognized.
     As  the  two  got  closer,  the man  jumped  off  his  horse  and
approached Kera. "Haven't seen you in a long while," he greeted.
     "Yeah,  a  long while,"  Kera  stopped,  her fears  of  discovery
realized.
     The man left his horse behind and walked over to her. "Where have
you been for the last two months?"
     "Tench."
     "Kera, don't give me that look. Liriss is really mad about you!"
     Kera did not expect any less. "That's his problem, isn't it?"
     "You're going to come back with me and tell him that yourself."
     "Keep dreaming, Garold,"  said Kera coldly. "I'm not  going to do
anything to further your career!"
     "You're coming back with me, whether  you want to or not! Even if
I have to knock you cold." Garold grabbed Kera's arms.
     Kera jerked an  arm free and punched Garold in  the chest. He did
not even flinch, but backhanded her as she tried to pull her other arm
free and permitted her to fall back into the water.
     Kera stood  up, wet  and angry.  In her hand  she held  a dagger.
Garold grabbed her arm and twisted until Kera dropped her weapon, then
started trying to pull her tunic  up. "Before we go..." Kera struggled
more furiously, forcing Garold to use both hands to hold her still and
preventing him from doing anything more with her clothing.
     "What's the matter?  It's not like we haven't  done this before."
He dragged  Kera back to  the bank and shoved  her down. As  he leaned
over  her, a  glimmer of  steel shone  in Kera's  hand and  sharp pain
engulfed his arm. Kera rolled out of the way as Garold hit the sand in
1anger and  bolted for her  horse. Garold got  up slowly, his  left arm
dripping blood  and drew his  sword. "You're dead, bitch!  Liriss will
take you either way."
     As Liriss' thug  advanced Kera grabbed the bow and  off her horse
-- she had kept the bow strung, since she was hunting and did not want
to  take the  time to  restring  it each  time an  animal appeared  --
notched an arrow, and drew back  the string. "Stay back!" she ordered,
aiming at his chest. "Or I'll kill you!"
     Garold either  did not hear  her or was  so taken with  his anger
that he did not  even pause at her words and  Kera released the arrow.
It struck its target in the stomach and he gasped, bending forward, as
if the wind had been knocked out of him.
     Kera quickly prepared  another arrow and as soon  as Garold moved
forward again,  fired. This arrow  took him  square in the  chest. His
legs buckled  and he sank to  his knees. Kera hesitated  with the next
arrow. Garold  tried to  speak, but  blood foamed at  his lips  and he
collapsed forward, the two arrow shafts breaking beneath him.
     Afraid that  the man hadn't been  alone, Kera looked up  and down
the beach and, not seeing anyone, quickly remounted and encouraged her
horse towards  the forest. The animal  started out at a  lazy walk and
Kera kicked  it as  hard as  she could with  her heels.  "Faster!" The
horse lunged into the forest, leaving  behind the body, with its blood
being slowly washed away by the tide.

     The sun  was just  sinking below the  horizon when  Kera galloped
through the  gates to Connall Keep,  eyes straining behind in  fear of
pursuit. She nearly  jerked the horse around and bolted  when the gate
guards came out to see what the racket was, but managed a bright smile
and a wave as they realized who she was and called polite greetings.
     Shivering with a  combination of chill and fear,  Kera guided the
horse to  the main stable  doors and  dismounted. As she  gathered the
reins to lead  the animal inside to rub down,  voices floated out into
the courtyard.
     "..prentice indeed. If'n  he's a knight, she should  be a squire,
not an  apprentice," The rough voice  of the stable master  was easily
identifiable. Kera  froze where she  stood, unable to  stop listening.
"Bet he jus'  gives the title t'  make it sound good, and  t' make her
believe she's more'n just a bedwarmer."
     Kera flushed angrily at the implication the man made, but decided
that a  confrontation would be  a bad idea.  Drawing her daggers  on a
servant of  a baron could be  almost as dangerous as  leaving Liriss's
employ. The thief  glanced sharply around the  courtyard, expecting to
see yet another of her former  master's men lurking about. Feeling far
too exposed outside, she called for a stablehand to come deal with her
horse and  ducked off towards the  main keep before the  child made it
out of the stable to follow her orders.
     Praying that  she would  meet no one  until tomorrow,  she pulled
open the keep door and nearly ran Myrande down on her way inside. Only
luck prevented Kera from going for her remaining dagger.
     "Kera!" exclaimed the  senechal in surprise. "I  was just looking
for you. Dinner's ready and -- my goodness! What happened to you? Your
shirt's all bloody!" Her dark eyes  lingered on the deep maroon stains
on the other woman's tunic.
     "I  decided to  go  out hunting,"  began  Kera, honestly  enough,
trying very  hard to sound  normal. "After  being cooped up  with High
Mage Marcellon in his  laboratory for so long, I needed  to get out. I
tried to shoot a rabbit while I  was out and it wasn't quite dead when
I picked it up." She pulled at the shirt ruefully, hoping that the lie
didn't  sound as  transparent as  she thought  it did.  "This was  the
result. Ruined a  perfectly good tunic because of  the darned creature
1and couldn't even bring it back in with me to show for the trouble."
     Myrande smiled sympathetically.
     "Go ahead and change then," she said. "I'll have them hold dinner
and send someone to clean the shirt."
     "I don't feel very hungry, my  lady," said Kera quickly. "I think
I'll just go to bed. If you don't object."
     "No, I don't mind. I'll see  you in the morning then. Goodnight,"
and she continued out into the courtyard.
     Kera  breathed a  sigh  of relief  and hurried  up  to her  room,
bolting the door behind her as soon as she got inside.

     "I'm simply  not sure," said  Marcellon, setting the  half filled
vial down on the table in annoyance and looking over at Rien and Kera.
"I wish  I could tell  you something more  definite, but I  can't. The
infection appears to  have been halted, but there are  still traces of
it  in Kera's  body. Another  day, at  least, will  be required  to be
absolutely positive that she will not relapse."
     Kera sighed deeply and Rien's eyes narrowed in concern.
     "I  don't  believe that  there  is  any chance  of  reinfection,"
continued the mage. "If you two  wish to associate, you may. But don't
DO anything,  understand?" He looked  sharply from one patient  to the
other.
     At any other time, an admonition  like that would have brought an
amused smile to Rien's lips and a giggle from Kera, but now their only
response was, "Understood."
     "Good," harumped Marcellon. "Now go,  Kera. I need to continue my
treatment of Rien. Come by again tomorrow morning and we'll see if the
disease is cleared from your body."
     "All  right," said  Kera.  She  gave Rien's  hand  a squeeze  and
slipped out  the door.  Resignedly, Rien seated  himself on  the stool
that Marcellon indicated with a preemetory gesture.

     Two days later,  Rien found Kera in the  courtyard, stretched out
on the grass with a cup of mead and a book. "I hope this isn't the way
you spent the last two days," he smiled, sitting down beside her.
     "You're just  jealous that I've  been able  to do this  while you
were cooped up  with the mage," Kera retorted with  an answering grin.
"Not that it took a long  time," she added pensively. "I expected that
it would  take weeks  and weeks to  get cured, but  it didn't.  We had
better luck in this one place in  a shorter amount of time than all of
the months of travelling combined."
     "Sometimes it works out that way," said Rien with a slight smile.
"Our luck's finally turned."
     "Gods I'm glad  of that," said Kera forcefully.  "We deserve some
good luck for a change."
     They traded the mead back and  forth a few more times, watching a
pair of birds fly in dizzy circles in the sunlight.
     "I  was  wondering if  you  want  to  leave tonight  or  tomorrow
morning," said Rien abruptly.
     Kera sat up, surprised. "You're cured?"
     "According to the High Mage himself."
     Kera embraced him  with a strength he didn't think  she had. "I'm
glad it's over, but how can he know so quickly? He didn't pronounce me
healthy until last night."
     "I  was his  second patient,"  Rien  said. "He  already knew  the
disease and the cure."
     "Where do you want to go?" Kera asked.
     "Not Dargon. I want to take  care of matters that were brought to
my attention two weeks ago."
     "The messenger? What was it all about?"
1     "Have a seat,"  Rien indicated. "Two months ago  a brigand showed
up in  the Duchy of Quinnat.  I was asked  to go there and  remedy the
problem. That's really all there is to it."
     Kera offered  him the  cup and  he took a  sip. "Can't  the local
constable handle it?" she asked.
     "I'm  afraid  not," Rien  said,  returning  the cup.  "The  local
constable, it  is reported, made  a very valiant effort  before dying.
It's  really not  his job  to control  renegade knights  in the  first
place."
     "So you're going to do it?"
     "That's why the job was offered to me," Rien said.
     "I really  would like to  leave right now," Kera  said, tactfully
refraining from  commenting about his  confidance. "This place  is too
stuffy for me. Everyone is always so proper."
     "Lady Myrande," Rien said, using a stiff and somber tone of voice
on purpose, "has asked us to stay  for a special dinner tonight, as we
are finally able to return to a normal life in society now."
     "I guess since she asked, we  should stay," Kera agreed. Over the
last week and  a half she had  gotten to know Myrande  rather well and
could not  personally object to such  a request. "We can  leave in the
evening, I suppose. It would be safer to travel by night anyway."
     "Safer?" Rien asked.
     "Who'd be  able to see  us? I guess since  I am stuck  with being
able to see in the dark, I might as well make the most of it."
     Rien embraced her and they both  fell back in the grass. "Tonight
it is."

     "Dinner  was just  wonderful," Kera  said with  a smile.  "I have
never eaten this well before in my life."
     Myrande  smiled back  at  her as  they walked  out  of the  hall,
towards the outer doors.
     "It's too bad that you can't stay longer," said Luthias.
     "Yes, well...Rien thinks it's about time we leave," replied Kera,
stealing a glance behind her. "So..."
     "Are you  sure that leaving at  night is a wise?"  asked Myrande.
"Travelling it night isn't the safest way to go."
     "Between the pair of us, Rien and I should be able to spot anyone
or anything coming at us before it sees us," Kera reassured. "We'll be
all right. Really."
     "And are you certain that you have enough supplies?"
     "Yes, my  lady," said Kera  patiently. "What you've  provided was
more than  generous and we  plan to supplement  it with our  road kill
anyway, so I'm sure we'll be fine."
     Rien  and  Marcellon  slowly  followed  everyone  down  the  main
corridor of the keep. "I am  positive the disease has been cured," the
wizard was telling his patient, "but should you suspect that you still
have it or that any side effects appear, seek me immediately. I expect
to be here for a few more months.  If you will be unable to locate me,
my daughter, Lauren, the Duke's wife, will be able to direct you."
     "That's very kind of you, sir. And about our arrangement...?"
     "Don't bother  with our  agreement," Marcellon answered.  "When I
will need you,  I will find you.  I suspect you will outlive  me as it
is."
     "And..." Rien began,  but Marcellon interrupted him  again, as if
reading his mind.
     "I have promised you and I never  go back on my word. Your morals
will not be compromised."
     They caught  up to the  others waiting  for them under  the entry
arch to the great hall.
     "...welcome here, Kera," Myrande was saying as Rien and Marcellon
1joined them.  "That goes  for you  also, Sir  Keegan. Should  you ever
travel back to Dargon in your adventuring, please come by."
     "Yes," seconded  Luthias. "And  perhaps next time  you and  I can
have that bout I mentioned."
     "Perhaps, lord," said Rien noncommittally. "I would like to thank
you for your hospitality. I  and my apprentice greatly appreciate it."
He  inclined his  head respectfully  to Luthias  and Myrande  and Kera
followed with a quick bow to each. The pair smiled.
     "Good journey to you," said Myrande as they stepped outside.
     "I certainly hope it will be," muttered Kera, and they headed for
the stables.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                       Hunting of the Red Tiger
                                Part 1
                        by M. Wendy Hennequin
                    (b.c.k.a. )

     Donegal na Valenfaer  had never thought he'd live to  be bored in
the Port  of the Sun, but  it had happened. He  told Captain Fynystere
this, and the captain laughed.
     "Well,  after seven  years  of wintering,  anything would  pale,"
Fynystere supposed, "even a city on the coast of Duparyn." The captain
considered. "I once thought as you did--that there were so many things
to do in the Port of the Sun that I could never do it all. But I did,"
Fynystere concluded  with a smile,  and Donegal shouted  his laughter.
"Richard's borrowing my  sailboat for a trip to the  Isles of the Sun;
why don't you ask if you can go along with him?"
     And so  Donegal had sought  Richard just Richard, a  shipmate who
had served--and wintered--with Captain  Fynystere nearly twice as long
as Donegal  had. After quickly  scouring the house, the  surgeon found
the man  he sought in a  work shed set  up to make and  repair arrows.
This was  hardly surprising. Richard  was the Eclipse's  bowmaster, or
chief archer; besides expertly shooting a long bow, he manned the huge
crossbow and tended the hellfire in battle.
     Richard looked up at Donegal and smiled when the surgeon entered.
"Come in," the archer invited amiably. "I'm almost done."
     Donegal  watched   Richard  glue  an  arrowhead   onto  a  shaft,
reflecting as he did so how different he and the archer were. Oh, they
were about  the same height and  build, and they were  both reasonably
good-looking, but there  was no other likeness. Richard  was bright as
Braigh, his skin bronzed  and his hair gilded by sea  and sun, and his
eyes  as blue  as the  water he  sailed. As  for Donegal,  the surgeon
doubted that even the night goddess could have been as dark as he was.
His curly hair was raven black; his  eyes were a deep, warm ebony; and
his skin was  the color of the smooth, dark  chocolates with which his
former master,  the kind leech,  had often treated  him when he  was a
child. Night and day, Fynystere called them sometimes, night and day.
     And  Donegal  laughed.  Richard  looked at  the  surgeon,  smiled
through his neat  beard, and continued repairing  arrows. "The captain
says you're sailing to the  Isles," Donegal began, leaning comfortably
against a wall. "Want some company?"
     "Certainly," Richard  accepted quickly,  picking up  a half-dozen
newly mended arrows and depositing  them in his quiver. "I'll probably
be in need of your skill, Donegal."
     "What're  you  doing?"  the surgeon  wondered  eagerly,  standing
straight.
     "I  am going  to  do something  I've wanted  to  do for  thirteen
years." Richard  lifted his long  bow from a  shelf behind him.  "I am
going to hunt the Lowenrote."

     Now Donegal had heard of the  Red Tiger--or Lowenrote, as the Sun
People called him--that  roamed and ravaged the Isles of  the Sun, but
he had never  thought anyone would be crazy enough  to chase the beast
down. Well, Richard  was strange, all right, but he  wasn't boring. So
despite  the madness  of the  scheme, Donegal  sailed at  dawn to  the
island of Grian  with Richard. The trip was calm  and quiet--for which
Donegal offered brief thanks to  Moire--and by mid-day, Richard pulled
the sailboat onto the beach.
     After  several determined  attempts, the  archer and  the surgeon
managed to yank the small ship past  the high tide line, and then took
the extra  precaution of  tying the  boat to a  stout palm  tree. That
done, Richard leaned past the sail for his bow and quiver, and Donegal
1recovered his Bichanese sword, his knife, and his surgical pouch. "How
long're we going  to be here?" Donegal wondered as  Richard strung his
bow.
     "I don't  know," Richard answered  simply. He reached  beyond the
surgeon for  a small bundle.  Unwrapping it, he  put a piece  of flint
into a pouch, hung his spying glass on his belt, and slipped two large
wine skins' baldrics over his shoulders. "We'll leave tomorrow noon at
latest."
     "I  don't  know,"  Donegal   hedged,  hefting  a  small  backpack
containing  some  food,  cloaks,  and extra  medical  supplies.  Well,
Richard couldn't very  well carry it with that quiver  on his back. "I
hear they sacrifice people here."
     "That's over  in the  Siopi Islands," Richard  corrected swiftly.
"We'll leave before  nightfall, if you like," the  archer offered, but
Donegal could tell that Richard would  prefer to stay and hunt the Red
Tiger.
     Well, that's  what they were here  to do, and as  Richard reached
for his short sword and knife,  Donegal asked him, "Where do we start,
Rich?"
     The archer  straightened and smiled  as he placed the  weapons in
their sheaths. "I honestly don't  know--" Suddenly, Richard stared and
grabbed the surgeon's arm. "There! Look!"
     Donegal whirled and caught a  brief glimpse of blurred, fiery red
on the dark, tropical green.
     "It's  the Lowenrote,"  Richard concluded,  sprinting toward  it.
"Come on, Donegal!"
     And slightly surprised, the surgeon followed the gold streak that
was  Richard's long  hair. Donegal  could  hear the  swiftness of  the
chase, the crashing  of the brush, and the cry  that could only belong
to a creature of such ferocity  as the Red Tiger. The surgeon followed
the haphazard trail of broken brush  and broken noise that Richard had
left in his wake with confident  speed. Oh, Richard was strong enough,
stronger than Donegal on any day of the year, and that was his nature;
but Donegal was swifter by far, the best runner and the quickest, most
limber fighter on the Eclipse.
     Within moments, the surgeon  compacted violently with the archer,
whose drawn  shot sprung,  spoilt, from the  long bow.  Over Richard's
shoulder, Donegal could  see the Lowenrote rear its head  and cry out,
as if laughing, in triumph and invitation. Donegal heard Richard speak
a foul word--yeah, he and Donegal  knew them all--and then, the archer
drew another colorful arrow.
     Laughing, the Red Tiger sprang into the jungle.
     Without hesitation, Richard relaxed his  draw and raced after it,
and  Donegal  effortlessly ran  after  him.  "Let me  track,"  Donegal
begged. "I'm faster."
     "I have the bow," Richard reminded him through slight panting.
     "And I can't shoot," Donegal  finished. It was something that the
surgeon considered a fault. Yes, once they returned to the Port of the
Sun, Donegal would ask Richard to teach him to shoot a bow.
     They stumbled  through the  jungle, always just  in sight  of the
scarlet flash that was the Lowenrote. Only once did they lose sight of
the animal,  and then, suddenly, there  is was, twenty yards  ahead of
them, as if  it had waited for them. Richard  paused, drew his readied
arrow, aimed, and--
     The arrow followed  the Red Tiger into the  dense jungle. Richard
cursed again, and Donegal followed his companion and the beast.
     The  tiger suddenly  and conveniently  chose a  broken, well-used
path. Donegal had slight misgivings; the People of the Sun weren't all
that  far  from  barbarians.  Richard sprinted  without  concern,  and
Donegal knew that  running a cleared path would be  easier for Richard
1anyway, so the surgeon left his fear in the jungle and followed.
     And  abruptly, the  pathway stopped.  Well, not  exactly stopped,
Donegal  amended  hastily,  just  veered right  and  left  instead  of
straight.  A quick  glance  assured  Donegal that  the  Red Tiger  was
nowhere nearby.
     "What now, Rich?" Donegal wondered.
     The archer grimaced, then reached for  the spy glass on his belt.
Gently, Richard took both ends and  pulled; the six inch tube expanded
to twelve inches. Richard  put it up to his eye  and glanced down both
trails. "Nothing," he concluded with disgust.
     "What *does* that thing do?" Donegal asked, reaching for it.
     Richard looked  over at  him abruptly. "Seven  years on  a pirate
ship,  and you've  never  looked through  one,  Donegal?" The  surgeon
smiled brightly but shook his  head. Richard handed the contraption to
him. "Here."
     Slightly dubious,  Donegal took the thing  and held it up  to his
eye. Richard's beard became gigantic. "By Sanar," Donegal swore with a
smile. "It makes things bigger."
     "No, it only makes them appear so," Richard explained. "Marcellon
told  me that  it has  something to  do with  the shape  of the  glass
inside."
     "Who's   Marcellon?"   Donegal  inquired   automatically,   gaily
examining treetops and  the far edges of the paths  through the spying
glass.
     "An old friend," Richard replied evenly.
     Abashed, Donegal quickly  looked away. He had just  broken one of
the two  sacred rules of the  Eclipse: "Ask no questions."  (The other
was, "Tell no lies.") Whatever happened  before a man came aboard, the
captain had  explained to Donegal when  he signed on seven  years ago,
was  that man's  business, and  his alone.  Anyone might  disclose his
history--Donegal's, for  instance, was well-known--but, as  a point of
honor, the  entire crew,  Fynystere included,  avoided interrogations.
"Sorry, Rich," the surgeon mumbled, handing back the spy glass.
     Richard smiled and clapped his friend's shoulder. "Let's go catch
a  tiger," the  archer suggested,  and Donegal  knew that  Richard had
forgiven  him, if,  indeed, the  man had  taken offense  in the  first
place.
     "Lead on," Donegal agreed.
     Richard  looked left  and right,  considering, when  both he  and
Donegal were startled by voices. Richard again raised the spying glass
and looked  toward the  jungle directly  in front  of him.  The archer
stepped forward, parted the growth in front of him, and peered through
the glass  again. "There you are,"  he said with satisfaction,  and he
handed the glass to Donegal and pointed. "There she is."
     Donegal took  the spying glass  and gazed at the  indicated spot.
Graceful and  patient, the half-hidden  Lowenrote stood across  a huge
clearing filled  with about a  hundred People of the  Sun, twenty-five
sailors, a  great pile of  palm nuts,  palm fruits, and  filled botas.
"We'd better go around, Rich," Donegal advised as he handed the archer
the device. Richard folded it and replaced it on his belt. "I hear the
Sun People  worship the  Red Tiger as  some sort of  god, and  I don't
think they'll take kindly to us hunting it."
     "You're right," Richard concurred, lowering his voice. He readied
another arrow and turned to the left footpath. "Let's go, and quietly,
Donegal."
     Listening  to  the  Sun  People's  chatter,  Donegal  nodded  and
followed silently. Someone replied--no,  translated, for he said, "The
chief demands two iron swords for the fruit and oil."
     All feeling left Donegal's limbs, and he stopped dead. "Rich!" he
choked.
1     "What? What is it?" came the quick, concerned reply. When Donegal
couldn't answer, Richard turned back and joined him. "What is it?" the
archer asked again.
     "We have to  leave," Donegal finally managed to  rasp. The leader
of the sailors gave into the demand for two swords.
     "Beinisonian,"   Richard  realized,   listening.  "Don't   worry,
Donegal. They haven't seen us."
     "If we go  after that tiger, they will,"  the surgeon, terrified,
pointed out. "They'll take me back. I won't go back, Rich."
     "You've  covered the  brand,"  Richard  reasoned, indicating  the
bright, Bichanese  band that  covered Donegal's forehead.  "They won't
have  any idea  you were  a slave,  unless," the  bowmaster continued,
another thought  dawning, "there's  some other  sign. Were  all slaves
like you?"
     "Like me?" Donegal questioned, confused out of his fright.
     "I don't know--curly-haired, maybe, or dark-skinnned."
     Donegal, with much effort, managed  to curtail his urge to laugh.
"Do you  think my  skin-tone matters to  the Beinisons,  Rich? They'll
enslave anyone--dark as  me or light as you, tall,  short, men, women,
children, Stevenics, criminals,  whatever. If slavery was  as plain as
the skin on my face, do you think they'd bother to *brand* us?"
     Richard  bowed his  head. "Sorry."  He  raised his  head to  peer
through the trees. "Then you should be safe."
     "I'll never be  safe, and I'm not going  back," Donegal insisted.
"I won't risk it."
     "And how much  will you ask for the twenty  girls?" Donegal heard
the Beinisonian ask. "I can assure  them all good marriages, for there
are few women in our land."
     Donegal gasped  and parted  the bush  in front  of him.  "No," he
breathed.  But  there they  were,  twenty  lovely, half-dressed  young
women, excited and eager to be sold.
     "He's a liar," Donegal said,  more to himself than Richard. "He's
buying them as slaves."
     "What do  you mean, he's  a liar?" Richard demanded.  Richard, as
far as Donegal knew, only  understood his native Baranurian, which was
also the  language of communication  aboard the Eclipse, and  a little
Bichanese. "What's going on?"
     "Twelve pounds  of gold, and  twelve pounds of silver,"  said the
interpreter. "More  than that we will  not ask, for you  have promised
them honorable marriages."
     "That's a  lie," Donegal protested  in whispers. "He  won't marry
them  off;  he'll sell  them  as  slaves.  Rich," he  began  suddenly,
grasping his friend's arms, "we've got to stop them!"
     "What?" Richard  ejaculated, looking at  Donegal as if he  were a
madman. "Stop them?"
     "They're   buying  those   girls,"  Donegal   explained  hastily,
indicating the women. "They'll sell them  as slaves. We've got to stop
them!"
     "Stop them!" Richard, shocked, echoed. "Donegal, they are twenty;
we are two. We can't do anything. Let's hunt the Lowenrote."
     "Rich,  listen!" Donegal  commanded, pounding  the soft,  fertile
earth. "I know  what it's like. They'll take those  girls, and they'll
brand them,  burn slavery into  their foreheads  so they can  never be
free--And then they take them across the ocean--no beating or rape, of
course, for it  lessens the value--but half of them  won't survive the
journey. Then, in Beinison, they'll  be sold like animals--then beaten
and raped and--"
     "I thought you were treated kindly," Richard argued seriously.
     "*I* was. Millions weren't. But I know how bad it is, Rich; I saw
it.  I talked  to them.  I  helped my  master treat  beaten and  raped
1slaves. Many *died*, Rich. We've got to stop them!"
     "You can't stop it," Richard  insisted. Donegal opened his mouth.
"No, hear me  out. We know there are twenty,  and probably more aboard
their ship--wherever  that is. And  even if  we could stop  these men,
there will be more coming, Donegal,  always more coming. We can't stop
Beinison." Donegal frowned. "Let's go hunt."
     The surgeon  scowled at his  friend. "Go ahead," he  sneered. "Go
and  chase your  cat, Rich.  I'm going  to do  something about  this."
Donegal rose and dashed the way they had come.
     After a few  minutes, he crouched behind the  brush and listened.
"Done," said the interpreter.
     "Very  well," the  sailor  replied. "Tell  the  girls to  prepare
themselves. We'll leave soon. Mon-Arnor, take the oil, nuts, and fruit
to the ship. I'll follow after the feast with the--the brides."
     Nervously, Donegal drew  his knife and pondered. What  to do, how
to do it...
     There was  a rustling to his  left; with all his  swift reflexes,
Donegal whirled and  presented the knife boldly. He heard  a tear, and
Richard,  his  blousy  shirt  ripped,  collapsed  onto  his  backside.
"Damnation!"
     "What, did the cat come this way?" Donegal snapped.
     "Don't be an  ass, Donegal. You'll never do  this alone." Richard
sat up  and squinted through the  trees. "What happened? Some  of them
are leaving."
     "Yeah, they're  taking palm fruits and  palm nuts and oil  to the
ship. The women will follow after they eat, with some of the sailors."
     "Looks like five are staying  behind. Good." Richard rose. "Well,
let's  go,"  Richard  directed  expectantly. Donegal  stared  at  him.
"Donegal, trust  me. The best  bet is to  let those fifteen  return to
their ship and  then sink it before  the women and the  other five get
there. We  can pick off  the others later.  Otherwise, it will  be too
messy--and  the women  will be  killed." Donegal  was still  confused.
"Trust me," Richard  repeated, holding out a hand to  help the surgeon
to  his feet.  "Believe me,  Donegal. I  was trained  to run  military
campaigns. And," the Baranurian added,  his blue eyes twinkling like a
sunny sea, "I have a wonderful idea."
     Desperately wondering  why Richard  had been so  trained, Donegal
rose. "Lead on."
     Richard nodded and  began to follow the  circular footpath around
the  clearing.  "We'll  come  to  their  outlet  eventually,"  Richard
whispered. "We'll follow them to their ship."
     "Then what?" Donegal rasped, crouching close to the archer.
     Before answering,  Richard unfolded  his spy glass  and carefully
peered through it  at the Beinisonian slavers. "They're  taking a path
not far from  this one; look, Donegal." He handed  the spying glass to
the surgeon,  who dutifully  raised it. Fifteen  Beinisonians, hefting
the oil-filled  botas and  fruit-filled sacks,  were making  their way
along an eastward path. "We've got to get ahead of them."
     "I thought you said to follow them."
     "It'll be  easier if you get  there first. How well  do you swim,
Donegal?"
     "Better than some fish; I use to live on a river."
     "Underwater?"
     "Yeah, some."
     "Good.  I have  an idea  for disposing  of most  of these  men at
once."
     "Let's hear it."
     "No time," Richard countermanded. He reached across his shoulders
and  divested himself  of one  of the  wine skins.  Handing it  to the
physician, he instructed,  "Take this, and get ahead of  them. Swim up
1to their ship, and..." The archer grinned. "You'll know what to do."
     "What is  it?" Donegal wondered,  sniffing the packet.  He nearly
dropped the  bota when  he smelled the  sulfur and  pitch. "Hellfire?"
Donegal  smiled wickedly.  Hellfire was  just the  thing they  needed.
But.. "What did you bring hellfire on a hunting trip for?"
     "I  had-- We  don't have  time for  this," Richard  reminded him,
rummaging in  the backpack that  Donegal wore. He  retrieved something
and put it in  his belt purse. "You know what to do.  I'll meet you at
the beach. And be careful that no one sees you."
     Donegal  nodded  once and  stealthily  ran  toward the  path.  As
Richard had  conjectured, it  wasn't far, and  Donegal, after  a quick
look either way  and a hurried prayer to the  Masked God, sprinted out
upon it.
     After a five  minute run--thank the Masked God  that the clearing
wasn't far from the coastal beach  and that the captain's sailboat was
in another  cove!--, Donegal  came to  the edge  of a  deserted beach.
Hiding  behind a  funny-looking plant,  Donegal observed  a long  boat
resting upon  the tranquil  sand. In  the calm  lagoon was  anchored a
small   ship--forty  man,   Donegal  guessed   with  a   grimace--with
Beinisonian flags and markings.
     Behind the  bush, the  surgeon shrugged out  of the  backpack and
removed the  surgical pack from his  belt. He took off  his high boots
and  his shirt  and used  them to  cover the  pack and  the pouch.  He
secured the skin of hellfire over his shoulder, checked his katana and
knife, and snuck silently to  the water. Without waiting--every second
he could be  observed, killed, or worse--Donegal  slid lengthwise into
the shallow lagoon. He smiled, for the lagoon was as warm and soothing
as a bath, and stroked quietly toward the ship.
     While taking a breath, Donegal heard  the first of the men coming
close to the beach. They were singing a bawdy song and having, Donegal
suspected, the time of their  lives. Well, the surgeon thought grimly,
they had  better enjoy the time  while they had it.  Once the hellfire
was in place, the Beinisonians' pleasures would be over.
     But he would have to move quickly, lest they see him. Keeping his
strokes as quiet as possible, Donegal approached the ship's bow. For a
moment, he paused, unsure; on the Eclipse, they spread the hellfire on
the water with small catapults, not swimmers.
     A little  on the ship, then  a ring of hellfire,  Donegal decided
after the short  consideration. And best to start here  at the bow, he
reasoned, before they get  to the beach and can see me.  And if I stay
reasonably close to the ship, its  curves should hide me from those on
board.
     Donegal chose what he deemed a good spot and began treading water
with his legs. With  his arms thus free, it was easy  to open the wine
skin and  begin pressing the jelly-like  hellfire onto the bow  of the
ship and then onto surface of the water.
     Watching the greasy hellfire float, Donegal remembered how he and
Richard had discovered the stuff five years ago. They had been looking
for some way to  fuel the Eclipse's lamps; the pirates  had run out of
oil on the latest attack, when they had used it to ignite the victims'
ship. So  Donegal, who knew  a little  about alchemy from  his medical
training,  and Richard,  who knew  a little  about alchemy  from Sanar
knows where,  volunteered to try  to make  something to tide  the ship
over until they reached port.
     The surgeon and the archer started mixing all manner of flammable
stuff--exotic  oils,  the yellow  sand  which  Richard called  sulfur,
incense, tar,  pitch, potatoes, wine,  ink, whatever they  could find.
They found that an excellent, bright,  long burning fuel could be made
of  a neutral  jelly- grease,  sulphur,  pitch, and  a few  other--now
secret--ingredients.
1     The hellfire had burned so brightly, Donegal recalled, continuing
his deployment,  and had kept  the ship  so well and  economically lit
that  the  captain  insisted  upon  buying  the  ingredients  for  the
yet-unnamed  hellfire instead  of oil  when they  reached port.  While
testing the  second batch, Donegal  accidentally splattered some  in a
filled bucket,  and he  and Richard  realized how  extraordinary their
invention was.
     Soon the Eclipse became the  most famous--and feared--ship on the
Valenfaer Ocean.
     Donegal finished his circle of  death by placing some hellfire on
the slaver ship's stern for  good measure. Pleased, the surgeon looked
toward shore and frowned; the Beinisonians had arrived.
     Donegal cursed  internally. He  couldn't stay  by the  ship; only
Sanar knew  where they  would bring  the long boat.  If he  struck for
shore now,  they might  see him,  and that would  be his  undoing. The
Beinisonians would hardly think Donegal a native--a Man of the Sun, in
Bichanese clothes?--and if they removed the headband--
     No, he  would kill  himself--and some of  them--first. And  if he
couldn't, well, then Richard and the hellfire would take care of it.
     The Beinisonians  pushed the long  boat into the balmy  water and
rowed toward their mother ship.
     Without thinking,  Donegal sank  himself and  swam away  from the
slaving vessel. It will be a long swim, especially as he was taking an
indirect path to  avoid the long boat. A shot  of panic seared Donegal
like lightning. He hadn't swum beneath the waves in so long--
     But  Donegal had  mastered  water and  fear as  a  child, and  he
refused to let them conquer him  now. Was he not Donegal, the surgeon,
the pirate, and the runner? A  brief lack of air could hardly vanquish
him. Determined  and again secure,  Donegal pulled himself  toward the
shores of Grian.
     He reached  the shore  only a  little short of  breath. Am  I not
Donegal, he repeated, laughing silently at himself, the runner and the
pirate?  Aye, and  a good  thing  too. Richard,  though strong,  could
hardly survive  so long beneath  the waves. Satisfied,  Donegal pulled
himself onto a shady  spot of the sand, and after  only a brief glance
at  the Beinisonians,  he dashed  behind the  funny-looking plant  and
recovered the  rest of his  belongings. Richard would be  coming soon,
and Donegal  would have  to be  ready to  dispose of  the rest  of the
slavers once Richard had disposed of their vessel.
     Donegal idly replaced his boots on his feet and carefully watched
the  Beinisonians.  The   long  boat,  which  had   just  reached  its
destination, was filled to its capacity, but a large, somewhat sloppy,
pile  of palm  fruit, palm  nuts, and  oil skins  still dominated  the
lagoon's shady beach. Four trips at least, the surgeon decided. He and
Richard had plenty of time.
     "Donegal," a whisper rasped behind  him. Donegal waved the archer
forward. Richard  crawled out of  the jungle  to sit beside  him. "All
ready?"
     The surgeon grinned. "Whenever you are."
     Richard took  out his spy glass  and watched the long  boat. "How
far away is the hellfire circle?"
     "Not more than ten feet, and I put some on the bow and stern."
     "I  can see  it. Good  job."  The Baranurian  archer lowered  the
spying glass and considered. "Ten  feet...we'll wait for them to start
the return trip," Richard decided, "which is just as well." He reached
into his quiver  and pulled out five arrows swathed  in Donegal's best
bandages. The surgeon grimaced at the ill use of his medical supplies,
but  Richard sent  him  an  ironic glance  that  silenced the  leech's
protests and  handed his  friend a  piece of flint.  "When I  give the
word, light the arrow."
1     "Just like  on board,"  Donegal finished,  grinning. He  drew his
sword and experimented upon it with  the flint. The water on the steel
prevented a  spark. The surgeon frowned  and dried the blade  with his
shirt. "We've  been through this  a thousand  times, Rich; I  know the
routine."
     "They  have  a  sweet  little  cargo  there,"  Richard  remarked,
glancing  again through  the spy  glass at  the sailors  unloading the
fruit, nuts, and oil. "It'll be a shame to torch it."
     "Better it burns than the women."
     Richard nodded, but didn't lower the spying glass. "Freedom never
comes cheaply," he agreed; then abruptly, a shadow of pain crossed his
face. "I'm still paying for mine."
     Then the  archer set  the spy  glass on the  sand and  readied an
arrow. "Get  ready," he  warned, watching. He  stood, looked  over the
distance once more, drew the arrow, and aimed. "Now."
     Donegal struck the  flint against the katana, and  an eager spark
leapt  to the  loose  end  of the  maligned  bandage. Richard  allowed
himself a  fractioned second to check  his aim and let  the shaft fly.
With eerie beauty, the blazing arrow soared across the sky like a lazy
comet  and landed  upon the  bow of  the ship.  Another flaming  shaft
followed it closely and struck the  water just as the long boat pulled
ten feet from her mother ship.
     The lagoon,  the long  boat, and the  ship erupted  into demonic,
blue- white flame.
     "Good shot!"  Donegal declared, elated  with the inferno  and the
screams of the damned. Well was their concoction named hellfire.
     "Get back," Richard  warned sharply as he  readied another arrow.
"There'll be stragglers."
     "They won't make it through the hellfire," Donegal protested, but
he drew his Bichanese sword anyway.
     "Don't count  on it," Richard  advised. "It's been  done before."
The Baranurian archer smiled with sinister glee. "But it won't be easy
or painless; freedom never comes cheaply."
     Donegal chuckled. "If Jilana wills, they  won't be able to buy it
at all."
     "I'm so  glad I  was raised  to believe in  one God,"  the archer
muttered. "I'd never keep track of so many."
     "But monotheism is so dull," Donegal reminded him with a grin.
     "Don't make me laugh," Richard  commanded sternly. "I'm trying to
concentrate."
     Richard often was  like that, Donegal noted with  a smile, joking
one moment and ordering people  around the next. Yet Richard commanded
well,  Donegal  admitted.  Perhaps,  since he  had  been  trained  for
military strategy, Richard had also been trained in leadership. In any
case, the leech obeyed.
     "Take my  spying glass,"  the Baranurian said,  "and look  at the
water. Is anyone swimming toward shore? Check all directions."
     Once again, Donegal did as he Richard bade him. "Two, coming from
the long boat.  I doubt anyone made it off  the mother ship alive--no,
wait. Two more, heading toward us!"
     Richard squinted. "Four! Damnation!"  Re-aiming, he let his arrow
loose. The  archer re-loaded  his bow without  waiting for  the scream
that confirmed  his accuracy, and  he shot again.  Richard immediately
loaded his bow.
     Donegal concentrated his spying glass  on the ones heading toward
Richard and himself; those two  were, after all, the immediate danger.
No, not two, one; a slick of blood was rapidly forming on the lagoon's
surface. "Got  him, Rich!" Donegal  cried as Richard fired  the second
arrow. In the spying glass, Richard's arrow was seemingly swallowed by
the other.  "Right in  the throat!"  Donegal exulted  gleefully. "Well
1done!"
     "Two on shore!" Richard cried, turning. He drew another arrow and
shot.
     Donegal whirled to the pile  of tropical produce. Two were indeed
on shore; they  were badly burned, but well-armed. One,  whose arm had
been nicked and bloodied by  Richard's swift arrow, had a mean-looking
cutlass; the other had a bow and--
     "Get down!"  the physician screamed, collapsing  heavily onto the
sand. But Donegal heard the shot release--or was it Rich's shaft?--and
heard it  dully contact with a  tree. A dull twang  sounded; Richard's
arrow had misfired, and he cursed.
     Brandishing  his Bichurian  sword, Donegal  shouted a  Highlander
war-cry learned  from the mate,  Cedric of Gallows' Lane,  and charged
the intruders. Aye, intruders, for they had invaded this peaceful isle
to take advantage of its serenity.  Donegal? He only came with Richard
to hunt  the Lowenrote, but Erida  could take his soul  and devour his
body  before  he would  just  allow  these  serpents to  destroy  this
island's women.
     The Beinisonian archer clumsily prepared a new arrow, and Donegal
didn't bother to suppress a  contemptuous grin. Richard would have had
another shot  off by now--why *didn't*  Rich have another shot  off by
now? Donegal dived  at the archer, spoiling his shot  and breaking his
shaft. One  swift stab--right  to the  heart, Donegal  thought--and it
would be over for this one.
     The archer  twisted with  a bestial cry,  and Donegal  managed to
plunge the tip of the katana  in the man's stomach. The leech withdrew
the blade, held it high--
     "Donegal!" Richard shouted with alarm.
     The katana fell, and the surgeon heard an arrow make a *thunking*
sound behind  him as  it penetrated the  swordsman's flesh.  A *thump*
followed as the dead man hit the ground. The now-harmless cutlass fell
simultaneously  off Donegal's  back. The  archer's blood  spurted onto
Donegal's chest.
     And  Richard was  beside him,  helping him  up. "You  were almost
dead," the Baranurian  explained. "He had the cutlass  ready for you."
Swiftly waxing angry, Richard violently jostled his friend. "Damn you,
don't do stupid  things like that! I could have  picked them off where
we were,  but I couldn't  risk shooting you!"  The archer took  a deep
breath and smiled. "You stupid surgeon. Are you all right?"
     Donegal nodded. "You?"
     "That arrow  sailed right  past my ear;  God protects  archers, I
guess," Richard  laughed. He retrieved  the cutlass from the  sand and
inspected  it. "A  very nice  blade," he  complimented the  corpse and
slipped the  blade into  his belt.  "Thank you."  He took  his hunting
knife from its sheath and began cutting his arrow from the swordsman's
flesh. "Would  you please  run back  to our little  niche and  get our
things? We're going to need the spying  glass. I want to see if anyone
got off of that ship."
     "I think  we got them  all, Rich,"  the leech speculated,  but he
returned to the funny-looking plant anyway. Quickly, Donegal slung the
backpack over his shoulder, slipped  the surgical pouch onto his belt,
tied  his shirt  around his  waist,  and retrieved  the spying  glass.
Polishing it gently on his shirt, he returned to Richard.
     "Can't be wasting arrows."  Richard sighed as Donegal approached.
He looked seriously at his friend  as he cleaned the bloodied head and
replaced the shaft in his quiver. "We still have much work to do."
     "Aye, that we do," Donegal agreed, offering Richard the glass.
     The archer took the spying glass from his friend and examined the
blazing  ship.  It was  a  glorious  sight,  Donegal decided,  and  he
laughed. The purifying blue-white flames  of the hellfire were awesome
1and  beautiful,  aye,  an  apt  agent  of  just  death  and  essential
purgation. Donegal, satisfied, turned to Richard.
     "Yes,  we got  them all,"  the Baranurian  declared, folding  the
spying glass. Snatching his bow, he  rose and smiled at his old friend
as he hung the device on his belt. "Shall we get the rest, Donegal?"
     "Let's," grinned the leech.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
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1------------------------------------------------------------------------
 (C) Copyright May, 1990, DargonZine, Editor Dafydd .
All rights  revert to the authors.  These stories  may not be reproduced
or redistributed  save in the case  of reproducing  the whole  'zine for
further  distribution  without  the  express  permission  of the  author
involved.






1                                                             /
  DDDDD                              ZZZZZZ                //
  D    D  AAAA RRR  GGGG OOOO NN  N      Z  I NN  N EEEE  ||
  D     D A  A R  R G    O  O N N N     Z   I N N N E     || Volume 3
-=========================================================+|)
  D    D  AAAA RRR  G GG O  O N N N   Z     I N N N E     ||  Issue 7
  DDDDD   A  A R  R GGGG OOOO N  NN  ZZZZZZ I N  NN EEEE  ||
                                                           \\
                                                             \
------------------------------------------------------------------------
--   DargonZine Volume 3, Issue 7        05/11/90          Cir 970    --
------------------------------------------------------------------------
--                            Contents                                --
------------------------------------------------------------------------
 DAG                          Dafydd                 Editorial
 The Bronze Horseman I        Max Khaytsus           Sy 10-Seber 22, '13
 Hunting of the Red Tiger II  M. Wendy Hennequin     Neber 1013
 A Night Off the Town         M. Wendy Hennequin     15 Mertz, 1014
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                         Dafydd's Amber Glow
                         by Dafydd Cyhoeddwr
               (b.c.k.a. )

     Okay,  here is,  as promised,  the scoop  on the  DargonZine back
issue archives:

     Back issues of  DargonZine are available from  the Archive Server
run by Mark Seiffert. DargonZine has its own section of the Archive in
the directory called other/digest/DargonZine,  with each volume having
a  separate sub-directory  for it's  issues. There  are two  auxillary
files available from the DargonZine  directory: the file "index" lists
the file names and  the descriptions of what is in  the files; and the
"list" file is a Unix-style ls-lR file of the files available.
     Back issues are requested  from the machine "Archive@mgse" (which
may  have to  be translated  to "archive%mgse@rex.cs.tulane.edu"  from
some machines) by sending it mail. An example of the commands required
to get the help file, the index  and list files, Volume 1 Issue 1, and
Volume2 Issue 1 of the magazine is below:

- cut here ----------------------------------------------------------
help
send other/digest/DargonZine/list
send other/digest/DargonZine/index
send other/digest/DargonZine/vol01/issue01
send other/digest/DargonZine/vol02/issue01
- cut here ----------------------------------------------------------

     The files are also available  for anonymous uucp at 504-467-1069,
2400      baud,     login      'archive'     in      the     directory
"/archive/other/digest/DargonZine/". Callers at 300  or 1200 baud will
have to send a break.
     If you  have any  problems or questions,  please contact  Mark at
"archivea@mgse"  (or "archivea%mgse@rex.cs.tulane.edu"  - Mark  is the
administrator of the Archive and I have little to no knowledge of just
how it  works. Please  be sure to  send your mail  files to  the right
place:  questions/problems to  archivea@mgse,  requests  for files  to
archive@mgse. Thank  you, and thanks to  Mark for the service  and for
much of the above explanation.

     The above presented documentation is  right out of the DargonZine
Info file, and, as noted, was  culled from the documentation that Mark
provides  for his  Server. As  I said  last issue,  I have  tested the
Server and it works. However, it seems to only accept one command at a
time. So, if you want multiple issues,  it would seem that you have to
send multiple mail messages to the  machine. But that's no bad thing -
it will help  distribute the load on the network  if you don't request
all 13 back issues at once anyway!
     I  just have  two more  things to  make note  of. Its  probably a
little late for this (should have been in the last issue), but I would
like  to remind  those students  who  receive DargonZine  and who  are
leaving school for  the summer to unsubscribe (just send  me a message
-its  that easy)  to save  the  bandwidth it  will take  to send  your
account an issue of DargonZine and have it bounce because your account
is no longer active. When you return in the fall, just send me another
message  and I'll  resubscribe you,  and you  can get  the issues  you
missed from Mark's Archive Server! Thank you for the consideration.
     And, lastly, there are a few  addresses out there that seem to be
reachable from  the ListServ  network that distributes  this magazine,
but  not from  my personal  account. I  would like  to reassure  these
people, most particularly Cathy Newberry (who is the only account I am
sure I cannot reach by mail - but there must be others), that I am not
ignoring their  requests for  further information.  Cathy, I  tried to
send you  back issues, and this  week the DargonZine Info  file so you
could get them yourself. But, no  matter what I tried (and that wasn't
as much  as it could have  been maybe, but I'm  no mailer-daemon), our
Mailer refused  to believe that  your node exists. I'm  terribly sorry
that I  couldn't respond  directly to  your requests,  but I  did try.
Fortunately, I know  that the issues make  it to you, so  above is the
back issue information.
     Thank you and enjoy DargonZine.

             Dafydd, Editor DargonZine
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                          The Bronze Horseman
                                 Part 1
                            by Max Khaytsus
             

     A brigand with a large gap  between his teeth handed the lance to
the  young knight  on his  horse.  "He's giving  you a  chance to  die
fighting, but  if you win,  the rest of us  will kill you."  He smiled
savagely. "You went after the wrong people, boy."
     The knight backhanded  the brigand and brought the  lance up over
the saddle. "I see I killed the wrong three. Get out of my way or I'll
skewer you."
     Another brigand drew  his sword. "You be careful what  you say or
you may have to fight without a tongue."
     The knight lowered the tip of  his lance to point at the speaker.
"If I die here  today, more will come. Your kind  will _not_ rule this
land." He thrust  the lance forward, hitting the brigand  in the chest
hard enough  to knock him over.  "If I die today,  I will do so  for a
good cause and people will remember my name."
     "Now,  now, Sir  Arvel," someone  said behind  the knight  and he
turned to  face a man  dressed in full  plate made of  bronze, sitting
atop a  night black mount. "Enough  of this bragging," the  rider went
on. "I am  giving you this chance  because you did earn  the chain you
wear and I wish to remove it from you the same way you earned it -- in
combat."
     "Quinn," Arvel answered, "killing me won't make your life easier.
You are still an outlaw."
     "Until I am  removed by a tribunal,  you will refer to  me as Sir
Garwood Quinn."
     "Baron Bankroft already revoked your knighthood!"
     "Baron Bankroft is dead!"
     Arvel glared at the man in the bronze armor.
     "Are the peasants ready?" Quinn asked one of his men.
     "They are all in the field, Sir."
     "Good. If you will, Sir Arvel," Quinn turned to his opponent. "My
men will escort you to your starting position."
     The gap-toothed brigand  took the reins of the horse  and lead it
away. Quinn kicked his  horse to a gallop, going to  the other side of
the meadow.
     Arvel's horse was  led to a red  marker on the edge  of the field
and turned to face in Sir Garwood's direction. The brigand walked away
and Arvel raised his head to the  sky in a silent prayer. As the first
horn sounded, he leveled his lance.  On the second he kicked the horse
into a trot. Across the field Sir Garwood did the same. The two horses
gained speed on  their charges and the knights collided  with a clash.
Arvel's shield received a  great dent in its face. He  was not sure if
it could take another hit like that,  but he suspected he did at least
as much damage to Quinn. He turned his horse and looked to find Quinn.
The  renegade  knight adjusted  his  shield  and charged  back.  Arvel
shifted his weight in the saddle and urged his own horse forward. Once
again the  two knights  collided, but  this time  Arvel fell  from his
saddle to  the ground  and Quinn  rode back.  He dismounted  and knelt
beside the fallen man.
     "See how  combat before the  gods works?"  he asked and  took the
chain of  knighthood into  his hand.  Arvel gasped  at the  force with
which the chain  was torn off. "You're no knight,"  Quinn declared and
slit the fallen man's throat.

     Rien  embraced Kera  one last  time  and whispered  "Have a  safe
journey,"  in her  ear. Kera  pressed harder  against him.  "I'll miss
1you."
     After a minute or so they  released each other and Kera remounted
her horse. Rien  watched her ride away until she  reached the curve in
the road, where she turned back and  waved. He waved back and soon she
disappeared from sight.
     Rien got back on his horse and kicked it into motion. There was a
month long trip ahead  of him to do a job that  should have been taken
care of months  ago. It was to  bring to justice, one  way or another,
Sir Garwood Quinn, one of the knights of Baron Bankroft, or rather the
late  Baron Bankroft,  who  was murdered  in cold  blood  by the  said
renegade a few days before the Melrin festival. Quinn, in his festive,
pre-holiday spirit, took a few of his  men and went out to pillage and
plunder his baron's  lands and set up camp somewhere  near the village
of Phedra, after permanently releaving the local constable.
     That was  the report Rien  received three  weeks ago at  the inn,
telling of  something that took  place almost two months  before that.
Now Rien's task was to find the renegade knight in the lands he's been
despoiling and one way or another to take care of him and his dozen or
so men.  Of course  by the time  Rien arrived, it  would be  well over
three months since  the initial event and in that  time anything could
have happened.  The problem  might have already  been resolved  by the
local authorities, which was doubtful, as any organized process in the
Duchy of  Quinnat would be  unlikely at best.  On the other  hand, the
problem  also had  had a  chance to  grow, which  was the  more likely
event. Rien only hoped it had not grown too much.
     He sent Kera to Sharks' Cove specifically for that reason -- what
he was about to  do was going to be very dangerous.  She would be much
safer on the road than in a fight.  She was to go to Armand and take a
boat to Sharks'  Cove to deliver his message that  said he had finally
gotten  around to  the  job. The  note also  requested  his horse  and
equipment and a mount for Kera.  Rien had initially left his horse and
gear behind to assure his co-workers that he would indeed take a break
this time. All he  ended up proving was that he  did not need anything
extra to run into more problems. The vacation became nothing more than
a disorganized  job, but no one  would ever hear about  that. Rien was
more restless than  Kera showed herself to be in  their week long stay
at the  inn in  Dargon, but  he controlled it  better than  she. Being
forced to "relax" and do nothing was sheer torture for him.
     Instead of dying of boredom, Rien managed to obtain an obligation
to  the   High  Mage  (who   hopefully  still  knew  nothing   of  the
troubleshooters), get a witches coven  upset with him (upset enough to
try and  kill him), anger  the provincial  Dargon mob (which  hired an
assassin  to  hunt him  down)  and  on top  of  that,  get himself  an
apprentice! Apprentice for what? He worked alone! His association with
Kera made him wonder about their  relationship now that he was finally
alone and had  the chance to think.  Was it because he  felt sorry for
her? Was it  because he felt responsible for the  disease? And why has
their relationship turned sexual of all things? She didn't even have a
drop of elven blood. His mate...ex-mate was at least an elf.
     One thing was for sure, Kera  lead the type of lifestyle he lead.
Despite this tie  between them there was still a  problem. He was more
than seven times her  age and would easily live to  see ten times that
amount. She, at best, would live to the end of the century. In fifteen
or twenty years she would be on the decline, no longer as strong or as
agile...and twenty years past that,  the same would start happening to
her mind. Rien  was not happy about human mortality.  It was the cause
of the  initial conflict between his  people and the human  race. In a
matter of  two centuries, a few  millenia ago, elves almost  became an
extinct race because  of their inability to die a  natural death. They
were  virtual  pacifists  back   then,  permitting  themselves  to  be
1slaughtered almost to the last.
     To date, Rien  knew of only four tribes in  existence, all living
in  the  same  place,  Wildwood,  in  the  valley  of  the  Windbourne
mountains, or Charnelwood  -- Darkling Forest --  as the superstitious
humans  in the  area preferred  to  call it.  Two of  the tribes  were
Ljosalfar. The one he was from and another, of which his ex-mate was a
member. The other two were Dopkalfar  and Rien knew little of them. He
could find them if he wanted to,  but there was never a reason to. The
Dopkalfar were  the ones who  insisted that  the human lust  for elven
blood should be repaid in kind and  it was this desire to survive that
almost singlehandedly saved  the entire race. It was  this desire that
separated  the two  groups into  the broken  race they  now were.  One
remained peaceful and  the other became warriors. The  conflict lay in
the issue of revenge and question of superiority. Did a more civilized
race have the right to condemn another?
     For the  most part Ljosalfar  strongly believed that  they should
not fight a war and should simply be ready to leave if the humans ever
come again.  The philosophy of  the Dopkalfar was  to be ready  at all
times to take on the challenge of  a war and win. There were naturally
all sides to the issue in each of  the tribes and this was a source of
great debates for many centuries.
     To Rien  it was all  ancient history, now  no more than  a racial
conflict he  believed to be  wrong. There  were less than  two hundred
elves that he  knew existed and their growth was  stunted by humans on
the outside and internal conflicts at home. If Ljosalfar and Dopkalfar
ever met for reasons other than to decide their future, it was to have
as big  a fight as  they could, although no  elf ever died  by another
elf's hand.
     There were some  human tribes in the mountains and  in the forest
that did not  hate elves and some  that even revered them,  but on the
whole, Makdiar was now a human world and the elves could no longer lay
any claim.
     Rien left  his tribe to  see the world  his father was  from, the
world no elf had visited for over two millenia. Most in the tribe were
against it, but  Rien managed to convince a good  portion of them that
it would be good  to know where they stood in the  minds of the humans
and that he,  of mixed heritage, was  the best person to  find out. To
his surprise, he  learned that his species was a  thing of legends and
most, save scholars and mages, did not realize that these legends were
often based on facts. Elves were as forgotten as the empires that rose
to defeat them.
     During his time in the  human dominated places, Rien learned that
humans feared things  they did not understand and often  tended to rid
themselves  of these  inconveniences  any way  they  could. Maari  and
Terell were both  in this category, but many others  were not. Perhaps
because  time erased  the memories  of the  wars, perhaps  because now
people  were more  tolerant.  Those like  Marcellon  and Taishent  and
Connall, who had no problems with what he was.
     And neither did Kera, a fact  that, oddly enough, pleased him. On
his fourth day in Dargon, just three days after they came to an uneasy
truce, she saved his life. Perhaps she realized he was not human then,
perhaps not. She certainly had  the opportunity, but more importantly,
she had no reason in the world to  save a man who could just as easily
have turned her  over to the town guard. She  could have abandoned him
or killed him or  given him to Liriss, but instead  killed for him and
remained  at his  side. That  was the  type of  people who  could live
peacefully side by side with elves and that's why he developed respect
for her...
     Rien could  not tell  if that  was the reason  for the  growth of
their physical relationship and did not  assume that he would find out
1soon. For now he was glad she had decided to stay with him and more so
that she  agreed not  to face  the dangers  he expected  to encounter.
Their plan was, that since Kera would reach Sharks' Cove a lot quicker
by ship, she  would pick up the  equipment and travel on  to Phedra, a
week long journey, where she would meet  up with him again. By then he
would have had a good week to take care of the job...or not.

     Rien caught sight of Phedra in early morning. It lay in a shallow
valley, backed by a  forest on one side and open  to farming fields on
the other. In spite of the hour,  there was no evidence of life either
in the village or in the fields.
     Rien stopped his horse on the  hillside and scanned the area. The
village appeared well cared for, but still empty. The fields were also
in good shape,  but like the town, there were  no indications of life.
Rien encouraged  his horse forward.  Up ahead  on his left  he noticed
some motion behind  a large bush, whose leaves were  beginning to turn
brown from lack of water.
     Unhooking his foot from the stirrup, Rien placed it on the arc of
the crossbow, which hung off the saddle to his right. He bent down and
grabbing hold of one of the two strings, pulled it back. Not an action
that should be  done while riding, but better than  not being prepared
at all.
     Rien looked ahead  again. The bush was still. Across  from it was
an old tree with branches extending over the road with too many leaves
to betray anyone hiding in it.
     The horse  was now about twenty  feet away from the  tree. At the
current  rate he  would be  passing under  it in  a few  moments. Rien
looked at the crossbow,  but it was impossible to place  a bolt in it,
not only  because of lack of  cover, but also because  it was pointing
straight down and  would not hold the missile.  Rien grumbled silently
for a second and  with his left hand undid the  strap binding the hilt
of his sword.
     He was passing under the first branches of the tree and looked up
just in time to see a net falling onto him. The horse stopped and with
a yell someone  leaped down. Rien caught the man  with his long dagger
in mid-air  and his assailant  landed on the  ground with a  thud, the
weapon lost somewhere under him. Rien  was also in a bad position. The
horse would not move while the net was around it and he could not draw
his sword to cut himself out. As he considered his situation, an arrow
from behind the bush penetrated his leg with enough force to secure it
to  the horse's  body.  The animal  reared up  in  surprise and  pain,
breaking the arrow and throwing Rien off,  as a second arrow hit it in
the shoulder, right were Rien's head had been a moment before.
     The net  caught on the  horse and the  saddle and Rien  more slid
than fell to the  ground. He grabbed the dagger on  the ground and cut
the net  open. When he  finally struggled  free, he encountered  a man
with a  drawn sword. The  first swing  would have surely  made contact
with his  head, except he timely  realized that his left  leg could no
longer support him  and collapsed to his knees. The  sword went barely
over his head and he hit the swordsman with his dagger.
     The man  staggered back  and Rien awkwardly  drew his  sword. His
eyes were now silver-grey with anger, matching the color of the steel.
Before  the brigand  could recover  for the  next attack,  Rien swung,
slicing his  opponent's stomach open.  The brigand dropped  his weapon
and collapsed on top of it, a pool of blood spreading under him.
     Rien staggered up,  the pain in his leg  becoming unbearable, but
went on to  face the two new challengers who  appeared from beyond the
bush. He parried  both their strikes, then attacked  one man's weapon,
sending it  to the ground.  The second  man swung at  Rien, connecting
loosely with his side. Rien returned the favor, but instead of pulling
1his sword back,  forced it forward. Panicing, the  brigand dropped his
weapon and tried grabbing his sword,  but Rien pulled it back, leaving
bloody streaks on the man's hands.
     Rien turned on  his second opponent, again knocking  his sword to
the  ground. The  brigand tried  punching him,  but Rien  swung again,
cutting his forearm  off. The man stared in shock  and horror and Rien
put the sword through him for the last time.
     When Rien turned to face the last man, the brigand was sitting on
the ground,  nursing his hands and  side, the sword laying  a few feet
away, where  it had landed. The  brigand yielded and Rien  put his own
weapon away.  He leaned on  his horse, still  covered by the  net, for
support. A dark  pool of red appeared  where he stood and  his leg was
soaked with blood from the calf down.  He pulled out a dagger from the
saddle bag to cut the net off  when hoof beats sounded up ahead on the
road. Rien looked up.
     Riding towards  him were three  men. The one  in the lead  rode a
black stallion and wore bronze plate  armor. The other two rode at his
sides and were dressed in chain.  Each man wielded a cocked and loaded
crossbow. They  stopped less than twenty  feet away from Rien  and the
man in  the middle  surveyed the scene  with calculated  interest. The
brigand sitting  on the ground rose,  holding on to his  injured side.
His  effort  was rewarded  with  a  crossbow  bolt  in his  chest  and
collapsed to the ground, probably dead.
     "Is this your doing?" the man asked in an aristocratic voice.
     Rien nodded, studying the man silently. He believed himself to be
speaking with Sir Garwood Quinn.
     "Those were my men," Quinn motioned  to the four bodies. "I think
it'd be best if  you joined them..." A new bolt  was inserted into the
crossbow.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                        Hunting of the Red Tiger
                                 Part II
                          by M. Wendy Hennequin
                      (b.c.k.a )

     Donegal na Valenfaer laughed as  he watched the Beinisonian slave
ship  burn  blue  with  hellfire.  "Well, that  wasn't  so  hard.  The
Beinisonians aren't  as tough as they  think they are. We've  had more
trouble pirating some rowboats."
     "Getting the others  will be more difficult,"  Richard warned him
sternly. "Those girls they bought will be in the way." He gazed at the
blazing Beinisonian  ship and frowned.  "You know, it'll be  much more
difficult for me to  pick them off. Here we had  nothing to be careful
of."
     "Don't worry, Rich," Donegal reassured him cheerfully. "I'll stab
a few in the back, slit a few throats...it'll be easy."
     "Has anyone ever told you that you're too optimistic?"
     "You've told me a dozen times."
     "Why doesn't it sink in?"
     "Because I'm too optimistic, Rich," Donegal answered innocently.
     "You're also a  pain," Richard growled playfully,  making his way
to the  path the Beinisonians  had taken. "Let's get  moving, Donegal.
Maybe we can catch them at supper."
     "Did   you  bring   any   poison?"  the   leech  wondered,   only
half-jokingly.
     The archer  abruptly stopped and  turned to his  friend. "Poison?
Why would I bring poison on a hunting trip?"
     "Hey, why  would you  bring hellfire?"  Donegal countered  with a
knowing smile.
     Richard flushed slightly, but he returned the smile and continued
down the path. "Last time I was  here," the archer explained, "I had a
little trouble with  the Sun People. A young lady  and I were enjoying
ourselves, and a few of the men became rather irate." Richard chuckled
softly. "Luckily,  I had a  little hellfire  on me; my  sword couldn't
have fought their spears."
     "Sounds like a close call."
     "It was  worth it. She was  a fine woman." Richard  retrieved the
spying glass  from his belt  and surveyed the  path in front  of them.
"All clear  ahead," he reported in  a low voice. He  crouched. "Still,
we're getting pretty close. Can you hear them?"
     Donegal listened; music and  laughter floated merrily through the
jungle. "Maybe we can get them now, while they least expect it."
     Richard shrugged  at the  possibility and  crept along  the path.
When they neared the clearing, Donegal stepped into the shadows at the
edge of the brush; seeing him, Richard did the same. The volume of the
music grew.
     Finally  halting,  Richard  parted the  underbrush  and  motioned
Donegal to join him. The archer was grimacing.
     About two  hundred People  of the Sun--men,  women, and  at least
fifty   children--filled   the    clearing.   Despite   the   carnival
atmosphere--large groups were dancing, and  a huge carcass cooked over
a  spit--each man  bore a  spear, and  some also  had strung  bows set
carefully  beside them.  A  few even  had iron  swords.  In a  moment,
Donegal, too,  was frowning. So much  for getting them out  while they
were off their guard.
     Richard reached for the spying glass and unfolded it. "Do you see
the Beinisonians?" the archer rasped.
     Donegal  quickly   scanned  the  jubilant  tribe   while  Richard
meticulously  searched  with the  spy  glass.  "There they  are."  The
surgeon pointed to  four men; three were Beinisonians, and  one was an
1older, elaborately dressed  Sun Man. "At least three  of them. Weren't
there five?"
     "That's  what  I  thought."  Richard  compressed  the  glass  and
attached it  to his belt. Turning  his back on the  festival, he said,
"We have  some time  to kill. It'll  be a while  before that  beast is
cooked fully."
     "Do the People of the Sun eat their meat fully cooked?"
     Richard made  a face. "Raw  meat? Don't  make me sick."  He rose.
"Want to search for the other..." His voice trailed off, and he stared
over Donegal's shoulder.
     The leech  whirled. Calmly and  patiently standing, not  ten feet
from them, was the Red Tiger.
     "Or," Richard continued softly, "we  could go hunting a different
animal." Slowly, he rose and drew an arrow from his quiver.
     The Lowenrote waited.
     Donegal began to stand. Richard placed  the arrow on the bow. The
surgeon straightened. Richard drew the arrow back.
     And the Red  Tiger leapt, laughing, into the  jungle. "Let's go!"
Richard urged,  and in a  split second,  he crashed after  the animal.
Donegal rolled his eyes, sent a  brief prayer to Gow, and plunged into
the jungle after his friend.
     Once again, he collided with Richard abruptly. Richard raised his
hand  swiftly  and sharply  to  still  Donegal's question.  It  didn't
matter; Donegal understood what was happening in a matter of moments.
     While  the  Lowenrote  stood patiently--no,  expectantly--on  the
other  end  of the  small  clearing,  two men--two  Beinisonians--were
chasing  two  desperately frightened  native  women.  The farther  man
reached out to snatch his prey--
     And fell to the moist ground, an arrow in his neck.
     The  second,  running  past  Donegal,  paused  as  he  heard  his
companion's cry.  Donegal leapt upon  him, forcing him to  the ground,
and in a moment, the surgeon had buried his knife in the Beinisonian's
back.
     When he  rose, Richard  was slitting the  other man's  throat for
security's sake. The women--and the Red Tiger--were gone.
     "Well," Richard began  softly, "it won't be long  now. When those
girls  return to  the party,  one of  two things  will happen.  Either
they'll  tell how  they were  nearly raped,  and the  Sun People  will
slaughter the other three Beinisonians,  or they'll tell how these two
were killed, and we'll have an  entire tribe on us." Richard turned to
his friend. "Well, Donegal, which do you think?"
     The surgeon grinned. "I think we may be in for it, Rich."
     The  Baranurian smiled  ironically. "You're  probably right."  He
loaded an arrow. "You  know, it might be best if we  took off and left
this island right now. The Beinisonians  can't come after us, and they
certainly can't take those women any place."
     Donegal glared at  his friend. "We started this,  Rich, and we're
going to finish it," the  surgeon commanded. Richard raised an eyebrow
at Donegal's tone of voice, but  he said nothing. Donegal saw this and
grinned gratefully. "Besides, Rich, it's much more fun this way."
     "That's a  fact," Richard agreed good-naturedly.  He stepped back
into the  brush. "Well, in any  case, they'll likely bring  the entire
tribe on  us. We're going  to need surprise  on our side,  Donegal. We
don't have much  else." The archer took two more  steps backwards, and
then Donegal could not see him at all.
     Donegal  glanced about  the  clearing and  quickly  moved to  the
shadiest spot he could find. He  hid the backpack under a nearby bush,
carelessly flung his white shirt into the jungle--let them look in the
wrong spot!-- and hid himself in the shadows. Donegal smiled wickedly.
No one would spot him in the murky shade.
1     "The band!" Richard hissed,  and Donegal remembered and panicked.
Remove his headband? But that bright  red and yellow band hid the mark
of    slavery!    If    the    Beinisonians   saw    it--    No,    he
wouldn't--couldn't--risk it.
     "You stupid  ass!" Richard's  voice harshly mocked  the surgeon's
hesitation. "Why don't you just wear a target on your head?"
     Donegal scowled,  furious at Richard  for stupidity that  was the
surgeon's own. With a growled  oath, Donegal reached for the Bichanese
band and hurled it from him with a vengeance.
     A crash sounded nearby. "A black angel and a golden one?" scoffed
a voice in drunken accents. "The woman has had too much wine!"
     A couple of  loud guffaws seconded the  opinion. Another Beinison
voice said,  only half-jestingly, "Don't  be so sure of  your mocking.
This is  the year of the  Incarnations. It could be  Braigh and Alana,
you know, and I wouldn't want to anger them!"
     The  laughs  became  louder.  "Don't be  silly,"  a  third  voice
ordered. "They  were probably  just attacked  by some  jungle animals;
that Lowenrote  that we  hear of  might well  be the  golden angel--or
demon--the women spoke of."
     "Exactly,"  the   first  of  the  voices   agreed.  A  heavy-set,
half-drunken  man parted  the  vegetation  on the  north  side of  the
clearing. "The women had too much to drink."
     "I don't  think so,"  the third voice  argued, stepping  into the
clearing. This man  was younger and cheerful, and  reminded Donegal in
some ways of himself. "Look there."  He pointed to the man Richard had
slaughtered. "Angels don't use bows. And look there." He indicated the
discarded shirt.
     The first  retrieved it while  the owner  of the second  voice, a
strong- looking  man with a  scar across  his bare chest,  entered the
clearing. "It's  a shirt,"  the heavy-set  slaver said.  "They weren't
lying."
     "Exactly. An angel wouldn't leave  a shirt be--" the youngest man
started, but the arrow that went through his eye stole his final word.
The heavy man  jumped backwards; the strong man burst  into the jungle
in pursuit of whoever shot his friend.
     And  that, Donegal  decided,  leaves one  for  me. Screaming  the
Highlander  war cry,  Donegal  leapt  onto the  heavy  man's back  and
slammed the knife  into his back. The heavy man  yelled his pain, and,
cursing, he threw Donegal to the ground. Turning, the enraged man, the
blade still in his flesh, now leapt for the surgeon.
     Donegal swiftly  rolled to the  right, and the  husky Beinisonian
fell onto the ground. Quick as levin, Donegal drew his Bichanese sword
and stabbed again.
     Again, the man let out a  roar more bestial than the Lowenrote's.
He  sprung to  his feet--how  can a  man that  big leap  like a  deer?
Donegal wondered--and charged the leech.
     Donegal lowered his sword instantly, and, thank Gow, at the right
moment. The heavy man impaled himself.
     Donegal stared, disgusted,  at the surprised corpse.  After a few
minutes, the surgeon mentally shook himself out of his stupor and slid
the  heavy man  from  his sword,  lest the  weight  damage the  blade.
Sighing in relief, Donegal wiped  his blade on some nearby vegetation.
It was over, aye, and they were successful. All the Beinisonians dead,
thanks to him and Richard.
     Richard!
     The jungle was silent.
     "Rich!" Donegal shouted, frantic. "Rich!"
     The jungle was silent.
     "*Rich!*" Donegal cried. If he  had gotten his best friend killed
in this stupid crusade, Donegal would never forgive himself.
1     "Don't get  excited," the  Baranurian counseled  drying, stepping
out of the jungle behind the surgeon. "I'm all right."
     Donegal turned. The  statement was true, to a  point; Richard was
well and whole, but a nasty  cut decorated the archer's chest. "Let me
take a look at that," Donegal ordered.
     "Are you all right?" Richard  wondered as Donegal scrutinized the
wound. "It's just a scratch; don't worry."
     "You're  right, Rich.  It isn't  bad."  But Donegal  went to  the
backpack anyway and returned with some  gauze and whisky. "Did you get
him?" Donegal asked as he cleaned his friend's wound.
     "Yes.  The arrow  hit  him  right in  the  heart.  The blood  was
incredible."
     "How'd you get this, then?" the confused surgeon asked.
     "You're not going  to believe this," Richard warned,  "but a tree
branch leapt out in front of me, and--"
     "There's some weird  things on this island,"  Donegal admitted as
he finished  his task. He  capped the whisky  flask and looked  at his
friend. "Now what?"
     "Well, now that  we've finished with the  Beinisonians, I thought
we might go hunting the tiger," Richard suggested.
     Donegal, suddenly weary, sank to the ground, but he found himself
unable to protest. After Richard had  helped him, it seemed to Donegal
that he would be unfair or ungrateful to refuse to help Richard.
     "But I'm  tired, too," Richard  added, smiling calmly at  his old
friend. "What do  you say we go back  to Port of the Sun?  We can come
back next week;  I'm sure that no one will  kill the Lowenrote between
now and then."
     "Sounds great," Donegal  agreed with all the  tired enthusiasm he
could  muster. He  slowly rose,  donned  his shirt  and backpack,  and
retrieved his knife from  the back of the heavy man  he had killed. He
stared at the corpse for a moment,  then said, "Let's take care of one
thing first." He bent and severed the head from the body.
     "What are you doing?" Richard asked, appalled. "Why are you doing
it?"
     "I   think  the   Sun   People   have  a   right   to  know   why
these--men--aren't coming  back," Donegal explained gruffly.  "And I'm
going to make sure they don't make the same mistake again."
     Decapitating  the  Beinisonians  took  several  minutes;  Richard
consented to return  and bring back the  head of the young  man he had
killed. That  done, Donegal took the  heads by their hair  and carried
the gruesome  bouquet to the  celebrating Sun People.  Richard thought
the surgeon  was crazy  and told  him so, but  he followed  anyway, to
"make sure you don't get yourself killed."
     So Donegal marched  like a conqueror into  the clearing; Richard,
beside him,  carried himself  like a grim  guard. Within  moments, the
music died. Fearful questions filled the clearing a moment later.
     "Where   is  the   interpreter?"  Donegal   loudly  demanded   in
Beinisonian.
     The  older  man  with  the   profusion  of  feathers  and  shells
decorating his  person came forward.  Beside him stood a  younger man,
who spoke.  "I am the  interpreter. The chief  wishes to know  why you
have done this. Why have you dishonored our tribe by robbing our women
of honorable marriage?"
     "No!" Donegal shouted  angrily. "I have saved  them from slavery.
They weren't going to marry the women; they were going to sell them!"
     The interpreter turned to the chief and spoke. The chief replied,
and the interpreter said, "Why do you suspect this?"
     "I have seen  it!" He pointed to the ugly  brand on his forehead,
the most dominant feature on his face  when he did not choose to cover
it. "This was  the first thing they would do--burn  slavery into their
1faces and into their brains! I, too,  was a slave there, and I saw the
injustice--the  beatings--the  rapes--the  whippings--the  torture!  I
know!  These snakes  tricked  you!  Your women  would  have been  made
slaves, sold like animals, made prisoners until they died!"
     The young man paled and relayed  this to the older man. The older
man considered.  A young  woman timidly approached  the older  man and
spoke. The  old man muttered  something to the interpreter,  who again
spoke. "If this is so, dark one, you and your companion have done us a
great service."
     "I am  not lying," Donegal  assured him stubbornly. "I  would not
make up something so horrible."
     "We must then give the women to  you, since you not only have won
them fairly from their purchasers, but  since you have also saved them
from this misery."
     Confused, Donegal turned to  the archer. Switching to Baranurian,
the tongue spoken  aboard the Eclipse, Donegal said, "They  want us to
take the women."
     Richard half-smiled and considered. "Not a bad deal."
     "What are we going to do with them?"
     "Use  your   imagination,"  Richard  suggested,   laughing.  "But
unfortunately, we can't do it. I can't handle more than five or six at
a time, and we'd never get them all in the sailboat, anyway."
     Donegal looked at the interpreter  and shook his head. "We didn't
fight for their freedom to take it away again. Let them stay here with
you."
     The interpreter  relayed this to  his elder, who spoke,  and some
men came forward bearing bars of gold and silver. The interpreter told
the visitors, "You must take something for the deed."
     Donegal eyed the metals for a moment, then shook his head. "I did
this to save them  from what I escaped. I want no  gold." He turned to
Richard and switched once more to  the Baranurian tongue. "Do you want
some of that?"
     "For what?" the archer inquired.
     "For saving the girls."
     "I didn't do it for money, Donegal."
     The surgeon smiled gratefully at  his friend, then turned back to
the chief and  the interpreter. "We want  nothing," Donegal concluded,
but then  the aroma of  the cooking  meat assaulted him.  "Except," he
continued, "for a piece of meat and a drink of water to refresh us."
     The interpreter spoke,  and two women came forward  with meat and
drink for  the visitors. Donegal spoke  their thanks and began  to eat
timorously.
     Richard  sniffed the  meat and  started to  eat ravenously.  "Sun
buffalo!" he cheered.  He took a long draught of  water. "Best meat in
this part of the world!"
     Donegal took a  larger bite and found he agreed  with the archer;
the meat was  rather tasty. The Sun People returned  to their dancing,
singing, and  feasting as  the visitors  ate. "It's  nice to  see them
happy again," Donegal sighed contentedly. He turned to the Baranurian.
"Sorry we didn't catch your tiger, Rich."
     "As I said, the Lowenrote will  be here next week." Richard wiped
his  hands  on  his  leggings,  took another  draught  of  water,  and
retrieved his bow. "We'd better be leaving if we want to reach Port of
the Sun at a reasonable hour. Let's go, Donegal."
     Donegal  nodded and  faced the  chief. "Thank  you," the  surgeon
said. "Good-bye."
     The  chief  seemed  to  understand without  the  interpreter.  He
smiled. Donegal waved farewell and followed Richard along the eastward
path.
     "This is the one the Lowenrote led us to," Richard commented. "It
1should come out on  the beach, and then we'll just  follow it until we
reach the sailboat."
     "Whatever." Donegal smiled tiredly. "What a day."
     "You do seem to bring excitement wherever you go," Richard teased
with a grin. "I've gotten into more scrapes with you..."
     "Hey,"  the leech  protested  good-naturedly, "of  course it  was
exciting. I only came with you because I was bored!"
     "Bored?" Richard laughed. "Well, that's  what you get for seeking
adventure, Donegal."
     "And don't  blame me for  all those brawls  I seem to  get into,"
Donegal continued  hotly, glaring  jestingly at  the archer.  "I don't
start them."
     "No,  you  usually just--holy  Stevene!"  Richard  screamed in  a
shocked  tone which  Donegal had  never before  heard the  archer use.
"Donegal, look-- "
     Instinctively, the surgeon dropped, and  a knife whizzed over his
head. He looked up to see  three demons, charred, ugly beings straight
from the fires  of hell, attacking Richard with fists  and blades. Two
more of the appalling creatures were running toward him.
     "Gow!"  Donegal  screamed  for  aid  and  drew  his  katana.  The
horrifying man-shape jumped back and circled. The other skirted behind
Donegal.
     "Don't call for his help," the one behind the surgeon taunted him
sinisterly. "Gow rarely helps those who use Amante's methods."
     And the devil leapt onto  Donegal's back. The surgeon dropped and
rolled, thus pinning the creature under  him. But there was the other,
coming at him  with a short sword. Donegal lifted  his legs and kicked
as  the one  underneath  him tried  to stab  him  from behind.  Again,
Donegal rolled a little, pinning one of the ugly thing's knife arm.
     "Rich!" the surgeon called for his  only aid. His only answer was
loud crack and a cry of pain. "Rich!"
     The pinned thing  was pummelling Donegal with his  free fist; the
other  charged  again.  Frantically,  Donegal swung  his  katana.  The
charger  leapt backwards  and  stumbled. The  pinned  one was  moving,
trying to roll.
     Again, the free one charged. The  pinned one sought to roll. In a
stroke of  inspiration, Donegal stopped  fighting and rolled  with the
monster he had pinned. The thing  screamed as its companion buried his
short sword  in him. The  other cursed and took  the name of  Sanar in
vain.
     Donegal slid  from under  the body,  dragged his  Bichanese blade
with him, and attacked the fiend  facing him. The short sword, Donegal
knew, would be  no match for his  katana, if he were  a great fighter.
But he wasn't;  the dead beast had been right  to say Donegal followed
Amante's methods. No, Donegal couldn't win a straight fight; he had to
strike from  behind, use surprise. Well,  he was a pirate,  after all,
not a Knight of the Star. Still, his blade cut his opponent's arm.
     "Rich!" Donegal called.  He couldn't spare a  look; the grotesque
thing came at him again. What were these things?
     Donegal managed to  leap away from the intended  blow and deliver
one of his own.  He whirled to face his attacker  again. From here, he
could see  Richard. The archer was  lying on the ground  and using his
left hand to wield the cutlass. The  bow was nowhere in sight, but one
of the  demons, an arrow in  its belly, lay dead  near Richard's feet.
With another stroke, Richard killed one of his opponents.
     "Well done!" Donegal encouraged,  sidestepping another attack and
aiming a blow at his antagonist's  head. Good Sanar, what *were* these
ugly, burned things?
     A blade--Richard's blade--flashed past Donegal's astonished eyes.
The surgeon stumbled and fell. The  attacker came forward and held his
1sword's  point  at  Donegal's  throat.  "And  now,  slave,"  said  the
Beinisonian, "you will die."
     "Rich!" Donegal called, praying for a miracle.
     "Your  friend can't  help  you," the  man-thing laughed  cruelly.
"Look, slave."
     Without moving  his head, Donegal glanced  aside. Another charred
being held his blade at Richard's throat. Damn!
     "Now,  slave,  say  prayers  that Sanar  will  save  your  soul,"
snickered the monster, "thought I doubt that slaves--"
     Giving a bestial roar, a red  blur flew over the creature's head.
He looked up;  Donegal buried his katana in the  burnt thing's gut. It
fell; Donegal turned to help his friend--
     But  the other  creature was  engaged, its  throat locked  in the
teeth of the Red Tiger. Donegal sprinted to Richard's side, lifted the
archer's head. "Are you all right?" the surgeon breathed, watching the
Lowenrote rend the attacker with teeth and claws.
     "My arm," Richard answered, his voice stiff with pain.
     Donegal gently probed Richard's right forearm. "Broken."
     "Tell me something I don't know," Richard snapped.
     "Hey," Donegal began, "don't--"
     The  Lowenrote tossed  its victim  away with  a sudden  movement.
Carefully, deliberately, it approached the men it had saved.
     "Run!" Richard  rasped, shoving Donegal  away with his  good arm.
"She'd catch  me, but if she's  busy, she'll never catch  up with you.
Go!"
     Donegal stood;  often the  commands in  Richard's voice  were too
powerful to be  disobeyed. But the surgeon was still,  unsure. The Red
Tiger trotted to  the pair and paused. Donegal's  limbs froze although
Richard again was shouting at him to leave.
     Gingerly,  the Lowenrote  approached  the  paralyzed surgeon  and
began to rub  its head against the  back of Donegal's hand,  much as a
pet cat would. Donegal wondered if he would die of the shock. Then the
tiger approached Richard and nuzzled the archer's neck.
     "I'll  be damned,"  Richard said,  reaching out  and petting  the
beast. "She wants to be friends. Hello."
     Donegal was finally able to move; he blinked, then ordered, "Stay
put, Rich. I'm going to find something to splint that arm to, and then
we'll leave."
     "Use my  bow," Richard suggested,  gesturing with his  left hand.
"It's broken.  I'm glad  I didn't  bring my best  one. You  like that,
don't  you?" the  archer added,  scratching the  Lowenrote behind  its
ears. "You're a good kitty."
     "I didn't  know you  liked animals," Donegal  laughed, retrieving
the  bow  and  its string.  He  patted  the  Red  Tiger's nose  as  he
approached. He gently reached for Richard's broken arm.
     "I've always like--damn, that hurts!"
     "Well, it's  going to,"  Donegal reminded him  practically. "I'll
set it when we  reach Port of the Sun. I don't  have everything I need
here." Quickly,  the surgeon  finished the job  and offered  Richard a
hand up. "Let's get going."
     "I'm with  you." Richard  stroked the  Lowenrote's head,  and the
tiger purred. "I guess I won't be hunting you anymore. Let's go."
     Silently, Donegal  led the way  through the jungle path.  After a
few  minutes,  he turned  to  say  something  to Richard,  but  stated
instead, "That tiger's following us."
     Richard  turned to  the beast.  "Go away,"  the archer  commanded
gently. "Go on."
     With a resolute tilt of the head, the tiger nuzzled Richard's leg
and trotted after him and Donegal when they moved on.
     "I don't  think it's going,"  Donegal observed, looking  over his
1shoulder. "What are we going to do ?"
     "Take her with  us, I suppose," Richard guessed.  He sighed. "I'm
not fighting with her."
     "But a tiger?" Donegal protested. "On the Eclipse?"
     Richard, his pain still evident,  tried to smile. "Hasn't Captain
Fynystere been saying we need a cat aboard?"

     It  was  near  the  next  dawn when  Richard,  Donegal,  and  the
Lowenrote--whom  Richard  gave  the original  name  of  Kitty--finally
returned to Captain Fynystere's house in Port of the Sun. They had had
a hell of a time returning;  it was difficult to maneuver the sailboat
with only three  arms. But luckily, the break had  been clean and easy
to splint  and set. Unfortunately,  Donegal rued,  it would be  six or
eight weeks before Richard could teach him to shoot a bow.
     "You  two look  like  you've been  through  a battle,"  Fynystere
observed cheerfully  when the pair  joined him for breakfast.  Then he
saw the Red Tigress. Fynystere looked briefly nervous, but calmed when
Kitty approached  him gently and nuzzled  his hand. "So I  see you got
your tiger, Richard."
     Richard looked at  Donegal and smiled. The  surgeon grinned back.
"Yes, Captain," Donegal  answered, "and we managed to hunt  us a whole
pack of wolves, too."
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                           A Night off the Town
                          by M. Wendy Hennequin
                      (b.c.k.a )

     "Homesick?"  a  gentle  voice wondered,  causing  the  red-soaked
paintbrush  to fly  from Gaoel  Fynystere's steady  hand to  the newly
cleaned deck. The  captain of the Eclipse whirled and  stared into the
serenely amused  face of his  bowmaster. Richard just  Richard smiled.
"It's a nice painting," the archer commented, gazing critically at the
nearly complete  representation of the night-shrouded  city of Dargon.
Only the  Regehr, the  red north-pointing star  which would  crown the
port city like a glowing ruby, remained uncolored.
     "You're back  early," the  captain finally noted,  retrieving his
paintbrush. "Is something wrong, Richard?"
     The bowmaster  squatted beside  his old  friend. "Plenty,  but it
will keep, Gaoel. It can't touch us here off the town."
     "Nothing can  touch us," the  captain noted smugly,  cleaning the
brush so  that he  could complete the  painting. Fynystere  dipped the
brush, smiling wickedly as he thought of the Eclipse's reputation. Not
only could  no one  touch the Eclipse  or her crew,  but no  one would
dare.
     "Nothing but our  own souls," Richard replied, sighing.  "It is a
beautiful painting, Gaoel."
     "It's  a  beautiful  night."   Fynystere  looked  fondly  at  the
moon-shadowed city with  a thousand flickering eyes, with  a mantle of
stars such as Alana the Night  Goddess, the figurehead of the Eclipse,
would wear.  Fynystere dabbed the  Regehr above Dargon  with blood-red
color. "Mind telling me why you're  back so early on a beautiful night
like this?"
     "You  know I  don't raise  living and  dead on  shore leave  like
Donegal and Cedric do."
     "But  you  generally  like  Dargon,"  the  captain  pointed  out,
delicately touching the canvas.
     "I  do like  Dargon," Richard  confirmed. "Are  you almost  done,
Gaoel?"
     Fynystere smiled  at Richard's abrupt  change in subject;  it was
typical of the bowmaster. "Aye, just." Fynystere washed the brush in a
cup of  seawater. Richard rose  and lifted the painting.  "She'll hang
beside the Eclipse," Fynystere decided  aloud. He folded the easel and
closed  the  small chest  full  of  paints.  "Luen, take  the  watch!"
Fynystere bellowed, and  he turned to the archer. "Well,  Rich, if you
aren't going to drink on shore, you'll drink with me."
     "Aye, captain."
     Fynystere led  the way in  the dark  to his cabin  below. Richard
opened the door for his friend,  and the captain, after gently setting
the paint chest in the corner,  lit the hellfire lamp. Richard set the
painting against the wall and took the spare seat.
     "Drink, Rich?"
     "I'll pour," the bowmaster offered,  taking a folded paper out of
a pouch. "You read."
     Fynystere took the  letter eagerly, broke his  family's seal, and
scanned the  neat handwriting  anxiously. He frowned.  "Xandra's still
missing," he announced, anger and frustration in his voice.
     "Gaoel," Richard said gently, pouring the whiskey, "I don't think
you'll ever see your sister again."
     "If she's dead, I'll kill that God-damned Duke!"
     "That will only get you killed," Richard noted, and as usual, his
logic  was  irrefutable.  "Here,  drink." Fynystere  took  the  goblet
absently. "It always amazes me that you only blame the Duke of Dargon.
Your sister did participate, you know."
1     "Aye, but  Xandra didn't refuse  to acknowledge the child  or cut
the Duke off from her. Damn that ass! He's probably the one who scared
her out of Dargon in the first place. If it weren't for Fionn Connall,
the Duke might have had her killed."
     "Clifton Dargon? Hardly," Richard laughed.  "I know Dargon has an
overblown sense of honor, but it isn't *that* extreme."
     Fynystere started to grunt, but he  forgot the sound in the words
of the  letter. "My God!"  When Richard  failed to speak,  the captain
looked  at him  concern in  his eyes.  "Rich, there's  war! Beinison's
attacked us!"
     "I know," Richard said calmly. "I  heard at the Rogue and Quiver,
and while  I was waiting  for your letter,  I went to  Belisandra's to
find out what I could about it. It's rather interesting."
     "Interesting?" Fynystere scoffed, kicking  a chair toward him and
sitting firmly in it.
     "War is always interesting," Richard returned mildly.
     "Not when you're in it!"
     "I beg to  differ," Richard replied with formality  that was only
half-mocking. "We war against ships,  and I've never heard you declare
it boring."
     "This isn't the same."
     "Perhaps," Richard acknowledged.
     Fynystere took  the drink Richard  had poured him and  scowled at
the bowmaster. "So, you went to Belisandra's. Why?"
     Richard  nodded. "As  I suspected,  some  of the  Duke's men  and
Connall archers  were there."  The bowmaster  frowned. "They  knew the
entire romance.  It's rather complicated,  but the  end of it  is that
Beinison has executed the Count of Connall and attacked Pyridain."
     "They killed  Fionn Connall?" the captain  screeched, thinking of
the man who had protected his  sister, who had helped Gaoel escape the
city after he had clouted Connall's brother, the Duke.
     "No,  they killed  Luthias  Connall,"  Richard clarified.  "Fionn
Connall  and  his  other  son--Roisart, I  think  his  name  was--were
murdered last Melrin."
     "Murdered?" Fynystere let his breath out in a low whistle. "Sweet
Randiriel. And now what?"
     "Well," Richard began,  taking a deep breath and  raising his cup
to his mouth, "the Knight Commander  is fighting them off in Pyridain,
and this duchy's getting ready for an attack on the Laraka River."
     "The Laraka? What for?"
     Richard  swallowed  his  liquor  and stared  at  his  captain  in
disbelief. "Gaoel, come on! They're after Magnus! The Laraka's Magnus'
lifeline."
     Fynystere  pondered the  information.  "I  suppose you're  right,
Rich, but you would know better than I."
     Richard laughed and set the goblet aside. "Would I?"
     "You are from Magnus, after all."
     Richard leaned forward suddenly. "What makes you think that?"
     This time, Fynystere was laughing. "Wake up, Rich! Every time you
open your mouth, you announce that you're from Magnus! You have one of
the most pronounced Magnus accents I've ever heard!"
     "I don't have an accent. *You* have an accent."
     The captain  wiped his eyes  and caught  his breath, but  when he
looked at  his bowmaster,  he was still  smiling. "Enough,  Richard: I
have the accent, but you are still from Magnus."
     The archer folded his lips. "Yes," he agreed stiffly.
     Fynystere burst into  laughter once more. "Calm  down, Rich. It's
the  only thing  I've  found out  about you  in  thirteen years."  The
bowmaster sighed  and agreed. "You  keep your secrets more  close than
any man  I've ever known."  Richard gave  his captain a  serious look.
1"Well, what about  the war? When do they expect  the attack on Shark's
Cove? How is it faring in Pyridain?"
     "They  expect the  Shark's Cove  attack  to arrive  in Yule,  and
despite the morale of the House Dargon troops and the Connall archers,
it isn't going well in Pyridain at all."
     "Yule?!" Fynystere slammed  the goblet on a  small table. "Yule?!
Sanar and Stevene, what the hell  are they thinking of? Yule? It isn't
that far! And besides, from the south--the seas are fairly calm--Naia,
Rich, Melrin  at the  latest!" The  captain exploded  to his  feet and
stared  wildly  at  Richard.  "You  say it's  bad  in  Pyridain?"  The
bowmaster nodded once. "How bad?"
     The bowmaster  shrugged and looked  at his old friend  mildly. "I
don't have numbers."
     Fynystere punched  a wall.  "Damn you by  all the  gods, Richard!
Will we win?"
     Richard settled  into his chair  calmly. "God knows. No  one here
does."
     Fynystere snatched the discarded,  fallen letter, opened it, read
it, and again looked at Richard wildly. "That's it, Richard. I have to
do something."
     Richard was silent.
     The captain of the Eclipse crossed the room nervously. He came to
his trunk and  threw it open. "Not much here,"  he assessed nervously.
"It's enough." He shut the chest  soundly. "They may not think me much
of a  captain, but I'll  be better  than the incompetent  whoreson who
thinks  that  the Beinison  navy  won't  be  here till  bloody  Yule!"
Suddenly, the captain  whirled. Still and silent,  Richard watched him
placidly. "What's wrong with you? Aren't you even concerned? Rich, you
own half this ship, and I'm leaving!"
     Richard smiled slightly. "Why are you leaving, Gaoel?"
     "My *country's*  under attack, you  jack-ass! Do you think  I can
leave  my people  here, my  family,  to get  butchered by  Beinisonian
curs?"
     "Do you think you will help them by leaving the Eclipse?"
     "Curse you!" Fynystere screamed. "Of course I will! I'll join the
Royal Navy, and  they'll make me a captain. I  won't let those heathen
Beinisonians touch my land." The captain scowled at his guest. "You're
not even concerned that I'm leaving."
     "Nay, I'm  not," Richard  confirmed quietly, "because  you're not
going."
     "I tell you--"
     "Sit  down  and  listen,"  Richard ordered,  and  without  really
knowing  why,  Fynystere obeyed.  There  were  times when  one  obeyed
Richard,  rank notwithstanding.  "You are  not going  back to  Dargon,
Gaoel. You can't."
     "Why can't I?"
     "We'll put aside the fact for the moment that Clifton Dargon will
have you killed on sight," Richard began calmly, "but Dargon's Admiral
of the Fleet. Do you think you have a chance of a commission?"
     "What? But he's a Knight!"
     "I know," Richard agreed wryly. "It's very strange."
     "I wouldn't go to Dargon."
     "Fine," Richard  concurred for sake  of the arguement.  "And what
would  you do  on one  ship? How  could you  protect your  family? You
couldn't. You'd go where they tell  you, do what they tell you. You're
likely to get killed. The Beinisonian Navy is nothing to laugh at, and
you know it."
     "Of course I know it," the captain responded contemptuously. "But
I'll have hellfire--"
     The bowmaster's  eyes burned as blue  and hot as the  hellfire he
1invented. "You will *not* have hellfire!" Richard thundered, and there
was  no  room for  arguement  in  his  voice.  "Hellfire is  mine  and
Donegal's, and  by my  God and  all of  his, it  will *not  leave this
ship!*"
     Fynystere frowned, greatly displeased. "I can't just do nothing!"
     "I'm not saying that you should do nothing. But the fact remains,
Gaoel:  you hurt  your family  and your  kingdom more  by leaving  the
Eclipse than by staying with her."
     "What are you suggesting I do then?" the captain asked with angry
stiffness.
     Richard leaned  forward, his  face serious.  "Gaoel, this  is the
most powerful ship a-sail. You know that.  We have a fine crew, and we
have hellfire.  We can sink anything  Beinison has afloat, and  we can
afford to leave the Baranurian navy alone."
     "A personal crusade?"
     "Why not?" Richard countered, smiling again and leaning back. "If
we still go after the merchant ships, the crew will be content."
     "I don't think the Beinisons aboard will like this, Richard," the
captain muttered,  reaching for  his drink, but  internally, Fynystere
was relieved. Despite  the fact that Clifton Dargon  had deserved that
blow to  the face in his  court for deserting Xandra,  Fynystere truly
had no wish to deal with him again.
     Richard abruptly  threw back his  blond head and  laughed loudly.
"Gaoel, are you  jesting with me? 'The Beinisonians  aboard won't like
this'?  Donegal, whom  they  enslaved? Albar,  whom  they branded  for
worshiping Cephas  Stevene instead of  Gow and Sanar? Use  your sense,
man!"
     Fynystere thought  about and  smiled; Richard was,  again, right.
The captain sat back thoughtfully. "So," Fynystere said, "we leave the
Baranurian  navy alone  and sink  anything belonging  to Beinison.  It
might work; it might help." He  looked at his bowmaster earnestly. "Do
you really think it would work?"
     "I think it's the best we can do, you and I."
     Fynystere laughed and poured  himself more liquor. "You're right,
Rich.  You always  are." The  captain quaffed  his drink,  then looked
searchingly at his old friend. "How did you know?"
     "Know what?" Richard wondered.
     "Know what I'd do, and how to talk me out of it."
     "Well, I know you," Richard explained uncertainly, "and as for my
talking  you out  of  it--well,  I'd already  had  the arguement  once
tonight."
     "Really? With who?" Fynystere asked, avid curiousity shining from
his eyes.
     "With  myself."  The  bowmaster  sighed  as if  he  had  a  world
oppressing  his   soul.  "I   realized  I'd   do  my   family--and  my
country--more harm than good if I returned."
     "Hmm." For lack  of any better action, Fynystere  buried his nose
in his  cup. As much as  he wanted more information,  Fynystere didn't
dare break his own rules and question Richard about his past.
     "I couldn't leave the Eclipse anyway," Richard breathed, settling
into  the comfortable  chair. "It's  like home  to me,  and I  have no
other--and no one else."
     "You mentioned family," Fynystere reminded him.
     "A brother," Richard confirmed, "and  if he were in danger--" The
bowmaster stopped, clouds in his blue eyes.
     "You'd leave?"
     "Leave?" The  archer gave a  short, barking laugh. "I'd  take the
Eclipse with me. Believe me, Gaoel, I'd need all the help I could get.
But as it is, I think he's well protected."
     "Hmm,"  the captain  muttered  again. "Here,  Rich, have  another
1drink." The captain tossed the skin  to Richard, who caught it deftly.
"And tell  me one more thing  about tonight before we  drink ourselves
senseless, Richard."
     "What's that?"
     "How did  you know that the  Dargon House troops and  the Connall
archers would be at Belisandra's Tavern?"
     "It's a popular retreat of  both companies when they're in town,"
Richard hedged as dexterously as he caught the skin.
     "Aye, and  how'd you  find that out?"  the captain  demanded, his
hazel eyes sparkling. The bowmaster looked away. "Come on, Rich, or by
J'mirg--"
     "Ask no questions, Gaoel," Richard threatened.
     A dim sun dawned in  Fynystere's clouded consciousness. "You were
in Dargon before you joined us."
     "Aye." Richard inhaled heavily and took another drink. "I trained
as an archer in Connall." The  archer suddenly smiled. "Those days are
gone with your merchanting, Gaoel. Let's drink."
------------------------------------------------------------------------
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  (C) Copyright May 1990, DargonZine, Editor Dafydd .
All rights revert to the authors. These stories may not be reproduced or
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  D     D A  A R  R G    O  O N N N     Z   I N N N E     || Volume 3
-=========================================================+|)
  D    D  AAAA RRR  G GG O  O N N N   Z     I N N N E     ||  Issue 8
  DDDDD   A  A R  R GGGG OOOO N  NN  ZZZZZZ I N  NN EEEE  ||
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--   DargonZine Volume 3, Issue 8        05/18/90          Cir 965    --
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--                            Contents                                --
------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Campaign for the Laraka I    John Doucette          10 Naia-1 Yule, '14
 My Father's Curse            M. Wendy Hennequin     18 Naia, 1014
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                       Campaign for the Laraka: Part I
                           An Unpleasant Surprise
                              by John Doucette

Castle Pentamorlo, Duchy Dargon, Baranur
10 Naia, 1014 B.Y.

     "You're right, Kimme, I don't understand," Morion said.
     "I am  not sure  I fully  understand either,  my love,"  the Araf
commented. "All I know is what I saw  in the vision. I do not know why
this vision  came to me. But  I do know I  must find the cause.  And I
must know which ending is to be."
     "But do you have  to go now?" Morion asked, coming  to sit on the
bed beside the woman who so recently came into his life.
     "Yes," she said, stroking his cheek.
     "But, Kimme,  there is a  war! I have  to leave for  Shark's Cove
tomorrow to  meet with  this Sir  Ailean. I'd feel  much more  at ease
knowing you were here, safe. Kimme,  I have to see to the preparations
for leaving.  If you leave today,  we won't have time  to say good-bye
properly."
     Kimmentari smiled. "Then I shall have to delay my departure."
     "I'll go and hurry my students along. The faster things get done,
the  faster I  can get  back.  Then we  can...discuss things."  Morion
quickly kissed Kimmentari and then departed.
     When he left the room,  Kimme shuddered. She'd felt the nightmare
coming on  all the while  they were talking and  it had taken  all her
control not to let anything show.
     Haltingly, she crossed the room  to the door and barely succeeded
in locking it with her shaking hands before the nightmare came in full
force. Kimmentari collapsed in a heap as the now-familiar scene danced
and  swam  in her  sight.  Once  more,  the gore-splattered  room  was
revealed in all  its horror. Once more, the cries  of innocents echoed
in Kimmentari's ears. Once more, she  threw back her head and screamed
a silent scream as a face of pure evil turned to stare into hers. Once
more,  she heard  the  silent  promise on  the  dead  lips. And  then,
mercifully,   the   darkness   welled   up  and   she   drifted   into
unconsciousness.

Castle Pentamorlo, Duchy Dargon, Baranur
11 Naia, 1014 B.Y.

     "Kimme, please?" Morion asked as he prepared to mount his horse.
     Kimmentari  laughed, a  musical-sounding laugh.  "My love,  no. I
shall be fine."
     "But what about the--"
     "The hoftanau  will not take  me while you  are gone. It  may not
take me at all."
     "But  you  said  that  when  one  of  your  race  falls  in  love
with...with a..." Morion searched for the correct expression.
     "Fast-liver," Kimmentari supplied.
     "A fast-liver. That  the fire-love comes over you.  And that it's
usually fatal."
     "True," the blue-skinned, ruby-eyed Araf  said. "But in the Dance
I saw  that our strands continued  after the Dance was  done. That may
mean the hoftanau will not take me."
     "I would still feel better if you remained here."
     "No. I must find out the meaning of this vision."
     Morion put his hands on her shoulders. "Can't you tell me what it
is?"
     "I can't  remember it clearly,"  she lied. "Perhaps  this journey
will help  me determine  what the  vision means and  which of  the two
endings is destined to come to pass."
     "You're sure?"
     "Yes."
     Just  as Morion  was about  to continue  the conversation,  a man
wearing an  unimaginably polished breastplate interrupted.  "Sair," he
said, back ramrod-straight, "tha Battalion is ready tae march."
     "Thank  you,  Colour Sergeant.  Start  them  off. I'll  be  along
presently."  The  Colour  Sergeant  saluted, did  an  about-turn,  and
marched away. Morion  turned to Kimmentari. He made to  speak, but she
silenced him with a finger.
     "You must go," she said.
     Morion gathered her in his arms and kissed her lovingly. "I'll be
back as soon as I can," he said as he mounted his steed.
     "Be careful," she said anxiously.
     "I intend  to be, Kimme." Morion  paused, unsure what to  say. He
and Kimme stared at each other for a long time. Finally, Morion leaned
over and kissed his lover a long, thorough kiss.
     "I love you," he said.
     "I know," Kimme replied, smiling. "I love you also."
     "I know. Good-bye." Morion put his  helm on and rode out the gate
after his men. He was riding to war.
     Kimmentari  watched  him go,  the  ache  in her  heart  painfully
present even before he rode out of sight. She turned to go to the room
she and  Morion shared  to finish  packing for  her journey  to Dargon
City.
     She  had just  entered the  room when  the waking  nightmare came
again. This time, however, she saw a man dressed in black running down
corridors filled  with death  and the  dead and she  saw the  same man
enter the room  where cowered the innocents caught up  in the struggle
for power.  Except this time,  the man in  black rescued those  in the
room.
     As  had  happened many  times  over  the  months just  past,  the
nightmare had  had two endings; one  for ill, one for  good. Just what
part she had to play, only Thyerin knew. And He wasn't telling.

War galley HUNTRESS, flagship Beinisonian Expeditionary Force
Valenfaer Ocean, 150 leagues southwest of Shark's Cove, Duchy Quinnat,
   Baranur
2 Melrin, 1014 B.Y.

     Field Marshal Joachim Vasquez leaned  on the railing near the bow
of the  HUNTRESS and  gazed out  over the moonlit  sea at  the vessels
carrying  the thirty-five  thousand  soldiers under  his command.  One
hundred forty transports, escorted by one hundred warships, fully half
of Beinison's  complement of men-of-war,  sailed slowly north.  In the
morning,  the armada  would  split, fifteen  thousand  men and  twenty
escorts continuing north to Dargon,  the remaining twenty thousand men
and eighty  warships diverting  to Shark's  Cove at  the mouth  of the
Laraka River, Magnus' lifeline.
     The  war was  now  in its  sixth month.  The  offensive begun  by
Beinison in  early Naia was  showing results even the  most optimistic
strategists had only dreamed of. After only two weeks of fighting, the
Baranurian front  in Pyridain collapsed. Even  now, Beinisonian forces
were  racing  north,   hoping  to  reach  Pyridain   City  before  the
demoralized enemy was able to mount an effective defense.
     Vasquez was  unaware of  the success of  the main  offensive. His
force had  set sail as  soon as the  weather allowed. Vasquez  was not
overly  concerned about  the success  or  failure of  the main  attack
anyway.  If things  went as  planned, or  even moderately  so, Vasquez
would be in Magnus inside three weeks.
     His  thoughts were  interrupted by  a young  Marine. "Pardon  the
interruption, sir,"  the young man  said. "General Collanti  sends his
complements and asks you join him in the Admiral's quarters, sir."
     "Good," the tall, black-haired man replied. "See to it we are not
disturbed unless there is an emergency."
     The Marine saluted  and stepped aside to allow  the Field Marshal
to take  the lead. Vasquez  made his way  below deck to  Fleet Admiral
Grieg Talens' cabin. Although Talens  and Vasquez shared joint command
of the B.E.F.,  until Vasquez and his troops were  ashore, Talens held
authority due to his thirty years of experience at sea.
     In three  days, Talens  would put Vasquez  and the  B.E.F.'s Main
Body ashore at Shark's Cove, whereupon  it would be his task to ensure
the lines of supply and communication remained open to what would then
be  known  as the  Shark's  Cove  Staging Area.  Talens'  subordinate,
Commodore Alexi Tormana,  would have the responsibility  of seeing the
B.E.F.'s Northern Force safely to  Dargon, upon which his post-landing
task would then be identical to that of his commander.
     Vasquez entered the warm, spacious, brightly lit cabin due one of
Admiral  Talens'  rank and  experience.  Seven  men were  waiting  for
Vasquez's  arrival.  Admiral  Talens,   Commodore  Tormana  and  their
deputies, Captains Danridge and  Gromiko respectively, represented the
Navy. General  Collanti, Vasquez's second-in-command,  Collanti's aide
and deputy Colonel Jackson, and Vasquez's aide and new deputy, Colonel
Conti, represented the Army.
     "Now that  you're here,  Vasquez, we can  get down  to business,"
Talens remarked.
     Collanti stiffened  at the  tone Talens  had taken  in addressing
Vasquez. He was  about to make an oral protest  when Vasquez waved the
comment aside.  There had always been  bad blood between the  Army and
the Navy,  but the current  venture was  too important for  Vasquez to
risk offending the man who would be his lifeline once ashore.
     There was another reason Vasquez  chose to disregard the comment.
In the four  weeks spent aboard ship, Vasquez and  Talens had grown to
respect each other's abilities. Though  neither had developed a liking
for the other, neither had they developed a dislike. Both recognized a
soldier  when they  saw one.  Still,  that didn't  mean the  Army-Navy
rivalry had to be put on hold.
     "Good evening, gentlemen," Vasquez said as he strode to the chart
table covered  not by naval charts,  but by a map  of the northwestern
part of Baranur. "You all know  the general outline for the invasion,"
Vasquez said, dispensing with preliminaries. "Now, I shall outline the
specifics." Vasquez  picked up a  pointer and began his  briefing. "In
three days, Main Body will commence landing here," he said, indicating
a spot on the map, "at Shark's Cove. Once Shark's Cove is secure, Main
Body  will advance  down  the  Laraka, laying  siege  to Port  Sevlyn.
Shark's Cove and Port Sevlyn will each be garrisoned by a Regiment. In
addition, two Regiments will hold the border with Kiliaen."
     "After  securing  Port Sevlyn,"  he  continued,  "Main Body  will
advance on Gateway Keep in the  Royal Duchy. That, gentlemen, is Phase
One. It  should take no longer  than sixteen days." There  was stunned
silence around the table. The Army officers were shocked; Gateway Keep
was four hundred thirty leagues from Shark's Cove. A long way to go in
sixteen days  through hostile territory.  They were not  confident the
task could be completed. The Navy officers, for their part, considered
the scheme to be that much more proof of the Army's incompetence.
     Vasquez let  the silence continue  a little longer,  enjoying the
reaction from his officers. Never one to let pleasure intrude on duty,
he continued with  the briefing. "General Collanti  and Northern Force
will land at Dargon in thirty-seven days' time."
     "Enrico," he said, speaking directly  to his long-time friend and
former deputy,  "your task is to  seize and hold all  of Duchy Dargon.
The details  I leave to you  with one exception: you  must subdue Lord
Morion's holding at Tench. One more thing, Enrico. You'll have to hold
Dargon on your  own. Expect no help  from me. I simply  don't have the
men."
     "Don't worry,  sir," Collanti said  in his booming  voice. "We'll
hold."
     "I'm sure  you will, Enrico. To  continue, Phase Two will  be the
siege of  Magnus itself. After taking  Gateway Keep, I will  pause for
three days before advancing on the enemy's capital."
     Vasquez paused to gather his  thoughts. Once ready, he continued,
looking each of those assembled in the eyes as he spoke. "Phase Two is
vital to the entire operation. Magnus is the key to Baranur."
     "If we  succeed," he said, hitting  the map with the  pointer for
emphasis,  "the war  is over.  If  we fail,  Baranur has  a chance  to
recover. Questions?"  he asked.  Seeing none, he  said, "Then  you had
best get to your ships. Tomorrow, we begin a new era for Beinison."

Shandayma Bay shore, 16 leagues north of Shark's Cove, Duchy Quinnat,
   Baranur
5 Melrin, 1014 B.Y.

     Sir  Ailean of  Bivar, Knight  Captain of  the Northern  Marches,
watched in  grim silence the column  of thick black smoke  that marked
the grave of  the last of the war galleys  from Baranur's Laraka River
Flotilla. Scout vessels had spotted  the armada two days ago, somewhat
earlier than expected, and Sir Ailean had immediately moved his troops
to the most  likely landing point. The fact that  he guessed correctly
was small consolation. Ailean had five thousand five hundred to oppose
four times  that if the  scouts' reports  were accurate. From  what he
saw,  the  scouts were  indeed  accurate.  Too damned  accurate.  "Why
couldn't they  overestimate just  this once?"  he asked  to no  one in
particular.
     Ailean was  nervous. The young  man with  the pale blue  eyes and
honey-blond  hair had  only recently  been knighted  after serving  as
squire to Sir Edward Sothos for two years. Ailean had found his former
master to be a stern, but  fair, teacher and disciplinarian. He deeply
admired Sir Edward but was afraid  that the older warrior never really
liked him. He had desperately wanted Edward to like him.
     And then,  just three  months previous,  Ailean had  received his
Knighthood and  appointment to the  position of Knight Captain  of the
Northern  Marches on  the recommendation  of Sir  Edward. When  Ailean
heard that the  Knight Commander had pushed  for Ailean's appointment,
he  was overjoyed.  He vowed  then and  there that  he would  give his
former teacher no cause for disappointment.
     Now, here  he stood facing a  very real enemy for  the first time
and he  felt fear at  the sight of  the armada anchored  off-shore. He
knew that  all he  could do was  hurt the enemy,  delay him  until the
Knight Commander could find the men to reinforce him. Ailean moved his
line closer to the water's edge.
     Already, the  enemy transports had  released their boats  and the
first wave of  Beinisonian troops were headed for  shore. Ailean could
do  little  more   than  watch  as  the   Beinisonian  light  infantry
disembarked and fought their way  through the waist-deep water; Ailean
had  no archers,  and  of  his infantry,  three  Regiments were  heavy
infantry  and  the  other  two were  medium  infantry.  Lord  Morion's
Battalion, in  reserve, was composed  of the  best of his  current and
former students.  While a group  of Morion's students was  equipped as
light infantry,  their numbers were far  too few for Ailean  to commit
them to engaging their Beinisonian opposites.
     The  Beinisonian  officers shouted  and  cajoled  their men  into
formation in  knee-deep water perhaps  twenty yards from  the armoured
ranks  of their  enemy. These  were some  of Beinison's  finest, elite
soldiers  hardened to  the  ways  of war.  At  a  shouted signal  they
charged, splashing through the water towards their enemy, screaming at
the top of their lungs.
     They collided with the  Baranurian line, sabre against longsword,
leather cuirass against chainmail and scalemail.
     The Baranurians  outnumbered the Beinisonians  five-to-four. More
importantly, the  Baranurians far out-classed their  opponents both in
terms  of  weaponry  and  weight  of  armour.  However,  most  of  the
Baranurian troops  had never seen  combat before and  the Beinisonians
fought like men possessed.  The inexperienced Baranurians began taking
a step  backward here, two there  as they fought to  defend themselves
from the foe.
     Ailean saw what was happening  and sent runners with instructions
to hold the line,  to stand fast, to drive the  enemy back. Ailean saw
and heard his  Captains and Sergeants hitting,  shoving, shouting, and
cursing the men into immobility.
     The bodies began piling up all  along the beach as Baranurian and
Beinisonian struggled to  kill one another. And always  there were the
shouts of the sergeants, "Close up! Close up!", as they ordered men up
from the rear ranks to replace those in the front who had fallen.
     The Beinisonians  had succeeded  in pushing the  Baranurians back
ten yards and were forcing the  flanks, where the two forces were more
evenly matched in terms of armour, back even farther. While his centre
was holding firm, Ailean knew that if he could not bring the situation
on the flanks under control he would  be forced to pull back even more
than he already had to avoid  encirclement, thus allowing the enemy to
bring  heavier troops  ashore.  And  that, he  knew,  would spell  his
force's doom.
     Ailean wracked his  brain for a solution as the  battle raged on,
but he  saw no way to  prevent catastrophe. Perhaps, he  thought, if I
threw  Lord Morion's  Battalion in  to reinforce  the centre,  I could
split them.  Possible, he thought. But  do I have the  time? He looked
towards his flanks for the answer.  The left flank had finally managed
to hold the enemy advance and was even pushing them back slightly. The
right flank, however, had fallen back  even more and was now bent back
thirty more yards from the water's edge.
     And then, in  a flash of inspiration, Ailean saw  his chance. The
very success  of the Beinisonians  on the  right flank was  also their
greatest danger. In pressing their  advantage, they too were now forty
yards from the water's edge.  Being outnumbered, they could not afford
to hold back a reserve. If Ailean could take his reserves into the gap
between the Beinisonians and the water's  edge, he could roll up their
left flank and fall upon their centre.
     Throughout history, it has long been taught that the last general
to commit his reserves usually wins the battle, all other things being
equal. Sir Ailean of Bivar was about to prove that maxim once more.

Shandayma Bay shore, 16 leagues north of Shark's Cove, Duchy Quinnat,
   Baranur
5 Melrin, 1014 B.Y.

     Lord  Morion side-stepped  the Beinisonian's  downward swing  and
countered with a cut to the  throat. Ailean's plan to attack the enemy
in the flank  had worked beautifully. Ailean and Morion  had taken the
five hundred men and women of the reserve Battalion and led them north
to the  assistance of  the hard-pressed 1st  Regiment of  the Pyridain
Borderers. By  the time Ailean  and Morion had arrived,  the Borderers
had been  pushed back sixty  yards from  the water's edge.  The Knight
Captain led Morion's Battalion against the enemy without delay. Unable
to  stand  assault  from  two directions  at  once,  the  Beinisonians
retreated rapidly south.
     Ailean now  had the enemy  compressed into a  horseshoe perimeter
that was quickly  shrinking. Light troops, no matter  how good, simply
can not stand  toe-to-toe with heavy infantry and slug  it out. Of the
one  thousand   bodies  littering   the  beach,  eight   hundred  were
Beinisonian. And of those eight  hundred, two hundred had been wounded
but had drowned before the tide went out.
     "On! On!" Morion shouted,  exhorting his students forward. "Press
on! Drive them hard!"
     Two Beinisonian soldiers ran at  Morion. One stumbled and fell in
the wet sand  but the other kept on coming.  Morion turned his enemy's
thrust with his shield and aimed  a slash at his opponent's unarmoured
head.  The Beinisonian  parried  with  his sabre  and  dropped into  a
fencer's crouch.
     Morion thrust towards his adversary's  abdomen and was met by his
opponent's  parry.  The combatants'  blades  never  met, for  Morion's
initial  thrust  was  a  feint.  His real  thrust  was  aimed  at  the
Beinisonian's left  side. His blade  slid deep between  his opponent's
ribs and the man crumpled. Whether he was dead or not, Morion couldn't
be sure  because the second  Beinisonian had regained his  footing and
was after Morion once more after finishing one of Morion's students.
     Morion immediately  saw this one  would prove a  tougher opponent
due to the fact that his enemy was left-handed, making Morion's shield
useless,  even a  hindrance.  He  threw it  aside  and  leaped at  his
opponent.
     Though  Morion   was  wearing   much  heavier  armour   than  the
Beinisonian, his  enemy didn't hesitate about  grappling hand-to-hand.
Both mens' swords had met at the guards and each had the other's wrist
locked in a grip of desperate strength.
     Morion pushed  and strained,  trying to  gain enough  leverage to
throw the younger  man off balance. His opponent  was strong, stronger
than his size  would indicate. The wet sand under  Morion's right foot
shifted and  he fell. The Beinisonian  was thrown off balance  as well
although he managed to keep his footing.
     Morion struggled to  his knees and grasped his sword  just as the
Beinisonian reached  him. Morion  caught a glint  of sunlight  off his
opponent's upraised sabre and knew he had time for one last act.
     Desperation  lending him  strength, Morion  stabbed upwards.  His
sword bit deep into his adversary's neck, severing the carotid artery.
The Beinisonian fell, his lifeblood rapidly soaking into the sand.
     Morion stood, retrieved his shield  and rested for a moment while
drinking from his canteen. He looked around; the battle was going well
for Baranur. The Beinisonian pocket  had shrunk even further. The only
thing preventing the  Baranurians from enveloping their  enemy was the
water. Morion sensed that one more good hard push and the Beinisonians
were finished.
     He replaced his canteen on his belt and was about to re-enter the
fray when  someone pounded him  on the right shoulder.  Morion whipped
around, sword poised to strike. It was Ailean.
     Seeing the grim expression on  Ailean's face, Morion asked, "What
is it? What's wrong?"
     Ailean started to say something then stopped and turned, pointing
out to sea. A black line of  boats was approaching, each packed to the
gunwales  with  troops. Morion  could  see  the tell-tale  flashes  of
sunlight that  meant the  the oncoming  Beinisonians were  armoured in
something more substantial than boiled leather.
     "By all  the gods!" Morion  exclaimed. "They're sending  in their
heavy infantry! They're not waiting to clear the beach!"
     "Yes," Ailean said tightly. "It is the end."
     "We're going  to have to  work fast if  we want to  extricate the
bulk of our force," Morion commented.
     "Yes you will," Ailean said in agreement.
     Morion turned his head sharply to look at the young knight. "What
did you mean by that?"
     "Sir Edward personally entrusted me with stopping the Beinisonian
attack on  Shark's Cove.  At all  costs," Ailean  said, gazing  at the
oncoming enemy.
     "But he couldn't have known the  size of the force that you would
be facing."
     "It matters little.  We both know what the phrase  'at all costs'
means."
     "Ailean,  they outnumber  us five-to-one!  We've hurt  them. It's
time to fall back and delay them as long as possible."
     "I agree."
     "Well what is this talk of me taking command?"
     "You'll need a rear-guard," Ailean  said in a business-like tone.
"The Borderers  should be  sufficient. That would  leave you  with the
better part of three-and-a-half Regiments."
     "You don't stand a chance!"
     Ailean turned to speak. When he did, it was with determination in
his  eyes and  a  note of  finality  in  his voice.  "I  swore to  His
Excellency--on  my  honour--that   I  would  not  fail   him.  Do  you
understand,  Lord  Morion?  The  fact  that I  have  failed  means  my
honour--or my life--is  forfeit. My honour means more to  me than life
itself. And so, I shall die to preserve it."
     "Ailean, don't be a fool!"
     "Lord  Morion,  you  placed  yourself under  my  command  when  I
explained to  you the  gravity of  the situation. Do  you now  wish to
revoke your pledge?"
     "No. Neither do I wish to see you dead."
     "It's decided, Morion. The longer you delay lessens the chance of
escape."
     Morion stared at Ailean for long moments. Then, uttering a curse,
he  left the  knight  and  began the  difficult  task  of executing  a
fighting  withdrawal,  perhaps  the  most  difficult  of  maneuvers  a
commander has to oversee.

War galley HUNTRESS, flagship Beinisonian Expeditionary Force
Shandayma Bay, 16 leagues north of Shark's Cove, Duchy Quinnat,
   Baranur
5 Melrin, 1014 B.Y.

     "Well, Vasquez," Fleet Admiral  Talens asked in irritation, "what
are they doing?"
     Vasquez  lowered the  spyglass he'd  borrowed and  said, "They've
spotted the  second wave. They're  retreating." He slammed  the object
shut. "We  have them! I'm going  ashore. Colonel Conti, see  to it the
rest of the force is landed."
     "Yes, sir."
     A boat was put over the  side and Vasquez and a six-man bodyguard
headed  for the  beach  as  fast as  the  oarsmen  could row.  Vasquez
intended to personally  oversee this battle to its  conclusion. He had
the chance  to capture  six Colours  in one battle.  That would  be an
achievement no other Field Marshal could rival.
     Vasquez  was intently  studying  the battle's  flow. He  couldn't
believe what he was seeing.  The Baranurians were succeeding in making
their withdrawal,  outnumbered as  they were. Whoever  their commander
is, thought Vasquez,  he is a worthy opponent. "I  look forward to our
meeting," he said aloud.

Shandayma Bay shore, 16 leagues north of Shark's Cove, Duchy Quinnat,
   Baranur
5 Melrin, 1014 B.Y.

     Morion  was  slowly  disengaging  the three  Regiments  of  heavy
infantry. He  split his own  Battalion into  two groups, one  to cover
each  flank. The  troops were  holding up  well, considering  this was
their first battle for most.
     Morion  was  increasingly  dissatisfied  with the  speed  of  the
withdrawal. Ailean had something less than two thousand men to try and
hold close  to twenty-five hundred  at bay with another  four thousand
about  to land.  Morion estimated  he had  another twenty  minutes, at
best, to get his troops away from the fighting.
     Morion's  force was  about halfway  to the  dunes. He  turned his
attention from his  soldiers to the battle still  underway. Ailean had
been forced back but by some miracle was keeping the enemy at bay. But
at what great cost. Half his men  were dead or wounded and those still
able to  fight were trying  to hold a  frontage that five  times their
number  had difficulty  holding  earlier that  morning.  And that  was
against  the  enemy's  light  infantry.  When  the  Beinisonian  heavy
infantry landed, Ailean's force would be overwhelmed in seconds.
     Morion knew he had  to act quickly or he would  not even have his
twenty minutes. He called the Commanders of his three Regiments to him
and  briefly  explained  what  he  had  in  mind.  There  was  shocked
disbelief. Morion's plan was dangerous  and if things went awry, there
would be  no hope of  putting up even a  token resistance. But  as one
Commander put it, "We'd just be buying ourselves a few minutes more if
we don't."
     A few minutes  later, Morion, now seated on his  horse, was ready
to implement  his plan.  Trumpets blew, drums  sounded, and  all three
Regiments changed from line-of-battle to line-of-march. To be attacked
now would  spell disaster. At a  signal from Morion, the  Colours were
unfurled  and the  signal given  to force-march.  All three  Regiments
moved off at a trot, the fastest pace they could manage in the sand.
     Morion  drove  them  mercilessly, seemingly  uncaring  about  the
difficulties  the quickness  of  the  pace and  the  heat  of the  sun
presented to the men and women  under his command. Once they were past
the dunes and onto better footing, he ordered the pace stepped up even
further. When  he'd put a league  between his force and  the enemy, he
slowed the  pace to a  walk. Riding to  his senior Commander  he said,
"Keep them  headed toward Port Sevlyn.  I'm going back to  see how Sir
Ailean fares."
     He galloped back to the beach as fast as his horse could make it.
He arrived just in time to witness the battle's final moments. By this
time, the enemy had landed his second wave and surrounded the remnants
of Ailean's force.  Morion looked down on the scene  with a mixture of
pride  and  grief. Pride  that  both  Regiment's Colours,  King's  and
Regimental, still flew. Grief that less than fifty men warded them.
     As  he watched,  the  enemy's commander  came  forward and  asked
Ailean to surrender.
     Ailean refused.
     Again  the  Beinisonian asked,  almost  pleaded,  with Ailean  to
surrender. "Why  waste your  life? I  shall have  the Colours  with or
without your surrender."
     Again Ailean refused.
     "So be it," the enemy commander replied and slowly walked back to
his own lines.
     The end was swift. The Beinisonians charged Ailean's group and it
was over in minutes. Ailean was among the last to fall, preserving the
Colours and his honour to the very last.
     "Damn you, Ailean," Morion cursed softly. "Damn you and your Code
of Conduct. And  damn you, Sir Edward, for accepting  his pledge. Look
what it's brought."
     Morion turned his  horse and made his way back  to his troops. He
knew  he could  not stop  the Beinisonians  with his  small force.  He
probably couldn't  even delay them. But  he must try, for  Baranur was
lost if he didn't.

Shark's Cove, Duchy Quinnat, Baranur
5 Melrin, 1014 B.Y.

     The Melrin festival's going quite  well considering there's a war
on, the "owner"  of The Tipsy Dragon tavern thought.  Adrea Rainer was
watching the  tavern while her fellow  trouble shooter (for lack  of a
better word) Rien was off on business elsewhere.
     At thirty, the blond-haired, brown-eyed  thief still had not lost
her touch.  She could pilfer  your coin-purse while standing  right in
front  of  you  and  you  would never  be  the  wiser.  Her  five-foot
eight-inch frame held her well-muscled  one hundred thirty pounds with
ease. There  were not many that  made the mistake of  antagonizing her
that got away without a scar or three for their troubles.
     Adrea  had been  going non-stop  since early  this morning.  On a
normal day,  she'd be  lucky to get  ten customers  before night-fall.
Now, late afternoon, The Tipsy Dragon was full to capacity and she was
hard-pressed to keep up.
     She was  returning yet-again  for a  round of  ale when  a street
urchin who worked for Gaius  Caligula burst wild-eyed into the tavern.
"The Beinisonians have landed!" he  shouted. "They're at the north end
o' town!"
     The  patrons panicked,  trampling each  other in  their haste  to
reach the door. Adrea vaulted across  the bar just in time and watched
as the  tide of humanity flowed  out the door. She  could hear screams
almost immediately. Obviously, the  Beinisonians had moved faster than
the boy had said. Outside, she could hear the looting begin.
     She  threw off  the apron  she was  wearing and  ran to  her room
downstairs in  the basement  sub-levels, taking the  steps three  at a
time. She had prepared for this. Before he had left, Rien had told her
to be ready  to move at a  moment's notice in case the  Cove should be
attacked. Adrea  had scoffed at  the notion.  Shark's Cove was  so far
north of the  Beinison-Baranur border that the  thought of Beinisonian
soldiers running through the streets had been laughable.
     Adrea burst  into her room  and quickly dressed in  clothing more
suited for  travel. Next,  she began shoving  her belongings  into her
pack: food, extra clothing,  everything disappeared into the backpack.
She secreted a throwing dagger in her right boot. Two more disappeared
up  her sleeves.  She began  buckling  on her  shortsword but  thought
better of  it. Wearing  a weapon  so openly  would surely  attract the
attention  of  any  soldiers  she  might  run  into  on  the  streets.
Reluctantly, she  stowed the sword  away in her backpack;  her daggers
would have to serve.
     She ran up  to the common room  and was about to  leave The Tipsy
Dragon  when she  heard  a  woman scream  just  outside. She  stopped,
thinking quickly. Obviously she couldn't  leave just now, at least not
by the  door. Her only  other alternative was  to try leaping  from an
upstairs window.  Adrea was  on her  way when the  door to  the tavern
burst open.
     Adrea  turned and  saw  a young  woman,  perhaps eighteen,  being
pursued by  six soldiers.  The woman's  dress was  ripped and  she had
bruises on her  face. Apparently, she had escaped  before the soldiers
could overly harm her. She flung a  chair at one of her tormentors but
to no avail. The six caught her and forced her to the floor.
     Adrea, at the  back of the room near the  stairs, went un-noticed
throughout the entire  event. She stood rooted to  the spot, uncertain
of what to do.  The sensible thing to do would  be to run immediately,
before the  soldiers noticed her. But  that was not in  Adrea Rainer's
character. She could not abandon an innocent to such a fate.
     She crept  closer to the soldiers,  who by now were  taking their
turns with their victim. Adrea closed to within ten feet and drew both
daggers  from her  sleeves. She  stood and  was noticed  at once  by a
soldier just finishing  with the now-unresisting woman  lying naked on
the floor. Adrea threw both  daggers in quick succession, both finding
their  marks. The  soldier who  noticed  her fell  backward, a  dagger
sprouting  from his  throat.  A second  Beinisonian  collapsed with  a
dagger protruding from his back.
     One of the  remaining four shouted something in  a language Adrea
wasn't familiar  with but  could guess the  meaning of.  Adrea quickly
drew her last dagger and settled  into a fighting stance. She expected
the four  to rush her  without regard  for tactics but  they surprised
her, fanning out in a semi-circle.
     At a given command, all four  rushed her at once. Adrea swept her
dagger in an arc before her and succeeded in delivering a deep gash to
one  of  her attacker's  arms.  Before  she  could capitalize  on  her
accomplishment,  she was  grabbed  roughly from  behind  in a  massive
embrace. She struggled but could not loosen the hold on her.
     The soldier  she had slashed came  to stand in front  of her, his
hand clasped  tightly to his  wound. He looked her  in the eyes  for a
moment before  nodding to one of  his companions who reached  down and
wrested the dagger from Adrea's hand.
     The  wounded   Beinisonian  said  something--evidently   a  crude
remark--and the others laughed. Adrea  spit in his face. Surprisingly,
he  did nothing  except  take Adrea's  dagger from  one  of the  other
soldiers.
     The wounded man said something in  a low voice, turned and walked
over to the  young woman sobbing on the floor,  the dagger hidden from
her sight.  He knelt  between her  legs and  Adrea heard  her begging,
pleading with the man not to rape her again.
     The  wounded soldier  slowly brought  the dagger  into view.  The
woman screamed  at the sight  of it  and began struggling  against her
assailant.  The  soldier  brought  the   blade  down.  Adrea  heard  a
sickeningly  wet sound  and saw  the woman's  struggling legs  go limp
except for  a slight  twitching as  her life  gushed from  her severed
carotid artery.
     The soldier stood  and indifferently tossed the  dagger aside. He
nodded and Adrea  was forced to the floor. She  kicked and flailed her
arms  but there  were too  many of  them. Her  tunic was  ripped open,
exposing her breasts.  She tried to resist but she  was held fast. Her
trousers were hauled roughly off her and  she felt the cold metal of a
steel gauntlet touch her thighs.
     Looking around in desperation for  something, anything, to use as
a weapon,  she spied a heavy  spitoon within arms reach.  She wrestled
one arm free and grabbed the  spitoon. She swung with all her strength
and felt it connect with the body  on top of her, sending her attacker
to the ground.
     Adrea ran for the stairs, hoping  to reach a room upstairs so she
could escape from  a window. She had just reached  the stairs when she
felt something heavy hit her  between the shoulder-blades, sending her
sprawling. Rough hands  dragged her to the middle of  the room and the
partially  stunned   trouble  shooter  was  held   down  and  violated
repeatedly.
     After they were  through, Adrea was hauled upright and  held in a
standing position in front of the  wounded soldier, now sporting a cut
on his  scalp. He  said something  but Adrea was  aware only  that she
could feel  a soreness between  her legs. The Beinisonian  slapped her
and again spoke, this time much  harsher. He saw she was still unaware
of him and made a noise of  disappointment. He drew his own dagger and
held  it in  front  of Adrea's  face. Still,  Adrea  did not  respond.
Deeming  that there  was no  more  pleasure to  be had  from her,  the
Beinisonian quickly and efficiently disemboweled her.
     Adrea collapsed immediately,  unable even to scream  the pain was
so intense. The  four soldiers expertly looted  Adrea's belongings and
left their hacking, naked victim to die slowly in unbearable agony.
     Across the street,  the boy who had shouted his  warning to those
in The  Tipsy Dragon turned from  the ghastly sight the  tavern's open
door afforded him and retched against a wall.

Laraka River, 10 leagues southeast of Shark's Cove, Duchy Quinnat,
   Baranur
1 Yule, 1014 B.Y.

     Lord Morion  sat his  horse seemingly  ignoring the  rain pouring
from the sky. Two thousand eight  hundred men and women marched slowly
southeast along  the riverbank. The  rain, and the occasional  bolt of
lightning,  served to  lower  their already-low  morale.  Most of  the
survivors of the previous day's battle  were numb with shock. They had
seen friends  die or  horribly wounded  and what  was worse,  they had
lost. The  few veterans among  them tried  to keep up  their comrades'
morale, but the veterans themselves were in a somber mood. Not because
of the deaths--they had seen plenty of death during their service--but
because they  knew the odds  they faced.  Most wore the  expression of
soldiers that were going to die and knew it.
     Morion rode at the  head of the column. He was  aware of what his
soldiers were  thinking; he had  had those same thoughts  himself many
times in  the past. He  was tempted to  agree with his  veterans. Port
Sevlyn was only six days away  and had a militia. Morion discarded the
city immediately. He had too few men and Port Sevlyn was too large for
him to  adequately defend. The only  other option was Gateway  Keep in
the Royal Duchy.
     Gateway was built  for the very purpose Morion  required; to stop
an invader from  reaching Magnus. "Yes," he said  aloud. "Gateway. For
good or ill, we'll make our stand at Gateway."
     Morion turned in  the saddle and surveyed his men.  They may look
beaten now, he  thought, but they'll do. They'll do.  He faced forward
once  more and  settled in  the saddle  for the  long, tense  march to
Gateway. The Beinisonians would be close behind him all the way.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                             My Father's Curse
                            by Wendy Hennequin
                       (b.c.k.a )


     The King  was laughing when  Marcellon, Sir Edward, and  I walked
into his private  audience chamber. There was a chess  board set up in
the corner;  the red  king was  lying prostrate in  the center  of the
board, defeated.
     Fine thing,  for a King to  be laughing and playing  chess in the
middle of the  war. But I am a  Knight, and as Sir Lucan  and my uncle
Sir Clifton Dargon taught me, I held my peace.
     King Haralan turned from his other advisors when he saw us enter.
"Greetings,  Mage," the  King  began, slowing  his mirth.  "Greetings,
Edward.  Welcome,  and  welcome  to  you,  Sir  Knight."  I  bowed  my
acknoledgement. "What think you?"
     Marcellon advanced and helped himself to  a goblet of wine from a
tray. Marcellon's often bold before the King, bolder than anyone, even
me, and I'm fairly  forward, King or no King. "What  think I? Of what,
your majesty?"
     "That I  take a  Queen--that I  take the  Countess of  Connall to
wive."
     Marcellon swallowed the wine quickly to avoid choking. Sir Edward
stared. I  smiled and  bowed to  the King  again. "Your  majesty shows
excellent taste  in women," I  complimented. "The Countess  of Connall
would make a fine queen. It's too bad your majesty won't be able to do
it."
     The  King   raised  his  eyebrows.   Sir  Edward  stared   at  me
unbelievingly. Marcellon shot me a  friendly glance of admiration. The
Master Priest, who stood behind the  King, scowled at my boldness. The
King  recovered  first, blinked,  and  spoke  to  me. "You  think  her
difficult to court, Sir Knight? In that, I would agree."
     "That's true,  your majesty,"  I answered,  smiling. And  don't I
know it!
     "That's the  least of your problems,  sire, if you want  to marry
Lady Myrande," Marcellon interrupted. "For one thing, you'll never get
the Church to agree to it."
     "You  overstep your  bounds, I  think, Mage,"  the Master  Priest
replied  scornfully. "The  Church  would  do nothing  to  stop such  a
marriage. It could bring only good. Although the Countess is far below
the King in  station--the mere daughter of a Knight--"  I frowned. Sir
Edward scowled.  "--she is well-liked  and capable. She would  make an
excellent guardian  of the Princes  Sadron and Kalien should  the King
fall in battle."
     Sir Edward finally found his  tongue. "You're not going to fight,
are you, Haralan?" he burst out. "Don't be a fool."
     "No  more  than I  must,"  the  King  promised.  "I am  no  great
warrior."
     "Besides,"  the Master  Priest continued  as if  he had  not been
interrupted, "there is no reason to prohibit such a marriage."
     Marcellon looked at  me and I at him. "Forgive  my boldness, your
holiness," Marcellon began, his voice  deferential, "but I believe the
Stevene stictly forbade adultery and bigamy."
     "So he  did, Mage,"  the Master Priest  answered darkly.  "But no
such impediment exists here."
     King Haralan gave Marcellon an odd look. "I don't understand you,
Marcellon,"  the  King admitted  softly.  "I  am  a widower,  and  the
Countess is a widow."
     "Not while I'm still breathing!" I ejected finally. Marcellon and
Sir Edward had wanted me to keep quiet, to see how long it took before
the King realized  who I was. But  the hell with it.  I wasn't letting
him think he could marry Sable while I'm still alive. And if he didn't
recognize me now, he was really dense.
     The King stared at me in disbelief,  much as Sir Edward had a few
moments ago. "Count Connall," he finally breathed. "My God." He became
a little calmer, and began again. "Greetings and welcome, Sir Luthias,
Count of Connall. Forgive my rude assumptions, but I did not recognize
you  with that  beard--and the  rest of  your body--attatched  to your
head."
     "I hold  no grudges," I  admitted graciously. I can  be gracious,
sometimes, if  I want, and  King Haralan  didn't deserve my  wrath. He
did, after all,  think I was dead,  and he does, after  all, have good
taste in women.
     "And we are glad to  see," King Haralan continued, switching from
Normal Person  to Royal Pompous  mode, "that  you are so  difficult to
suprise."
     "What's so suprising?"  I returned. "I admire my  wife, too." The
King laughed.
     "This," the  Master Priest  said contemptuously to  King Haralan,
"is the Count of Connall?"
     "He  is," Sir  Edward  answered for  the  King. "Apparently,  the
Beinisonains didn't kill him, but rather tortured him."
     "I don't want to talk about it," I said.
     "If your majesty still wishes to  marry with the Countess, I will
arrange the divorce."
     I glared at  the Master Priest. What a--! "Over  my dead body!" I
shouted  at him.  Then I  took two  steps forward  and pointed  at him
angrily. "Better yet, over yours!"
     Marcellon  gave  the Master  Priest  a  cool look.  "The  Stevene
allowed for  divorce only  in extreme cases,"  the High  Mage reminded
him.  I  knew that,  somewhere.  But  theology  was one  of  Roisart's
hobbies. I  like history better.  Marcellon continued in his  dry way,
"You would do well not to abuse your power."
     "Is that a threat?" demanded the Master Priest.
     "If need be. You are not the only one with power, your holiness."
     "We would recommend that you worry more about the Count Connall's
threat,"  the King  said light-heartedly.  I gave  him a  wicked grin.
Sometimes King Haralan and I  understand each other, which is strange,
for we are so different. But then, Roisart and I understood each other
perfectly--sometimes,  I think  Roisart  understood me  better than  I
understand  myself--and  we,  too,  were very  different.  "The  Count
Connall threatened your very life, Master Priest, and in the matter of
the Countess, he  rarely stays his hand." The King  paused and waved a
herald forward. "The Countess Connall cannot  be far; summon her to my
presence immediately."
     "And the Bichanese lords with her, your majesty?"
     "Bring them," commanded  the King. King Haralan looked  at me and
Sir  Edward.  "The  gracious  Emperor  of Bichu  has  sent  us  thirty
knights--what do they call them?"
     "Samurais," I offered.
     "Just so. The Emperor has sent us thrity samurais--" As usual, no
one in the Kingdom can manage a correct Bichanese pronunciation! "--to
aid us  in the  war against  the Beinison Empire.  Among them  is your
Castellan, Count Connall; do you require him for the war?"
     I nodded and began to thank the  King. Michiya was just the man I
wanted for my chief aide and advisor. He  is one of the few men I know
whose  military  knowledge I  completely  respect  and whose  military
prowess I would fear, if we were enemies. But that Master Priest began
again--damn him!
     "The Count Connall would not be so foolhardy as to raise his hand
against me, a holy Priest of the Stevene."
     I  was  going  to  say  something about  how  the  Stevene  hated
hypocrisy, but instead I turned to  the King. "Your majesty, I believe
we have settled the matter of my wife. Would your majesty grant me the
favor of  requiring the  Master Priest  to shut his  damn mouth?  As a
'mere knight,' I have not the rank to do so."
     "I  do,"  Marcellon volunteered.  "Shut  up,  Jehan." The  Master
Priest  scowled, and  Marcellon  offered his  sweetest, most  innocent
smile.
     "The matter is  closed," the King proclaimed. "We  will not marry
the Countess;  indeed, we  had only  meant it as  a jest,  although we
admire Lady Sable  greatly. Now, your holiness, be so  good as to hold
your tongue. We have other matters to discuss."
     "Tell  me about  the Bichanese,  Haralan," Sir  Edward requested,
sitting. "You said there are thirty. Who leads them?"
     "A  very  respectable  man   of  perhaps  Marcellon's  age  named
Kirinagi."  Somehow I  knew  that Michiya  would  pronounce that  name
differently. "He is very knowledgeable and very capable. His second, I
gather, is Ittosai Michiya's brother, whose name I don't recall."
     "Ito," one of the advisors  said. "Ittosai Ito. An odd Bichanese.
He has blue eyes."
     I vaguely recalled Michiya once telling me about an older brother
named Ito, but I had other things  on my mind. How far had Sable gone?
Would she recognize me? Did she still--
     "Speaking, as we were, of generals, Haralan, would you approve my
appointment for General of the  Cavalry?" Edward asked. "I have chosen
Sir Luthias, Count Connall."
     "I approve completely. The post is yours, Sir Luthias."
     "Thank you, sire,"  I said automatically, but I  was watching the
door for Sable.
     "How are matters in Pyridain?"
     And Marcellon and Sir Edward started in on it, the whole romance,
from start  to finish.  In the  middle, the door  slammed open,  and I
heard Sable's voice in the hall  beyond: "Your majesty will forgive me
if I speak candidly and say that this had better be good!"
     King Haralan whirled. I knew Sable  would never speak that way to
the King. And  then she came in, leaning heavily  on Michiya's arm and
on another man, a tall Bichanese with blue eyes. I suppose he was Ito,
but I didn't care. Right then, I fell against a wall, terrified.
     Sable was pregnant.
     God, no,  I prayed. I  didn't mean it.  I wouldn't kill  a Master
Priest, God.  Don't take  her from  me. No, don't  take her.  You took
Roisart  and Father--before  that Mama-Aunt  and Sir  Lucan and  Uncle
Clifton--not her, God, not her too!

     *"I lost her, Lucan; she's gone, and there's no remedy for it!"
     "I understand."
     "How can you understand? How  dare you? Your wife lives; Morwyn's
alive, and so is  Sable! How do you know what it is  to lose your wife
to your sons?"*

     The King was  standing. Sable was panting; she was  pale, and her
dress was soaked from  the waist down. Marcellon was at  her side in a
second. "When did the water break?"
     "Just now."
     "Are you in pain?"
     "I have been, all day, but I didn't realize it was labor."
     "You?" Marcellon  laughed. I wanted to  be with her, to  hold her
before she died, but I couldn't move. "You, the midwife, Lady Sable?"
     "I've never been in labor before," she snapped. Then she smiled a
little, till pain erased it. "I'm glad to see you, Marcellon, and you,
too, Sir Edward."
     I stared  at her. No  greeting for me?!  I hadn't been  gone that
long! But I couldn't speak, couldn't tell her, couldn't move...
     Sable  finally looked  at  me,  but I  don't  know  whom she  saw
standing there.  "I regret I'll  not be able to  get to know  you, Sir
Knight. Your majesty--"
     "*Sable!*" I finally screamed, but that was all I could do.
     And  she looked  at me  again, frightened  and pale,  and fainted
right into the arms of the big, blue-eyed Bichanese.
     Now I could  move. Marcellon was beside her, and  Michiya and his
brother were propping her up. I knelt beside her. "Don't let her die,"
I begged, taking her hand. "Don't let her die."
     "What   nonsense   are    you   talking?"   Marcellon   wondered,
half-interested. "Your majesty, excuse us.  I will see to Lady Sable."
The King consented,  and Marcellon turned to  Michiya. "Lords Ittosai,
help me move her."
     "I  can carry  my  own wife,"  I snapped,  lifting  her. She  was
awkward to manage, so pregnant...oh, God, don't let her die.
     But she  was going to die.  She was going  to die. And it  was my
fault.
     "Luthias-sama," Michiya  was saying excitedly, "they  told me you
were dead!"
     "I'm much better," I grumbled, shifting Sable. "Where do you want
me to take her?" I asked Marcellon.
     "You do not look much better than a dead man," the tall blue-eyed
Bichanese said.
     "Let me take her," Michiya offered.
     "No." I turned to Marcellon. "Where?"
     "This way," said the mage, and I followed.
     "Can I stay  with her?" I asked, barely aware  of Michiya and Ito
following me.
     The High  Mage nearly  stopped dead and  stared and  smiled. "You
wish to stay with her? You're more unusual than I thought!"
     "Do you think I'd let her die alone?" I shouted.
     "Die?  What are  you talking  about? Hurry,"  Marcellon continued
without  waiting  for  my  answer.  "We've got  to  put  her  to  bed.
Gentlemen, return to Sir Edward."

     *A little  boy was sneaking  through the  halls. It was  past his
bedtime, and he  would be punished by Mama-Aunt if  he were caught. It
was  harder tonight;  he  was tired,  for today  had  been his  fourth
birthday, but he  persevered. He must once again thank  his father for
the gifts: a  new sword, of real  iron just like Sir  Lucan's, and his
very own pony!
     And he crept, alone in his nightshirt, to his father's study. His
bare feet made no noise on the cool stone.*

     Michiya spoke quickly  in Bichanese to his  brother; Ito replied.
"I  shall  stay with  Luthias-sama,"  Michiya  announced, and  marched
beside me. I was glad he was there. God, if only Roisart were here! If
only Father--
     Damn it, it was  *his* fault, not mine! I didn't  do it! I didn't
mean to do it--
     But deep  down, I knew  it was my  fault. I've always  known. And
now, I was being punished.
     Marcellon opened a heavy door and  ushered me inside. I put Sable
on the soft bed. Marcellon spoke to  Michiya, but I don't know what he
said; Sable was stirring, and she cried out in pain.
     "Easy," I soothed, brushing her hair.
     "Luthias," she breathed, "you're alive."
     Normally, I would have given her a sarcastic or funny answer, but
I choked.  Maybe Beinison  took the  humor out of  me. "I'm  sorry," I
finally managed. "I'm  sorry, Sable. It's my fault. I  never meant for
this to happen. I  didn't want you to be--" When  had this happened? I
thought I was careful. I thought--
     It didn't matter. She was pregnant,  she was dying, and it was my
fault. It was all my fault.
     "That first  night," she breathed. "Everything  was so confused."
She  smiled, touched  the chain  across my  shoulders. "When  were you
Knighted?"
     She  was dying,  and  she  wanted to  know  about my  Knighthood?
"Sable," I began, but I couldn't finish. What was I going to tell her?
What could I tell her? What did it matter? She was going to die!
     "I'm  glad you're  home," she  whispered, then  pain crossed  her
face, and she shouted.
     "Do  you want  an anestetic?"  Marcellon offered,  coming to  her
bedside with a  cloth. I took it  in one hand and  wiped her forehead.
With the other hand, I searched for hers and grasped it.
     Sable  shook her  head. "It  won't be  long." And  she cried  out
again.
     How could someone be in this much pain and not die?

     *The  Baron drank  from  the  blue decanter  and  whirled on  his
castellan. "Do you know how it feels?" the Baron demanded wildly. "How
can you? How can you know how it feels? Morwyn lives still; my Julia's
dead!"  The Baron  turned toward  the portrait  of his  dead wife  and
sobbed. "Oh, Julie..." The castellan  approached gently and put a hand
on the Baron's  shoulder, but the Baron furiously pushed  him away. "I
don't want your sympathy; you have none."
     "You're drunk, Fionn. Go to bed," the castellan suggested mildly.
     "What does it  matter? What does anything  matter?" The castellan
turned away and shook his head. He stared at the door, helpless. "What
can matter after your sons murder your wife? God, I hate them--I curse
them!  May they  feel  the same  wound--may the  women  they love  die
bearing their children!"
     The  castellan's eyes  widened.  Swiftly turning,  he struck  the
Baron angrily.  "For God's  sake, hold your  tongue!" he  shouted. The
Baron toppled, and the castellan turned to the door.
     But the little boy had fled.*

     Sable held my hand tightly. I  thought she was going to break it.
How long had  this been going on? It seemed  like hours. Yet Marcellon
was calm--she was dying and Marcellon was calm!--as if everything were
all under control.
     What did he  know? Damn the Mage! Or maybe  he didn't understand,
but  that's very  strange for  Marcellon,  who knows  mysteries as  if
they're obvious.
     Sable cried  out again.  "Push," Marcellon commanded  gently, and
Sable's face twisted  with the effort. She cried  again, but Marcellon
said, "Push, Sable. I can see the head."
     And that, I knew, would be the end.

     *The little  boy leapt into  his bed  and pulled the  covers over
him. Unable to be strong any longer, he sobbed into his pillow.
     Suddenly, there was a voice at his side. "Luke?" Little arms went
around him. "Luke, what's wrong? Don't cry."
     He couldn't  tell him;  no, he wouldn't  burden his  brother. The
little  boy  would bear  the  secret,  the  hate, the  guilt--and  the
curse--alone.
     But still he sobbed till dawn in his brother's arms.*

     There was  a baby  in the  room, a crying  baby, but  Sable still
breathed--and she was still in  pain. I stared. Marcellon was smiling.
"Another push, Sable, and we're through."
     "It shouldn't be...this bad," she panted.
     "There's  another child  here," Marcellon  explained. "There  are
twins."
     Oh, God, she  really is going to  die! Just as Roisart  and I had
killed our mother, my sons would kill theirs! Oh, God, please!
     Marcellon gave me  a strange look. Then he looked  at Sable again
and  produced  another screaming  child.  "Now  just the  afterbirth,"
Marcellon encouraged.
     I remember wondering what the hell *that* was. And Sable, in less
pain--she was dying  for certain--pushed again, I suppose,  and it was
over.
     And she still breathed.
     She smiled at me and squeezed  my hand--gently, thank God; it was
sore as hell--and  I stared at her. She was  alive. I couldn't believe
it.
     She must be  dying peacefully, gradually, so  painlessly that she
must not even realize  it. Thank God for that; at  least she would die
in peace.
     And  Marcellon came  forward, bearing  two bundled  lumps. "Would
your excellencies deign  to view your perfectly  healthy children?" he
asked gaily, putting  them on the bed  next to Sable. I  stared at the
Mage in disbelief,  then looked at the babies as  Marcellon moved away
to wash his hands.
     "They're so small," I said. Then I felt stupid.
     Sable whacked  me playfully. If I  hadn't known she was  dying, I
would have  thought she was  getting better. "Newborns  generally are,
dullard,"  she  laughed  breathlessly. "Especially  twins."  Then  she
looked at me seriously. "Roisart and Luthias?"
     "What?" I asked.
     "Names."
     "Fionn, not Luthias."
     "Lauren and Clifton called their little boy Fionn."
     "All right," I conceded dully, "Roisart and Luthias."
     "That," said the approaching High  Mage, drying his hands, "would
be highly inappropriate."
     "Inappropriate?" Sable asked. "Inappropriate  to name my children
after their father and uncle?"
     Marcellon,  in  that annoying  way  of  his, raised  an  eyebrow.
"They're girls," he explained simply. And I felt even stupider.
     "Julia?" Sable suggested, looking at me.
     "Fine,"  I said  without  fighting. Perhaps  calling my  daughter
after her would free me of her death. "The other...Morwyn?" She nodded
and smiled, and  I knew that she  was glad to name  our daughter after
Mama-Aunt.
     "After your  mothers?" Marcellon questioned, and  I nodded. "Very
good. If  you don't  mind, I'll take  the babes to  be blessed  by the
priests."
     "By the  Master Priest?"  Sable asked sleepily,  snuggling toward
me.
     "Don't  be ridiculous,"  Marcellon  answered  dryly. "His  breath
would wilt the poor children." Sable smiled. "I shall return shortly."
     I kissed Sable  swiftly, then rose. I  caught Marcellon's sleeve.
"How much longer?" I asked in whispers.
     "Longer?"
     "Until she dies."
     Marcellon  gave me  a  very  strange look.  "Your  wife is  fine,
Luthias,"  he soothed,  putting a  hand  on my  arm. "It  was an  easy
labor." *That*  was easy? "She was  never in any danger  of death. She
will live for many years. Don't be alarmed."
     "She's  not  going  to  die?" I  asked  incredulously.  But  that
couldn't be...any woman I cared for...
     "Of course  not," Marcellon returned with  slight irritation. "Go
back to  your wife,  Sir Luthias, if  you like; she  will sleep  for a
while, however."
     "Sleep? After that?"
     "They  don't  call  it  labor for  nothing,  manling,"  Marcellon
scoffed,  using  Clifton's  horrid  nickname for  me.  His  eyes  were
smiling, though. "Go on, Luthias. It's all right."
     I stood rooted, staring at the door as Marcellon closed it, until
I  heard Sable  call me.  I turned.  "Are you  all right?"  she asked,
holding out her hand.
     I came to her and took it.  "Me? I'm fine. You're the one who was
in the pain. Sable, how are you?"
     "Wonderful," she told me. I sat in the chair beside her bed. "Are
you all  right, Luthias? I  thought sometimes  that you felt  the pain
more than I did."
     She'd never know how much. I  touched her face, and then I kissed
her. "It's all right, Sable." She  had said she was wonderful; she was
going to live, Marcellon had said. It was going to be all right.
     Seeing the  change in my face,  she sighed, closed her  eyes, and
slept.
     And I laid my head down  beside hers, thanking God that my father
had not cursed me after all.

     *The Baron  drew his little son  onto his knee, but  the normally
exuberant boy trembled  and looked away fearfully.  "Don't be afraid,"
the Baron said soothingly. "It's all right."
     The boy would not answer.
     The Baron  held his son  close. "I didn't  mean what I  said last
night,   my   son,"   the    Baron   whispered,   rocking   the   boy.
"Grown-ups...when we  hurt, sometimes  we say  crazy things,  and they
hurt others...I never meant to hurt you, my son."
     Uncertain, the boy withdrew  slightly and looked questioningly at
his father.
     The Baron saddened at the pain  on the little boy's face. "I love
you,  my strong  son," he  said, holding  the boy  close. "I  would do
anything to spare  you pain--I would give anything to  be certain that
you never feel the  pain I felt when your mother died.  I love you and
your brother;  please believe that,  my son, and believe  that nothing
you did hurt her and nothing I said was true."
     And the boy sobbed and held his father tightly. "It's all right,"
the Baron whispered. "Don't cry, Luthias." The Baron held his boy at a
small distance. "You believe me?" The boy nodded. "I would never curse
you, nor  would I  ever hate or  hurt you." The  boy nodded  again and
gulped his  tears. "Now come,"  invited the Baron, offering  his hand.
"Let's go riding."*
------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Quanta is an electronically distributed magazine of science fiction.
Published monthly,  each issue contains short fiction,  articles and
editorials by authors around the world  and across the net.   Quanta
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1------------------------------------------------------------------------
   (C)    Copyright    May,     1990,    DargonZine,    Editor    Dafydd
. All rights revert to the authors. These stories may
not be reproduced or redistributed (save  in the case of reproducing the
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the author involved.






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  D     D A  A R  R G    O  O N N N     Z   I N N N E     || Volume 3
-=========================================================+|)
  D    D  AAAA RRR  G GG O  O N N N   Z     I N N N E     ||  Issue 9
  DDDDD   A  A R  R GGGG OOOO N  NN  ZZZZZZ I N  NN EEEE  ||
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--   DargonZine Volume 3, Issue 9        07/27/90          Cir 963    --
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--                            Contents                                --
------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Reluctant Revelation         Carlo Samson           Mel 5-Ye 2, 1013
 The Bronze Horseman II       Max Khaytsus           Se 25-Ob 5, 1013
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1                           Reluctant Revelation
                            by Carlo N. Samson

     The trading  ship _Vanguard Voyager_ sailed  smoothly through the
calm  green waters  of  the  Laraka River.  Cydric  Araesto and  Mandi
Mercallion stood at the rail, watching  the town of Port Sevlyn slowly
come into view along the left bank.
     "At long last,"  Cydric remarked. "It'll be great to  get back on
solid ground again."
     Mandi clapped her hands excitedly. "Party!" she exclaimed.
     "Where?" Cydric  looked at her  quizzically. "What party  are you
talking about?"
     "The  one that  Uncle Quill  and the  Lord Mayor  of Port  Sevlyn
always throw for  Brynna whenever she gets back from  a voyage," Mandi
replied. "Long voyages I mean, like  when she got back from Bichu, but
after they  hear about  how we  gave Challion and  his pirates  a good
thumping I'm sure  they'll have one for her--probably  not tonight but
for sure  tomorrow night, or  the next night  at the very  least. I've
just got to get a new dress!"
     Cydric stretched  and leaned against  the rail. "I'm  sure you'll
have a  nice time. Myself, I  just want to  get to a decent  tavern. I
haven't had a good Lederian since we left Shark's Cove."
     "You'll have a nice time too," Mandi said. "The Lord Mayor stocks
plenty of Lederian."
     "Is the whole crew invited to this party?" Cydric inquired.
     "Truthfully,  no." Mandi  twisted  a strand  of her  tawny-auburn
hair. "Well,  except for Kayne  and Scarabin, they're  always invited.
But since you  did help save the ship I'm  absolutely sure Brynna will
invite you as well. She owes you that much."
     "It's not necessary. I'm not all that fond of parties anyway."
     Mandi's  jaw popped  open in  surprise  at his  comment. "Why  on
Makdiar not? There's food, music, dancing--it'll be fun! Don't tell me
you wouldn't want to go."
     "I've been  to enough of  them to know  what goes on.  I'd rather
spend my evenings engaged in more meaningful activity."
     "Really? I didn't  know scribe's sons got invited  to the Mayor's
mansion very often."
     Cydric started to  reply, but decided to let the  remark pass. He
didn't want  to start any conversation  that would lead him  to reveal
his  true past.  To change  the subject,  he pointed  out towards  the
docks. "Say, isn't that a Navy ship over there?"
     Mandi snapped  her fingers.  "I know what  it is.  You're worried
about showing up  without a date! I  can take care of that  for you. I
know lots of girls who'd--"
     Cydric put  his hand  over her  mouth. "Mandi,  even on  the wild
chance that  I did get  invited, there's nothing  you could say  or do
that would make me go."

     Light chamber  music mixed  with the  sound of  many simultaneous
conversations  filled the  spacious  feast hall  of  the Lord  Mayor's
mansion.
     "It  was very  kind of  you to  invite me  to this  celebration,"
Cydric said to Brynna Thorne. The twenty-seven-year-old captain of the
_Vanguard Voyager_ nodded  and tipped her wine  glass. "Quite welcome,
Cydric," she replied. "Mandi convinced me that double the usual voyage
pay wasn't enough of a reward."
     Cydric made  to protest  that it  was more  that enough,  but the
silver-haired gentleman  standing next  to Brynna  clapped him  on the
shoulder and said, "Now, now, Brynn.  You can't put a price on bravery
such as his."
1     "Thank you,  Lord Thorne," Cydric  replied, "but I didn't  do all
that much. The bow was enchanted; anyone could have made the shot."
     Lord Quillien Thorne shook his head. "The dweomer is such that it
makes good archers even better.  You underrate your own skill. Myself,
I think you're a fine addition to my daughter's crew."
     A large brown-bearded  man in rich maroon  robes approached them,
accompanied by  a tall  woman in  similarly elegant  dress. "Quillien!
Brynna!"  the man  called. "You'll  be  pleased to  know that  Captain
Hellriegel has just captured the last of the _Black Swan's_ crew--even
that Danner fellow. The messenger was just here."
     "Excellent news,"  said Lord  Thorne, looking  to Brynna  for her
reaction.
     "That's  wonderful! Thank  you,  Lord Mayor,"  Brynna said.  "The
Navy's  certainly done  their job.  I'll have  to send  him a  note of
thanks before he leaves."
     "They ought to be the ones thanking you," said the woman, who was
the Lord Mayor's  wife. "All those months spent  chasing down Challion
and Skoranji and their mangy lot--then look who brings them in!"
     Brynna  smiled. "You're  too kind,  milady. Some  of the  credit,
though, belongs to Cydric here."
     Suddenly feeling uncomfortable, Cydric said, "I think I'll go and
tell  Mandi that  Danner's been  captured. She  was concerned  that he
might come back for her. If you'll excuse me?"
     "Enjoy yourself," said the Lord Mayor. Cydric nodded to everyone,
then took  his leave. He spotted  Mandi by the musicians  and made his
way over.
     "Did you  have a nice  chat with  Brynna and Uncle  Quill?" Mandi
asked.  Cydric answered  affirmatively, then  told her  about Danner's
capture.  "That's such  a relief!"  Mandi exclaimed.  "Not that  I was
really worried, though."  She tugged at the side of  her black evening
dress. "Oh, while  you were talking some of my  friends arrived. Let's
go, I'll introduce you."
     Moments later,  Cydric and  Mandi arrived at  a table  where four
young people were seated. "Everyone," Mandi said, "This is Cydric, the
one I was telling you about. Say hi!"
     A  well-dressed young  man with  almond-brown hair  stood up  and
gripped forearms with Cydric. "The name's Kifton, I'm the Lord Mayor's
son. Sorry  I wasn't here  to meet you  at first--the meeting  with my
personal treasurer ran a little long."
     The next to  greet Cydric was a meek-looking youth  and an ample-
bosomed flaxen-haired  young woman.  Mandi introduced them  as Garrett
and Tassy Covington. She mentioned that Garrett was studying to become
a healer, and that Tassy was one of her best friends.
     "I sure hope  you're planning to tell us about  your adventure on
board  the  ship,"  Garrett  said.   "It  must  have  been  enormously
exciting."
     The  last person  at the  table  was a  slender young  lady in  a
midnight-blue satin ball dress. Her cinnamon-brown hair was twisted in
a long loose braid that lay across  her shoulder; in her left hand she
held a small white lace fan.
     "Cydric," Mandi said,  "this is Rayna Silverwood.  She'll be your
date for tonight."
     Cydric looked at the girl and  immediately felt his blood turn to
ice. No,  it's not  possible, he  thought. Damn! Of  all the  girls in
Baranur....He felt Mandi nudge him slightly. "Ah, I am very pleased to
meet  you," he  said woodenly,  taking Rayna's  outstretched hand  and
quickly pressing it to his cheek.
     Rayna flashed  the barest  hint of  a smile.  Her pale  blue eyes
locked  with Cydric's  for  a moment,  then her  gaze  flitted to  the
tabletop. "I-I'm pleased as well," she replied, a hint of confusion in
1her voice.  She stole another  glance at  Cydric as she  began fanning
herself.
     Mandi stared  at the two  of them, puzzled by  Cydric's reaction.
She knew that Rayna was somewhat of  a shy girl, but she expected more
enthusiasm   from   Cydric.   It    couldn't   be   that   Rayna   was
unattractive--she and Jannis had spent hours getting her ready for the
party.  The look  on Cydric's  face was  one of  shock, surprise,  and
dismay--like he'd seen someone he never hoped to see again.
     "Mandi!  Have you  seen Jannis?"  Tassy asked.  Mandi turned  and
motioned to  the arched  entrance to  the gardens at  the back  of the
feast hall. "Last I saw, she was with the Baron Fianchetti's son."
     "Brynna's little  sister certainly  is popular, isn't  she?" Kiff
said, grinning. Mandi  shot him a disapproving look. "You  know what I
mean," he hastily amended.
     From the  front of  the room  came the  Lord Mayor's  voice. "The
feast will  begin shortly," he  announced. "I would ask  that everyone
please be seated now."
     The guests gradually  left the dance floor and made  their way to
the banquet tables that were set up around the hall. Cydric hesitantly
sat down  next to  Rayna, while  Mandi took  a seat  next to  Kiff. "I
thought Kayne and  Scarabin were supposed to be here,"  Cydric said to
Mandi. "I haven't seen them since we left the ship yesterday."
     Mandi started  to make a cutting  reply, but decided to  speak to
him  later on  in private.  For the  mean time,  she would  act as  if
everything was fine. "Don't you remember?" she replied. "Scarabin's at
the healer's  getting cured of his  razorworms, and Kayne went  off to
see  some woman.  This is  the first  time they've  missed one  of our
parties."
     "What about Brynna's mother--your Aunt Rolanda?"
     "Someone challenged her  to a game of King's  Key. She's probably
out on the terrace beating the pox out of him."
     A serving girl came by and  filled their goblets with wine. After
taking a sip Kiff said, "So Cydric, you seem to be the hero of the day
around here. Why don't you tell  us all about the pirating incident of
a couple days ago?"
     "Yes, please do," Rayna said.
     Cydric  drank a  bit of  wine, not  acknowledging Rayna's  words.
After the  liquid had cleared  his throat  he proceeded to  relate the
events of the  day before last. The group let  him talk uninterrupted;
when  he was  finished,  Tassy  asked, "So  who  exactly is  Commander
Challion? I think I heard the name somewhere before."
     Kifton, in  the process of drinking,  looked over the rim  of his
goblet and set it down. "Hah! Now  there's a good story." He wiped his
lips, then spoke. "Challion used to  be Knight Captain of the Southern
Marches about five years  ago. My cousin was in the  Army at the time;
he told me that one night old Captain Challion had a bit too much fine
wine,  then went  out  and tried  to  have his  way  with a  peasant's
daughter.  Hah! Obviously,  the Army  kicked  him out.  They say  that
Challion used to brag about how  one day he'd become Knight Commander,
so after his discharge the troops gave him that title to mock him."
     "Serves him right, I think," Garrett  said. "But then, how did he
become a  pirate?" Kifton  shrugged, then looked  at Mandi.  "You ever
hear anything about that?"
     Mandi  cocked her  head in  thought. "Yes,  but bits  and pieces,
mostly. They  say that he was  at the Abyssment in  Shark's Cove once,
and met  up with Captain Skoranji--who  owns the _Black Swan_,  by the
way.  Well, Challion  supposedly  played  high-stakes paquaratti  with
Skoranji and  it ended  up that  Challion won the  ship, but  since he
didn't know spit about sailing he  made a deal with Skoranji that they
go into scavenging treasure from wrecked ships and split whatever they
1found evenly, but  Brynna said that she once ran  across them off Cape
Perpetual  where  they were  searching  for  a  sunken ship  that  was
carrying gold  that the pirate  Soloman Banshee supposedly  stole from
the vaults of the Beinison Emperor and--"
     Kifton reached over and put his hand over Mandi's mouth. "I think
he understands now."
     Mandi sputtered  and pushed his  hand away. "Pox! Why  are people
always doing that to me?" She glared briefly at Kifton, then delivered
the same look to Cydric.
     A  middle-aged woman  in elegant  dress swept  past their  table.
Suddenly  stopping in  mid-stride, she  backtracked and  spoke to  the
group. "Greetings  everyone, having a  good time? Hello  there Cydric,
nice to see  you again. You've met Lord Silverwood's  daughter, I see.
Getting along, are you?"
     "Ah--glad to see  you too, Lady Thorne,"  Cydric replied. Mandi's
temper sparked  as she saw the  hurt look in Rayna's  eyes when Cydric
didn't answer  the question. Not now,  she told herself. I'll  get him
later.
     "Where's Jannis?" asked Tassy. "Seems  like she vanished all of a
sudden."
     "Oh,  she's out  by the  stables--showing  off her  horse to  the
Fianchetti boy," Rolanda Thorne replied. "He's rather a geeby type, if
you ask  me, but  don't tell  the Baroness I  said that!"  She grinned
widely. "But he's harmless, and at least Jannis likes him. I told them
to come  in, so  they'll be  here soon.  Well, enjoy  yourselves, all.
Dakka-zee,  as  the  Bandalusians  say!"  She  tousled  Mandi's  hair,
gathered up her voluminous dress and hurried off.
     A bell sounded, followed by  Lord Thorne's voice. He stood behind
the table at the  front of the feast hall; Lady  Thorne took the chair
to his left, and to her left Brynna was already seated. The Lord Mayor
sat to Thorne's right, and next to him sat his wife Miriyan.
     "Thank you all for being here,"  Lord Thorne said. "Once again my
daughter Brynna has proved herself a  worthy sea captain, and made her
family and friends  all very proud of her. Before  we begin the feast,
there is something we would like to do for her. Corbin?"
     The Lord  Mayor stood. "I've  known Brynna  ever since she  was a
child, and  she was never one  to believe the limits  other people set
upon her. Three years  ago she set sail on her  maiden voyage in spite
of  all those  who  said a  woman  couldn't command  a  ship, and  her
reputation has grown with each succeeding journey."
     He went on to describe her past voyages and accomplishments, then
signalled to  a servant who  handed him a  carved wooden box.  He went
over to Brynna  and motioned for her to stand.  Brynna looked confused
for a moment, then  got up at the urging of her  mother, who also rose
from her seat.
     The  Lord Mayor  continued, "It  is  with great  pleasure that  I
present to  you, Captain Brynna  Thorne, this symbol of  Port Sevlyn's
highest honor."  He opened the  box to reveal an  eight-pointed silver
medallion inlaid  with the  likeness of Cirrangill,  God of  the Seas.
Brynna smiled  broadly and thanked  the Lord Mayor amid  loud applause
from the guests. Lady Thorne lifted  the medallion out of the case and
looped the  attached ribbon around  Brynna's neck. Lady  Thorne hugged
her, as  did her father.  The Lord Mayor  and his wife  extended their
congratulations as well.
     "Got her totally by surprise!" Mandi exclaimed.
     Brynna looked down at the  medallion that hung against her chest,
then up  at the still-applauding  crowd. She waited until  the ovation
had  died  down  before  speaking.  "This is,  this  is  certainly  an
unexpected honor," she said, her hand  going to the blue streak in her
long dark hair. "I'm  not usually at a loss for  words...." She made a
1brief  speech in  which she  expressed  her appreciation  for all  the
support  her friends  and family  had given  her over  the years,  and
mentioned that her crew also  deserved recognition for their loyal and
faithful service. She was making  her closing remarks when Lady Thorne
broke in.
     "Wait a  moment! That's not the  only surprise we have  for you,"
she said. "Okay, Jannis, bring him in!"
     Through the  back entrance to  the feast  hall came a  tall well-
muscled man in  a gray uniform, accompanied by a  slim young girl. The
man strode up to the Lord Mayor's  table and bowed, while the girl sat
down with Cydric and the others.
     Lady Thorne smiled widely. "Everyone,  may I present Captain Xane
Hellriegel,  of the  Royal  Navy ship  _Storm Challenger_.  Dakka-zee,
Captain, so  nice that you  could attend!" Captain  Hellriegel thanked
his hosts  and smiled at  Brynna, who stood open-mouthed  in surprise.
"Greetings, Captain Thorne," he said. "Very glad to see you again."
     "Now now now, none of this 'captain' business, please," said Lady
Thorne. "This is a celebration--first names only!" She leaned close to
Brynna and whispered, "Don't just stand  there gaping like a fish! Say
something to the man, lest he think you're a statue."
     Brynna  cast her  mother  a  dark look,  then  turned to  Captain
Hellriegel. "So nice that you could attend," she said.
     "Please do have a seat, Xane," said Lady Thorne. "Next to Brynna,
if you would."

     Mandi shook  her head.  "Pox, Jannis, I  thought you  were giving
Fianchetti  Junior a  tour  of the  stables. Don't  tell  me you  were
outside with _him_ all this time!"
     Jannis  Thorne grinned  at Mandi  from  the opposite  end of  the
table. "I certainly was, sure as snow! Are you jealous?"
     "Oooh, I could poke your eyes out!"
     "Thank you,"  Jannis said with  a laugh, tossing back  her golden
hair.
     "Hah!  What's to  be jealous  of?" said  Kifton, putting  his arm
around Mandi.  "Those Navy fish-kissers don't  make a tenth of  what I
could get  from a  caravan contract. I  could spend in  a day  what he
makes in six months!"
     "Oooh, I'm  not the  only one jealous  around here!"  said Mandi,
elbowing Kifton in the ribs. "You  always bring up your money whenever
you feel threatened, don't you?"
     "I do not," said Kifton.
     "Do so!"
     "You want to bet on that?"
     "Just as I thought."
     "He's just a  fish-kisser! There's nothing special  about what he
does."
     Mandi thrust  his arm away  from her. "What  he does is  the same
thing that  Brynna does! Are you  saying that being a  ship captain is
nothing special?"
     "That's not what I meant," Kifton said defensively. "What I meant
was...simply that...uh...."
     "Forget it, Kiff," said Jannis. "You're in deep enough as it is."
     "So Jan," Tassy said, "Whatever happened to young Fianchetti? Was
he impressed by El-Johan?"
     Jannis giggled. "About that! Soon as we stepped into the stables,
he started  sneezing like a  thunderstorm. He  never said that  he was
allergic to horses.  It got so bad  he decided to go home.  And a good
thing too, for just then Mother  came over with Captain Hellriegel and
asked me to keep him company until she called. He told me all kinds of
fascinating stories--he's a very interesting  man, a perfect match for
1Brynna."
     "You mean Captain Thorne isn't married?" asked Cydric.
     "Not yet,"  replied Jannis, "but not  for long, if my  mother has
her way."

     "I was about to send a messenger to inform you that we'd captured
all of the _Black Swan's_ crew,"  said Captain Hellriegel, "but it was
such a fine day I decided to deliver the message myself. I was halfway
to the  doors when Lady  Thorne intercepted me  and invited me  to the
celebration.  What I  didn't expect  was that  I'd have  to make  that
surprise entrance."
     "Yes," said Brynna, "Mother always manages to surprise everyone."
     "I'm afraid Corbin  and I are also partly  responsible," said the
Lord Mayor's wife. "Rolanda coaxed us into going along with it."
     "So tell  us, Captain,  what's the word  from Magnus?"  asked the
Lord Mayor.  "Is there  any truth  to the rumors  of an  invasion from
Bichu?"
     "There's  plenty  of speculation,  yes,  but  I personally  don't
believe it," Hellriegel replied. "For  one thing, it's highly doubtful
that the Bichanese--"
     Lady Thorne clapped  her hands. "Please please! You  men, all you
talk about these days is war. Let's discuss more pleasant things. This
is a celebration, after all."
     "How  right you  are,  Rolanda," said  Miriyan.  "The subject  is
growing  rather tiresome.  I  doubt we'll  see any  major  war in  our
lifetimes."
     Lord Thorne  drained the  last of  his wine  and signalled  for a
refill. To Captain Hellriegel he  said, "It's extremely fortunate that
you  decided  to  replenish  your   water  supplies  at  Port  Sevlyn.
Otherwise, those pirates might be causing trouble in town right now."
     "They  won't  be troubling  anyone  for  a  long time  to  come,"
Hellriegel replied. "We're taking the ship  in tow, and the whole crew
is safely in the  brig--except for the oarsmen. We had  to find a mage
to disperse them."
     "So it is true," said the Lord Mayor. "Skoranji _did_ have undead
among his crew. I didn't think it possible."
     "How gruesome," said Miriyan, shuddering.
     Lady Thorne started to speak, but her husband cut her off. "We're
not discussing war, Rolanda," he said.
     "I meant  anything that dealt with  death on a mass  scale," Lady
Thorne snapped.
     "That reminds me," said the  Lord Mayor's wife, "the first course
should have been served by now. I'll have to see what the problem is."
She excused herself and left the table.
     In keeping  with Lady Thorne's  topic limitations, the  men began
talking of  less gruesome things  such as  the state of  Lord Thorne's
trading business. "The Land's Rim is doing quite well," Quillien said.
"I've added  spell-protection to the  vaults, plus installed  a secret
exit--might  come  in  useful  if the  Bichanese  invade."  The  group
laughed. "In addition," continued Lord  Thorne, "the items that Brynna
brought back from her last expedition  have sold extremely well; I can
now afford  to either  add a  new room  to the  house, or  buy another
ship."
     The   Lord  Mayor   shook  his   head.  "I've   a  better   idea,
Quillien--build a  summer home  in the Catswoods.  Duke Quinnat  and I
were thinking of some kind of joint project...."
     Lady Thorne suddenly looked at her daughter. "Brynna dear, you've
been unusually quiet. Feel free to join in at any time."
     "I need to get a breath of air," Brynna said. "Please excuse me."
She stood  up abruptly and hurried  out through the back  of the feast
1hall.

     "...so as  soon as we'd docked,  Captain Thorne went over  to the
_Storm Challenger_ to tell them about the battle and have them pick up
the survivors," Cydric  was saying. "I did see her  talking briefly to
Captain Hellriegel--something he said seemed  to irritate her, and she
left the ship in a hurry."
     "She didn't mention anything about that to me," Jannis said. Just
then, Brynna  rushed past them out  of the room. Lady  Thorne followed
not a moment behind.
     "Not again," sighed Jannis.
     "Cydric," Mandi said, "did you  know that Rayna's father supplies
almost all of the pottery that's used in the towns along the Laraka?"
     "Really," Cydric said. "I didn't know that."
     "It's true," Rayna said. "He owns three shops here in Port Sevlyn
and two in Magnus. Have you ever seen how pottery is made?"
     "Ah, no,  but I'm sure  it's fascinating." Cydric turned  back to
Jannis. "What do you mean 'not again'?"
     Mandi made a tiny sound of frustration.
     "Mother  and Brynna--they  always seem  to get  into an  argument
whenever Brynna gets back from  a voyage," Jannis explained. "And it's
usually about the same thing."
     Mandi said, "Cydric, could I see you for a moment--in private?"
     "Hold it,  what do you  want to see  him alone for?"  Kifton said
suspiciously.
     "It's about--his horse," Mandi said  quickly. "He had to leave it
behind in Shark's Cove when he joined the ship. I promised him I'd let
him ride mine when we got home."
     "But now? They're about to serve the food!"
     "Well, it'll  be dark  soon. He  can't very  well ride  around at
night--it's so  hard to see  things! Honestly, Kiff, think  before you
speak." Mandi got up and indicated for Cydric to do the same.
     Cydric looked confused. "Ah, Mandi--"
     "Once around  the pond, isn't that  what you said? Well  let's go
then, come on!" She went  around to Cydric and surreptitiously pinched
him.
     "Ow! Owv course.  Pardon us." Cydric followed Mandi  out into the
garden. Brynna  and Lady Thorne  were there, having a  discussion near
the rose bushes. Mandi led Cydric away  from the house and over to the
stables.
     "What is this about, Mandi?" Cydric demanded.
     "I ought  to--I ought  to poke _your_  eyes out!"  seethed Mandi.
"I'm not going take it anymore!"
     "Calm down and tell me what you mean."
     "Oh, you don't  know what I mean--I'll tell you  what I mean! You
have been utterly,  totally, and completely rude to  Rayna! You hardly
spoke to her--you barely  even looked at her! I'm not  going to sit by
and let you treat one of my dearest friends this way! Oh, I could just
scream! Rayna's  a bit shy,  and I thought you'd  be at least  nice to
her. Her mother died recently, and  she needs someone she can talk to.
I just  can't believe how you've  behaved towards her! For  your sake,
you'd better have a reason for it!"
     Cydric stood stunned for a moment, taken aback by Mandi's tirade.
He gulped, quickly weighing the  consequences of telling her the truth
or compounding the little lies he'd already told.
     "Well? I'm waiting," said Mandi.
     "I had no idea her mother was dead," Cydric said cautiously. "You
should've told me."
     "I didn't think I needed to.  I thought you'd be at least polite.
Is  there a  reason that  you weren't,  or did  you suddenly  become a
1scrud- sucker overnight?"
     "Yes, there was a reason. But I don't need any abuse."
     "Sorry. Do you feel like telling me?"
     Cydric looked away and began to pace. He turned the question over
and over in his mind. Would it do more harm than good to tell her? Was
it really that much of a secret? Would it be so bad if he did tell? He
debated  within  himself for  several  minutes.  Finally he  made  his
decision.
     "All right, I'll tell you."

     "Brynna! Slow down! You can't  just walk out of the party--you're
the guest of  honor! What's the matter?" Lady Thorne  hurried to catch
up with her daughter.
     Brynna  stopped  and spun  to  face  her  mother. "Was  it  truly
necessary to invite him?"
     "Him?  Xane? Well,  why  shouldn't I  have? After  all,  he is  a
captain  like yourself.  I  imagine you  two have  lots  of things  in
common."
     "You may as well have  invited every other ship captain currently
in dock, for that matter."
     "Oh Brynna,  please. He's come  to apologize for whatever  it was
that he  said to you. Not  many men would  do that! And besides,  I do
believe that he's never been married before, either."
     Brynna exhaled loudly and crossed her arms. "Gods' breath, that's
exactly what I thought. You never change, mother."
     "I don't  understand...." Lady Thorne stopped  speaking as Cydric
and  Mandi came  out of  the  house and  headed past  them toward  the
stables. Brynna waited  until they were out of earshot,  then said, "I
suppose I'll have just to say it  plainly: I want you to stop throwing
men at  me in  the hopes that  I'll marry one  of them!  It's becoming
extremely annoying to return home and find you waiting with the 'catch
of the  day', as it  were. Haven't I  said enough times  that marriage
isn't important to me right now?"
     "But Brynna dear, you're almost thirty. It's--"
     "Age again. Mother, I don't want to talk about. Straight?"
     Lady Thorne  shook her head. "I  just--I don't know what  more to
say. How  can I convince you?  You can't go rambling  around the world
for the rest of your life. Someday you'll have to settle down."
     There was the sound of someone coming down the paved garden path.
Both women turned to see Captain Hellriegel approaching them.
     "I'll  leave you  alone," said  Lady  Thorne. "But  this is  your
chance --remember what I've said. Be  nice to him, now!" She nodded to
Hellriegel as she headed up the path back to the house.

     "I  don't  think he  likes  me,"  Rayna sighed,  rapidly  fanning
herself.
     "That's  not  true," Jannis  said,  trying  to sound  reassuring.
"Cydric's probably just trying to work up the courage to--"
     "Hah! Just be  serious for a moment," Kiff  interjected. "The man
killed a sorcerer with nothing but  an arrow. I think he's got courage
enough. More likely  he'd prefer someone more--"  He suddenly realized
that Rayna  was sadly staring at  him. "Uh, what I  meant was, someone
who's not so...well, let's just say...."
     "Kiff," Jannis said.
     "What?"
     Jannis  made  an  obscene  gesture  to  him.  Kiff  sputtered  in
indignation. Tassy giggled. Garrett looked  over at Kiff and shook his
head.
     "Perhaps I should  be going now," Rayna said. She  started to get
up, but  Jannis gently pushed  her back down.  "No, you don't  have to
1leave. I think  that's what Mandi's talking to him  about out there. I
did notice that he was somewhat cool towards you."
     "Cool!" Kiff snorted. "Dead of winter  was more like it. His look
alone could've frozen water! I mean, frostbite...."
     Jannis coughed loudly.  "One more word Kiff, and  I'll tell Mandi
about Corinne."
     "Hah! Who?"
     Jannis took  out a handkerchief  and impressed her lips  upon it.
She held up the cloth to display the red blotch left by her lip stain.
"The girl Mandi will think this belongs to, that's who."
     "Hah! You wouldn't," Kiff said, his tone sobering.
     Jannis smiled sweetly.
     Rayna folded up her fan. "I  think I really should leave. I'm not
feeling all that well anyway."
     "But Rayna--" Jannis looked to Tassy for help.
     "Tell your mother it was a  lovely party." Rayna got up and began
to walk away.
     "Ah--you should at least have dinner!" Tassy called. "It would be
a shame, almost  an insult really, to walk out  before the meal's been
served."
     Rayna paused,  then returned to  the table. "I do  suppose that's
true." She sat back down. "But why do you think Cydric was acting that
way?"
     "Maybe he's got another girl," Kiff mumbled.
     "Kifton!" Jannis and Tassy said together.

     "Is anything wrong?" Captain Hellriegel asked.
     "Just  a  little family  disagreement.  Nothing  to be  concerned
about," Brynna replied.
     "Why did you run out here, though? You seemed a little upset."
     "As I  said, nothing to  be concerned about." Brynna  turned away
and peered closely at a nearby rose.
     Hellriegel nodded and clasped his  hands behind his back. After a
moment  he said,  "Congratulations on  the medal.  It's an  honor well
deserved."
     "Indeed," Brynna replied without turning around.
     Hellriegel let out  a breath and rubbed the back  of his neck. "I
didn't expect this to be easy," he muttered to himself.
     Brynna straightened  up and faced  him. "I think I'll  be getting
back to the party now. Do please  excuse me." She started to walk past
him.
     Hellriegel grasped her arm. "Brynna--Captain Thorne, please wait.
I--"
     Brynna glared  at him until he  released her. "Don't you  have to
get under way soon? Your prisoners must be anxious to get to trial."
     "About what I said the other day. I'm sorry."
     "So mother was right. You did come to apologize."
     "Listen, Captain--I can't excuse what I  said to you that day. It
was wholly obnoxious, it was entirely uncalled for, it was--"
     "Typically male?" Brynna finished.
     "All right, that too. There's no  way under Kisil-Doon I can take
back what I said. All I can say is, I wish I'd never said it."
     Brynna nibbled her lower lip, but said nothing.
     Captain Hellriegel let his hands drop to his sides. "That's all I
really came  here for.  I suppose I  should get back  to my  ship now.
Goodbye, Captain." He slowly turned and started up the path.
     "Captain," Brynna called after a moment.
     Hellriegel stopped and faced her.
     "Would  you have  said similar  things to  a...a non-female  ship
captain?"
1     Hellriegel grinned. "Definitely not. I'd have said something much
worse!"
     Brynna strode up to  him. In a softer tone she  said, "If I might
ask a small favor?"
     "Of course, anything."
     "I have some business to take care of in Magnus, and since you're
already going there...."
     "My cabin is yours--if you want it, that is."
     Brynna smiled slightly. "We'll see."
     "This   wouldn't   have   anything   to   do   with   the   Codex
Araltakonia--the book that Challion wanted so badly--would it now?"
     "It might," said Brynna. "If I could have an hour to get ready?"
     "Take all the time you need."

     Cydric sat down against a tree. "You may be surprised at what I'm
about to tell you,  and for you to fully understand  I'm going to have
to start at the very beginning."
     Mandi plopped down in front  of him, legs crossed underneath her.
"I'm listening."
     "You  also  have  to  promise  not to  say  anything  until  I've
finished."
     "Yes! Now get on with it."
     Cydric sighed, then proceeded to tell  her the truth. He told her
that instead of being a scribe's son like he initially claimed, he was
in fact the son of Khysar  Araesto, who was the King's Royal Treasurer
and Duke  of Pyridain.  He told  her of  his long-standing  desire for
adventure,  of his  love  for the  King's niece  Lysanda,  and of  the
Dreamrealm adventure  he had shared with  the Sage of Dargon.  He then
gave an account of how he was forced to marry Lysanda after he learned
of  her  pregnancy,  and  of  how the  resulting  scandal  caused  the
dissolution of their marriage.
     "...so that's why  I decided to leave Magnus, and  how I ended up
in  Shark's Cove.  But when  you introduced  me to  Rayna, I  couldn't
believe  it--she  looked  exactly   like  Lysanda.  Same  hair,  eyes,
lips...they could almost  be twins. And everything that  I was feeling
after  she left  with the  baby--it all  came flooding  back to  me. I
thought I'd forgotten  her, about what she said...I was  afraid that I
might  take it  all out  on Rayna.  So  I tried  to say  as little  as
possible. Damned  unfair of me I  know, but..." He shrugged.  "I don't
blame you if you're still angry."
     Mandi sat silent  for a moment, digesting all he  had revealed to
her. "Pox,"  she said at length.  "When you said you  had a reason...I
thought it was her looks, or her dress--I had no idea I'd be getting a
full confession!"
     "I felt  I needed to tell  you the entire truth.  It was becoming
too difficult to keep my lies straight."
     "I'm glad you  trust me enough to tell me  all this," Mandi said,
placing her  hand on  his knee.  "But you actually  lived in  the same
castle with the King! That is the most amazing thing I've--"
     "Are you still upset about how I acted towards Rayna?"
     "Well--well  of course  I am.  I  know what's  she's feeling;  my
mother's dead, too."  Mandi traced a circle in the  dirt. "It happened
when I  was a child,  though. I never  got along with  my stepmother--
that's why I ran away and came  up here to join Brynna." She looked up
and shook  Cydric's leg.  "But Rayna's  a completely  different person
from Lysanda.  Just because  they look  the same--that  means nothing.
Rayna may be  a little shy, but  she's warm and caring,  a really good
friend. She would never do anything  to hurt anyone, and right now she
needs  someone that  won't  leave her  after a  single  night. Do  you
understand what  I mean? She deserves  a honest chance. Will  you give
1her at least that much?"
     Cydric slowly nodded. "You're right. I suppose I do owe her that.
Should I apologize?"
     Mandi stood up  and dusted herself off. "How about  if the two of
you go out to a tavern together?  You can start all over without being
distracted."
     "Sounds like  a good idea. Help  me up, would you?"  He stretched
out his hand. Mandi reached for him, but withdrew her hand at the last
moment.
     "That was  extremely humorous,"  Cydric said,  getting up  on his
own. Mandi giggled.  Cydric frowned. "Is that a  leafhopper?" he said,
putting his finger on her shoulder.
     "What!" Mandi said, quickly turning  her head. Cydric flipped his
palm over and lightly slapped her cheek.
     "Oooh!" Mandi exclaimed.
     "Now we're even. Shall we go?" Cydric grinned.
     "You have to tell Brynna, you know."
     "Oh," Cydric said.

     The first course  was served shortly after  everyone had returned
to the house. Garrett frowned down suspiciously at his plate. "Is this
it?" he asked.
     The dish consisted of a slab  of cooked beef in between two thick
slices of bread. Kifton said, "It's a recipe Mother learned about from
a  bard who  came through  here a  few weeks  ago. He  said it's  very
popular down in  the southeastern duchy where it  originated. In fact,
it's named after the Duke himself."
     "What Duke is it named after?" Tassy asked.
     Kifton thought. "Leftwich," he said.
     "A Leftwich," Mandi repeated. She took a small bite. "It's good,"
she said.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                   The Bronze Horseman, Part 2
                        by Max Khaytsus
             

     Kera  gratefully  accepted  the sailor's  outstretched  hand  and
jumped down onto the pier. After a few weeks at sea, it was a pleasant
change to stand on ground that did not rock beneath her feet.
     "I hope you had a good voyage, miss," the sailor told her.
     "Actually that  was my  first time,"  Kera smiled.  "The constant
rocking was...well, a pain."
     "Never been on a ship before?" the sailor asked with a smile.
     "I have,  but only  for a  few hours at  a time,"  admitted Kera.
"Never had to sleep on one before."
     "That was a relatively calm trip," the sailor said. "You picked a
good time to travel."
     "Calm?" Kera exclaimed. "What about that storm last week?"
     "That wasn't a  storm," the sailor laughed. "A month  or two more
and storms like that will be common out there."
     "You below!"  someone yelled from  the ship.  "Get a move  on! We
need to unload cargo before nightfall!"
     "Better go," the  sailor sighed. "Gotta make room  for new cargo.
Enjoy your stay here, miss."
     "Thank you," Kera called as the  sailor rushed off. She walked up
the pier to the dock and stopped, looking both ways. A board-walk much
larger than the one at Dargon stretched  both ways as far as she could
see. Rien said that  The Tipsy Dragon, the bar she  was to deliver his
message to, was on the north shore  of the Laraka, about a league from
the docks. She turned right, adjusting  her pack, and went towards the
river.
     Kera wished she had her horse,  but as Rien predicted, she had to
sell the animal  in Armand. The ship's captain refused  to put up with
the horse on a three week journey  and there wasn't the time to travel
by land.  She dreaded  having to sell  the horse, as  it had  been her
constant companion  for the last  few months,  but there was  no other
choice and  Rien promised her she  would be provided a  replacement in
Sharks' Cove.
     After some walking Kera came to the  end of the dock at the north
end of the Laraka river delta. On the island ahead of her rose a large
stone castle that caught her eye.  It wasn't as tall or magnificent as
Dargon Keep, but a single silver tipped spire pointing up into the sky
over barely visible stone walls covered by a multitude of trees forced
her to stop and look.
     Never having  been more than  two hours  beyond the gates  of the
city of Dargon, Kera found everything to be a wondrous sight, even the
ship she sailed in on. This castle, the second she had seen in all her
life,  was  easily  one  of  such wonders  and  she  remained  on  the
board-walk admiring it  for a long time. She had  heard the sailors on
the ship talking about this castle,  Quirin Keep, and about its owner,
Baron Morgen Roderick, whose reputation  matched that of Sharks' Cove,
the so called "hind end of Baranur".
     Kera finally turned to the  road leading upriver, deeper into the
city and  began looking for  her destination. There were  many beggars
wandering the docks and a lot of drunken men slept by the walls of the
buildings near the  pier. The other people, who Kera  imagined to be a
little more respectable,  were not as friendly as the  folk in Dargon.
When  she  asked for  directions,  most  simply  ignored her  as  they
wandered by  and those who did  stop to shrug their  shoulders did not
even dare  to smile. The  entire atmosphere of  the city was  rude and
impersonal. One young  man even walked up and pinched  her behind. She
turned around and  whopped him one so  hard that he slunk  away with a
1bloody nose and  a fat lip. Then  for a whole block people  got out of
her way, which kept her immensely amused.
     By  late afternoon  Kera found  a two  story building  facing the
river with the words "The Tipsy Dragon" painted across a sign board on
the front,  right below an  overweight dragon reclining lazily  on the
letters.  The crowd  in this  part  of town  appeared to  be a  little
wealthier, better dressed and somewhat more friendly.
     After a brief  hesitation Kera entered the tavern.  Inside it was
murky and  loud, but Kera  was surprised to  see that no  drunk people
slept on the tables and, on the  whole, it was a lot cleaner than most
places in Dargon.
     A large bouncer looked down at Kera. He must have been over seven
feet tall!  She must have  missed him because  he blended in  with the
furniture so  well. Everything appeared  a little imposing.  Feeling a
little self conscious,  Kera slipped by him into the  large main room.
Three musicians  played on a raised  platform in the far  corner and a
young woman sang  in front of them.  Kera tried to catch  the words to
the song,  but realized they  were in  a foreign language.  She wasn't
that far from Dargon, was she? In either case, both the melody and the
words were pleasant  to the ear. Finding  a seat at the  bar, Kera sat
down.
     The bartender was  off at the other  end of the bar  and she took
the  time to  look  around a  bit. Perhaps  the  bar's most  prominent
feature was  a kite shield hanging  up above the center  stand, with a
large crimson  dragon sprawled  out on his  back, obviously  drunk and
just  having released  a  belch in  a puff  of  circular white  smoke,
painted on the shield's face. Kera almost giggled at the sight.
     "What can I  get you?" the bartender walked over  to Kera. He was
young, maybe a little older than she, with good muscle tone and a deep
tan from being  in the sun. Definitely not the  typical overweight and
balding barkeep with a dirty apron.
     "Mead," Kera  said and he  walked off.  She wondered how  to best
follow  Rien's  directions  without  making a  fool  of  herself.  The
bartender came back and placed a glass before her.
     "I'm carrying a message," she said.
     The man looked up. "For whom?"
     "I am carrying a message," Kera repeated.
     The man frowned  and looked around the room. "When  the singer is
done, talk to her."
     Kera nodded  and picked up  her drink. When the  bartender walked
away, she turned to watch the group on stage. The three musicians, all
men, were dressed uniformly. At first Kera thought it to be frivolous,
but  then realizing  that  by dressing  this way  the  men would  make
themselves more recognizable, she saw the logic.
     The  girl singing  was commonly  dressed,  if a  little like  the
merchant  class, which  could  afford better  garb.  She was  slightly
taller than Kera, dark eyed with blond hair.
     Kera was wondering why she has  to deal with a musician, when the
singer finished  her song  and bowed. The  patrons began  cheering and
even the bartender  clapped his hands. Someone yelled for  her to sing
again and the majority of the tavern began cheering her on.
     The young woman raised her hands  into the air to silence the mob
and when it was quiet, started  speaking in a slightly accented voice.
"Let me take a break and I will sing again later in the evening."
     "You're  just trying  to keep  us here  so we  buy more  drinks!"
someone yelled and the patrons broke into laughter.
     The  young woman  got off  the  stage and  went to  the bar.  The
bartender walked over to her and  placed a glass with dark blue syrupy
liquid before her.
     As Kera watched,  they chatted with each other for  a while, then
1the bartender pointed  in Kera's direction. After a few  more words he
left and  the singer walked  over and sat down  by Kera. Up  close she
looked a little older than Kera had initially thought. Maybe thirty or
so.
     "I am told  you brought a message," the woman  said. "Are you one
of the new couriers?"
     Kera shook her head. "I feel like one, but I'm not."
     "Who is it from?"
     "Sir Keegan," Kera answered.
     The woman looked puzzled. "Rien?"
     Kera nodded. "I didn't know what you called him here."
     "May I see it?"
     Kera picked up  her pack off the floor and  pulling the rolled up
sheet out, cautiously handed it over.
     Noticing the apprehension, the woman put the parchment on the bar
and reached her hand out to Kera.  "I am Adrea Rainer. I'm in the same
line of work as Rien and for the time being in charge here."
     "I'm Kera. Rien apprenticed me."
     Adrea laughed. "So  he finally broke down and took  one. Have you
had dinner yet?"
     Kera shook her head.
     "Good," Adrea said. "You can  keep me company. Brice!" she called
to the  bartender. "Serve us  dinner." She  picked up the  message and
asked Kera to follow her to a corner table, where she read it.
     "I'm afraid  he's a little  late going after Sir  Garwood Quinn,"
Adrea said. "We  sent a man up  two weeks ago. I expect  Rien will run
into him."
     "He  couldn't make  it earlier,"  Kera  said. "There  were a  few
problems."
     Brice came over  with a tray and served dinner  to the two women.
"It tastes better than it looks," he said and left.
     "Problems?" Adrea asked, ignoring the bartender.
     "I can't comment on them," Kera said. "I don't know if Rien wants
this known."
     Silence  ruled the  table for  a  few moments,  then Adrea  spoke
again. "How long have you been with him?"
     "We met in Dargon before Melrin," Kera said.
     "How did his vacation go?"
     "I didn't  find it very relaxing,"  Kera said, "but he  claims it
was a break from the normal routine."
     "First one he took in three  years," Adrea said. "He tends to get
into trouble just for the adventure of it."
     "Life with him isn't boring," Kera agreed. "I wish he hadn't sent
me here for his stuff. I can't begin  to tell you how many times I got
sea sick on that boat."
     "First time?"
     "No.  I've  been on  boats  before,  but  never for  three  weeks
straight."
     "A few more times and you'll get used to it," Adrea promised.
     "A few more  times and I'll develop a phobia,"  Kera smiled. "I'm
just glad I'm not going back the same way."
     "When do you want to get going?"
     "As  soon as  I can,  I suppose.  How long  will it  take to  put
everything together?"
     "An hour or so," Adrea said. "We weren't expecting you."
     Kera nodded. She  was surprised at the short amount  of time, but
did not give it away. "That will be fine."
     "Why don't you spend the  night here?" Adrea offered. "After that
boat ride you may need the rest."
     Kera thought about it for a moment. "I suppose a night won't make
1that big a difference. Why not."
     "Good,"  Adrea  approved.  "I'll  show you  to  your  room  after
dinner." Silence took hold for a  little longer, then Adrea pointed to
Kera's pack. "Is that all of your gear?"
     "I sold  my horse and armor  in Armand," Kera said.  "Neither one
had much  room or purpose  on the ship."  Not true, really.  The horse
could have served as  company at least as good as  some of the sailors
and the armor could have been  packed neatly under something to be out
of the way, but available if necessary.
     "A horse is no problem,"  Adrea answered thoughtfully, "but we'll
have to measure you for armor. What's your height...?"
     Brice returned to the table. "Adrea?"
     "We're not done yet," she looked up.
     "The couriers are back," he said.
     "Damn!" she  moved her plate  aside and  stood up. "One  of these
days I'll get out on the streets again and you can handle the messes."
     "That's what happens when you have children," he answered.
     "Get back  to the  bar," Adrea  shooed him  away. She  turned and
looked at Kera's confused expression.  "I'm the senior member present.
I deal with all problems. You want to come along?"
     Kera nodded and got up, following  Adrea to a room behind the bar
where two men  waited for them. She recognized one  as the courier who
delivered the message to  Rien in Dargon, but he did  not seem to know
her. Perhaps the  cloak had protected her better than  she thought. He
handed Adrea  a rolled  up sheet and  she sat down  to read  it, after
tearing the seal.
     "This just proves  Bichu can't go to war!" she  finally said. She
wrote her  response under the  message and resealed the  letter. "Take
this back. I want to know who and where!"
     The two men left.
     "They don't get to sleep over?" Kera asked with a smile.
     "I guess  I'm running  them a bit  ragged," Adrea  admitted, "but
there are all these rumors and no trace of their source."
     "What makes you think that Bichu does not want to go to war?"
     "Lack of a fleet. They need to get here to attack us."
     "I met  a Bichuese  man up  in Dargon," Kera  said. "He  was very
nice."
     "In Dargon?" Adrea asked.
     "He  is Baron  Connall's  Castellan," Kera  said.  "He came  here
because of a family feud at home."
     Adrea scribbled a note on a  sheet and folded it. "I'll have this
checked. He may know something useful. Let's go finish dinner."
     The two women returned to the dining room.
     "Do you know Rien well?" Kera asked suddenly when they sat down.
     "I suppose," Adrea  answered. "We've worked together  for a while
now."
     "Can  you  tell me  about  him?  He  doesn't talk  about  himself
much..."
     "That's a sensitive one," Adrea  said. "What do you already know?
You know where he is from?"
     "Charnelwood," Kera said. "He told me about his parents also."
     "Good," Adrea nodded. "I wouldn't be  telling you much if you did
not know this. It's the most sensitive part of him."
     "I understand why he has so much to hide..."
     "Well, let's see,"  Adrea began, "he wanted to find  out what the
real  world is  all  about.  His people  avoided  outside contact  for
centuries. A long time ago,  according to histories...what we now call
myths, the world was quite different. Our scholar could tell you a lot
more about those. I'll introduce you to him this evening. Rien's tribe
has  been  secluded from  everything  since  before Baranur  became  a
1country.
     "From  what I  understand, his  father was  one of  the very  few
contacts they made with the outside  world. How and why, I don't know,
but obviously one thing led to another and Rien was born. I don't know
how his tribe treats him, but he definitely feels he is an outsider to
them and above all, doesn't talk much about it."
     "What  about  his  name?  It  doesn't sound  elven.  Was  it  his
father's?"
     "What do you consider elven," Adrea asked.
     Kera honestly  could not answer.  "I meant it sounds  human," she
said.
     "It is,  but it's not  his father's. Have  you ever heard  of Sir
Gaelan Keegan?"
     Kera shook her head.
     "I'm not  surprised. He  doesn't talk much  about that  either. I
didn't know  about it until  I saw  it in a  book and brought  it up,"
Adrea said. "I don't know why that man never became a hero. Judging by
his biography,  he should  have. A  century ago  Sir Gaelan  Keegan, a
baron in  the Duchy of Arvalia,  together with a dozen  of his knights
defeated the  mob lead by  Duke Silas  Wolfric's brother, to  take the
duchy back...and didn't lose any of  his men in the overnight victory.
Of course that was also the only thing he did in his lifetime."
     Kera continued staring blankly, not understanding the relevance."
     "Rien was there,"  Adrea emphasized. "He was  Sir Gaelan Keegan's
squire. Gaelan took him to help him  learn how to fit in. That's where
he got the name."
     Kera felt herself  turn pale, forgetting her  question dealt with
Rien's name. "How old is he?"
     "I don't know,"  Adrea said. "He was about fifty  back then. That
would make him a hundred and fifty now."
     Kera gasped.
     "Are you all right?" Adrea asked.
     "I didn't realize he was that old," Kera said.
     "Elves tend  to do  that..." Adrea  smiled. "Or,  as he  puts it,
`Ljosalfar do; I don't know about the Dopkalfar'."
     They both laughed at the  expression and quickly finished dinner.
Adrea then sang a  bit more for the customers and  after, took Kera to
the back room and down a flight of stairs.
     "This is  where our people  stay," Adrea said, showing  Kera into
one of the rooms on the floor. "We  try to keep our staff in the dark,
underground. Regular customers stay on the top floor."
     Kera dropped her  pack on the bed and looked  around the room. It
was large, larger than the one in the Connall Keep. Candles mounted in
special brackets on the  walls kept the room well lit  and there was a
distinct lack of windows, which made  the room look gloomy in spite of
the plentiful lighting.
     "I've never slept underground before," Kera noted.
     "I promise you won't get sea sick," Adrea smiled.
     The bottom level of the tavern was occupied by a small library, a
relaxation area and  a laboratory. They were all brightly  lit, but it
was not obvious  by what. There were candles on  walls and tables, but
none were lit and none cast  shadows. Kera spun around, looking at the
floor, searching for her shadow, but it was not there.
     "Magic," Adrea explained. "Come, I'll  introduce you to the force
behind it."
     "Force?" Kera asked, hurrying to catch up.
     Adrea opened the  laboratory door and walked in  with Kera behind
her. The room was as big as the  rest of the level. It was filled with
counters and shelves  along the wall and tables in  the center. On one
of the tables was an assortment of vials and beakers and other various
1equipment, most of which Kera could  not identify if her life depended
on  it.  Most of  the  glassware  was  filled with  different  colored
liquids, some boiling over into other dishes, others standing aside.
     It took  Kera a  while to see  the blond haired  man in  his late
thirties  sitting across  from the  door, watching  a glass  with some
liquid heating over a flame.
     "Deven?" Adrea called to him and  he raised his hand in response,
without looking up.
     "Hold on." He had a distinct foreign accent.
     "Let me show you around," Adrea sighed. "He gets so much into his
work he forgets to eat. He tends to sleep here too..."
     Adrea took Kera  around the lab, mentioning  equipment and trying
to explain the setups. Most of  the information went right over Kera's
head. Noticing that,  Adrea assured her that a year  ago she knew next
to nothing about magic as well.
     Finally the liquid Deven was watching changed color and he turned
to the two women.
     "It's supper time," Adrea told him.
     "I already ate," he answered.
     "That  was lunch,"  Adrea reminded  him. "This,"  she pointed  to
Kera, "is Rien's trainee, Kera. Kera, meet our resident wizard, Deven.
We'd all be lost without him, but he'd be twice as lost without us."
     "A pleasure to  meet you," Deven said, taking  Kera's hand. "Will
you be staying a while?"
     "Just  overnight,"  Kera  said.  "I  came  by  to  pick  up  some
equipment."
     "That's good," he mumbled. "Is Rien here?"
     "He's up in Phedra," Adrea answered.
     "Oh...." the  mage said,  looking over  his shoulder.  "It's nice
meeting you..." he told Kera and went back to the tables.
     "Did I offend him?" Kera asked Adrea.
     "Don't  worry.  He  probably  just  remembered  something.  He'll
remember about you later in the evening."
     "I have a book I need to give him."
     "What book?" Adrea asked.
     "From the Ducal library in Dargon. Rien wanted it copied if there
are no copies here. He told me  it goes to `the guy who can't remember
his name'."
     "Sounds like you found him," Adrea smirked. She led Kera from the
laboratory to the  library. "Let's see if  we have a copy.  What is it
called? Who wrote it?"
     "Realities of Myths by Bistra."
     Adrea started  scanning the shelves. A  lot of the books  were in
foreign languages. Most looked new, but well used. "No," Adrea finally
said. "Doesn't look like we have it. What is it about?"
     "Uh..." Kera hesitated. "It talks about magic and mythology."
     Adrea pulled a thick tome from the shelf and started flipping her
way through  it. "It's not listed,"  she finally said. "We  don't have
it. I  never even  heard of it.  What did Rien  need a  mythology book
for?"
     "It's  not  exactly  mythology,"  Kera  said.  "It  explains  how
mythological and unnatural things fit in the natural world."
     "You sound like Rien."
     Kera smiled, a little embarrassed. "That's how he explained it to
me  when he  started  looking for  it."  It wasn't  an  answer to  the
question asked and she thought about  it a little longer. Adrea seemed
to know Rien pretty well. "Rien  got lycanthropy when he was in Dargon
and wanted  the book to  obtain more information about  it...he's fine
now," she added quickly.
     Adrea looked thoughtful. "Tell me about it."
1     Over  the   next  hour  Kera   told  Adrea  the  story   of  what
happened...most of what happened, since she felt some parts, including
her meeting  with Rien and  their relationship should  remain private.
Adrea was  very understanding and it  made Kera feel better  for being
honest.
     After their talk Adrea went to check on her daughter and Kera got
the book and returned to the laboratory.
     Deven was  back watching the  transparent liquid bubbling  over a
flame. If Kera  had not seen him move when  Adrea introduced them, she
would have sworn he was frozen  to the bench. She remained standing in
the doorway until  Deven looked up. He must have  been more alert than
he appeared.
     "Come in," he said. "What can I do for you?"
     Kera showed him the book. "Rien told me to ask you to make a copy
of this if you don't have one."
     Deven examined the book. "Never heard of it. Did you check in the
library?"
     "Adrea did. She didn't find it."
     "Then we probably don't have it," he said. "Let's go copy it."
     "Now?" Kera asked. "I heard it  takes months for a scribe to copy
a book!"
     "And  that's  precisely the  reason  my  father never  made  much
money," Deven said. "Magic is an art form of many applications."
     As  Kera  watched, Deven  got  a  clay  box  and a  long  stemmed
yellow-green plant and after placing the  box on the book, on which he
lay the  plant, he cast a  spell. Before Kera's eyes  the plant turned
into a book identical  to the one at the bottom of  the stack. The box
between the two books glowed a dim red.
     "What is it?" Kera asked when Deven finished.
     "A scribe's  hand," he  answered as  if miscellaneous  body parts
were an everyday occurrence to him.
     Kera took a deliberate step back, but he did not seem to notice.
     "This will only last for a day  or so," Deven went on. He found a
bottle of ink and a small green  gem and spent the next hour trying to
crush the gem  into powder and then,  mixing it with the  ink, made it
into a paste. All this time he kept asking Kera about the book and her
education and  discussing what she  knew, though he spoke  very little
about himself. By  the time the paste was ready,  Kera understood what
Adrea meant when  she said she learned  a lot about magic  in the last
year.
     The  paste, which  there turned  out to  be quite  a lot  of, was
molded  around the  new book  and Deven  cast another  spell. The  box
stopped glowing and  the paste disappeared. Deven proudly  held up the
two books.
     "Even the true owner wouldn't know  which is which. Give this one
to Adrea to send back. I will catalog the other."
     Kera thanked him and retreated upstairs. Deven was an interesting
person to  listen to, but  after an hour  of listening to  theories of
crystal stability and how to make  octopus ink into real ink, Kera had
a headache she felt may outlive her.
     "Is Deven  still working?" Adrea asked  when Kera made it  to the
bar.
     "He was making a copy of the book."
     "Is  he done?  Well, never  mind. He  wouldn't let  you go  if he
wasn't."
     Kera  smiled and  handed Adrea  the book  to be  delivered. "This
needs to be returned."
     "Who does it go to?"
     "Rish Vogel,  a chronicaler in  the Duchy of Dargon,"  Kera said.
"It's from the Duke's library. That's  the only place there was a copy
1in the whole city."
     "I take it neither the Duke, nor this Vogel know it's missing?"
     "They might by  now," Kera said. "I didn't think  they'd just let
us borrow it."
     "You should ask Deven about  some of his stories," Adrea laughed.
"He used to be a book thief."
     "With spells like that?" Kera asked, surprised.
     "He created  the spells  after the College  of Bards  caught him.
That's the one he'll  talk your ear off with. I'll  have the book sent
to Dargon as  soon as there is a courier  available," Adrea said. "Now
I'd better go beat Deven over the head. One of these days I should let
him alone,  just to  see how long  it takes him  to realize  that he's
hungry. He's bound to notice it sooner or later...I hope."
     Kera remained  on her stool,  watching the band play.  There were
more customers now than before. Brice  served her a drink and after an
exchange of pleasantries left to help the other patrons.
     After a  while Kera  began getting bored.  There wasn't  all that
much to  do at  the tavern.  The people  here were  for the  most part
middle aged  and cultured;  a crowd  Kera could not  fit in  with. She
nursed her drink a while longer and then went outside.
     A crescent  moon shone  above the  bay off to  the west  and Kera
wandered down the  street towards the harbor. Within a  few blocks the
buildings became rundown and a lack  of street light, artificial as it
was, became apparent. Kera noticed a  person sleeping by the wall of a
building and edged by carefully, so as not to disturb anything.
     For  the most  part the  streets  were empty,  but appeared  more
dangerous  than the  ones in  Dargon, even  if there  was an  assassin
looking for  her there.  A patrol  passed by Kera  and she  could have
sworn that at least two of  the three guards were drunk. They stumbled
on, past  her, not  even noticing  she was there.  Even in  Dargon the
guards, who  suspected Kera  was a  criminal, would  greet her  in the
streets. Sharks' Cove was dirty and foreign and impersonal.
     Kera turned off  the cobblestone street and made her  way down to
the river. During her voyage at sea Kera learned that her newly gained
night sight  made it possible for  her to see fish  swimming under the
water at night, but it was not  the case here. The water was murky and
dirty and although it ran very fast, it had a stagnant smell to it.
     Kera sat down on shore, looking into the water. She wanted to put
her feet in it, but decided against  it. The beach was dark and quiet.
On the  shore across from  her, at least  a half league  distant, Kera
noted  flickering lights  and a  dark  massive structure.  It was  the
Quirin Keep. She  watched the lights a little longer.  One, high above
the structure appeared and disappeared every few seconds. It must have
been a guard  patrolling up at the  top of the tower.  After some time
Kera  got up  and started  walking along  the beach.  For some  reason
Sharks' Cove felt wrong and uncomfortable. She could not wait to leave
this city.
     After a while  Kera heard a commotion and  edging carefully ahead
saw two people fighting in the  dark. Her initial instinct was to stop
them...or join the fight herself -- she was never exactly sure of this
impulse, but after a few moments  of thought decided not to interfear.
There was no  reason for her to  get into trouble in a  town where she
would only  spend the  night and  making a  resolution not  to provoke
anyone, returned to The Tipsy Dragon.

     In the morning, after breakfast, Adrea  took Kera out back to the
stables to  give her the  equipment and  the horses. The  night before
Kera was  measured for armor after  she returned to the  inn and while
there was no  plate that fit her perfectly, Enneth,  the large man who
was standing at  the door the previous day, found  a suit of chainmail
1for Kera overnight.
     The two  horses, as  Kera found  out, were  thundersteeds. Large,
heavy animals with  hairy feet. Kera had  to stand on her  toes to see
over their backs.
     "Rien takes  a lot  of ribbing  from us  about his  horse," Adrea
said, pointing to one of the mounts.  "A knight on a mare. Her name is
Kelsey, by  the way. But she's  better behaved than most  knights I've
met."
     Kera walked around  the horse, looking it over. On  the left side
of the saddle hung a kite shield covered by a cloth. Kera lifted it up
to reveal the  coat of arms --  a white oak on a  dim blue background.
She smiled at the sight of the symbol Rien had told her about.
     "It's covered so he won't  advertise," Adrea said. "I don't think
he uses it much  anyway. His lance has been lying  about back here for
the last two and a half years, gathering dust."
     "He's not much of a knight, is he?" Kera asked.
     "I don't  think he  understands knighthood," Adrea  answered. "Or
maybe he doesn't want to understand it.  He really has a point when he
says that  there is  no reason  to give an  opponent the  advantage of
equal footing."
     Kera walked over to the horse given to her. It was also female, a
few inches shorter,  but tall enough to  force her on her  toes to see
the top of the saddle. "If you're  trying to be inobvious, why are you
using thundersteeds?"
     "We  don't normally,"  Adrea said.  "Most are  riding horses  and
light war horses, depending on what  sort of jobs we do. Most couriers
use  lighter horses  that won't  stand a  chance in  a fight,  but can
outrun almost  any beast. Rien tends  to push his horse  to the limit,
along with himself, so he uses one that can take the strain and you'll
need one to keep up."
     Kera paused a  moment longer, looking over the  animals. "I guess
I'd best get going," she said finally.
     "Provisions and money  are in your saddlebags. Rien's  gear is on
Kelsey," Adrea quickly finished the inventory. "Will you need anything
else?"
     "Good weather and decent directions," Kera smiled.
     Adrea fished around in Kelsey's saddlebag and pulled out a rolled
up scroll. "One map. You'll have  to request the weather from a higher
source."
     Kera took the map and got up  on her horse, glad that she was not
wearing plate when having to climb. "Any messages?"
     "Just tell him `welcome back'."
     Kera took Kelsey's reigns and  looped them around a protrusion on
her horse's  saddle. This  way she could  control both  animals. "Does
this one," she pointed to the horse she sat on, "have a name?"
     "Not really. You can have the honor of naming her."

     Having heard that Garwood Quinn was still settled in Phedra, Kera
decided to enter  the village with caution. The farmers  a few leagues
south of  her destination warned her  that all roads were  guarded and
the only  traffic on them  has been a  group of Quinn's  men returning
from a raid. There was no evidence of any adventurers, or anyone else,
leaving Phedra, although  a number went there to claim  the reward. As
yet there has been no evidence that anyone had succeeded.
     With all this in mind, Kera  secured the horses in a wooded grove
away  from the  road,  in the  hills  south of  the  village to  avoid
detection. She  also left her  chain armor,  sword and bow  behind. If
Rien  was in  Phedra,  he may  need  help  and she  may  need to  stay
inobvious.  Being   inconspicuous  was  the  trait   of  the  thieving
profession which she knew so well.
1     After some  time of fighting her  way through the brush  and tall
stalks of grain,  Kera spotted an elderly man checking  the crops. She
was about to duck back into the growth, when he spotted her.
     "Hey! What are you doing in there?"
     She froze as he made his way to her.
     "Stop trampling  the wheat!  Get out  on the  path. What  are you
doing in there?"
     Kera  looked the  farmer over.  He was  probably in  his fifties,
shaggy, tired  looking and most  importantly, unarmed. With a  sigh of
relief Kera stepped out of the crop to face the farmer.
     "What are you doing here, girl?" he asked again.
     "I was on my way to Phedra," Kera answered.
     "On your way to Phedra?" the  man echoed. "Now that's a foolhardy
thing to  do. If  Sir Quinn  sees you, you'll  never leave,  young and
pretty as you are."
     "I am  looking for a  friend of mine,"  Kera said. "He  should be
waiting for me in Phedra."
     "No one has  friends in Phedra any more," the  villager said. "It
all belongs to  Quinn. If your friend was smart,  he avoided Phedra. I
recommend you do that too. Don't go to Phedra. It's not safe."
     "Maybe you've  seen him,"  Kera got an  idea. "He's  blond, about
this tall,"  her hand  rose to  the six  foot level,  "on a  light war
horse? He should have been here about a week or two ago."
     The  man thought  for  a moment,  as if  trying  to remember  the
multitude of travellers that passed by. "No one like that, miss. Not a
commoner. There was a knight like that, though."
     "A knight?" Kera snapped. She  knew Rien disliked knighthood, but
a knight riding into town would  be much more impressive. "When? Where
did he go?"
     The farmer shook his head. "A little over two weeks, miss, but he
didn't go anywhere. Sir Quinn challenged him to a joust...and he lost.
Everyone Sir Quinn challenges looses."
------------------------------------------------------------------------
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                 QQQ
             ______________________________________

             A Journal of Fact, Fiction and Opinion
             ______________________________________

Quanta is an electronically distributed magazine of science fiction.
Published monthly,  each issue contains short fiction,  articles and
editorials by authors around the world  and across the net.   Quanta
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1   (C)   Copyright    July,       1990,   DargonZine,    Editor   Dafydd
. All rights revert to the authors. These stories may
not be reproduced  or redistributed (save in the case of reproducing the
whole 'zine for further distribution) without the  express permission of
the author involved.






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  D     D A  A R  R G    O  O N N N     Z   I N N N E     || Volume 3
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  D    D  AAAA RRR  G GG O  O N N N   Z     I N N N E     || Issue 10
  DDDDD   A  A R  R GGGG OOOO N  NN  ZZZZZZ I N  NN EEEE  ||
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--   DargonZine Volume 3, Issue 10       08/03/90          Cir 957    --
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--                            Contents                                --
------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Ghosts of the Past           Max Khaytsus           Nober 15, 1013 and
                                                      Janis 16-17, 993
 Campaign for the Laraka II   John Deucette &        Yule 6-12, 1014
                              Carlo Samson
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                      Ghosts of the Past
                        by Max Khaytsus
             

     "Sir!" a young guardsman ran into Captain Koren's office.
     Captain Koren  and Lieutenant Kalen  Darklen exchanged a  look of
irritation.
     "Did they  ever teach you  the polite way  to deal with  a closed
door, soldier?" Lieutenant Darklen stood up.
     The guard quickly  straightened himself out -- it  was obvious he
had  run  a long  way  --  saluted his  two  superiors  and asked  for
permission to speak.
     Kalen sat back  down. "I want you  to take a night  shift for the
next two weeks,"  he said. "Perhaps I can inspire  some manners in you
by keeping  you near by. Hopefully  you will remember that  you should
knock before entering. You will start tonight."
     "My  current  shift  ends  at   sunset,  Sir,"  the  young  guard
protested.
     "When I was  your age," Captain Koren finally  spoke, "and Dargon
was half the  size it is now...and  there was twice as  much crime, we
had a  shortage of guards  and an  abundance of criminals.  I remember
moving into the guard house to supplement man power day and night. Now
report before I decide to give you a years worth of night shifts!"
     Kalen hid  a smile as  the guard straightened out  into exemplary
posture of attention.
     "Sir, after last  week's fire by the docks, the  old building was
completely  torn down  and  yesterday the  men  rebuilding it  started
digging up the old foundation to put in a new one..."
     The passive  `so what?' expression  on his superiors'  faces made
the  guardsman hurry  up with  his report.  "This morning  one of  the
workers stopped the  patrol I was with and showed  us what they found.
There were  skeletons under  the foundation...and this..."  He stepped
forward and handed Koren a metal pin.
     Turning the  pin in his hands,  Koren stood up. "Kalen,  have you
ever seen this before?" He handed it to his friend.
     Kalen took the pin and examined  it. "It's the same as the plaque
in the entry way."
     "Do you know what it is?" Koren asked the guardsman.
     "No, Sir. I  recall hearing a noble once lived  in this building,
before it was given to the town guard. I assumed that the pin belonged
to a noble... maybe one of those bodies."
     "This building," Koren said, "belonged  to the Ducal General, Sir
Connall Dargon, brother  to Duke Anton Dargon. He gave  it to the town
guard when  he was awarded  the Barony of Connall  in 889, as  at that
time it stood taller than most buildings and was made of stone.
     "The pin  and the  plaque are  symbols that  the town  guard once
used. They were changed over to the  new ones on New Years Day, in the
year 1000."
     "But  wasn't Fionn  Connall  the brother  of  Clifton Dargon  the
second?" the guardsman asked. "Wasn't he the one awarded the Barony of
Connall?"
     Koren  sighed, disappointment  deep within  him. "And  after your
patrol tomorrow, I want you to go down to the hall of records and find
out  the history  of the  Barony,  now County  of Connall.  I will  be
expecting your written report in two days. If I feel it lacks quality,
we will discuss this further, understood?"
     "Yes,  Sir," the  guard answered,  no longer  willing to  talk or
argue. His mouth has gotten him  into more than enough trouble for one
day.
     "That body  has to  be at least  fourteen years  old," Lieutenant
1Darklen said  when the Captain of  the Guard looked back  to him. "I'd
like to take a look."
     Both men stood up and followed the young guard out of the office.
"You don't have to go, Kalen,"  Koren said, remembering Kalen had been
taking the night shift ever since  the trouble with the provincial Mob
began. "You've been up for a while..."
     "I am curious," the Lieutenant said. "Sounds like an old case."
     Koren chuckled. "Then get my horse ready. I will be right there."
He stopped by  a desk in the lobby. "Where  is Lieutenant Shevlin?" he
asked the guardsman sitting there.
     "He left on  patrol a while back, Sir," the  man answered. "He is
patrolling the market."
     "And Lieutenant Milnor?"
     "She hasn't come in yet, Sir."
     Koren thought  for a moment.  "If either  of them shows  up, have
them meet me at the tavern that burned down last week."
     "Yes, Sir," the guardsman nodded.
     "Oh, and  has there  been any  word on  finding that  crazy mage,
what's his name?"
     "Cefn an'Derrin," the guardsman said. "Lieutenant Shevlin filed a
report yesterday. The owner said he  was paid enough to rebuild and is
not interested in charging anyone."
     "Listen to  what I say,  not to  the owner," Koren  answered. "If
he's spotted  in this town  again, I want  enough men watching  him to
make the King's  personal guard look like a cadet  convention! I don't
want crazies  running around my  city, setting fires to  seedy joints.
Next thing you know, they'll be burning down the keep!"

     "We  didn't  touch anything,  Captain,"  the  work foreman  said,
taking Koren directly to the  skeletal remains. "We couldn't. Your men
told everyone to leave and remained in  the pit. I hope you can finish
this soon. The fresh lumber will be brought tomorrow and we're already
a day behind schedule."
     "Stop rambling, Tarnak," Kalen told the foreman.
     The group  came up on  a narrow wooden  stair leading into  a ten
foot pit.
     "You'd better go first," the foreman said. "They drew steel on me
when I tried it."
     Kalen tested  his footing on the  stairs and went down  first. He
was met by two guards who  saluted him and remained at attention until
Captain Koren stepped  down. "Which way?" he asked,  brushing the dust
from the stairs off his uniform.
     "Right  this way,  Sir,"  one  of the  guardsmen  pointed to  the
opposite wall.
     "Lead on," Koren told him.
     "When was  this building  built?" Kalen asked  the foreman  as he
edged past the remaining guard on the stairs.
     "I don't exactly know," the man said. "Depending on who built it,
there should  be records  in the  town library  or in  the archivist's
possession in the  keep. Judging by the design and  condition, I'd say
about twenty years ago."
     "That sounds right for what the Captain was saying."
     Koren  and the  two guardsmen  with him  reached the  shallow pit
first. It  was some  ten feet  across and  three deep.  In it  lay two
skeletons. Koren hopped down into the hole and started looking around.
The other four men stood on the edge waiting.
     "What was this?" Kalen asked.
     The construction foreman  shrugged. "A grave, no  doubt. This all
was covered  over by the foundation.  It's not even necessary  for the
building. Wood a good  foot deep was used to cover  this over, to take
1the weight. Whoever laid it knew there were bodies under here."
     "Kalen!" Koren called out of the pit. "I want a doctor to look at
these skeletons and a mage too."
     Kalen gave an  order to one of  the men and jumped  down into the
pit after his Captain. "What did you find?" he asked.
     "Nothing," Koren shook his head.
     "Tarnak says  whoever built  this building  knew the  people were
under it," Kalen reported. "I hope they were already dead."
     "I hope so too, Lieutenant, but  we may never find out. Right now
I  want to  check when  this  tavern was  built,  by whom  and if  any
disappearances are recorded for that time. Guards in particular."
     "Tarnak guesses it was built  twenty years ago," Kalen said. "Did
many guards disappear back then?"
     "No more  than now,"  Koren said.  "Maybe one or  two a  year. It
happens. This is a dangerous line of work we're in."
     Kalen knelt  next to  his superior, studying  one of  the bodies.
"Did you find something?"
     "Look at the forearms on this one," Koren pointed.
     Kalen took a closer look. "His hands were cut off!"
     "So we've  got two dead men,  one quite possibly a  guard, buried
under  a building  twenty years  ago. Which  one had  the pin?"  Koren
called up to the guard on the edge.
     "Neither one of  them really had it," the man  said, jumping down
into the pit to show Koren where the pin was found, but at that time a
woman in a uniform similar to Kalen's appeared at the edge of the pit.
     "Captain Koren,"  she called down.  "I was  told to drop  by here
before going on patrol."
     "Ah,  Lieutenant Milnor,"  Koren looked  up. "Are  you with  your
men?"
     "They're up on the street waiting for me."
     "Do you have a medic among them?"
     "Yes, Sir. Is someone hurt?"
     "Everyone's  fine. I  just  want  him to  take  a  look at  these
bodies."
     Ilona Milnor looked  down the side of the pit,  seeing how to get
down best without getting her uniform dirty. Kalen hurried to her aid.
"Right here," he  said, reaching up. The woman accepted  his hands and
jumped down.
     "Get Moor for me," she told the guard in the pit.
     The guard nodded and after telling Koren where the pin was found,
climbed out and ran off.
     "What happened here?" Ilona asked, looking at the two skeletons.
     Kalen quickly  told her  the story of  the mornings  events while
Captain Koren examined the area again.
     "Anything?" the two younger officers joined their superior.
     "Nothing," he shook his head. "The clothing is too old to tell us
much," he said, pointing to a mostly decayed rag lying by a wall.
     Kalen attempted to  pick it up, but the cloth  crumbled into dust
at his touch. Beneath it he scooped  up a few rusty buttons and handed
one to Koren.
     The Captain  again shook  his head.  "Upper class,  definitely. I
wonder which of these bodies it belonged to..."
     There was sound  of running footsteps and  two guardsmen appeared
at the  side of the pit.  Jumping down, they saluted  the officers and
awaited instructions.
     "Moor, I  want you  to take  a look  at those  bodies and  make a
report before they are moved,"  Koren ordered. "Urone, go find records
for when this place was built and by who."
     The two men started at their respective tasks. Koren thoughtfully
looked on  as the medic  examined the remains.  He turned over  in his
1hands the  broken forearms of  one body,  all along shaking  his head,
then took a closer look at the skull.
     "Sir?" Kalen put his hand on Koren's shoulder.
     "Uh? Yes?" The man turned around. "What is it?"
     "Just the way you looked, Sir," Kalen said.
     "Oh, it's nothing,"  Koren sighed. "I was just  wondering if that
was someone  I knew  once. It  will be  twenty-five years  this winter
since I first came here, you know.  All those boys who never came back
home from their patrols..."
     "It's a  dangerous job,"  Kalen said. "You  said it  yourself. It
could happen to any of us."
     "That it could," Koren sighed again and went over to the medic.
     Behind him Kalen  felt Ilona wrap her arms around  his torso. "It
scares the  hell out of me  when he starts eulogizing  like that," she
whispered.
     Kalen turned  and put his arms  around her. "Don't let  it get to
you. Let's go see what they're doing."
     "I don't know about this skull,"  Moor was saying to Koren. "It's
missing teeth, but I don't know if they fell out or got knocked out. I
don't even feel competent enough to guess..."
     Kalen knelt  by the second skeleton  before Moor got to  it. This
one did not appear to have any broken bones and the teeth seemed to be
all in place.
     "I can tell you this one is  male," Moor went on. "Or rather used
to be..."  He turned to  the second body  and looked up  at Lieutenant
Milnor. "A lot of help I am," he smiled.
     "I already sent  for a doctor," Koren said, "but  you may as well
take a look first. One learns to take initiative in this job."
     Moor got back to work and Ilona bent down next to Kalen to better
see what was  being done. She leaned  with her hands on  the ground to
keep her balance and immediately brought them back up. "Oh!"
     Everyone  looked at  her  as  she picked  something  up from  the
ground. It was a  finger bone with a silver ring  still around it. She
removed  the ring,  turned it  over in  her hand  and gave  it to  the
Captain. He examined it, turning it over; a silver ring with a crimson
red stone  and small letters  engraved on the  side. It struck  him as
very familiar  and then a  deep pain made it  obvious what it  was. He
turned away from the others, kneeling on the ground, tears building in
his eyes. There was only one person that skeleton could have been.
     Kalen and Ilona exchanged a look of confusion, then Kalen got up.
"Captain? Are you all right?"
     Adrunian Koren wiped his eyes and  brushed back his grey hair. It
was not fitting for his men to  see the Captain of the Guard this way.
He  turned. "I  am fine,"  he  said. "Lieutenant  Milnor, resume  your
patrol. Darklen, go home. Get some  rest. The Duke doesn't like having
to pay extra." He walked over to the other side of the pit and started
pacing.
     Ilona  stood up  and  walked  over to  Kalen.  Moor  got back  to
examining the skeletons, pretending he did not see the exchange.
     "Go ahead," Kalen told Ilona. "I'll make sure he is fine before I
leave."
     She kissed  him quickly and he  helped her out of  the pit. "I'll
come for you after your shift."
     Ilona Milnor left in the direction  of a lone guard pacing by the
staircase.
     Kalen  turned  and  leaned  against  the edge  of  the  pit.  His
relationship with  Ilona was more  than professional, but  Koren never
seemed  to mind  that. Kalen  even suspected  at one  time that  Koren
promoted her because he did not  want stories of a Lieutenant seeing a
mere guard.  Ilona, of  course, proved competent  in her  position and
1affair between equals wasn't enough for others to gossip about.
     Kalen watched  as his  Captain measured the  pit back  and forth,
wondering what that ring Ilona found  was. Could it have belonged to a
lady  Koren loved?  He couldn't  recall any  useful stories  about the
Captain's past and saying a quick  prayer to the Goddess Randiriel for
Ilona's safety, walked over to Koren.
     "Sir?"
     Koren looked over. "Didn't I tell you to go home?"
     "Yes, Sir," Kalen said, "but I was wondering if you had breakfast
yet."
     Koren shook his head. "I eat over paperwork."
     "So that's where the stains on my reports come from..."
     Koren smiled grimly.
     "Would you care to join me for breakfast?"
     The Captain grumbled for a bit,  but with some more convincing on
Kalen's part,  finally accepted  the offer  and they  went to  a small
tavern a couple of blocks away.
     "Kalen, I know what you're trying  to do and I am very grateful,"
Koren said after placing his order.
     Kalen ordered as well. "Do you wish to talk about it, Sir?"
     "Just Adrunian," Koren said. "We're  not on duty." He fell silent
for a moment, then started talking again.
     "Let me tell you a story..."

                               ***

     Deanir  knocked on  the  boss' door  and  entered. Seadon  Rohden
followed him in. "Lord Rohert," Deanir said, bowing to his uncle, "the
shipment just left."
     Jaipena Rohert, a grey haired man  in his sixties, looked up from
the book he was reading. "Any trouble?"
     "One sailor  said he would  report us to  the town guard  when he
found out what the cargo  was," Seadon reported. "The Captain promised
to throw him overboard when they get far enough out at sea."
     "Fine, fine," Rohert said, laying the  book down. "Now I want you
two to  put together the group  to raid the caravan  leaving tomorrow.
Deanir, I want you to make sure  Seadon knows his way around. We'll be
doing this a lot now."
     The  two men  bowed again  and left.  "How big  is the  caravan?"
Seadon asked outside in the corridor.
     "Twenty  wagons at  last count  and  still hiring  guards. I  had
Liriss sign up on it. He'll keep us informed until we're ready."
     "Can we do it in one day?"
     "No.  We have  to be  ready in  a few  hours. I  was thinking  of
ambushing them."
     "I don't think we'll make it," Seadon groaned. "Do you want me to
sign on as well just in case?"
     "No,  no. That's  all right.  "One man  is fine.  I'd rather  put
together the  party that  will ambush them.  I'll start  gathering the
people right away. I  want you to find Liriss and  see how the caravan
is doing. Meet me after sunset at the Hungry Shark. Alone."

     The caravan grouped in a large  camp just outside the town gates.
People ran back and forth in preparation for the next day's departure.
There were at least two dozen wagons standing around, together with at
least that many tents. A few armed men wandered among them.
     Making his way between the  wagons, Seadon spotted Liriss sitting
by a small  fire with two other men.  A fat pig hung on  the spit over
the flame and periodically  one or the other of the  men would poke it
with a stick and then turn it  over. Seadon hesitated as to whether he
1should approach Liriss  with other people around, but  soon decided it
would be less  obvious if he would call him  aside, rather than simply
stand by a wagon, having people walking by stop and look at him.
     "Liriss?" he called out, approaching the fire.
     The young man turned to  look behind him, then recognizing Seadon
said a couple of  words to his companions and got  up. Seadon waited a
few feet away, not  wanting to let the other men have  a close look at
him.
     "New plans?" Liriss asked him.
     "No. Just getting last minute information," Seadon answered.
     "We're still leaving at day  break," Liriss said. "We're supposed
to have twenty-eight wagons by then and about forty guards."
     "Forty?" Seadon asked. "Rohert only has twenty-two men total!"
     "Well, I told you last week he's  too old for this line of work,"
Liriss motioned. "Things aren't how they were when he was our age."
     "In this  town you either  work with him  or against him  and the
town guard is after you either way."
     "I want him to retire," Liriss  said. "Even if I have to convince
him  myself. I  think I  can  turn this  business around,  make a  big
profit."
     "That's  between  the two  of  you,"  Seadon shrugged.  "My  only
concern is how we're going to take forty men."
     "I've  been working  on  that,"  Liriss smiled.  "The  two I  was
talking to are all ready on our side."
     "Rohert won't like you adding people to the take."
     "They're not taking anything."
     "So what did you promise them?"
     "A piece  of the action," Liriss  smiled, taking the hilt  of his
sword. He pulled it up from the scabbard, "and this is the action." He
slammed the sword back down. "They'll be of use."
     "We'll need more than two men," Seadon said, "providing they stay
with us long enough."
     "I  also  took the  liberty  of  obtaining  some poison  for  the
guards," Liriss said. "We will need no more than a dozen men."
     "Poison?" Seadon asked.  "For forty guards and  all the merchants
and travelers?"
     "Just enough for  the guards on the night watch.  We only need to
catch the caravan off guard for Rohert's attack to work."
     "All right  then. Make sure  you're on duty tomorrow  night. I'll
tell Deanir your plan."
     "Good. I'll be ready."
     Seadon  scanned the  caravan. There'd  be  more to  take on  than
Liriss thought. "See you tomorrow night."
     The two  men walked off  in different directions,  Liriss putting
together his plans and Seadon pondering how to stop them. Poison was a
new twist. He slowly walked through the city gates, looking at the two
guardsmen patrolling along the road.
     Seadon walked over  to the side of the road  and slowed his pace.
One of  the two guardsmen  started down  the road towards  him. Seadon
smiled to himself. "Your place at midnight," he whispered as the guard
passed by him.

     Seadon made  it to  the designated meeting  later than  he should
have. He  spent the evening at  the tavern, discussing the  plans with
Deanir and later dodged back and forth across town, trying to lose the
spies following him around.
     Seadon Rohden  was not a  criminal. Just  the opposite, he  was a
town guard. A new  one -- only three weeks on the job  -- but none the
less,  a guard.  He  came to  Dargon when  a  childhood friend,  Glenn
Aposhyan, known here as Adrunian Koren,  sent for him a message saying
1that new guardsmen were needed at  this frontier town, to which he had
come some five years before.
     Seadon, a mere two years younger than his friend, spent his early
years working  as a mercenary  for hire and guard  for a week.  It was
just the experience  needed to become a town  guard, particularly now,
when crime was on the rise and  people needed to fight it were looking
for easier, quicker ways to make money.
     When  the Captain  of the  Guard  heard that  a trustworthy  man,
unknown in  Dargon, was  available for  hire, it  was arranged  that a
guard would meet Seadon in Tench,  brief him and leave everything else
to fall in as a lucky `coincidence'.
     And so  Seadon embarked on a  month long journey, first  to Tench
and then  to Dargon, where he  would join the criminal  underworld and
aid the town  guard. It all went  well, except that a  few days before
reaching town,  his wife, Nadya,  gave birth  to their first  child, a
baby girl.
     Seadon almost turned back to Tench, willing to forget his new job
and duty, but was reminded by his wife that what he was doing was more
important and she and the girl  would manage. This appeal to his sense
of duty  convinced Seadon to  go on to Dargon,  but he could  not stop
cursing himself for agreeing to the job  when he had a family to think
about.
     Having set  up his wife  and daughter in  a boarding house  in an
area that happened  to be safe, but cheap, Seadon  started his job, at
first by watching the market and  the docks and later following people
he thought were the individuals  associated with the local underworld.
On his  fourth day  in Dargon,  Seadon made contact  with a  man named
Liriss, a professional cutthroat in  his mid twenties, who, by chance,
failed at his attempt to relieve a merchant of his gold and was nearly
apprehended by a pair of guards.
     With a lot of luck and careful timing, Seadon aided Liriss in his
escape and having made this friend,  was soon pulled into the world of
the underground.
     By this  time he had done  a couple of jobs  for the organization
and reflected well  in the eyes of Jaipena Rohert,  an elderly man who
appeared  to be  everyone's grandfather  on  the surface,  but on  the
inside  was the  undisputed  boss and  practically  owner of  Dargon's
underworld.
     Of course Seadon's successes were  insured by the town guard. One
or twice each week he would meet with a Lieutenant or even the Captain
of the Guard and make a  full report, including plans and projections.
They were all very  small, up to now. This was going to  be the job in
which Rohert and  his men were to fail miserably.  The planned raid on
the caravan was just the large event that the Captain had been waiting
for and  now, being  able to  plan for it  was going  to make  all the
difference in  the world. The next  two days were to  deliver the blow
that was going to destroy large scale crime in Dargon.
     Seadon walked past  the door he was to enter,  throwing a careful
glance back.  With the street seemingly  empty, he turned back  to the
building and  knocked twice. The  door was  opened by a  plump elderly
woman who  quickly ushered him in  and rebolted the door.  Inside were
four guardsmen, including Adrunian Koren and the Captain of the Guard,
a dignified woman in her late forties with lightly greying hair.
     "Where you followed?" she asked Seadon as soon as he was inside.
     "I don't think so," he answered.  "Deanir has been sending men to
follow  me all  week, but  I think  it's sheer  jealousy. He  wants to
impress his uncle with his good work."
     "Is that how you make a report?" Adrunian mocked him.
     Seadon straightened out  to stand at attention  and repeated what
he said, appending a "Ma'am" on the end.
1     The Captain smiled. Formality was not her concern for the moment.
She indicated a chair. "Take a seat." One of the guards helped the old
woman out of the  room. She was there only to make  it look normal for
passers by outside.
     Seadon sat down at the desk  next to Adrunian and the Captain sat
opposite to them. The other two guardsmen remained standing.
     "What happened? Are they getting ready?"
     Seadon shifted in his seat. "The caravan is to be attacked on its
first  night out.  The plan  is to  poison the  guards and  kill those
sleeping."
     "How many men are involved?"
     "A dozen. Most  of them are on  their way already. I  am to leave
first thing tomorrow morning. They gave me the night to make an excuse
to my wife. They don't know she knows."
     "Good. I'll  have the caravan master  informed tomorrow," Captain
Byer said. "Anything else?"
     Seadon shook  his head. "A  dozen men  is about half  of Rohert's
resources. If  you take them,  you'll probably take him...or  hurt him
enough to stop him, in the least."
     "All right. You did well. Go along with their plan until you know
we're present. Try not to kill anyone."
     "Yes, Ma'am," Seadon answered.
     "Dismissed, soldier," the Captain said and got up.
     Seadon and Adrunian got up as well. "Almost over," Seadon smiled.
     "We'll have a lot to talk about when it is," Adrunian said. "Five
years is a long time to catch up on."
     "And  this time  you  won't  drink me  under  the table,"  Seadon
laughed. "I've learned to hold the liquor well."
     Adrunian chuckled himself. "It's hard to believe you already have
a daughter. You'll have to age quicker now. Be more responsible."
     "I wish I could be home  more often," Seadon sighed. "I feel like
I'm hurting them by doing this."
     "You best go then," Adrunian told his friend. "You'll be away for
a few days."
     Seadon looked over to Captain Byer talking to the two guards. She
nodded her consent for him to leave and he went to the door.
     "Give  my greetings  to Nadya,"  Adrunian slapped  Seadon on  the
back. "See you at the raid."

                               ***

     Captain Koren  took a lengthy sip  from the glass. "That  was the
last time I saw him."
     "And you never found out what happened?" Kalen asked.
     "We suspected,"  the Captain said, "searched,  asked questions...
Rohert's nephew  had a  problem with  new people.  He was  paranoid as
hell.  I guess  Seadon was  followed that  night after  all... Strange
thing is  we never  heard of  Deanir again either.  He must  have been
frightened off by the raid."
     Kalen nodded. He  had no way to comfort his  friend's deep wound.
"I'm sorry, Sir."
     "Don't call  me `sir' in here,  Kalen. I chose to  have breakfast
with a friend, not a subordinate."
     Kalen hid a smile by taking  a swallow from his glass. "So you're
sure it's him?"
     Koran dug into his pocket and pulled out the ring he found on one
of the bodies.  "This is Seadon's wedding band. It's  identical to the
one Nadya wore...she was found floating  in the ocean a few days after
the raid. Her ring is in my office."
     "Maybe we'll learn  what happened now that we  found the bodies,"
1Kalen said. "We need to identify the other one."
     "I hope  so," the Captain said.  "I want you to  reopen the case,
Kalen. I want their  killer and I want to know  what happened to their
daughter."
     "I'll get on it as soon as we get back to the guard house," Kalen
said.
     "No you won't," Koren repocketed  the ring. "I wasted your entire
morning. Go  home and get some  rest. I'll leave you  instructions for
the evening."
     "Yes, Sir," Kalen answered mockingly. He handed the money for the
meal to a  passing bar maid and  the two men left the  tavern. As they
passed a table near their own, the man sitting there studiously looked
down at his half finished meal, then got up, paid and quickly left.

     "So they finally found them," Liriss smirked to Kesrin. "I'm glad
you told me. The  town guard is so slow these  days, you almost forget
they're out to get you."
     "Just doing  my job, Lord,"  Kesrin answered. "It sounded  like a
story you might want to know...but obviously you already do."
     The crime lord  leaned back in his chair, a  crooked smile frozen
on his  face. "Let me tell  you, Kesrin, I  am that story. It  was the
high point of my first few years on the streets.
     "After my  parents died, I was  left to mingle with  the slime in
the  alleys,  until  one  of  Rohert's  men  made  the  yearly  urchin
collection. Those that  could be used were left,  myself included; the
rest were  sold or  drowned --  no one  seemed to  mind back  then and
Rohert considered it a public service -- you couldn't get away with it
these days. The guards keep a firm inventory of the urchins now.
     "After  some  time  of  picking pockets  and  picking  locks  and
climbing through open  windows, I gained a position of  trust and some
power and  started seeing things I  did not like. Rohert  was soft. It
was like a mouse  doing the cat's job. He lost  money and people right
and left and  his nephew, Deanir, a remarkably ambitious  fellow of my
years was just waiting for the family business to fall into his hands.
     "I never believed  the old man had what it  took to control crime
and  his  little  heir  was   far  too  greedy  to  expect  reasonable
improvement..."

                               ***

     Deanir paced the room in a  nervous frenzy, waiting for his uncle
to appear. It  was the middle of  the night, a day  before the biggest
job and he just caught a spy in their ranks. It would be hard to top a
night like this.
     "My  Lord,"  a   man  entered,  "we  have   the  prisoner's  wife
downstairs. Do you want them together?"
     "No,  but  make  sure  that  they know  we  have  both  of  them.
Cooperative prisoners are easier to deal with. Let them know they have
a lot to lose."
     As the man turned to leave,  Rohert entered through a door across
the room. "You hold on there, Bradan," he stopped the guard and turned
to Deanir. "What happened?"
     "Seadon Rohden  is a spy,  uncle," the young man  answered, doing
his best to appear relaxed. "I had  him followed to a meeting with the
town guard."
     "Really?" Rohert paused  thinking. "Bring Liriss here.  I want to
know just how this man made it in."
     "He is with the caravan, uncle. He will lose his job."
     "Good.  If he  loses this  one,  it will  go much  worse on  him.
They'll be  short handed, so  they will  hire on someone  else without
1checking him  out. Go now!  No. You go, Bradan.  I need to  speak with
you, Deanir."

     Liriss nodded grimly  to the information Bradan  revealed to him.
The old man was  weak, but better not to be crossed.  "We have to make
our move  tonight," he  finally said,  having heard  all there  was to
hear. "Take care of  Deanir, then have one of the  men loyal to Rohert
take  my place  with the  caravan.  The town  guard can  help me  take
control."
     "What about Rohert?" Bradan asked.
     Liriss smiled. "By morning Dargon will be mine."
     The two men soon reached the building Rohert made his base in and
went in different directions, each  thinking of how best to accomplish
his task and gain the rewards that a job well done would bring.
     Liriss reached his  target first. He found Rohert  in his office,
sitting in his chair, seemingly asleep. `This is too good to be true,'
flashed through Liriss' mind. He  spotted Rohert's eating dagger lying
on the table and  picked it up. He contemplated the  irony of dying by
one's own tools but as he made it  to the other side of the table, the
old man's eyes opened. "You  should not leave these unattended, Lord,"
Liriss handed the weapon to his superior.
     Rohert eyed him, took the dagger, but did not say a word.
     "I was told you wanted to see me," Liriss went on. "Did something
happen?"
     "Rohden contacted the town guard."
     "Are you sure?" Liriss was surprised at his own surprise. He knew
the facts. It has  been quite a surprise when he  heard it himself for
the first  time from  Bradan and  that he was  able to  duplicate that
reaction pleased him.
     "Why don't you tell me a little more about him?" the old man went
on, ignoring the counter question.
     "He helped me avoid the town  guard," Liriss said. "I took him to
a bar,  bought drinks. We talked.  He told me  he was new in  town and
looking for a  job. I arranged a meeting between  him and Deanir. He's
got a wife and daughter. That's about it."
     "Did  you check  on him  before arranging  that meeting?"  Rohert
asked, replacing the eating dagger on the table.
     "No, Sir," Liriss  said. "I always thought it was  the job of the
man doing  the hiring. Besides,  he was in town  for only a  few days.
There was no one to ask."
     Rohert got up. "And so it is.  Rohden is from out of town. He did
not have a rep. Now he does."
     "How do  you want to  handle it?" Liriss asked,  realizing Rohert
had no  ill plans for  him, but  it was too  late to change  his plan.
Another opportunity may not come any time soon.
     Rohert went over to the window overlooking the market. It was the
window Liriss would get  to know well in the years  to come. "We can't
take the caravan if the guards know..."
     Liriss picked up the dagger off  the table and walked over to the
window as well. "What about the men you sent out yesterday?"
     "Send someone out  to intercept them," Rohert  sighed and turned.
The dagger in Liriss' hand found it's way to the old man's stomach.
     "Didn't I tell you not to leave this lying around?" he grinned.

     Having sent a  man to take Liriss' place, Bradan  made his way to
Deanir'  personal  quarters.  In  just a  few  hours  these  luxurious
apartments would  be his very own.  The verdict on the  current master
was all ready out. It was time for a change of ownership.
     As he knocked a young woman opened the door. "Can I help you?"
     Bradan drew  his sword.  "Guess." He  followed the  woman inside,
1only to find Deanir undressed and in bed. The coward gave up so easily
that there  was not even  a story left  to tell to  the grandchildren.
Everything simply fell into place.

                               ***

     "And that's  all there  is," Liriss  finished telling  the story.
"Rohden was obviously working for someone, though he did not admit it.
He was a  strong man. Didn't even  crack when we tortured  his wife. I
finally had him buried alive under  a building. I'm sure his character
made a solid foundation."
     A partial smile escaped Kesrin's lips. "What about the other one,
Sir?"
     "The other  isn't even  worth a mention,"  Liriss said.  For some
reason his voice  had a pleasant, self gratified tone.  "Deanir got on
my nerves so much over those few  years that I had him beaten until he
was purple all over, cut his  hands off personally and buried him with
Rohden. Let it be said they died in the same war.
     "I  had  to let  Bradan  go  after some  time  as  well. He  grew
obnoxiously greedy after a few years. Acted just like Tilden."
     Kesrin smiled. "Whatever works, right?"
     "That's  right," Liriss  said.  "Drowned Rohden's  wife and  kept
their girl. My revenge..." He  stopped, thinking about the little girl
that grew up in his care. She was a good girl when she was young...
     "Do you know who the girl is?" he asked Kesrin.
     "No," the man shook his head. The story which Liriss told him was
a good twenty  years old and he  had no clue which of  the twenty year
olds working  for him  it could  be. Liriss had  a talent  for finding
people, even with the town guard watching his every move.
     "Kera," Liriss  intoned, his voice sounding  like breaking glass.
"I made a mistake at the start...but I will have it fixed."
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                      Campaign for the Laraka: Part II
                         The Juggernaught Unleashed
                    by John Doucette and Carlo N. Samson

Port Sevlyn, Duchy Quinnat, Baranur
6 Yule, 1014 B.Y.

     Lord Morion leaned against the  hearth, every muscle in his weary
body crying  out for  rest. When  he was first  ushered into  the Lord
Mayor's  study,  he'd  been  offered  wine  and  a  chair  by  a  very
industrious servant. Morion declined  rather harshly (the poor servant
had yet to recover from his fright) for he knew that if he stopped for
so much as a few minutes, he would succumb to sleep.
     "Where is  that man?" Morion  said aloud. He adjusted  his armour
for the tenth  time in as many  minutes in a vain attempt  to stop its
chafing. He'd been wearing it ever since the battle on the beach north
of Shark's  Cove on  the last  day of  Melrin that  saw Sir  Ailean of
Bivar,  Knight  Captain of  the  Northern  Marches, and  two  thousand
Baranurian soldiers die with another seven hundred wounded in a futile
effort to repel the Beinison Empire's amphibious landing there. Morion
was now in command of the twenty-eight hundred survivors he'd led away
from the battle at Ailean's  order. Morion had been ruthlessly driving
his men  and women  towards Gateway  Keep in the  Royal Duchy.  It was
there  he   intended  to  make   a  final  stand.   Being  outnumbered
nine-to-one, all he  could hope to do was delay  the enemy long enough
for Sir Edward Sothos, the Knight  Commander, to gather what forces he
could  and prepare  Magnus for  a siege.  Morion knew  his chances  of
substantially hampering  the enemy's progress  were slim, but  he must
try. Magnus lies  one hundred twenty-six leagues  beyond Gateway Keep,
less  than a  three-day forced  march. If  Morion failed,  Baranur was
lost.
     The door  to the study opened  and the Lord Mayor  of Port Sevlyn
stepped  through to  greet his  guest.  "I apologize  for keeping  you
waiting so long, Lord Morion. Urgent matters required my attention."
     "What matters?" Morion snapped.
     "I hardly think that tone is  warranted, my Lord. I was seeing to
the Militia's organization."
     "I'm sorry, Lord Mayor. It's been a long and disappointing week."
     "So your  messenger told us," the  Lord Mayor said as  he crossed
the room to his desk. "Won't you be seated, my Lord?"
     "Not to seem ungrateful, but no. I  fear if I sat in that chair I
would be asleep in moments. Sleep is a luxury I can't afford."
     The Lord Mayor nodded in  sympathy. "I understand." He paused for
a moment, clearly reluctant to bring  up the next point of discussion.
"When  will they  arrive?" 'They'  referring to  the Beinisonian  army
coming up the Laraka.
     "My  scouts say  three  days," Morion  said tonelessly.  "Perhaps
more, perhaps less."
     "Three--but we can't  be ready that soon! I'll have  to order the
gates shut  now! We won't  be able to bring  in the food  or livestock
from the surrounding farms! Those supplies were necessary to feed your
men.
     Still, better to have the sheep in the house causing a stink than
outside feeding  the wolves, as they  say. We'll just have  to tighten
our  belts more  than  anticipated.  I suppose  we  could try  getting
supplies in by riverboat at night. What do you think, my Lord?"
     Morion had  crossed to  the study's only  window. He  stood there
with his back to the Lord Mayor,  looking down on the plaza. There was
much activity, none of it to  do with buying and selling goods. People
were running  this way and  that with  no apparent purpose  other than
1panic. There were a few who did not panic. The soldiers of the Militia
were one  group. Morion saw  a squad from  the Regiment based  in Port
Sevlyn tramp  hurriedly past on their  way to the town's  walls, hands
clutching  tightly at  longswords or  busy adjusting  straps on  their
leather armour.  The other  group that was  immediately visible  was a
group  of perhaps  twenty people  energetically loading  supplies onto
carts. Morion could  see a grey-haired merchant, and a  wealthy one at
that, directing  the chaos with grim  efficiency. A man who  knows the
storm is  coming and is  trying to get what  he can to  safety, Morion
thought.
     Morion had become  so lost in his own thoughts  that he failed to
notice the Lord Mayor speaking to him. "What was that, Lord Mayor? I'm
afraid I've got a great many things on my mind."
     "Perfectly  understandable. I  asked your  Lordship's opinion  on
bringing supplies in by riverboat at night."
     "I don't think you will be needing extra supplies."
     "Not need  extra--? We  must have more  supplies, my  Lord. There
simply  isn't  enough  to  feed   the  population  and  the  increased
garrison."
     Morion turned from the window to face the Lord Mayor. "There will
be no  increased garrison, Lord  Mayor," Morion said, the  fatigue and
stress of the past six days evident in his voice. "I only stopped here
as long as I have to ask you to order the Militia to come with me."
     The Lord Mayor's  face went grim. "You mean to  abandon us to the
enemy?" he asked with barely suppressed anger.
     "You forget who you speak to."
     "Forgive me,  my Lord," the  Lord Mayor said with  great sarcasm.
"It was my  understanding the Royal Army existed  to protect Baranur's
citizens from harm."
     "There are reasons  for my actions. Not that I  am accountable to
you or anyone save myself. But I  do not want it said that I callously
left the people of Port Sevlyn to the mercy of the Beinisonians.
     You will  listen to my  reasons, Lord Mayor, in  silence." Morion
explained the situation to the Lord  Mayor. Port Sevlyn was simply too
large  for  Morion to  adequately  defend  with  the force  under  his
command. There was nothing else to do but retreat to Gateway Keep.
     "You give us to the enemy as you would meat to a pack of wolves!"
the Lord Mayor shouted.
     "Yes!"  Morion shouted  back. "I  need  time and  I'm willing  to
sacrifice Port Sevlyn to get it!"
     "How dare  you!" the Lord  Mayor practically screamed.  "The King
will hear of your actions. Then let us see how long you keep your head
on your shoulders!"
     "If I can't delay that army long enough there will BE no King!"
     Morion forcibly  quieted himself.  "All of  Baranur is  at stake,
Lord Mayor," he said  in a normal tone of voice.  "What happens in the
next few days  will mean the difference between a  chance for survival
and no chance at all. I don't expect unquestioning obedience from you.
You're not a soldier and I know such a sacrifice is alien to you. Give
me  the Militia  and surrender  the  city. The  Beinisonians might  be
delayed half a day figuring out what  to do with you. At least it will
be something."
     The Lord Mayor  of Port Sevlyn looked down at  his hands for long
moments. When  he spoke, he  did so quietly  and Morion was  forced to
strain to hear  him. "You are right  when you say I am  not a soldier.
From the  time of my  youth I  was being prepared  for the day  when I
would assume the title of Lord Mayor.  For most of my adult life, Port
Sevlyn has been  my world. Now it  is threatened and I  can do nothing
about it and  that makes me angry.  You have reminded me  of my higher
duty to my  sovereign. It has been  too long since I lived  up to that
1obligation."
     "I am considered an honourable and just man by most," he said and
then added with a smile: "Even if I drive a hard bargain at times." He
looked up at Morion.  The look in his eyes was  one of resignation. "I
will do what you ask of me.  The Militia will stay here. We shall hold
the enemy as long as we can. And  now, if you will excuse me, my Lord,
I have preparations to make." So  saying, the Lord Mayor rose and left
the study.
     Morion turned  back to the window  and gazed out upon  the doomed
city. The merchant was still  there, over-seeing his own preparations.
He'd been joined by two women, one of  the same age as he with a regal
beauty that went beyond physical  appearance, the other a much younger
vision of  the elder. Morion  watched the man  as he pleaded  with his
wife and  daughter. He won't leave  until his life's work  is safe and
they  won't leave  without him,  Morion thought.  Finally, after  many
minutes of sometimes  heated discussion, mother and  daughter left for
the docks after tearfully embracing husband and father. The man looked
after them  until they were out  of sight and then  threw himself into
his preparations once more.
     "I hope  you succeed. I wish  you luck." Morion put  his helm on,
adjusted  his sword  and  again unsuccessfully  tried  to relieve  the
chafing his  armour was  giving him.  "You knew  this was  coming, Sir
Edward. You  sent too few men  to Ailean. The responsibility  for this
death  and suffering  is yours.  When next  we meet,  there will  be a
reckoning."  Morion turned  from the  window  and stalked  out of  the
study.

Crown Castle, Magnus, Royal Duchy, Baranur
6 Yule, 1014 B.Y.

     Sir Edward Sothos was having a most peculiar dream. He dreamed he
was in a castle  in a kingdom called Baranur and  that a very annoying
person was pounding on his door.  Wait a moment, he thought, that's no
dream. "Come!"
     The door opened and torch-light  streamed in, silhouetting a tall
slender figure.  "Edward," the figure  said, "a messenger  has arrived
from Lord Morion."
     "All  well  and  good,  Jan,"  Edward  said,  forgetting  in  his
half-awake state to  address his friend by her nickname,  "but is that
any reason  to wake  me from  the first  sound sleep  I've had  in two
weeks?"
     "Sir, I assure you this is important."
     Edward sighed. Another night's sleep  ruined. "Well come in then.
And light a lamp, will you?" Jan  closed the door and stumbled over to
the table  near Edward's  bed. After  a few  minutes of  fumbling, she
managed to light  the small battered lamp Edward kept  as a momento of
his days as a wandering knight.
     Edward squinted slightly, his eyes not yet adjusted to the light.
What he saw  made his eyes open  wide. Jan was dressed  in a nightgown
that did a barely adequate job of concealing her.
     "What's the emergency?" Edward asked.
     "A messenger  has just arrived  from Lord Morion, sir,"  Jan said
tightly.
     "Lord Morion?" Edward repeated, a sense of dread coming over him.
     "Sir Ailean is dead, sir," she said in a subdued voice.
     "Dead?"
     "Yes,  sir.  Lord Morion  reports  that  the Beinisonians  landed
approximately  twenty  thousand  men.  Ailean  stayed  behind  with  a
rear-guard  to give  Morion time  to  extricate the  bulk of  Ailean's
force.  His Lordship  also  informs  you that  both  Regiments of  the
1Pyridain Borderers are no more." Jan  paused for a moment, reading the
last of the message. "Sixteen  thousand Beinisonians are marching down
the Laraka. Heading for Magnus."
     "What!?" Edward flung the bedclothes  off him and just as quickly
reclaimed them. The shock of hearing of his former squire's death made
him  forget  he  wasn't  wearing anything.  Jan,  blushing  furiously,
quickly turned around.
     "Commander," Edward said with  embarrassment, "perhaps you should
return  to  your   own  quarters  so  that  both  of   us  might  more
appropriately attire ourselves."
     Jan blushed even more furiously  than before as she realized what
she was wearing. "Yes, sir," she said and then fled the room, her face
the colour of her hair.
     Several minutes  later, Edward had  just put  on his robe  when a
nock sounded at his door. "Come!"  The door opened and Jan entered the
room, this time  attired in a heavy  gown she had picked  up years ago
during her first and last visit to Dargon City.
     "Much  less distracting,  Coury,"  he commented,  causing Jan  to
blush  slightly. Edward  frowned.  Jan's been  acting strange  lately.
We'll have to  talk later. Edward retrieved Morion's  message from the
table and sat in a chair while quickly scanning it.
     "Nehru's Blood," he cursed softly. "What have I done?"
     "Sir?"  Jan asked,  confused. She  sat  next to  Edward. "Have  I
missed something?"
     Edward  smiled  ruefully,  the expression  softening  his  scar's
effect. "When  Marcellon and  I 'found'  Luthias in  Pyridain, Luthias
told us  that he was  tortured for information regarding  the Laraka's
defenses.  He said  Beinison  was  planning a  large  invasion of  the
Laraka. Just how  large he wasn't sure. I notified  Sir Ailean, may he
know  The  Reaper's  Acceptance,  and  instructed  him  to  prepare  a
reception for the Beinisonians."
     "I never  thought they would attack  so soon. I was  certain they
would wait until  the storm season was safely past.  Just as I thought
they wouldn't attack until spring."
     "Surely you can't mean you blame yourself?"
     "I am the Knight Commander.  Ultimately, EVERY act the Royal Army
undertakes is  my responsibility. But  in this case...in this  case, I
waited too long before ordering the Militia to join Ailean. And now we
face the greatest crisis of the war thus far."
     Jan didn't argue with Edward's  answer; it was in accordance with
everything her instructors taught her  at the Royal Academy. "What are
your orders, sir?"
     "Send  a  messenger after  Luthias,"  Edward  said after  only  a
moment's pause. "Order the General to  turn 'round and make for Magnus
with all haste." Edward stood and  walked over to a cabinet. He opened
it  and sorted  through the  various maps  until he  found the  one he
wanted.
     "Here,  Coury.  Hold  this  up  against  the  wall,  would  you?"
Stretching her arms wide, Jan held the map up while Edward poured over
it.  Lost in  thought, Edward  did not  become aware  of the  intimate
nature of  their stance for several  minutes. When he did,  he quickly
disengaged himself and put the map away.
     "Hmmm. Yes.  Well. Send  a runner to  General Wainwright  are you
getting all this?"
     "Yes, sir," Jan replied. "Sorry, sir."
     "Send a runner  to General Wainwright. Have him  put the garrison
on alert. And wake the King."
     "Now?"
     "Yes. Now. If the situation becomes  any worse, I may have to ask
for the Edict. Go. We don't have much time."
1     "At once, Your Excellency."

Gateway Keep, Royal Duchy, Baranur
9 Yule, 1014 B.Y.

     Lord Morion  galloped to the  front of the column  stalled before
the entrance to Gateway Keep. He'd given instructions for his force to
enter the small fortification situated on the fork of the Laraka where
its  mountain tributary  joined  the  larger body  of  water while  he
scouted the surrounding terrain.  He'd just finished the two-hour-long
reconnaisance and was looking forward to a hot meal and a warm bed for
the first time  in many days. The  sight that greeted him  now was not
one to gladden his heart or soften his anger.
     "What's  the  delay,  Commander?"  Morion called  as  he  reigned
sharply in.
     "The Castellan  refuses to  open the gate,  my Lord,"  the senior
Regimental Commander replied.
     "Refuses to--have you told him who we are?"
     "Yes, my Lord. He says he has  orders from the Lord Keeper not to
let us in."
     "Ho, Castellan!" Morion shouted up at the wall. "Open this gate!"
     "Who's that?" a man called from the battlements.
     "Lord Morion  of Pentamorlo. Now  open this damned gate  before I
break it down!"
     "I cannot, my Lord. The Lord Keeper has decreed you are not to be
allowed admittance."
     "In the name of His  Royal Majesty," Morion said through clenched
teeth, "I  ORDER you! OPEN THE  GATE!" Morion could see  indecision on
the Castellan's face. The man turned and sent a runner off to the gods
knew  where. After  several increasingly  tense and  angry minutes  of
waiting, a young man dressed in robes appeared on the wall next to the
Castellan.
     "What seems to  be the problem, Lord Morion?"  the green-eyed man
asked in a neutral tone.
     "My  men and  I require  entrance and  this fool  won't open  the
gate!"
     "Then what is  the problem? Castellan Ridgewater  is following my
orders. I do not want you inside Gateway's walls nor on my lands. Take
your force and leave."
     "Perhaps you  do not  understand the  gravity of  the situation,"
Morion said, trying hard to remain calm. "There is a large Beinisonian
force headed upriver  and they shall surely attack Gateway.  Let us in
and perhaps we can hold out long enough for reinforcements to arrive."
     "Gateway  has no  need of  your assistance,  Lord Morion,  we are
quite capable  of defending ourselves.  If His Majesty scolds  you for
not being here, feel free to inform him I acted on my own authority."
     Morion straightened somewhat in his saddle. "Lord Keeper, you are
defying the King's order! If you force me to, I will storm the gate."
     "I highly doubt that, my Lord. I believe your force would be more
concerned with their own safety,"  Ne'on said. His nostrils flared and
he  seemed to  swell  with  power. In  an  instant,  the ground  under
Morion's men turned  to molten lava and men and  women screamed as the
searing-hot liquid  ate at armour and  flesh. Then, as suddenly  as it
appeared, the lava ceased to exist. "Don't you agree?" Ne'on added, as
the  panic among  the  assembled Regiments  subsided. The  white-robed
Keeper with the  ghostly appearance spoke inaudibly  to the Castellan,
and left the wall for his own quarters.
     Morion cursed  in rage. He could  not fight magic as  powerful as
this. Nine days  he had driven the two thousand  eight hundred men and
women under  his command at  a brutal pace  in order to  reach Gateway
1Keep ahead of  the enemy. And now, all that  effort, all that hardship
was for naught. Not knowing what else to do, Morion ordered the senior
Commander to turn  the men around and  make camp on the  south bank by
the ford they'd crossed over the Laraka's tributary.
     The Beinisonian  juggernaught was  coming and Morion's  last hope
had been  snatched away. When  the enemy arrived,  he and the  men and
women who followed him would die.
     "I wish you were here, Kimme. Just to see your face once more."

Port Sevlyn, Duchy Quinnat, Baranur
9 Yule, 1014 B.Y.

     The Main Body of the  Beinisonian Expeditionary Force flowed over
the fields and meadows towards  its destination: Port Sevlyn. The Lord
Mayor stood on the battlements and  watched them come, rank after rank
after endless rank,  the morning sun glinting off  weapons and armour.
An unstoppable juggernaught that wanted  Port Sevlyn for its own. "But
I shall deny you  this city for as long as I am  able," the Lord Mayor
said aloud. "You will find us an expensive morsel."
     The men and women of  the Militia Regiment head-quartered in Port
Sevlyn watched the  enemy come as well. All were  frightened. Most had
never even trained together, at least not in Regimental strength. They
were light infantry, their armour  and weapons their own. Their tunics
were the only pieces of equipment  the Royal Army supplied. They faced
an enemy who outnumbered them thirteen-to-one and far out-classed them
in  terms of  armour.  An enemy  who  knew war  because  it was  their
profession.  For  all  their  shortcomings,  for  all  their  lack  of
professionalism,  one  very  important  thing could  be  said  of  the
Militia.  They didn't  run. That  said  something about  the depth  of
feeling each had for their homes and family.

     Joachim Vasquez lowered  the spyglass. They can't  have more than
one thousand men, he thought. And light infantry, to boot. This should
be easy. "So why do I have this feeling?"
     "Sir?" Colonel Conti asked.
     "Nothing,  Colonel. Merely  thinking out  loud." Vasquez  sat his
horse  for  several moments  more,  staring  at Port  Sevlyn's  walls.
Perhaps they'll listen to reason.  "Colonel Conti, get us two shields.
We're going to parley with them."

     "My Lord  Mayor!" the Commander  of the Militia called  out. "Two
riders approach under shield of truce!"
     The Lord  Mayor hurried back up  to the walls he  had so recently
left. The Beinisonian army had halted  it's advance half a league from
the city. Detachments were making their  way around Port Sevlyn to the
north. The city would be completely surrounded in an hour.
     Two riders bearing white-painted  shields rode unhurriedly toward
the walls.  The rider on  the left wore a  scarlet cape. That  and the
gilding on  his breastplate suggested  he was a  high-ranking officer.
The second rider,  from his appearance, was only  slightly inferior to
the first.
     The two  stopped just inside  earshot. The higher-ranking  of the
two shouted in barely adequate Baranurian, "I am Field Marshal Joachim
Vasquez, commander of this army. Who commands Port Sevlyn?"
     "I do. Lord Mayor of Port Sevlyn."
     "Your Worship, will you surrender the city to me?"
     "I think not."
     "Many will  die needlessly. I  greatly outnumber you.  Should you
force me to attack, I will still take Port Sevlyn. The only difference
will be the number of young men on both sides who will perish."
1     "If you  want my city, Field  Marshal, you must pay  the price. I
assure you it will not be cheap!"
     "You will not reconsider?"
     "I had thought my meaning plain. Or are you hard of hearing?"
     "So be  it!" Vasquez wrenched  his horse's reins around  and rode
back  to his  troops.  Within minutes,  the enemy  were  on the  move.
Vasquez had committed  perhaps the most grievous sin  an officer could
make; he let his emotions get the better of him.

Western wall, Port Sevlyn, Duchy Quinnat, Baranur
9 Yule, 1014 B.Y.

     Conn  Alrod stepped  back from  the  wall as  the grappling  hook
sailed over the battlements and  securely lodged itself. The rope went
taught  with  tension.  Conn  stepped forward  and  looked  down.  Two
soldiers were climbing  up the rope. Conn shook his  head in wonder at
their state of mind. He allowed them  to get halfway to the top before
cutting the rope free of the  grappling hook. The two tumbled to their
deaths.
     A ladder clattered against the wall  not two feet from where Conn
stood. He ran  to the nearest basket of rocks  and man-handled it over
to  the ladder.  Grunting with  the  effort, he  strained and  pushed,
finally managing to wrestle it to  the top of the battlement. With one
last push, he sent sent it over. He was rewarded by the screams of the
Beinisonians climbing the ladder.
     Conn  heard  a  scrabbling  sound to  his  right.  A  Beinisonian
appeared, gripping the  rope of another grappling  hook. Conn couldn't
deal with the  enemy soldier because more were approaching  the top of
the ladder.  Cursing in frustration,  Conn heaved with all  his might,
trying to push the ladder away.  No success. The first Beinisonian was
almost to the top.
     A soldier  of Conn's Company  had engaged the Beinisonian  on the
rope, who  by this  time had  gained the  battlements. A  second enemy
soldier  had already  appeared.  The first  Beinisonian  cut down  his
opponent  with ease.  Conn suppressed  an oath.  The dead  soldier had
celebrated her nineteenth birthday only days before.
     A third  Beinisonian appeared  on the rope.  Conn glanced  to his
left and saw the  first of the enemy soldiers on  the ladder reach the
top. Conn did the only thing he could. He ran.

     "There!  We've   gained  a   foothold!"  Field   Marshal  Vasquez
exclaimed. "Attacking prematurely has caught them off-guard."
     "I hope so, sir," Colonel Conti replied. "I hope so."

     The  Beinisonian  wedge was  growing  alarmingly.  Unless it  was
contained, and soon, the siege of  Port Sevlyn would end very quickly.
Conn  shouted frantically  for  his Senior  Sergeant  to gather  every
available  man. "Hurry,  Patrick!"  Five Baranurians  were trying  and
failing to hold the wedge.
     The Sergeant came  running with a squad at his  back. He'd had to
seriously  deplete  the  number  of  men defending  the  rest  of  the
Company's frontage to  gather this many. Conn drew  his sword. "Musn't
keep them waiting, eh, Patrick?"
     "No, sir," the big Sergeant agreed, a wide grin on his face.
     Conn turned to  his men. Filling his lungs with  air, he shouted,
"At them, lads! Charge!" Conn threw his  band at the wedge with a fury
born  of desperation.  He lost  his sense  of time.  Everything seemed
covered in  a red haze.  All Conn  knew was that  he had to  reach the
ladder  and push  it  away. He  hacked and  stabbed  blindly into  the
struggling  mass  of  Beinisonians,   Patrick  Havercamp  beside  him,
1grinning fiercely all the while.
     A sword was thrust at Conn's face. He beat it aside and struck at
his attacker. He  felt the blade bite  but could not take  the time to
see if  his opponent was  dead or merely wounded.  A body fell  at his
feet. He  stepped over it,  concerned only  with reaching his  goal. A
Beinisonian appeared in  front of him. Conn thrust his  sword into his
enemy's abdomen, twisting his wrist to  turn the stroke into a killing
one.
     Conn ripped his sword free and  suddenly, he was at the ladder. A
Beinisonian reached the top of the ladder and stopped, surprised, when
he saw not  a friend waiting but a foe.  He died, Conn's blood-smeared
blade in his throat.
     Confronted with his goal, Conn  came back to himself. He sheathed
his sword  and bent to  the task of pushing  the ladder away  from the
wall. His back was wide open to attack, but he trusted Patrick to ward
him as he had done in the past.
     Conn  summoned all  his strength  and still  the ladder  wouldn't
budge. He pushed  until his face went  red and the veins  stood out on
his neck and  still nothing. He was  about to give up and  look for an
alternate method when suddenly the ladder moved, seemingly on its own.
It was then  Conn became aware that Patrick was  beside him helping to
push  the ladder  away. Conn  also noticed  the sounds  of battle  had
diminished somewhat.
     "We did it, sir."
     Conn sat against  the battlements, chest heaving as  he took much
needed air  into his lungs.  "Yes we did,"  Conn gasped out.  When his
breathing was  under better  control, he heaved  himself to  his feet.
"What's the bill, Patrick?"
     "Ten, sir."
     "Damn! Damn damn damn!"
     "Captain Alrod!" a  voice called from the right.  "They're on the
wall again!" Cursing fate, the  Commander, the gods, Conn gathered the
ten survivors and  led them against the new Beinisonian  wedge. It was
going to be a long day.

Port Sevlyn, Duchy Quinnat, Baranur
9 Yule, 1014 B.Y.

     Lord Quillien Thorne  sat heavily in his favorite  chair. He said
nothing for several minutes, causing his family to worry. "We won't be
leaving," he  announced to  startled gasps. "The  Beinisonians control
the river. Any  attempt to leave by ship would  be suicide. We'll just
have to wait out the storm."
     There was a  long moment of silence. The concern  on the faces of
his wife Rolanda and his daughter Jannis was plain to see.
     "Quillien," Rolanda asked softly, "will the city hold?"
     Lord Thorne shook his head gravely. "There's not much chance of a
successful resistance. The enemy is too  strong; it's only a matter of
time."
     "But we can't just stay here," Jannis said. "What will we do?"
     "The only  thing we can  do," Lord  Thorne replied. "Hide  in the
vault until this is over."
     "And pray that it will be over soon," Rolanda said.

     "It's  only a  matter of  time," Commander  Karellan said  to his
assembled  Company  commanders.  The  six  Captains  and  four  Senior
Sergeants took the news calmly. They  had known what the Commander had
told them  since before  the battle  began. "We  lost two  hundred men
today.  Among them  four  Captains  and six  Sergeants.  And that  was
against perhaps a third of the  enemy's force. We'll lose a great many
1more tomorrow.
     I know the  situation is hopeless, but you must  impress upon the
men the importance  of continued resistance. It is vital  we give Lord
Morion the time he needs to prepare at Gateway. Nothing else matters."
Karellan sat. "Dismissed."

Main Body camp outside Port Sevlyn, Duchy Quinnat, Baranur
9 Yule, 1014 B.Y.

     Joachim Vasquez  was not a happy  man. He had lost  eight hundred
men dead  or wounded in  the day's fighting. And  the worst of  it, he
thought bitterly,  is that my  stupidity is  to blame. "I  should have
waited until the city was surrounded before I attacked." Colonel Conti
refrained from commenting.
     "The scouts report no sign  of enemy activity in the countryside,
sir.  They don't  even seem  to be  making an  attempt to  relieve the
garrison."
     "These Baranurians are more ruthless than I thought. They know we
must take Port Sevlyn. We can't afford to leave a threat to our supply
line unmolested."
     "Then why didn't they reinforce the garrison?"
     "Simple, Colonel.  They're setting up defenses  further along our
route  of  march. They  need  time.  And  they  are quite  willing  to
sacrifice one of their cities to  do it." Vasquez looked Conti full in
the face. "We may be in for a longer war than we expected."
     Vasquez  stood and  began  pacing  back and  forth  in the  small
confines of  his tent. He had  a most difficult decision  to make. The
strain  was  evident on  his  face.  Finally,  after many  minutes  of
agonized indecision, Vasquez had reconciled his warring emotions.
     "Colonel," he said, voice grim, "we  must make an example of Port
Sevlyn. As  much as I detest  this order, I  must give it to  you. The
Baranurians must be shown the price of resisting us."
     "What do you  mean, sir?" Conti asked, a  cold sensation creeping
up his spine.
     "When the city falls, the survivors  of the garrison and half the
populace are to be put to the sword."
     Conti closed his eyes.
     "May Sanar forgive us," Vasquez whispered.

Crown Castle, Magnus, Royal Duchy, Baranur
9 Yule, 1014 B.Y.

     "With  all due  respect,  Sire, this  is not  the  time for  this
discussion."
     "It  is  the only  time  for  this  discussion, Edward.  If  Lord
Morion's report is  accurate, the Beinisonians will  have reached Port
Sevlyn by now. For  all we know, the city may be in  enemy hands as we
speak."
     "Exactly my  point! If Port  Sevlyn has fallen, Connall  won't be
able to reach  Gateway in time to  prevent it falling as  well. And if
Gateway goes, the enemy will be knocking at Magnus' gates next."
     "Yes. Which is why we will  discuss this now. While we still have
time."
     "Yes, Sire." Edward took a seat in the War Room, formerly used to
house last Nober's Council sessions.
     Haralan occupied  the seat next  to Edward, his  long-time friend
and advisor. "Edward," Haralan began,  "this is personal. That's why I
wanted us  to be alone. You  and Commander Courymwen have  been seeing
quite a lot of each other lately, haven't you?"
     "What do you  mean?" Edward asked even though he  had a fair idea
1of what Haralan was getting at.
     "People--important people--have taken notice of you and Commander
Courymwen's `visits' to some of the  taverns and inns in Magnus. There
has been talk.  I see you understand the situation.  These people have
suggested that your mind isn't on the war."
     "That's absurd! Have I not embraced Baranur as my homeland? Did I
not reject my birthright in Galicia? What more must I do to prove I am
no outsider?"
     "Easy, Edward. This  is me. I know you are  loyal to Baranur. But
there are  powerful nobles who  would like to  see you gone  and their
candidate  in your  place.  Edward,  they may  be  able  to turn  your
friendship with  your aide into the  kind of rumors that  destroyed my
niece's  marriage.   If  they  succeed,   you  could  well   lose  all
respectability as  Knight Commander. When  that happens, you  cease to
become an asset. Indeed, you become a liability."
     "Is Your  Royal Majesty  ordering me  to terminate  my friendship
with Commander Courymwen?" Edward asked formally.
     "That would be my last resort. But I will so order if I am forced
to," Haralan said with regret.
     "May I be dismissed, Your Royal Majesty?"
     Haralan sighed.  "Yes. You  may" --the sound  of a  door slamming
interrupted Haralan in mid-sentence--  "go." Haralan sighed once more.
"This is a problem I can do without."

Western wall, Port Sevlyn, Duchy Quinnat, Baranur
10 Yule, 1014 B.Y.

     Conn woke  to a perfectly  sunny day.  He'd had a  difficult time
sleeping. Lying  on hard  stone, in leather  armour, was  not terribly
conducive  to a  good  night's  rest. He  groaned  and wearily  hauled
himself to his  feet. He turned to look out  over the battlements. The
camp fires of the enemy ringed  Port Sevlyn. Just over twelve thousand
men were  stirring, preparing  to once again  throw themselves  at the
hopelessly outnumbered defenders.
     Patrick came over  and silently offered his  commander and friend
some  cheese and  half a  loaf  of bread.  Conn ate  his breakfast  in
silence, staring at the bodies piled up at the base of the wall.
     "Today or tomorrow, Patrick."
     "Yes, sir."
     "I wish I knew if Fayonna was safe."
     "Yes, sir."
     Suddenly, Conn  stiffened. He turned  to order the stand  to, but
Patrick was already off. He'd seen Conn's reaction and had guessed its
cause. The Beinisonians had finished  breakfast and now they wanted to
play.

Main Body camp outside Port Sevlyn, Duchy Quinnat, Baranur
10 Yule, 1014 B.Y.

     Vasquez's  heavy infantry  Regiments marched  out one  hour after
dawn. Conti  had passed on  the order to make  an example out  of Port
Sevlyn. The men of the Regiments that had suffered during the previous
day's unsuccessful attack were eager for revenge. The remainder of the
soldiers accepted their orders because they had been trained to.

Western wall, Port Sevlyn, Duchy Quinnat, Baranur
10 Yule, 1014 B.Y.

     Conn delivered  a backhand  chop to the  throat of  his adversary
that sent the  Beinisonian staggering back, his life  pouring out onto
1Port Sevlyn's walls.  The Beinisonians had attacked  with their entire
force, twelve  thousand men.  The eight hundred  or so  defenders were
hard pressed to hold them. But by some miracle, hold them they did. It
was already  past noon  and the  third assault on  the walls  was well
underway. Conn  had been fighting for  seven hours. To him,  it seemed
like an eternity.
     The enemy had established fighting wedges at several points along
the wall.  Conn and the  other Company commanders spent  virtually all
their time  and energy  leading their small  reserves against  a wedge
whenever one was started. All Conn knew  was what was in front of him.
And that  was the  five or  so survivors  of the  newest wedge  on his
Company's section of wall.
     "Forward!" Conn snarled and led his fifteen men and women against
the five enemy.  His blade seemed a  part of him, an  extension of his
hand. He  reached out towards  an enemy soldier, felt  resistance, and
then his arm was red up to the elbow.
     "Well struck!" Patrick said. Conn hadn't even been fully aware of
what he'd  done. It  was as if  his body was  on automatic.  He looked
around, leaning on the battlements to give his weary, aching body some
kind of reprieve.
     Through a strength  born of sheer desperation, the  men and women
of  the 2nd  Quinnat  Militia Regiment  were  keeping the  Beinisonian
invaders from  gaining a lasting  foothold on  the walls. But  at what
great cost. Many  a young Baranurian lay sprawled in  death. Many more
were grievously wounded.
     Trumpets sounded to the north, east, and west; three notes rising
in  successive  octaves. The  Beinisonians  withdrew  from the  walls,
formed  their Regiments  into line-of-march,  and slowly  proceeded to
their  encampments surrounding  Port Sevlyn,  the setting  sun casting
shadows over the battlefield. Port Sevlyn had survived another day.

Gortholde's Hall, East Quarter, Magnus, Royal Duchy, Baranur
10 Yule, 1014 B.Y.

     A  large group  of soldiers  from the  Huscarl Regiment  known as
Magnus' Maniacs had  cleared a space in the centre  of the common room
and were  heavily involved in  a drinking  contest that could  only be
described  as  monumental. Thunderous  cheers  issued  from the  group
periodically  as the  contest neared  its  zenith. None  of the  other
patrons  of the  tavern seemed  to  take notice;  it was  best not  to
attract  the Maniacs'  attention unless  you could  fight well,  drink
large quantities  of ale, and had  a somewhat warped sense  of humour.
Even then it was usually better for all concerned if you were involved
with them for as brief a time as possible.
     Seated in a shadowy corner away  from the rest of the patrons was
a man wearing a black tunic  over a battered suit of chainmail armour.
A very  expensive-looking amulet hung from  a chain about his  neck. A
tankard sat  untouched on the table  in front of the  dark-haired man.
Incredibly,  the man  was asleep,  completely oblivious  to the  noise
surrounding him.
     A tall, red-haired young  woman wearing the blue-and-gold uniform
of The  King's Own over  a suit of  chainmail entered the  tavern. She
nodded a greeting to  the proprietor as she walked over  to the bar to
speak to him.
     Gortholde  was an  aging,  retired warrior  who  had gambled  his
life's savings to  buy the tavern. The gamble had  paid off handsomely
and now Gortholde was well-off, if  not wealthy. Most of his customers
were soldiers. Gortholde  had a soft spot for those  who served in the
Royal Army. Any soldier who  frequented his establishment could expect
good drink for low prices. Gortholde's  Hall was THE spot for off-duty
1soldiers to relax and unwind after a day's work.
     Gortholde  stiffened  to  almost-attention  as  he  answered  the
red-haired woman's questions;  she wore a Commander's  uniform and old
habits do die hard. He pointed in the direction of the black-clad man.
The woman  thanked him  and proceeded  to thread  her way  through the
revelers, tankard of ale in hand.
     She pulled  up a chair and  sat facing the dark-haired  man. Only
then did she realize he was  asleep. Smiling and shaking her head, she
rose  and went  around  the table  to waken  him.  "Edward," she  said
shaking his shoulder, "wake up."
     Edward Sothos woke with a start.  "What? Oh. Coury, it's you," he
said with relief.
     Jan laughed. "Of course it's me."  She returned to her seat. "So.
What do you need to say to me that can't be said at the Castle?"
     "Gods, I'm tired."
     "You look it. Why don't we go back? You need sleep. This can wait
'till tomorrow, can't it?"
     "No. I have  to check on the supply situation  and brief the King
and his advisors tomorrow. That will keep  me busy all day and most of
the night."
     "All right then. So?"
     "We've known each other for...three years now?"
     "Four last month."
     "Four years. You're...twenty-four, aren't you?"
     "Last Janis," Jan replied.
     "Twenty-four  and   a  Commander   already.  That  is   quite  an
accomplishment for one so young."
     "Edward, I'm only eight years younger than you are."
     "Not 'till Yule seventeen."
     "Okay, so you  won't turn thirty-one for another  week. Edward, I
don't see where all this is going."
     "You are a good officer and I won't--I can't--do anything to harm
your chance for success."
     "What do you mean?"
     "Jan, there's been talk," Edward said quietly.
     "Talk?" Jan  repeated, feeling wary.  Edward called her  Jan only
when he was discussing something serious.
     "About us. Certain  people have noticed we've  been spending time
together recently. There has been gossip that...that we--"
     "That we've been sleeping together???" she asked, astonished.
     "Yes," Edward said, face lowered.  "I'm sorry, Jan. It seems that
some nobles would prefer another Knight Commander and they are willing
to go to great lengths to discredit me. You were caught in the middle.
I am to blame."
     "But surely no one would believe these...rumors?"
     "They have reached the King's ears. He pointed out that truth has
nothing  to do  with  this  situation. If  this  developes further,  a
scandal such as that surrounding Lysanda's marriage could ensue."
     "You'd be stripped of your office!" Jan said hoarsely.
     "That isn't what I'm concerned about."
     "What then?"
     "You. I won't have your reputation sullied in this manner."
     "What will you do? What can you do?"
     Edward stared at  the cold fireplace. "If we were  in Galicia, my
course of action would be clear."
     "What?"
     "It doesn't matter. This is not Galicia."
     "I want to know. What would you do if this was Galicia?"
     Edward turned his  head to look his friend straight  in the eyes.
"Marry you."
1     Jan  nearly dropped  her ale.  She sat  back, too  dumbfounded to
speak.
     "As I  said, this is  not Galicia, so the  whole idea is  moot. I
shall handle matters." Edward rose. "We should go back now."
     "I think I'll stay here a while," she said slowly and carefully.
     "Are you certain?"
     "Yes," she said looking up at Edward. "Go get some sleep."
     "Good night, Coury."
     "Good night." Jan remained sitting  in the dark corner long after
Edward had left, her ale untouched. Edward's statement left her with a
great deal of confused emotions  and thoughts to reconcile. Jan stayed
until  Gortholde locked  up.  She went  to sleep  hours  later in  her
quarters, nothing resolved.

Crown Castle, Magnus, Royal Duchy, Baranur
11 Yule, 1014 B.Y.

     Edward stood in front of the wall-map of Baranur in the War Room.
He faced the  assembled nobles and began his briefing.  "My lords, the
situation in the south is  grave. The line from the Westbrook-Pyridain
border south to the sea  has been completely shattered." Edward paused
as gasps  of astonishment  raced through  the room.  "The Beinisonians
attacked with seventy  thousand men, according to the  reports. I must
point  out, however,  that many  of the  despatches arriving  from the
field are confused. Any organization that once existed is now gone.
     "Just how bad is it?" a minor scion of House Tallirhan asked.
     "The only organized force in the Southern Marches is comprised of
what little  forces are in  Duchy Westbrook. The remaining  Royal Army
forces are running north and west. Lord Kinsley has informed me of his
intention to deny Pyridain  City to the enemy to the  last. He has the
Duchy's Household troops and the  remnants of the Assault Brigade. The
three Regiments fled to the city when the main line broke.
     In addition, I have relieved King's General Tegran of his command
in Pyridain and placed all  troops under Lord Kinsley's orders." Again
Edward paused,  waiting for the storm  to break. His wait  was a short
one.
     "How dare  you!" Lord Ethros  of House Northfield shouted  at the
scarred  warrior.  "General  Tegran  is  one  of  the  Kingdom's  best
soldiers. You have not the right to relieve him! Just who do you think
you are, outlander?"
     "I," Edward replied in a cold  voice, "am Knight Commander of the
Royal Armies. Tegran is a soldier of  that Army and thus subject to my
authority. He was a good warrior once and is now a good administrator.
Administrators will not win this war.  Any man who does not perform is
useless to me and a boon to the enemy."
     "You are not a native of  Baranur! A Baranurian would know how to
honour brave soldiers. A Baranurian would--"
     The King interrupted  violently, slamming his hand  on the table.
"Enough! Sir  Edward is not far  enough below your station  for you to
speak  to him  so, Lord  Ethros! Bickering  such as  this will  get us
nowhere and will only serve to aid the enemy. Sit down and be silent!"
Haralan turned to Edward. "Continue, Sir Edward."
     Edward bowed slightly. "The major calamity occurred here," Edward
said,  indicating   a  spot  on   the  map  eight  leagues   from  the
Baranur-Beinison  border,   "at  Oron's  Crossroads.   Best  estimates
indicate an enemy  force twenty to thirty thousand  strong engaged our
main  concentration  north  of  the crossroads.  Our  forces  numbered
nineteen  thousand  five  hundred;  fifteen thousand  Royal  Army  and
Southern March Militia and four thousand five hundred House forces."
     "The  battle was  an even  struggle until  Dame Martis  ordered a
1withdrawal to  a more defensible position.  It was at that  point that
some nobles refused  to comply. Their vainglory would  not permit them
to follow  orders. The result  was that the  Royal Army units  began a
withdrawal while a significant portion of  the House units did not. As
Nehru  would have  it,  the  centre of  the  battle-line was  composed
largely of House  units. The enemy seized upon our  confusion and sent
his cavalry into  the breach. The centre disintegrated  and the flanks
were left isolated and exposed. Very few Regiments survived to conduct
something even approximating an orderly retreat."
     "What's  the  butcher's  bill, sir?"  King's  General  Wainwright
asked.
     Edward took a deep breath and spoke in a voice devoid of emotion.
"The  Combined Host  of  Baranur has  suffered  eleven thousand  dead,
wounded or  captured. The 8th  and 10th Baranurian Regulars,  16th and
19th Baranurian Archers, and 1st  Pyridain Militia have been wiped out
to the  last man and their  Colours taken. In addition,  the forces of
Houses Equiville, Bivar, Redcrosse, and  Othuldane are gone." Only two
men remained  unaffected during Edward's recitation  of the casualties
suffered; General  Wainwright because  he was an  old soldier  and had
seen much during his long and  illustrious career, the Duke of Quinnat
because his mind was on matters closer to home.
     "Dame Martis  gathered what  she could  and retreated  into Duchy
Westbrook. All  told, seven Regiments  moved into Westbrook.  Most are
well-off. The 4th  Pyridain Militia is little better  than an expanded
Company and has  been attached to the 3rd Pyridain  Militia to make up
for  that  Regiment's  losses.  The  2nd  Pyridain  Militia  has  been
destroyed. Their  remnants have  been attached  to the  1st Baranurian
Rangers.
     The officers  of the Regiments  not involved in the  battle seem,
for the  most part, unable or  unwilling to halt their  units and face
the enemy.  I trust in the  ability of the various  King's Generals to
bring such  action to  a halt,  but the process  will take  some time.
Rumors have  spread word that  the defeat was  worse than the  men are
being told and the mens' morale has fallen sharply. Rebuilding it will
take some time."
     "Aside from the forces under  Dame Martis and Duke Araesto's son,
what force have we to oppose the Beinisonians?" the King asked.
     "The Equiville  and Leftwich Militias  and a very few  Royal Army
Regiments."
     "Good God!" Wainwright exclaimed.
     "We may yet need the gods' assistance before this war has run its
course." At that moment, the great  double doors opened and a slightly
nervous Daniel  Moore entered and  slammed to attention. "What  is it,
Captain?" Edward asked with a slight trace of concern in his voice.
     "Sir,  the   sentries  at  Southgate  report   a  sizeable  force
approaching the city."
     "How large?"
     "Regimental strength, sir. Eight hundred to a thousand men, sir."
     "How could  they have  slipped so  large a  force this  far north
un-noticed?"
     "It's got to be the vanguard  of a larger force, sir," Wainwright
commented, "otherwise the 6th would have dealt with them."
     "The  6th--Nehru's  Blood!  That's  who they  are!  I  must  have
forgotten to inform the garrison  Commanders in the confusion over the
landings on the Laraka."
     "Speaking of  which," Lord  Ethros said, the  scorn in  his voice
apparent, "what exactly IS the situation?"
     Edward ignored  Ethros' tone. "Your  Grace?" he inquired  of Duke
Quinnat. "Would it please Your Grace to make your report?"
     Quinnat  looked at  Edward with  tired eyes.  When he  spoke, his
1voice betrayed weary exhaustion overlying the pain of seeing his lands
occupied. "No, Sir Edward, it would  not please me." He sighed. "But I
shall do so.  My Ducal Guard and I  made a wide sweep to  the north of
Shark's Cove. A Regiment garrisons the  town and there are two more on
the border  with Kiliaen.  The Beinisonians  are using  the town  as a
staging area  for their Navy  as well as the  invasion. I had  not the
force to attempt an attack so I  journeyed to Port Sevlyn. It is under
siege. By  how many men,  I do  not know; we  ran into a  Battalion of
light infantry,  skirmishers. We clashed  briefly and I was  forced to
retreat  further east  before swinging  south  to Magnus.  I lost  one
hundred and fifty good men that had been serving me for years. I could
gain no other intelligence regarding the enemy."
     "Nor have I," Edward commented, resuming control of the briefing.
"The last report I  have is from Lord Morion five  days ago. He states
that he expected  sixteen thousand men to march on  Magnus. Given Duke
Quinnat's observations,  we can  approximate the force  besieging Port
Sevlyn  at thirteen-to-fourteen  thousand.  The  garrison numbers  one
Militia Light Infantry Regiment. I believe we can assume that the city
has fallen and that Gateway shall come under attack very soon."
     "Why would  they not attack  the Crown City directly?"  the young
lord of House Tallirhan asked.
     "Because Gateway is too large a threat to leave in their rear, my
Lord", Wainwright responded. "Even were  they to besiege it, Gateway's
catapults would  make the river  a death-trap  for any ship  trying to
sail to Magnus.  Indeed, that is the only  reason Beinisonian warships
are not anchored off Kheva's Bridge."
     "What have we that could stop them?" Ethros asked.
     "Lord  Morion has  taken the  survivors Sir  Ailean's command  to
Gateway. He  has the better  part of  three Regiments. I  have ordered
Count Connall to  return to Magnus at once. Upon  his arrival, he will
be made Knight Captain of the Northern Marches and sent north with the
Hussars.
     The Huscarls,  Militia, and Legion  of Death shall remain  in the
city  as  a safeguard  should  the  Beinisonians by-pass  Gateway  and
attempt to  take the city  by storm.  That concludes the  briefing, my
Lords."
     "Thank you, Knight Commander," Haralan said.
     "Sire," Edward said, "the 6th  Regulars shall arrive shortly. May
I suggest  a parade? The 6th  have fought the Beinisonians  well and I
think they deserve the accolade."
     "Very well. We shall meet you at the Warrior's Way in two hours?"
     "That would be fine, Your Royal Majesty. Captain Moore?"
     Moore, who  had been standing unobtrusively  behind his commander
since bringing  the news of  the 6th's arrival, snapped  to attention.
"Sir?"
     "Have  Commander Courymwen  turn out  the garrison  for a  formal
parade  to take  place  in two  hours.  I  expect both  of  you to  be
present."
     "Sir!"
     "Off with you, then."
     Moore saluted and  left. Haralan stood and  those assembled stood
with him. "Good day, gentlemen," he said and departed, the rest bowing
to their sovereign. The nobles left to conduct their personal business
leaving Edward and Wainwright alone.
     "What, Artemus?"
     "You're  pushing  yourself  too  hard.  I  wasn't  going  to  say
anything, but I must now. You've got to get some sleep."
     "Sleep?  Sleep?! Artemus,  how can  I sleep?"  Edward turned  and
pointed at  the wall-map. "Look  at it, Artemus! The  Beinisonians are
pouring across the southern frontier and  I've got nothing to throw at
1them except  some Militia units.  And up north, they've  landed twenty
thousand  men on  the  Laraka.  For all  intents  and purposes,  Duchy
Quinnat  is under  Beinisonian rule.  And if  that wasn't  bad enough,
Magnus is  cut off from  the sea. I don't  know how long  the overland
trade routes will be able to handle  the city's needs. And you tell me
to sleep?"
     "Edward, you must  sleep. If you don't, you won't  be much use to
anyone. I've watched  you since you assumed your post  four years ago.
You're good. Very good. But I sometimes wonder if you were cut out for
all this. It seems to me that you would much rather be a simple knight
serving your lord than responsible for warding an entire Kingdom."
     "There is some truth to  that," Edward admitted. "There are times
that I long  for simpler duties and responsibilities. All  my life, my
only dream  was to serve  the Emperor as a  Knight of the  Imperium. I
suppose that  has something  to do  with it. But  that doesn't  mean I
don't  want this  as  well. I'm  not just  serving  my King,  Artemus.
Haralan is my  closest and dearest friend.  As long as he  wants me as
Knight Commander, I shall gladly fill that role."
     Edward paused for a moment and went to stand in front of the huge
map.  "Artemus," he  said, gazing  intently at  the huge  depiction of
Baranur, "the Kingdom is  in grave danger and I don't  know that I can
save it."  He turned. "I  shall die, if need  be, to save  my friend's
lands, but just between the two of us...we're going to lose this war."
Edward turned back to the map. "And  there's not a blessed thing I can
do to stop it."

     Wainwright sat his  horse, back ramrod straight,  his eyes raking
over  the  massed  ranks  of   the  6th  Baranurian  Regulars  as  the
grey-haired veterans paraded through  Southgate. The Warrior's Way was
lined  with  troops.  The  King's Own  in  their  blue-and-gold  dress
uniforms; The Royal  Horse Guard, their dark blue  dress tunics giving
them  an arrogant  air; the  three  Huscarl Regiments  in their  white
tunics, battle-axes gleaming; the  four Militia Regiments standing out
in their scarlet uniforms. All stood rigidly to attention as the eight
hundred and thirty-seven members of the 6th marched by.
     The Regulars  halted. Speeches  were given. The  Knight Commander
spoke of  the unmatched quality of  the 6th and the  often over-looked
benefits experience  can bring. King  Haralan spoke of  the admiration
all Baranur had for the brave soldiers of the 6th who alone had fought
the Beinisonians  to a bloody  stand-still before they were  forced to
withdraw.
     Wainwright  watched  Edward  all through  the  proceedings.  Just
before they had left the War  Room, Wainwright had managed to persuade
Edward to  get some  rest immediately after  the parade.  The knight's
revelation to Wainwright  that he felt the war lost  was probably just
the result of  a much delayed, much needed  slumber. Wainwright prayed
that was the cause. As a  Baranurian, Wainwright refused to accept the
notion  that his  Kingdom might  be conquered.  As a  soldier, he  was
forced to admit the situation looked desperate. Everything hinged upon
events  taking  place  on  the  Laraka.  If  Gateway  Keep  fell,  the
Beinisonians could lay  siege to Magnus, thus cutting  the capital off
from  the rest  of  the Kingdom.  And  that would  mean  the death  of
Baranur.
     The speeches were  concluded. The 6th resumed  its march, turning
right and  passing through  the huge  gate in  the final  wall barring
access to  the King's Keep.  As Wainwright passed through  the massive
gate, his thoughts drifted north.

Western wall, Port Sevlyn, Duchy Quinnat, Baranur
11 Yule, 1014 B.Y.
1
     Conn  paced back  and forth  on  Port Sevlyn's  western wall.  He
glanced for the fifth time at the  little group huddled at the base of
the wall near a small inn. Patrick saw his commander's glance and gave
him a gesture of reassurance. Conn waved back, secure in the knowledge
that Patrick had Conn's Company ready to move at a moment's notice. My
Company, he  thought sadly. Conn's Company  had diminished frightfully
since the  siege began.  There were  scare one score  left out  of the
hundred Conn had led into battle  two days previously. Most of the 1st
Quinnat Militia's companies were in the same state.
     Commander Karellan  had placed Conn  in command of the  west wall
and given him one third of the Regiment's remaining strength to defend
it. He'd  done the  same with  the two  other surviving  Captains. All
told, three hundred exhausted men  and women warded Quinnat's capital.
They were pitifully  few compared to the horde encamped  on the plains
before the city.
     Port  Sevlyn had  been a  city untouched  by the  ravages of  the
world. One  might have said there  was a slight touch  of innocence to
the place. No longer. War had come  to Port Sevlyn and left its brutal
mark. On the walls  and the fields near the base of  the walls lay one
thousand three hundred corpses,  Baranurian and Beinisonian. The blood
of  Port Sevlyn's  children stained  her battlements  and towers.  The
city, and its inhabitants, would never be the same again.
     Conn was growing  irritable. It was late afternoon  and still the
enemy had  not come. He  couldn't understand why the  Beinisonians had
not attacked. Strangely,  he felt himself growing angry  that they did
not come. The gut-wrenching fear as  a grappling hook thudded home and
the odd joy of battle seemed so much  a part of him now that he almost
wished the enemy would attack.
     Conn  caught  a  sign  of  movement  from  the  enemy  camp.  The
Beinisonian Regiments  were on  the move  again. They  marched slowly,
almost sedately, toward the city. Each  Regiment was drawn up in three
tightly packed ranks. And waving from stout poles of polished oak flew
each  Regiments' Colours,  the  very  heart and  soul  of a  Regiment.
Guarding the Colours were each  Regiments' best warriors. Conn counted
the Colours of four Regiments coming at his section of wall. The day's
work was about to begin.

     Patrick Havercamp  hacked and  slashed at the  enemy, his  face a
mixture  of anger  and worry.  His friend,  Conn Alrod,  was somewhere
ahead and in trouble. When the Beinisonians had gained the battlements
in  two places,  Patrick had  known it  was time  to commit  the small
reserve Conn had placed under the Sergeant's command.
     Now, Patrick and his men were attempting to push the second wedge
back and  link up  with the  small group of  soldiers, led  by Captain
Alrod, who were  valiantly struggling against twice  their number some
twenty yards distant.
     A Beinisonian lunged at the Sergeant. Patrick side-stepped neatly
and slammed  his knee  into the man's  groin. The  Beinisonian doubled
over more from  surprise than real pain, but the  result was the same.
Patrick grabbed the Beinisonian's chin-strap and roughly bent his head
back. A  quick jerk of Patrick's  sword and the man's  life poured out
his severed jugular.
     "Keep at the scum, lads!" Patrick shouted at his men as he tipped
one enemy soldier over the battlements to fall screaming to the ground
below. Patrick scanned  the scene of battle and caught  a brief glance
of his friend. He was about to shout encouragement when he saw Conn go
down.
     Fear and  rage chased  each other across  Patrick's face.  He and
Conn had been  friends since childhood. When Conn's  wife Fayonna gave
1birth,  Patrick  became  the   boy's  godfather.  Patrick  had  always
protected his friend  from danger during their youth  and the tendency
naturally extended into adulthood.
     Roaring like an  enraged bear, the big  Sergeant launched himself
toward  his friend.  He hewed  his way  through the  enemy ranks  as a
farmer harvests grain. Some few Beinisonians  tried to stop him but he
beat them  down and ripped  their life away  as if they  didn't exist.
Their    comrades,   terrified    of   this    seemingly   unstoppable
gore-splattered apparition unleashed in their midst, broke and ran.
     Those following  behind the  Sergeant raised  a mighty  cheer and
surged forward. There  was not a single Beinisonian left  alive on the
wall within the space of five minutes.
     Patrick  knelt beside  his friend  and gently,  carefully removed
Conn's  helmet. Patrick  gave a  heartfelt  sigh. The  wound that  had
felled his Captain  was superficial. Patrick leaned over  and ripped a
strip of cloth off a dead Beinisonian's  tunic and used it to bind his
friend's  wound. "Conn,"  Patrick called.  Nothing. "Conn,"  he called
more forcefully.
     Conn groaned  and stirred.  "Who's there?" he  called in  a voice
groggy with pain.
     "It's me, sir. Patrick."
     "I can't see," he said. He  reached for his eyes but the Sergeant
restrained him.
     "Nothing to  worry about, sir.  Just a  little blood, is  all. Be
still and I'll clean it off." Patrick wiped the blood off his friend's
face, making  Conn flinch when  Patrick came too  close to the  cut on
Conn's scalp. "Sorry, sir."
     Conn  waved Patrick's  apology  aside. "Help  me stand."  Patrick
lifted Conn  to his feet  with a gentleness  surprising for a  man his
size. "Thanks."
     "You all right, sir?" Patrick asked with concern.
     "Just  let me  get my  strength, Sergeant."  Conn rested  against
Patrick's bulk, letting the throbbing of his head wound slowly lessen.
After a  minute or two,  he pushed  himself away from  Patrick. "Okay,
Patrick. Let's get back to work."
     Patrick grinned. "Yes, sir!"

Port Sevlyn, Duchy Quinnat, Baranur
11 Yule, 1014 B.Y.

     "Sit,  Captain, sit,"  Commander Karellan  told Conn.  "How's the
wound?" he asked not unkindly.
     "Fine,  sir," Conn  lied.  He felt  as if  someone  was taking  a
sledgehammer to his head.
     "Good," Karellan said then lapsed into silence.
     That can't  be the only  reason he  called me here  tonight, Conn
thought. "Sir?"
     "Yes?"
     "Was there something specific you wanted to speak to me about?"
     Karellan sighed. "Yes, Captain, there is." Karellan paused again.
When next he spoke, he looked at a set of figures on a scrap of paper.
"The  casualty   count's  just  come  in.   One  hundred  twenty-three
effectives including one Senior Sergeant,  one Captain and myself." He
looked up at Conn. "Not a very formidable force, is it Alrod?"
     "Enough to give those bastards something to remember, sir!"
     "That's the  whole point, isn't  it? Make  them pay in  blood for
this city."
     "It's not  going to  be pretty  when they take  the city,  is it,
sir?"
     "No, Captain,  it's not."  Karellan ran  his fingers  through his
1greying  hair. "We  can't hold  the walls  any longer.  Come daybreak,
we'll pull the men back and wait for the enemy to come." The Commander
rubbed his  eyes in a  vain attempt to  banish some of  his weariness.
"Alrod, I'm charging you with holding the gate."
     "But if we abandon the walls--?"
     "What use is there holding the gate? As long as we hold the gate,
and the keep for that matter, we  make it that much more difficult for
the enemy  to move through  the city. They'll  be forced to  spend the
time to destroy us."
     "Yes, sir," Conn replied without much enthusiasm.
     "Take Sergeant  Havercamp and forty  good men and hold  the gate,
Conn. Hold it as long as you can and when you think you can't hold any
longer, hold some more."
     "Where will you be, sir?"
     "The Lord Mayor and I and the rest of the garrison will barricade
ourselves in  the keep. We may  not last long, but  we cannot disgrace
the Duke  by giving his home  to the invaders without  a fight. That's
all," he said, rising from his chair. He gripped Conn's hand in a firm
hold. "Good luck, Captain."
     "And to you, sir."

     Rolanda Thorne  looked up as  her husband came through  the door.
"Well, Quillien?"
     "The news  is not good," he  said, putting his cloak  away. "As I
expected. You'd best have Jannis come in and hear this."
     Lady Thorne went to get their daughter. The look on her husband's
face and the tone  of his voice frightened her more  than she cared to
admit.

     "Would it  be all  right if  Tassy and  Garrett stayed  with us?"
Jannis asked after her father had explained the situation as explained
to him by the Lord Mayor.
     "I thought  they'd left town,  but I  heard from Rayna  that they
were still here."
     "Of course they can stay with  us," said Lady Thorne. "Rayna too,
if she wants."
     "Okay. I'll go over right now and tell them."
     "Be  careful,  Jannis," Lord  Thorne  warned.  "Take your  dagger
along."
     "But  the invaders  haven't gotten  into the  city yet,  Father,"
Jannis replied.
     "These are dangerous times," said Lord Thorne. "Do it anyway."
     "Just a moment," said Rolanda. She went over to a display cabinet
and took an object off one of the shelves. "Take this."
     "Your  sundagger?" Jannis  asked, accepting  the enchanted  blade
from her mother.
     "When Brynna gave me this I never thought I'd need it," said Lady
Thorne. She instructed her daughter on  how to invoke the magic of the
dagger; Jannis listened carefully, then  left. Lady Thorne watched her
from the  window, wishing that they  all were someplace far  away from
the conflict.

Main Body camp outside Port Sevlyn, Duchy Quinnat, Baranur
12 Yule, 1014 B.Y.

     Vasquez stood outside his tent  gazing at the pre-dawn sky. Storm
clouds loomed and  a chill wind was blowing from  the north. A fitting
omen for today's  work, Vasquez thought. Today would be  the last day,
of  that he  was  certain.  Vasquez had  lost  four  hundred more  men
yesterday and he knew the defenders  had paid dearly also. He expected
1no more than two hundred would face his Regiments when the attack went
in. And then would the soldiers  of the Beinisonian Emperor take their
revenge on those sheltering behind Port Sevlyn's walls.
     The young  Field Marshal  splashed his face  with cold  water and
returned to  his tent to finish  drafting the report he  must send the
Emperor on his reasons for giving the order to destroy Port Sevlyn. As
he set pen to paper, he could hear the shouts of the Sergeants calling
the men from their slumber. The final day of the siege had begun.

Main gate, north wall Port Sevlyn, Duchy Quinnat, Baranur
12 Yule, 1014 B.Y.

     Patrick gently shook his Captain  awake. "It's morning, sir. Time
for breakfast."
     Conn sat up  slowly and carefully. The pain from  his scalp wound
had lessened  only slightly  during the night.  "What's the  fare this
morning?"
     "Campaign rations, I'm afraid, sir."
     "Well, I suppose it's better than nothing at all."
     "Only just, sir."
     Conn bit a chunk off the slab of thrice-baked bread and washed it
down with  a large mouthful of  water. "Have you checked  the men?" he
asked his friend.
     "I have,  sir. They're scared,  the lot  of them, but  they'll do
fine when the  time comes, sir. They  know this will be the  end of it
and there's a few wondering what  the enemy's going to do once they're
over the walls."
     "Well, let's hope that Vasquez character rides tight reign on his
troops."
     "From your lips to God's ears, sir."
     "Right, Patrick," Conn  said, getting to his feet.  "Let's see if
we can get an inspection done before they hit us."
     Conn and Patrick  walked throughout the barbican,  talking to the
men and women, reassuring them that  they would fight bravely and well
and reminding them that every second's delay did harm to the enemy.
     They were on the wall between the two towers of the barbican when
the Beinisonians began to move.  "Okay, Patrick," Conn said turning to
the Sergeant, "down you go."
     "But, sir! Don't you think I should stay with you?"
     "No, Sergeant.  I need a good  man to hold the  gatehouse. That's
the weakest part of the barbican."
     "Yes, sir."  Patrick drew himself  erect and threw  his life-long
friend a salute with parade-ground  precision and then hurried down to
the gatehouse.
     Conn surveyed the enemy formations closing on the walls. From his
observations, he guessed  that no more than one  Regiment would attack
the gate. He  laughed at the thought.  He was so used  to fighting off
three and four  Regiments at once that one Regiment  of a thousand men
hardly seemed worth noticing. War can be absurd at times, he thought.

Main gate, north wall Port Sevlyn, Duchy Quinnat, Baranur
12 Yule, 1014 B.Y.

     "You five!  Come with me!" Conn  said, leading half the  men he'd
put on the  wall between the two twenty-foot diameter  round towers on
either side of  the gatehouse down to the gatehouse  itself. With only
forty men to  defend two towers, a twenty-foot section  of wall, and a
thirty by twenty-foot gatehouse, all  of which were collectively named
a barbican, Conn  could do nothing but divide his  men evenly, ten men
to each area. The towers were holding for the moment and no one as yet
1had thought to assault the wall, preferring to try and batter down the
stout gate  below the battlements.  The gatehouse, on the  other hand,
was in serious trouble.
     The enemy  had scaled the  walls in  three score places  and were
pouring into  the city. The Regiment  assigned to wrest the  gate away
from  its defenders  had completely  surrounded the  barbican and  was
concentrating its efforts on the  gatehouse. The eleven defenders were
barely holding only  because those clamoring to  gain entrance outside
the walls  were being thwarted  by the iron-reinforced oak  gate, thus
allowing  the commander  of  the  gatehouse to  use  his entire  force
against those  Beinisonians who  had scaled the  wall and  were slowly
forcing the portcullis.  Even allowing for the confined  spaces of the
gatehouse, eleven could not hold out long against one hundred.
     Conn led  his five into the  gatehouse. The enemy had  forced the
portcullis halfway  up and were  getting through in larger  and larger
numbers. Four  of the  defenders were down.  The remaining  seven were
being slowly pushed  back towards the gate. "Follow  me!" Conn shouted
and led his  men into the fray to bolster  the defenders. "Patrick! To
me!"
     Patrick cut  down his opponent  and joined his Captain.  "Nice of
you to join us, sir!"
     "Can't let you have all the  fun!" Conn shouted over the smithy's
din of combat. Conn's head was pounding  in time with the blows of the
battering ram being used on the gate.
     "What's it like topside?"
     "We're holding. Barely, but holding."

     Commander Karellan backhanded one  Beinisonian with his gauntlet,
sending the man staggering with blood  flowing from his broken nose. A
second enemy soldier rushed the disarmed Militia Commander, hoping for
a quick kill and the prestige of defeating the enemy leader.
     Karellan backed  up and quickly  ripped his cloak from  his plate
armour and wrapped it around his  right arm as a makeshift shield. The
Beinisonian charged, his sword sweeping  in a gleaming arc towards the
ex-Royal  Army officer.  Karellan brought  his  cloak up  to meet  the
attack. The Beinisonian's sword cut  into the thick cloth and Karellan
quickly entangled his enemy's sword in the now-useless cloak.
     Before the Beinisonian could recover and free his sword, Karellan
grabbed the man by the back of the neck and rammed his opponent's face
down into his  knee. The enemy soldier fell,  stunned. Karellan raised
his foot  and smashed  his boot  down on  the unconscious  man's neck,
killing him instantly.
     He looked  around and saw the  man whose nose he'd  broken coming
after him.  Karellan put  his shoulder down  and charged.  He collided
with the man's chest, the momentum  of the charge carrying both men to
the edge of  the keep's battlements. The Beinisonian  scrabbled at the
stone  trying  to keep  from  falling.  Karellan recovered  first.  He
planted his  hand on the  man's chest and  shoved, sending him  to his
death below.
     He stepped back from the battlements'  edge and picked up a sword
discarded in the fighting. Not quite what he would have preferred, but
it  would serve.  Karellan allowed  himself  a minute  of rest  before
re-joining the  fray. His vantage  point afforded him  an unobstructed
view of  the gate.  From the keep,  it looked as  if the  barbican was
being  buried  in  ants. "That's  it  then,"  he  said  to no  one  in
particular.

     "Get back, Patrick!"  Conn shouted. Conn had been  forced to pull
his  men out  of the  towers and  off the  wall in  order to  hold the
gatehouse.  Thirty-one men  and women,  most  of them  still in  their
1teens,  were formed  into two  fighting wedges,  one wedge  struggling
against  the  Beinisonians forcing  their  way  past the  now-upraised
portcullis, the other preparing to receive the enemy on the other side
of the  battered gate  being held closed  only by  Patrick Havercamp's
strength and the gods' help.
     The Sergeant turned and ran to  the dubious safety of the huddled
group of defenders. Seconds later, the beam holding the gate shut gave
way  with a  sharp  crack  and the  enemy  poured  into the  gatehouse
shouting a  victory paean. Patrick  yelled defiance back at  his enemy
and led his group against the foe.
     The  Beinisonians  far  outnumbered  the defenders,  but  in  the
confined space of the gatehouse, superiority of numbers meant nothing.
For several  moments, the Baranurians  in their leather  armour pushed
the enemy steadily  backward, the bodies piling up at  their feet. But
it could  not last.  The defenders  took casualties  as well,  and the
Beinisonians had many more men to  lose. Weight of armour and years of
experience soon began to take their  toll. Now, more and more of those
falling were Baranurian.
     Finally,  the enemy  had compressed  the defenders  into a  small
circle in  the centre of the  gatehouse. Combat ceased as  a figure in
splendidly  gilded armour  and wearing  a scarlet  cape fastened  by a
platinum clasp  strode through  the gate.  The man,  only a  few years
older than Conn, made his way to the forefront of his troops.
     He gazed for several seconds at the defiant group of Baranurians.
His eyes  locked with  Conn's and  the expression in  them was  one of
sincere regret and remorse. Slowly, silently, the man raised his sword
in solemn  salute and  in that  instant, Conn  knew that  no prisoners
would be taken. Conn returned the salute and sent his Fayonna a silent
farewell.
     The man  shouted a command in  a foreign language and  the packed
mass of  Beinisonians surged  forward. One by  one the  defenders fell
until  only Conn  Alrod and  Patrick Havercamp  still stood,  fighting
back-to-back as they had so often done during their shared childhood.
     Conn  hacked and  chopped and  lunged at  the enemy.  Facing such
overwhelming numbers  in such  a small  space, he  could not  help but
connect.  Two men  fell  dead  at his  feet  and  another reeled  away
clutching his arm before the first of the enemy blades struck. He felt
a sharp stab of pain as an  enemy sword bit at his leg. Conn delivered
an attack that was parried and before he could recover, a second blade
had lanced through  the ribs on his right side.  A third blade stabbed
upward into his face and Conn  fell to his knees, the pain unbearable.
A fourth  stroke severed his head  from his body, ending  his pain and
his life.
     Patrick felt  his friend  go down  and knew his  own time  was at
hand. Thus far,  he was untouched, a pile of  bodies strewn about him.
With his friend  gone, the enemy now came at  him from all directions.
The big Sergeant  flailed about with his  sword , but to  no avail. He
fell across Conn's dead body, pierced in three places.

     With the fall of  the gate, the way was now open  for the bulk of
the enemy  force to enter  the city. Regiment after  Regiment streamed
through  the bloody  human wreckage  of the  gatehouse and  fanned out
throughout the city. No mercy would be shown to the inhabitants. Where
initially this had been due to  orders, now the cause was revenge. Men
whose bloodlust had  been fired by seeing their  friends butchered and
bleeding for  three days  were turned loose  on an  unsuspecting city.
Their  orders were  to  put  half the  populace  to  the sword;  their
officers would  have a difficult  time ensuring the  blood-letting did
not go further.
     The  Regiment battling  for control  of  the keep  in the  city's
1centre had cleared the battlements of  the enemy and its soldiers were
stalking  the few  remaining defenders  through the  keep's corridors.
Within the space  of half an hour, the last  defender had been dragged
out kicking and screaming and then executed.

     Quillien Thorne heard  the screams issuing from  the direction of
the city's gate  and the realization of what was  happening struck him
like a thunderbolt. He ran  throughout the house shouting for everyone
to go immediately to the wine  cellar. Once certain that everybody had
gone down to the cellar, Lord Thorne followed.
     "What is it Quillien?" Lady Thorne asked with some alarm. "What's
wrong?"
     "A massacre! The Beinisonians have begun killing people!"
     "Killing people?" Jannis gasped. "Why--what for?"
     "Oh gods," muttered Garrett, clenching his fists nervously. "Pack
of  animals, all  of them.  I should've  been a  warrior instead  of a
healer...." His wife Tassy drew close to him and laid her head against
his chest.  Rayna turned  pale and  brought her white  lace fan  up in
front of  her face, as  if to shield herself  from the horrors  of the
situation.
     "We'll be  safe in the  vault until  the worst has  passed," Lord
Thorne said.  He crossed the room  to a certain wine  rack, reached up
and removed  the fifth  bottle of  Blue Royal from  the left.  He then
pushed in  on the  section of  wall revealed  by removing  the bottle.
There was a click and Lord Thorne slid the panel upwards.
     The wine  rack moved aside  to reveal a door  on which was  set a
silver handle pointing  up. Lord Thorne grasped the  handle and turned
it clockwise through 270 degrees. Next, he pushed in on the handle and
the door slid  silently back, allowing access to  the extensive vaults
in which Lord Thorne had hidden the possessions of his merchant house,
the Lands' Rim,  when he first learned of the  landing at Shark's Cove
twelve days' previously.
     Lord  Thorne ushered  the  group into  the  entrance-room of  the
vaults and  closed the door.  In the cellar,  the wine rack  slid back
into place.  No indication remained that  anyone had even been  in the
cellar.
     Inside the  vault, Lord Thorne  organized the group and  had them
make the entrance-room ready for  their stay. The room was thirty-feet
square and had  doors on three walls; the wall  through which they had
just entered the  room and on the  walls to the right and  left of the
exit  door respectively.  On the  wall  opposite the  entrance to  the
cellar was a mosaic depicting a lone sailor about to cast a harpoon at
an onrushing dragon whale. Mounted above the cellar door was a stuffed
shark's head. Lord  Thorne glanced at the head and  was satisfied; the
eyes were glowing white, indicating  the secondary magical defense was
inactive and it was safe to leave the room at any time.
     When the room was presentable,  Lord Thorne spoke to his charges.
"I know you are  all frightened. We are safe here,  they will not find
us. We shall wait for a time and then leave Port Sevlyn."
     "Then where will we go?" asked Tassy.
     "Magnus. The King must know of  what has transpired here. Now get
some rest,  all of you.  When we leave, we  must move quickly."  As he
himself made  ready to rest, he  considered just what burden  Fate had
given him; he and his wife had to shepherd this group of young--oh how
young they were!--people through an occupied city and two hundred-plus
leagues of possibly enemy-held and very hostile territory. He was glad
that his  son Brannon  and his daughter-  in-law Caramina  had already
left Port  Sevlyn on the _Sun  Hawk_, his fastest trading  vessel. His
other ship, the _Royal Trader_, was  on a routine cargo run to Magnus;
he was certain that when her captain heard the news of the invasion he
1would take the  ship and its crew to safety.  His thoughts then turned
to his oldest daughter Brynna and  his young niece Mandi, both of whom
had left  on an expedition  to the south about  a year ago.  He hadn't
received word  from Brynna  in months;  he prayed  that her  quest was
successful, and that her ship wasn't anywhere near Beinison waters.
     He knew he could count on  his wife and daughter during the rough
times ahead, but of the others he wasn't completely certain. Rayna was
almost  the  complete opposite  of  Mandi--quiet,  shy, and  reserved,
although she had begun to become  more open ever since she met Cydric,
a young man on Brynna's crew. Of  Tassy and her husband Garrett he had
no idea  how they would perform.  There were so many  details to worry
about. One problem at a time, he thought. One problem at a time.

     Several hours later, the group  was well-rested and ready for the
start of their long trek. Lord Thorne walked over to the mosaic of the
sailor, reached out and pressed the  thumbnail of the man's left hand.
The sound of stone  grating on stone issued from the  wall and a small
section swung back to reveal a narrow passage leading to the stables.
     Thorne  lifted a  torch from  its sconce  and proceeded  down the
passage, the  rest of the  group following behind. The  passage sloped
gradually  upwards and  after  a short  time, the  group  came to  the
entrance to  the stables. Thorne  opened the secret door  and motioned
the rest of his party out of the passage.
     They were immediately assaulted by  heat and smoke and the sounds
of terrified screams.  "It's worse than I thought,"  Lord Thorne said.
"We'll  have to  be very  careful." Cautiously,  he opened  the stable
door. The scene before him was one of horror.
     A  vast column  of  thick  black smoke  rose  from Port  Sevlyn's
northern district.  The invaders had  fired the poorer section  of the
city and seemed to be driving the inhabitants before them. The screams
and the  fire were drawing  ever closer.  The stench of  burning flesh
filled the air.
     "We'll try and  skirt the eastern edge of the  fire," Thorne told
the  group.  "Perhaps   in  the  confusion  we  can   reach  the  gate
unmolested." The six quickly set off  down the street, hoping to avoid
a confrontation. They were remarkably successful, twice having avoided
large  groups of  Beinisonians  with bloodied  swords.  They had  just
turned north for the gate when disaster struck.
     The group  was proceeding up  a narrow street when  four soldiers
appeared from an alley and quite literally almost ran into Lord Thorne
and  his party.  From the  look of  their armour  and weapons,  it was
obvious what the four Beinisonians had been doing in the alley.
     One  of the  men said  something Thorne  couldn't recognize.  The
tone,  however,  was  quite  clear:  "Kill  them."  Another  objected,
indicating Jannis, Tassy, and Rayna.  The first seemed to consider his
comrade's comment and then said something that made all four laugh.
     During all this, Lord Thorne had attempted to talk his way out of
the  predicament.   "Good  sirs,"  he  said,   knowing  they  couldn't
understand his words but hoping his tone would make his meaning plain.
"Perhaps we  can come to  an understanding? I  have gold and  will pay
quite well were you to forget you saw us."
     The  Beinisonians paid  no  attention, however.  The prospect  of
having three young  women outweighed any attempt to  try and negotiate
with the old man before them.  The flash point occurred when a soldier
grabbed Tassy.
     Garrett saw the soldier grin wickedly at his wife and immediately
threw aside everything  his training as a healer had  taught him about
respecting human  life. He launched  himself at his  wife's assailant,
and the two tumbled to the ground.
     The other  three soldiers were  just as stunned as  everyone else
1and they took a  moment to recover from their disbelief  and go to the
aid  of their  comrade.  A soldier  was raising  his  sword to  strike
Garrett's head from his shoulders when  an intense flash of light sent
all three soldiers staggering, their eyes blinded by the bright light.
Lady  Thorne  put  her  sundagger  away  and  stepped  away  from  the
still-struggling figures on the ground.
     Despite  the  Beinisonian's armour,  or  perhaps  because of  it,
Garrett worked his way into an  advantageous position and had gotten a
strong hold  on his  adversary. The Beinisonian  struggled, but  to no
avail.  Garrett violently  and repeatedly  smashed the  soldier's head
into the ground; the Beinisonian eventually stopped resisting and went
limp.
     "Run!" Lord  Thorne shouted. "Quickly! Before  they recover!" The
group ran hard for several minutes  then slowed to a quick jog. Before
long, they  came in sight  of the  gate. Soldiers formed  a protective
cordon that would  prevent anyone from entering or  leaving unless the
commander at  the gate wished it.  Thorne brought the group  to a halt
and quickly moved them out of sight of the detachment at the gate.
     "What do we do now, Father?" Jannis asked.
     "Perhaps we can bluff our way through."
     "But how?" Lady Thorne asked.
     Rayna spoke  for the first time.  "Why not pass ourselves  off as
pilgrims?"
     Thorne  looked at  the young  woman with  admiration. "That  just
might work.  We'll do  it. All right,  everyone, pay  attention. We're
going to  follow Rayna's  suggestion. Let  me do  all the  talking and
don't lose your heads." The last comment had been directed at Garrett.
     Lord  Thorne  calmly  led  the  group out  onto  the  street  and
proceeded toward the gate. They  were stopped by the soldiers guarding
the gate.  One of  them sent for  his commander and  made it  clear to
Thorne and his party  they were to wait and not to  do anything out of
the ordinary.
     Thorne waited with growing anxiety.  Now was the moment of truth.
An officer dressed in impressively gilded armour and wearing a scarlet
cape walked over to the group  flanked by two guards. He spoke briefly
with  the  soldiers who  stopped  the  group  and then  asked  several
questions of Lord  Thorne in perfectly fluent  Baranurian. Lord Thorne
grew more and more worried, for it was evident that the officer either
did not  believe Thorne's  answers or took  offense with  followers of
Stevene. The  questions were becoming  harder to deal with  and Thorne
knew his party was lost. Just  then, the officer questioning the group
was called away.
     A  second officer  with  gilding even  more  impressive than  the
first, and whose  cape was fastened with a platinum  clasp, had called
the  first officer  to him  and the  two were  now involved  in a  low
discussion.
     "What's the problem, Colonel?" Vasquez asked.
     "They  say they  are heretics,  followers  of Stevene  on a  holy
pilgrimmage," Conti replied.
     "And?"
     "And...they are heretics, sir. That alone condemns them."
     "Are you saying they should be killed?"
     "No. sir. You know my  feeling regarding that subject. But should
we not refuse them permission to leave the city?"
     "Are they who they claim?"
     "Hard to tell, sir.  It is possible they are who  they say, but I
find  it  too  much  of  a  coincidence  they  should  be  starting  a
pilgrimmage now."
     "Yes, Colonel.  I agree." Vasquez  studied the group.  From their
look, he  was quite sure they  were lying. "I'll handle  this, Conti."
1Vasquez turned and  regarded the spectacle of the  flaming city before
him. "Colonel," he  said, "the killing has gone on  long enough. Round
up a Regiment or two and bring order to this madness."
     Gow be praised, Conti thought. "What of the fire?"
     "Contain  it  and let  it  burn  itself  out. Have  the  Regiment
assigned to  the garrison handle  that aspect,  Colonel. I want  to be
organized and on the march by dawn tomorrow."
     "Yes, sir." Conti saluted and departed to carry out his orders.
     Vasquez walked  over to  the group  waiting patiently  beyond the
cordon. He could see the nervousness  on the old man's face. "Go." The
old  man's  eyes  narrowed  slightly; clearly  he  was  suspicious  of
Vasquez's intentions. "Go," Vasquez said again, not unkindly.
     "Thank  you,  Honored Sir,"  Thorne  said,  carefully hiding  his
immense relief. "May Stevene smile upon you."
     Vasquez   watched  the   group   make  their   way  through   the
blood-spattered gatehouse  and out  into the countryside.  "Sanar walk
with you," he  said quietly. He watched them for  several more minutes
and then turned to go about his business. Port Sevlyn had cost him one
thousand nine hundred  dead or seriously wounded.  With the detachment
of a  Regiment to  garrison the  city, Vasquez  would have  just under
eleven thousand men to complete the march on Magnus. There was much to
be done by morning.

     To  the southeast  of  Port  Sevlyn, the  soldiers  of the  Light
Regiments of the B.E.F. turned from  their vigilant watch to the south
to watch  the black smoke from  the dying city climb  ever higher into
the sky.  The men stared at  the marker of Port  Sevlyn's funeral pyre
until the Sergeants rather harshly reminded the men of their duty. The
men shrugged and turned to the  south once more, keeping watch for the
Regiments of the enemy that weren't coming.
     At least, not in their direction.
     Not immediately.

     Lord  Thorne  and  party  made  their  way  east  throughout  the
remainder  of the  day,  the smoke  behind them  sending  a clear  and
unmistakable message  to all  who could see  it; the  juggernaught was
unleashed  like a  wolf  among  lambs and  the  wolf  was hungry.  The
campaign for the Laraka was beginning to heat up.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                 QQQQQ                          tt
               QQ    QQ                      tttttt
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             QQ    QQ  uu  uu aa  aa  nn  nn tt aa  aa
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             QQQQQQ    uuu    aaaaa nn  nn tt   aaaaa
                 QQQ
             ______________________________________

             A Journal of Fact, Fiction and Opinion
             ______________________________________

Quanta is an electronically distributed magazine of science fiction.
Published monthly,  each issue contains short fiction,  articles and
editorials by authors around the world  and across the net.   Quanta
publishes  in  two  formats:   straight  ascii and  PostScript*  for
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get more info, send mail to:

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Quanta is a relatively new magazine  but is growing fast,  with over
two  hundred  subscribers to  date from  seven different  countries.
Electronic publishing is the way of the future.  Become part of that
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
1   (C)   Copyright    August,     1990,   DargonZine,    Editor   Dafydd
. All rights revert to the authors. These stories may
not be reproduced  or redistributed (save in the case of reproducing the
whole 'zine for further distribution) without the  express permission of
the author involved.






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  D     D A  A R  R G    O  O N N N     Z   I N N N E     || Volume 3
-=========================================================+|)
  D    D  AAAA RRR  G GG O  O N N N   Z     I N N N E     || Issue 11
  DDDDD   A  A R  R GGGG OOOO N  NN  ZZZZZZ I N  NN EEEE  ||
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--   DargonZine Volume 3, Issue 11       11/15/90          Cir 1057   --
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--                            Contents                                --
------------------------------------------------------------------------
 DAG                          Yours Truly            Editorial
 The Bronze Horseman III      Max Khaytsus           Ober 5-7, 1013
 Understanding                Bill Erdley            Yule, 1014
 Opus Interruptus             Wendy Hennequin        Melrin 4-5, 1014
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                      Dafydd's Amber Glow
                  by Dafydd Cyhoeddwr, Editor

          First,  I hope  that I  haven't  lost any  of you  loyal
      readers by  waiting so long to  get this issue out.  We have
      lots of  material now,  so there should  be lots  of reading
      material  coming your  way between  now and  the end  of the
      year,  which should  make up  for the  long dry  spell since
      August.
          Next, I would  like to officially welcome  a new author,
      Bill  Erdley,  to the  published  fold.  I'm sure  he  never
      thought he'd see this story in  print - he only submitted it
      to me an eon ago! But here  it is, and I'm sure you all will
      like it. It  presents a different perspective  on the little
      war we're having, and does so very effectively.
          Lastly, for those of you  who haven't heard, the Archive
      at  MGSE  is   no  longer  functioning  for   a  variety  of
      unavoidable reasons. What this means is that the back-issues
      of DargonZine are  no longer available in  an automated way.
      When the Archive accepted DargonZine as part of its service,
      I  archived all  of the  back-issues to  tape (I  needed the
      space desperately!).  So, while  I do  still have  access to
      them, I do not have them on hand at all times. Consequently,
      if  anyone wants  back-issues of  DargonZine from  now until
      someone  else volunteers  to  house and  distribute them  (a
      veiled plea!), they  will have to send their  requests to me
      and I will put them in  a queue. When I have enough requests
      and enough time,  I will send them  all out at once  - it is
      unlikely that  this will  be any more  frequent than  once a
      month (sorry).
          Now, on with the stories.....
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                       The Bronze Horseman
                             Part 3
                         by Max Khaytsus
              (b.c.k.a. )

     "He's not dead!"  Kera looked defiantly at the  farmer. "He can't
be!"
     "I saw it with my own eyes, Miss. They jousted and then Sir Quinn
cut his  throat. He's  not the  first one  either. Knights  and bounty
hunters from  all over have been  coming to collect the  reward on his
head."
     "No!"
     "Trust me, Miss, he's  dead. I can take you to  his grave, if you
want."
     "All right," Kera  said. Seeing Rien's grave would  not help her,
but maybe it would  let her know one way or the  other for certain. If
what the farmer said was true,  she would finish the job Rien started.
Quinn would become the target of her revenge.
    "Miss?  Miss?"
     Kera looked up, a single tear coursing down her cheek.
     "Are you all  right? I'm sorry about your friend.  Sir Quinn is a
renegade,  you know.  Come, it's  not  safe here.  Those brigands  are
always on the lookout for new blood."
     Kera felt another  tear run down her cheek and  tried to hide it.
Rien was all she'd  ever had, the only one who ever  cared and now she
was on her own. "I'm fine," she wiped her eyes. "Show me the grave."
     "This way," the farmer led her towards the cluster of huts at the
edge of the field and she  followed blindly. Nothing seemed to matter,
not even  as she  realized that this  might be a  trap. She  could not
imagine what to do next. It was  as if all control and ability to make
decisions suddenly escaped her.
     "It's right here," the farmer stopped short of a cleared patch of
land, not  far from the  edge of the road  leading to the  village. It
contained  seven wooden  markers, representing  the men  Quinn killed.
"Your friend  is on the edge  there," the farmer pointed.  "He was the
last killed."
     Kera walked over  and sank to her knees. `And  yet another knight
lies buried here,  slain by Sir Garwood Quinn on  20 Seber 1013,' read
the  marker. This  time Kera  forced  herself not  to cry  and made  a
decision. She  was going to get  revenge, no matter what  stood in her
way.
     "They're coming, Miss! You'd better  hide!" She heard the frantic
words of the farmer and turned. On the road at the edge of the village
were three  mounted men. As  the farmer began to  run, the one  in the
middle pointed  at him  and one  of his  companions charged  after the
running  man, drawing  his sword  on the  charge. The  other two  rode
slowly up to Kera and she gasped. The one who appeared to be in charge
was Rien.
     "You're  not from  this village,"  Rien declared.  "What is  your
business here?"
     "I-I..." Kera  stuttered and  saw Rien wink.  "I was  looking for
someone..."
     "One of them, perhaps?" he pointed at the graves.
     "This one, I think..." Kera pointed  to the last grave. "It's not
marked."
     "But it is marked," Rien insisted.  "Some fool knight who lost to
Sir Quinn. He got all the honors he deserved."
     At that  moment the brigand  who had  charged off into  the field
after the farmer came riding back  alone. "I struck him down, but he's
still alive. He's from the village."
1     "Get  the village  healer to  take  care of  him and  I want  him
brought  to me  when he  can talk,"  Rien said  and the  man rode  off
towards the village.
     "I  hope your  find  was  satisfactory, as  you  won't have  much
satisfaction from now on." Rien winked again. "Come here, wench."
     Kera walked  over to him  and he pulled her  up on his  horse and
quickly removed  the two daggers  in her  belt. Kera was  suddenly too
scared to move.
     "Here," Rien handed the blades  to his companion. "Remain here. I
will send someone to replace me, so you may complete the patrol."
     "Yes, Sir," the man answered and Rien galloped off.
     A safe distance away Rien slowed  his horse. Kera still could not
move. She  did not know  what happened to Rien,  what he was  after or
even who was buried in the  grave. More than anything else, she wanted
to embrace Rien, but could not permit herself to do so.
     "I am glad you're here," she  finally heard Rien's voice and felt
his arm  tighten around her waist.  "It's a lot worse  than I thought.
Quinn is holed up here as if he  was born in this place. He has plenty
of men, too. I managed to  become his lieutenant after killing the man
who originally held the  job, but I needed you. When  I kill him, this
place won't be safe  for anyone. We'll need to be  together. For now I
need you to pretend you'd rather be anywhere else but here."
     "I love you,"  Kera said almost inaudibly and  Rien realized that
she was crying.
     The horse  came to a  dead stop and  Rien's grip on  Kera's waist
tightened. "No. Not here and not now. Please."
     Kera  nodded through  her tears  and Rien  kicked the  horse into
motion again. "Did you get everything at Sharks' Cove?"
     "It's a  few leagues  out of  town," Kera  answered. "I  tied the
horses to a tree away from the road."
     "Good," Rien approved. "I'll check on them in the morning."
     They rode through the village which appeared to be deserted. Rien
stopped the horse before the largest building in sight and helped Kera
down, then jumped off himself. Kera noticed that he had a limp, but he
pushed her ahead of himself before she could say anything.
     The building  was a tavern  and an  inn. Inside four  men lounged
around drinking  and a  bartender stood behind  the bar.  Kera noticed
there was a metal chain around his neck which led up to the rafters.
     Rien kicked  the chair out from  one of the drunker  looking men.
"How often  do I have to  keep telling you  not to drink if  you can't
hold your booze?"
     The man  groaned, rising his hands  to his head and  Rien, having
picked up a half  full goblet off the table, threw it  at the man. "Go
get Quinn and clean up this mess when you get back!"
     The man  stumbled up to his  feet and staggered off  as the other
three straightened themselves  out. Rien shoved Kera into  a chair and
picking up the jug on the table took a few deep swallows from it, then
sat down himself.  A few moments later a tall  dark haired man dressed
in a fashionable  red tunic and grey pants came  down the stairs. Rien
immediately stood back up.
     "And what  have you brought  me this  time, Sir Keegan?"  the man
looked over at Kera.
     "With all due respect, Sir  Quinn," Rien answered, "I brought her
for myself. You told me I might select a woman for my own."
     "So I did,"  the man kept appraising Kera, "but  you said none in
the village suited your interest."
     "None did, Sir, but she is not from the village. She came looking
for one of the knights you jousted. I request her for my own."
     Quinn thought for  a moment. "Having found her, you  may have her
for tonight,  Sir Keegan,  but I  want her tomorrow  and then  I shall
1decide. She is rather young. The  rest of the men might appreciate her
as well. They need something new."
     "As you wish, Lord," Rien answered.
     "It's always as  I wish, Sir Keegan," Quin laughed  and went over
to the bar. "Give me a drink, man!"
     The man Rien  kicked out of his  chair came back to  clean up the
floor. "After you're done here, go  take up my patrol with Kritner and
Breault," Rien told him. "Kritner will be in charge."
     "Right away, Sir," the man answered.
     Rien took Kera by her arm and  led her up the stairs, showing her
into a luxurious room. "Sit," he let go of her and locked the door.
     Kera sat  down on the  bed. The way  Rien acted reminded  her too
much of the  men working for Liriss. She noticed  him doing everything
he said he was  against and it was beginning to  frighten her more and
more.
     "Are you all right?" he finally asked her.
     "Fine," Kera answered, wiping the tears off her cheeks.
     Rien knelt in front of her. "You sure?"
     "Why are you limping?" Kera asked.
     "I got hurt proving to Quinn I'm as good as any four of his men,"
Rien said. "It's fine now. I ride most of the time anyway."
     He and  Kera embraced and remained  that way for a  long time. It
was dark in the room by the time they let go of each other.
     "How are your eyes?" Rien asked.
     "As good as ever," Kera said. "I think my sense of smell improved
too."
     "It's not the disease?"
     "No, no.  That's all passed. I  guess I was so  concerned, I just
didn't notice the change at first. How are you?"
     Rien smiled. "A little worse for wear, but fine. I am glad you're
back," and he embraced her again.
     This time they let each other  go a lot sooner. "Are you hungry?"
Rien asked and without waiting for an answer went to the door. "Let me
get us some food." He put the  key in the lock and remained motionless
for a moment.
     "What's wrong?" Kera asked.
     Rien waited a moment longer, then turned to Kera. "Scream."
     "What?"
     "Just scream."
     Kera did and her yell was followed by laughter from the corridor.
She smiled and screamed again and Rien  pushed a chair so it fell over
with a thud. More laughter could be heard outside and Kera bit down on
her lip to prevent herself from doing the same.
     Rien placed  his index  finger to  his lips  and made  a shushing
sound, then quickly unlocked the door and stepped out.
     "What are you doing here?" Kera heard Rien demanding.
     "Talking, Sir," someone answered.
     "Not at my door!"
     "Yes, Sir."
     "Bring dinner for me and my friend and then get lost."
     Kera heard footsteps hurrying away and Rien stepped back into the
room,  holding  a candle.  He  was  smiling.  "I  have a  well  earned
reputation."
     Kera smiled also,  in spite of being concerned over  how Rien was
acting.  The  nagging  thoughts  of  how he  could  have  earned  that
reputation were  shoved to the back  of her mind, where  she would not
have to think about it.
     Rien placed  the candle in a  stand on the table  and returned to
Kera. "Give me your cloak."
     Kera fumbled with the strings at her neck and handed it to him.
1     Rien turned it  over, shook it, then carelessly tossed  it on the
floor in the middle of the room.  He then bent down and unlaced Kera's
tunic, pulling it partially off of one shoulder.
     "What are  you doing?" she  asked him, but instead  of answering,
Rien kissed her and roughed up her hair.
     A knock sounded at the door, "Yes?" Rien stood up and turned, one
hand resting possessively on Kera's shoulder.
     The door opened  and a man walked in carrying  a tray. He stepped
over the  cloak on  the floor  to place  the food  on the  table, then
stepped back  and threw a quick  glance over at Kera,  who lowered her
eyes. "Will there be anything else, Sir?" he asked Rien.
     "When's your patrol?"
     "Midnight, Sir."
     "Stay away from my door."
     The man  bowed and quickly  retreated from the room,  pulling the
door closed after himself. Rien hurried to relock it.
     "Come," Rien called to Kera and  she came over to the table. "You
can fix your tunic now," he motioned.
     "I  was  hoping I  would  be  removing  it later,"  she  answered
cautiously.
     Rien smirked. "As you wish. I won't make you sleep dressed."
     Kera hurried through dinner, even  though it was much better than
the trail rations she had been  enduring for the last couple of weeks.
She found herself thinking of the  things she saw and heard. Listening
to Rien she understood that he did his best to fit in with the rest of
the cut-throats  around, but the  environment greatly reminded  her of
Liriss' organization, something she thought was well behind her.
     "How did you join them?" Kera asked when she finished eating.
     "Here?" Rien asked and she nodded. "I was ambushed on the road. I
realized it was an ambush, but there was nothing I could do when I was
attacked,  other than  be ready.  So I  got hurt,  but I  did win  the
fight."
     Kera smiled. Somehow she'd expected that.
     "That's when Quinn showed up," Rien  went on. "He had a couple of
his men with  him and all had  crossbows, so I decided to  talk my way
out of a conflict...or  rather into a job. A couple  of praises of his
skill  and fame  and a  boast or  two about  my own  abilities got  me
challenged to  a sword fight. Quinn's  pretty good, but I  let him win
anyway. Told him I'm a knight.
     "That got him interested enough to  keep me around and a week ago
I arranged for  a mishap to take his lieutenant.  Being the only other
knight around, Quinn gave the position to me."
     "Why haven't you killed him yet?" Kera asked. "Sounds like you've
had plenty of opportunities."
     "He  has men,"  Rien said,  "and I  cannot outfight  all of  them
should  they  learn  that  I  either attempted  or  succeeded  in  the
assassination. I  also promised  you I  would meet  you here.  I don't
expect to stay long now. Just a few days so I can finish the job."
     There was some commotion and Rien  got up to look out the window.
He saw  two men pushing  another one around  in the dark.  "The guards
must have gotten a hold of another villager," he sighed.
     Kera took  a look too after  putting out the candle.  "Aren't you
going to stop them before they kill him?"
     "No. There  are only so  many good things that  I can do  and not
have anyone  wonder," Rien  said. "Don't worry,  they won't  kill him.
There are  so few villagers left  that Quinn will have  their heads if
they do."
     "Rien," Kera said, "Quinn told you he wants to bed me tomorrow."
     "He won't," Rien promised and put  his arms around Kera. "Tell me
about your trip. What happened in Sharks' Cove?"
1
     Kera woke up alone, realizing that her arms had fallen asleep and
to her surprise found that both her hands were tightly tied behind her
back.  She struggled  against  the rope,  which  was looped  somewhere
beneath the bed, but could not break or loosen it. With difficulty she
sat up on the bed and  looked around. Her clothing was still scattered
on the floor, but  Rien's were gone, as were the  dishes on the table.
She tried to bend  over, to see what the rope was  attached to, but it
was too short to give her that much freedom of movement. She kicked at
the floor in anger and threw herself back on the bed.
     "Son of a ...!" She couldn't  think of a good derogatory word for
an elf. `What am I going to do?  Run away?' She rolled over to look at
the window a  few feet away. All she  could see was a clear  sky and a
ray of sunlight filling the room. It must be late morning. Kera tossed
a bit longer, making herself comfortable.  It made sense to her that a
prisoner could not roam free, but couldn't Rien just lock her in or at
least tie her more comfortably? She  wondered if the door was unlocked
and maneuvered herself under the blanket. `He wouldn't dare...'
     The  street  was reasonably  quiet  and  occasionally voices  and
footsteps could  be heard in the  corridor. After what seemed  like an
eternity of  staring at the same  spot on the wall,  Kera decided that
her only  course of action  was to wait and,  anyhow, the bed  was the
most comfortable place in  the room and she could not  get free of the
rope anyway.
     It was well past noon when Kera heard a key click in the lock and
quickly slid further under the blanket.
     Rien walked in. She glared at him.
     "I'm sorry," Rien shut the door  and walked over. He sat down and
untied the rope.
     Kera felt  like strangling  him, but instead  placed her  arms in
front of herself and dropped her head in them.
     "Why?"
     "If you are to appear as my captive, it has to be full time."
     "Who's going to see me?"
     "Quinn  has keys  to all  doors. Most  other men  could pick  the
lock."
     "And you were going to leave me tied up for them?!"
     Rien stroked her back. "If you were free to roam about, could you
pick it?"
     "Why didn't you warn me?"
     "I didn't think of it last night  and did not want to wake you up
this morning.  You tend to sleep  late, so you would  have been spared
most of the anxiety."
     Kera sighed. "If you keep this up long enough, I'll forgive you."
     Rien smiled  and continued running  his fingers along  her spine.
"How long?"
     "Long," she answered and brushed the blanket back.
     Rien looked up to avoid meeting Kera's gaze and then moved behind
her, so she would not see him. "I  moved the horses to a box canyon on
the other side  of the hills to  the south," Rien said  after a while.
"It's secluded and has good grass."
     Kera moaned in response.
     "Are you paying attention?"
     "Uh-huh."
     "I left  one of the healing  potions we took from  Terell on your
horse. I am leaving another one in the room so you can be close to it.
The third is  on my riding horse  here. I've got the  poison here too.
You'll administer it to Quinn tonight."
     Kera turned over and Rien pulled his arms back. "What do you mean
I'll administer  it?" She  looked down  at his  hands. "Keep  going, I
1haven't forgiven you yet."
     "Quinn wants  to see you  tonight," Rien reminded her.  "You will
have the  opportunity. I will be  taking care of his  men." He reached
out towards  Kera and  a second later  she jumped up  with a  burst of
laughter.
     "Cut it out!"
     "That sounded pretty final," Rien said. "I guess I'm done."
     Kera covered her  stomach with her arms. "How are  we going to do
that?"
     "You will take..."
     A knock  on the door  interrupted Rien.  He looked at  Kera, then
stood up. She instinctively took the  rope and placed her hands behind
her back.
     "Come," Rien turned to the door.
     The guard whom Kera met in the field the day before entered. "The
old man is conscious, but the healer says he is not to be moved."
     Rien folded his arms and the  man took the opportunity to steal a
glance at Kera.
     "Prepare my horse. I will be there shortly."
     The guard bowed and left.
     Rien turned to Kera and she fell  back on the bed. "I hate this,"
she sighed.
     Rien sat down on the edge of  the bed. "I have to leave. You will
add the poison to  Quinn's drink tonight. I will take  care of as many
men as I can. We'll leave during the night."
     Kera looked up at him. His eyes were a nondescript blue-grey.
     "I have to tie you."
     She turned  over, placing her  hands on  her back and  closed her
eyes to hide the pain.
     Rien secured her hands and left  without a word, locking the door
after himself.

     Rien and  Breault dismounted  on the  neat lawn  in front  of the
healer's hut.  The healer,  Sherestha, a  plump old  woman, scornfully
muttered that these two could not walk the fifty yards from the tavern
to her house.
     "How is he?" Rien asked.
     "He'll die if he's lucky," the woman answered.
     Rien took the healing potion from the saddle bag and went inside.
The old  farmer lay on  his stomach on a  pile of blankets  and skins.
Across his back were leaves and  herbs covering a foot long gash. Rien
knelt down next to him.
     "He is not conscious," the woman said. "He's too old."
     Rien stood up and handed her the potion. "Make him drink it."
     "What is this?" Sherestha asked.
     "Does it matter? He'll die if he's lucky."
     Breault chuckled and the woman glared at him.
     "What is this?"
     "It will heal the wound," Rien said.
     The healer opened the vial  and smelled the contents, then turned
the wounded  man on  his side  and began pouring  the liquid  into his
mouth.
     The  smile on  Breault's  face diminished  as  the wound  started
healing over. He looked at Rien.
     "Come, we need to talk, Breault."
     They walked out back with Rien saying no more.
     "Why are you  healing him?" Breault finally asked.  "What good is
he to us?"
     "Are you questioning my authority?"
     Breault  drew himself  to  his full  six-four  height. "Yes,  Sir
1Keegan, I am."
     Rien calmly walked past him. "Don't you think I know better?"
     "I think something is wrong."
     Rien stopped. "Like what?"
     "There's something wrong with you."
     Rien remained  with his back to  Breault, but his hand  all ready
held the hilt of his long dagger. "Like what, Breault?"
     "You like  life," the man  made the accusation and  started after
Rien. "I've never seen you take it."
     Rien waited for  Breault to be directly behind  him, then turned,
putting  the dagger  in his  stomach. "Don't  you like  life, Breault?
Given the  choice, do  you want to  live?" He held  the man  still and
forced it up under his rib cage.  "I am taking a life, Breault. Do you
like it?"
     Red foam  began appearing at  the brigand's mouth and  he started
slipping down.
     Rien let the  body drop to the ground. "Now  you've seen it all."
He wiped the blade  on the dead man's tunic and  returned to the house
after stopping by his horse. He noticed the wound on the farmer's back
was almost gone and the old woman was looking it over.
     "He will never be able to repay you," she looked up.
     "You will," Rien said.
     "What do you want of me?"
     Rien  held up  the dark  green stalk  he had  retrieved from  his
saddle bag.  "This is Wolfbane.  I want you  to make me  the strongest
poison you can with it."
     "Why?" the woman asked.
     "I will free this village of its plague," he answered.
     "You alone?"
     "Mostly."
     "What's in it for you?"
     "Peace of mind. Revenge."
     "For what?"
     "One of the graves  out there belongs to a friend.  My lover is a
prisoner at the tavern. Is that  reason enough? ...And," he added more
carefully, as if the healer was  one of Quinn's people, "I just killed
a man for trying to stop me."
     The  old woman  took the  stalk from  Rien's hands  and carefully
studied him. "I will help you," she said finally.

     Kera lay on her back, staring at the wooden planks in the ceiling
when she heard  a key turn in  the lock. `About time,'  she thought to
herself  and turned  over. The  door  creaked open  and Garwood  Quinn
walked in. Kera's  eyes immediately snapped shut and  she pretended to
be asleep. She  heard Quinn walk up to her  and immediately wished she
was better covered by  the blanket. He stood over her  for a bit, then
walked away. A  chair was shoved aside and the  shutters on the window
were pushed  open. Quinn came  back to the  bed and kicked  it solidly
with  this boot.  Kera bolted  upright, looking  at him  with startled
eyes. The knight smiled and she looked down.
     "Has Sir Keegan been a gentleman with you?" Quinn laughed.
     Kera didn't answer.
     Quinn grabbed her chin and forced her to face him. "Well?"
     Tears formed in her eyes.
     "He  wasn't!"  Quinn laughed  with  delight.  "Well, I  won't  be
either!"
     Kera tried to pull her head back, but Quinn tightened his grip on
her jaw until she screamed in pain.
     "So you can talk..."
     Kera continued looking at him emptily.  It was the only thing she
1could do.
     Quinn pushed her  down and untied the rope from  the bed, retying
the  lose end  around her  neck. "Come  on," he  pulled the  rope. "My
room's bigger."
     Kera resisted and Quinn jerked hard  on the rope, making her fall
to the floor.  The loop around her neck tightened  and constrained her
breathing and as she began to to cough, Quinn stepped on the rope near
her  neck. In  her  coughing fit,  Kera tightened  the  loop more  and
started gasping for air.
     Quinn lazily bent down and loosened the loop, then pulled her up.
"See what  can happen  if you  don't follow my  lead?" He  checked the
knots at her neck  and hands and then pushed Kera  ahead of himself to
the door. By the  time they reached it, he was all  ready ahead of her
and pulling her  by the rope. "You  make this good and I  may even let
you enjoy yourself."
     In the corridor they were stopped by a guard. "Sir Quinn, a wagon
was just brought to the inn. The men say they have prisoners."
     Quinn looked at the guard with annoyance in his eyes, then shoved
Kera into him. "Take her to my room and keep her there."

     Rien returned near dusk, his  vial refilled with a potent poison.
He watched the off duty men roll two barrels into the bar from a wagon
in the  street. He asked where  it had come  from and was told  that a
merchant  and his  daughter  were captured  and  were currently  being
questioned by  Quinn. The wagon was  being unloaded at his  order. The
two casks contained wine.
     Rien  proceeded  upstairs to  his  room  only  to find  the  door
unlocked and  the room  empty. He  scanned the area  for any  signs of
struggle. There were none and he returned to the corridor where he saw
a guard standing by Quinn's door.
     "Where is the girl who was in my room?"
     "Here," the man said. "Sir Quinn asked me to guard her."
     "Did she try to escape?"
     "I don't know, Sir.  I was only told to bring  her here and guard
her."
     Rien opened the door and walked  in. The guard followed him. Kera
sat inside  in a  chair, her hands  still tied behind  her and  a rope
around her neck.
     "She  looks nice,  Sir," the  guard smiled  lecherously and  Kera
glared up at him.
     "Did anyone hurt you?" Rien asked.
     Kera shook her head.
     "How long ago did Quinn leave?" Rien asked the guard.
     "Not long. Shortly  after sunset, when the wagon  was brought. He
went to talk to the prisoners."
     "Good," Rien said. As the guard turned back to gawk at Kera, Rien
forced his dagger into the man's back and carefully lowered him to the
floor.
     "Are you sure  you're all right?" Rien asked  Kera again, cutting
her loose with the bloody knife. "They didn't do anything to you?"
     "I'm fine, really. He didn't have the time."
     Rien helped Kera  up and put his free arm  around her. "Return to
my room and get dressed. Come down in a bit. Be ready for a fight." He
picked up an empty glass and walked out with Kera.
     She took  a turn  down the  side corridor to  Rien's room  and he
proceeded to the top of the stairs. Below he saw Quinn's collection of
thugs and cutthroats gathering together  for dinner. Behind the bar he
noticed the two barrels that were brought in from the wagon. He smiled
and poured the poison the healer made for him into the empty glass and
proceeded down the stairs.
1     A  few of  the men  greeted him  on  his way  to the  bar and  he
responded in kind. "Where's Quinn?" he asked the barman.
     "There," he was directed to the back room.
     "Make  my dinner,"  Rien  ordered  and the  man  left, the  chain
clanking up above  him as he walked.  Rien went around the  bar to the
barrels, opened one with a mallet and dumped the poison in. The men in
the common  room quieted down hearing  the bang and looked  over. Some
even came up. A couple more hits  and Rien removed all the portions of
the splintered lid. "A little good  fortune that we can all share in!"
he announced. "Help yourselves."
     The men  cheered and Rien, picking  up a pitcher and  scooping up
some of the dark red liquid, left.
     Making his way past the mob that gathered around the barrel, Rien
stopped in the corridor before the  back room door and and emptied the
vial of poison he obtained from Terell into the pitcher. He opened the
door and  entered. A guard stepped  out of his way  and Quinn, sitting
with his back to the door  looked over his shoulder. Across from Quinn
sat a middle aged man and a girl not yet out of her teens.
     "Good, Sir  Keegan. I am glad  you could join us.  You should see
how this fool is trying to make a deal!"
     Rien smiled and placed the  pitcher before Quinn. "Compliments of
our guest."
     Quinn released  a laugh as  Rien reached up to  a shelf to  get a
goblet. "Get me two," Quinn instructed.
     Rien placed both glasses before  the knight and remained standing
behind him.
     Quinn poured  wine into  both goblets  and moved  one to  the man
across from him. "Let me remind you I have you, your property and your
daughter. Offer  me something  I don't all  ready have,  otherwise you
wanting to  go free is merely  wishful thinking. Drink a  little of my
wine. Let it not be said I am not a hospitable man."
     Rien looked  down. There  was no  way to  stop the  merchant from
poisoning himself. Quinn was about to have his last taste of wine.
     "No matter how badly I want my daughter and myself to to be free,
I can give you nothing more than  what you've all ready taken from me.
I will not drink stolen wine!" The  goblet bounced to the floor with a
pronounced clank.
     Rien looked at  Quinn, whose eyebrows went up. "Then  why did you
ask me to make a deal, you old fool?"
     The man did not respond and Quinn took a swallow from his goblet.
"I will let my men practice with you tonight and your daughter can try
and stay alive with me." He turned  back to Rien. "That bitch of yours
is in my room. You may have her back."
     Rien nodded.
     "May  the gods  strike  you down  for what  you  are doing!"  the
merchant exclaimed, glaring at the three rogues.
     "If they haven't yet, I doubt they will. Worry about yourself for
now," Quinn  said, taking  a second, larger  swallow from  the goblet.
"And tomorrow your worries may be over."
     Deep inside Rien smiled at the irony of the merchant's statement.
If he  identified Terell's  poison correctly, Quinn  would not  have a
pleasant death.
     Quinn coughed as he put the goblet down and again turned to Rien.
"Good wine. Have the men break open a barrel."
     "All ready  have, Sir.  I knew you'd  be in a  good mood."  As he
spoke, Rien noticed  Quinn's face beginning to redden and  his arm was
curled under his stomach.
     Quinn  struggled to  get up,  holding onto  the table,  trying to
maintain his  facing. A look of  horror spread on his  face. "Let them
go, Rien..." and with those words  Quinn collapsed to the floor. Blood
1flowed out of his open mouth.
     "Get a  healer!" Rien turned  to the  startled guard and  the man
made for the door, impaling himself on Rien's long dagger. Rien pushed
the dying man down on top of Quinn. He waited for a moment for the man
to die, then looked up at the merchant who was as white as a sheet.
     "In a few minutes you will leave  by this door and turn left down
the corridor. The passage leads to the stables out back. There will be
no guards. Take your horses and  wagon, nothing else, and go. The left
fork of the road is not guarded."
     Not  giving the  merchant  a  chance to  recover  from his  death
sentence and its subsequent favorable  resolution, Rien left the room,
proceeding to  the stables. He  killed the  man standing guard  in the
doorway and then  another one outside the barn door.  He took a little
more time to compensate the merchant with some of Quinn's lootings and
after dumping a  bag in the wagon bed, circled  around the building to
the front  entrance. The first thing  to catch his attention  were the
two guards lying at the door.  `The healer's poison must be quick,' he
thought,  walking past  them.  Inside  a good  half  of  the men  were
sprawled out on  the floor and furniture and another  dozen or so were
merrily drinking away.
     "Look!"  Rien noticed  someone get  up behind  the bar.  "Seli is
dead!" The  man pulled the bartender  up and shoved him  over the bar,
collapsing after him. Neither got up.
     Rien remained  at the door,  watching as  two or three  other men
quietly passed out in front of  him. There was a commotion upstairs. A
male voice  said something and a  moment later a body  hit the railing
and broke  through, falling into the  common room. The man  had a deep
wound in  his chest. Kera  appeared at the  top of the  stairs looking
down. Besides her clothing she wore  Quinn's red cloak and scabbard. A
bloodied sword  was in her hands.  She looked around the  common room,
surprised that no one had reacted  and, after spotting Rien, went down
stairs.
     As Kera passed  one of the tables,  a man at it got  up, took one
step towards  her and collapsed.  She stood  in awe, looking  at Rien.
"What did you do?"
     Rien  shrugged.  "I asked  the  village  healer  to make  me  the
strongest poison she could with a stalk of Wolfbane I took from Maari.
Wolfbane,  also   known  as  Monk's   Hood,  is  an   aphrodisiac  and
hallucinogen  in small  quantities, but  too much  of it  will burn  a
person out...or make them go mad.  She must have added something else.
They don't even realize what's happening to them."
     Another man  fell out of his  chair as Kera stepped  over the one
that had  fallen in front  of her. "I didn't  ask for a  lecture. What
about Quinn?"
     "I gave him the poison I took from Terell's shop. He's dead too."
     Only three  of Quinn's  men remained upright  and it  was obvious
they would  not last long. Nineteen  other bodies lay on  the floor. A
job well done...if well could in any way be associated with death.
     "Come,"  Rien took  Kera's  hand. "There  are  still patrols  out
there. We'd better leave."
     "Shouldn't they be killed too?"
     "There are  less than ten  men total,  all back alley  thugs. The
villagers can take care of them if they don't flee on their own."
     Distant thunder rolled through the  skies as they stepped outside
the tavern. Rien walked past the stables towards the forest.
     "Aren't we taking  the horses? It looks like it  will rain," Kera
stopped him, "and what about all your stuff?"
     "We have horses waiting," Rien  answered. "They are more powerful
than anything here and they carry  equipment. I have no use for looted
treasure. The villagers need it more."
1     Kera tossed the cloak she wore to the ground. "Red is too obvious
in the  moonlight," she  said. "And  it's not  my color."  She started
unstrapping the sword when Rien stopped her.
     "It's a good blade. Keep it."

     It was well  into the night when Rien and  Kera reached the hilly
area southwest of Phedra. Their target  was a cluster of boulders with
a small  pass between  them. On the  other side, in  a box  in canyon,
waited their two horses and escape from the remaining guards.
     "I  take it  you  didn't  bring them  through  here," Kera  said,
looking over a passage so narrow that even she would not fit through.
     "I went all the way around," Rien answered. "Climbing over to the
pass will  save us three leagues  of hiking. We'll have  to climb some
twenty feet, though. There is a lip in the cliff face up there."
     "What's another three  leagues after the last  ten?" sighed Kera.
She grabbed a  hold of some rocks and started  climbing. Rien followed
her.
     "Do you smell smoke?" Kera asked when near the top.
     Below  her  Rien  took  his  time  to  finish  the  climb  before
answering. "I've been  smelling it for a while. If  there was wind, we
could tell where it's coming from."
     The step-like  formation in the face  of the cliff was  about two
feet across, wide enough to stand on, but not much more.
     Rien leaned back on the wall. "Can you see the village?"
     "Right there,"  Kera pointed  into the  darkness. "It's  not very
clear."
     "I'm impressed," Rien nodded. "Much superior to other people."
     "Do I look better with grey or brown eyes?" Kera asked.
     "Excuse me?"
     "You did notice that my eyes changed color?"
     "Of course! I told you they did."
     "So which is better?"
     "For what?"
     "My appearance!"
     "I'm partial to grey."
     "Took you long enough."
     Rien laughed and Kera took a step towards him.
     "If we weren't on  a cliff right now, I'd give  you a shove you'd
remember for a while."
     "If you give me one here, I  promise you I will remember it for a
while as well. At least on the way down."
     Rien took Kera's arm. "Come on. This slopes up. Watch your step."
     They made their way up the ledge  into the crack in the hill side
and continued at a leisurely pace  for some time. They were passing an
overhang which was  level with the top  of the hill on  the other side
when a  loud sound of splintering  wood disturbed the night  and rocks
started falling from  above. The thunder that has been  at the horizon
for the duration of their walk, sounded overhead and a brilliant flash
of lighting split the sky.
     Kera jumped back and fell against  the wall. One stone managed to
bounce off her  shoulder and a mass of pebbles  sprayed over her back.
When it was all  over, she stirred and got up. Rien lay  a few feet up
ahead. He  must have taken the  brunt of the landslide.  Kera made her
way to him. He was alive, but  unconscious. The top of the hill was no
more than twenty feet away.
     While thinking of  what to do next, Kera  heard running footsteps
and went up, in hope of  finding help, but instead encountered two men
with swords, one of which promptly took a swing at her and missed. She
backed down the slope, dodged his  second attack and then swung at him
with her sword. Those late night practice sessions with Rien must have
1helped, as the man was knocked off  balance and fell past her, off the
cliff. His  fading scream made Kera  realize how dangerous it  was for
her to remain on the ledge and she hurried to level ground.
     The second  man, apparently wiser  for not taking the  same risk,
held a torch in  one hand and a sword in  the other, patiently waiting
for  her to  come up.  His first  swing was  with the  torch and  Kera
instinctively jumped  back, stumbling  and landing  on her  back. With
horror she realized  that her head was  over the edge of  a fifty foot
drop. The man advanced  with the torch ahead of him  before Kera had a
chance to  react. She could  not move with  it almost directly  in her
face.
     "Drop  the sword,"  the  man  told her  and  when she  hesitated,
brought the flame closer in. Kera smelled singing hair and immediately
let the weapon go. The man kicked it aside. "Now get up. Slowly."
     Kera did so and took a step  back when the man motioned her to do
so, but when he  bent down to pick up the sword, she  gave the torch a
kick and it flew out of his hand and over the edge. Darkness descended
on the small plateau. The man blindly swung his sword, but Kera had no
problems  avoiding  the blow  and  remained  crouched on  the  ground.
Without light and a cloudy  sky, her opponent was practically helpless
and expected her  to be just as  lost, but was surprised  by getting a
dagger in  his side. He swung  in the proper direction,  but was again
too high.
     Kera remained  silent, watching him  trying to hear her.  After a
while the man apparently  gave up and Kera was able  to put her dagger
into his knee. He sank to  the ground, but swung again anyway, missing
Kera completely. With another thrust she  finished him off and went to
check on Rien. Thunder and  lightning made themselves known once again
and a light rain began to fall.
     Kera found Rien still unconscious, laying where she left him. She
took  the time  to examine  him  now. It  was difficult  in the  rain,
without light  -- everything was  red or black or  both -- but  it was
enough to determine  his condition. The most obvious wound  was in his
side. It  was dirty and  bloody and the  clothing was torn.  Kera, not
quite sure  of what to do,  decided to move  him to the level  area up
above, instead  of continuing on the  thin ledge. It was  amazing that
neither one of them had fallen off it in the first place.
     While trying to move Rien, Kera found what looked like remains of
a  mechanism that  could have  caused the  rock slide,  but it  was of
little importance now. She struggled to get Rien up top and he groaned
from pain in spite of being unconscious.
     Locating the brigand's camp, a small cave in the rocks, sheltered
from the storm, Kera dragged Rien in and placed him on an even slab of
rock towards the  back of the cavern.  There was a small  fire to keep
warm and she tore off a few strips  of her tunic to make a bandage. It
was only then that Kera noticed that her own shoulder was bloody where
it had been hit.
     After washing  Rien's wounds,  Kera bandaged them.  She suspected
that his ribs  were broken, but not  being a doctor, not  only did she
not know  how to make sure,  but also how  to treat it. She  then took
care of her own shoulder and looked over the cave. It was bare, except
for the  fire and two  packs in the  corner. Searching them  she found
nothing more than basic equipment. It looked like the two men had only
been beginning to set up camp.
     Kera returned to  the cliff to pick up her  sword and then looked
around to  see if the men  brought horses. Not finding  anything, Kera
paused on the cliff overlooking the canyon. Through the rain she could
tell it  was a good mile  wide and at  least three long. Kera  did not
know where to begin looking for  their own mounts and the only healing
potion she  could use was somewhere  out there. She spent  a long time
1looking down  into the  darkness, waiting for  a glimmer  of something
other than trees. Finally giving up, Kera returned to the cave to take
shelter for  the night. Maybe Rien  would wake up by  morning and tell
her where to look.
     She  checked the  dressing on  Rien's side  one more  time before
settling down to sleep. He was definitely weaker and this time did not
even groan when  she moved him. His breathing was  shallow. The lesion
was still oozing blood with no indication of stopping; the area around
the  wound was  hot. Kera  made  the bandage  as tight  as she  could,
knowing  it would  probably do  more damage  to the  broken ribs,  but
preferring that to having Rien bleed to death.
     Upon  completion  of  the  task, Kera  made  herself  comfortable
against the wall  of the cave, leaning slightly back  on the step-like
rock formation and wishing for Rien's condition to improve by morning,
finally fell asleep.
     Kera opened her eyes and was  nearly blinded by the bright lights
around her. She blinked several times  at the light that was as bright
as day and after a minute her eyes adjusted to the brightness. She sat
in a  soft chair  with arm rests  in a large,  brightly lit  room. She
looked up to see where the light was coming from, but saw nothing more
than a uniformly glowing  ceiling. In front of her sat  a box, about a
foot square, with  a glossy black surface that  reflected the ceiling,
facing her. Kera reached out to touch it, but as soon as her hand made
contact, the box made a noise and  lit up with an orange glow. Strange
symbols appeared on the smooth surface.
     Startled,  Kera  jumped up  and  the  chair  she was  sitting  in
swivelled and  rolled back. For  the first  time she noticed  that ten
feet away, to her right, sat a young black-haired man. The clothing he
was wearing  Kera could not recognize  as having ever seen  before. He
wore faded blue pants and a sky-blue tunic carefully tucked into them.
She gasped and he looked up at her, no less surprised. Next to him was
a box identical to  the one Kera had touched --  she now noticed there
were quite a few of them set in rows about the room.
     The young man  simply stared at her for a  minute, not quite sure
what to say. The  box next to him flickered a couple  of times, but he
did not look at it.
     Kera straightened out as the rolling chair bumped against a table
on the other side  of the room. The box on that table  lit up like the
first. "Where am  I?" Kera asked, concerned about all  the magic going
off around her so freely.
     "En..."  the young  man began  to say  with what  appeared to  be
reflex,  making Kera  believe it  was a  question he  heard often.  He
picked up  a frame from a  pile of papers and  put it on his  face. It
looked to be made  of thin strips of metal, twisted  to hold two round
pieced of glass in place in front  of his eyes. A wider piece of metal
connected the  two pieces  at the  bridge of his  nose and  two pieces
extended from the other side to hook over his ears.
     The man  eyed Kera from head  to toe and she  stood there looking
back at him, doing the same.  "Kera?" he finally asked, taking a quick
glance at his box.
     Kera  nodded and  took  an unsure  step back.  She  felt for  her
dagger, but remembered she was sleeping  before and did not have it on
her. It was on  the ground in the cave, where she  had placed it after
cutting bandages for Rien. "Rien?!"  she spun around, realizing he was
not there.
     "Calm down!" the young man finally stood up. "He's fine."
     "He's  not  fine!"  Kera  fired back,  no  longer  concerned  for
herself.  "He's  alone in  a  cave,  unconscious and  bleeding!  Maybe
dying!"
     The young man again glanced at the box next to him. "Trust me. He
1will be fine,"  he said, not without compassion. Kera  noticed that he
had a slight  accent that made his words softer.  "Please, sit down. I
need to know how you got here."
     Kera did not care  one bit how she ended up in  the room. All she
wanted was to be back with Rien, but realizing that this man seemed to
know both her and her companion, she  sat down in the chair nearest to
her. Just like the first one she  sat in, this one was soft, swivelled
and moved freely on the floor.
     "I don't bite," Kera's host smiled  and indicated to a chair next
to his own. Kera changed seats, but  not to the one he pointed to. She
sat down  one chair away,  just in case she  would need to  move. That
seemed to satisfy him and he sat back down, again looking at his box.
     Kera looked at the  desk at which she was now  sitting. On it was
yet another of those boxes, but the  glossy front of it was not lit. A
rectangular pad  with emphasized  squares sat before  it. Each  of the
squares had a  different symbol on it.  On this desk, like  on some of
the  others, lay  a pile  papers, scattered  around in  disarray. Kera
picked one sheet up.  It was very smooth and thin  -- nothing like the
parchment she had  ever seen. On it were uniform  proper letters which
did not appear to be written by hand. Kera stealthily picked up a palm
sized glossy item on the table to examine it.
     "You were  asleep," the young man  said. Kera was not  sure if it
was a question or  a statement or even an order.  He still looked into
the glow of the box.
     The door  across the room  opened and  a slender woman  with long
brown hair  walked in.  "I got  it!" she declared  in a  joyful voice,
holding up  sheets of parchment  similar to  those on the  tables. She
stopped at the  door, looking at Kera. She wore  a white blouse neatly
tucked into a narrow grey skirt that went down to her knees and a pink
belt with a  butterfly buckle. The shoes on her  feet were elevated so
that  she stood  balanced on  her toes.  Kera could  not believe  that
someone  would   ever  wear  clothing  so   impractical  for  everyday
activities.
     "Stay there," the  man said to the woman, holding  up his arm. "I
don't know what's happened."
     The woman remained  standing by the door and the  man turned back
to his box. He quickly  pressed different locations on the rectangular
pad before the box and took one more look at Kera, then he turned back
and deliberately  pressed one of  the right hand squares.  Darkness so
dark that Kera could no longer see at all descended on the room.

     Her back hurting  from where a sharp rock pressed  into it forced
Kera to leap up from the "steps" she was sleeping on. She looked about
the cavern she  was in. The fire  was almost out and  her night vision
began supplementing  her normal sight.  She noticed Rien lying  on the
ground not far away. However much time passed, he has not moved.
     Kera sat down  next to him, realizing that she  held something in
her  hand. It  was  the little  glossy  object she  picked  up in  the
brightly lit  room that she  believed to have been  a dream. It  was a
thin, smooth rectangular bar, made of some material she had never seen
before. A slender chain was attached to one side, ending with a silver
ring. At  the other end  was a strange  golden symbol that  Kera later
realized to be  overlapping runic letters. A long red  line ran almost
the full length of the item. It was crossed by many small black lines.
Down both sides of the red line were more symbols, all in black.
     Kera turned the strange item over.  On the back side a circle was
cut away in the square. In it floated a glowing arrow and in time Kera
realized that no matter how it  was turned, level with the ground, the
arrow always pointed in the same direction.
     She put it away and took  another look at Rien. His condition had
1not improved.  Kera lay down  next to him  and after some  tossing and
turning, fell asleep again.

     Kera awoke to Rien  trying to turn over. She held  him down for a
moment,  stroking his  hair and  he  relaxed. She  again examined  the
condition of  his wounds and  was surprised to  find that the  cut was
beginning to  heal over  and what she  originally thought  were broken
ribs was only a severe bruise.
     Satisfied with her diagnoses,  Kera started making breakfast from
the supplies the men she killed had, waiting for Rien to wake up.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                          Understanding
          by Bill Erdley


     As I sit here  under this tree and watch my  friends die, I think
of how nice a  day this is. It's a fine day to  just sit and watch the
hawks circle  lazily through the  sky, occasionally dodging  an errant
arrow. The clouds seem oblivious  to the carnage happening below them.
The grass,  on the  other hand,  gets to  see it  all; the  blood, the
horror, the death.

        The grass doesn't understand ...

     I was  one of  the first  to fall  during the  first rush.  I was
holding my shield a little too high, and I caught an arrow in my right
leg just  above the knee.  As I stopped to  remove it, I  took another
arrow in the side.  I fell and crawled out of the  way of my comrades,
who continued the attack. I had fallen  near the tree, so my crawl was
not a long one,  but it was most painful. The arrow  in my leg snapped
off when  I fell, but  the leg  is almost numb,  so I don't  notice. I
removed the  arrow from  my side, but  it was high  enough to  catch a
lung. Already  I am coughing  blood, and  the wound continues  to ooze
through the rags that I hold over it. The rags are soaked.

     Even the grass beneath the tree knows the taste of blood ...

        ... but the tree won't understand.

     This is a fine day for sitting,  and for thinking. How many of us
know  what we  are fighting  for? How  many know  who we  are fighting
against?  We fight  for no  good reason,  except that  we are  told to
fight. Those  that we fight  could as easily  be our neighbors  as our
enemies. Yet we hack  and slash and kill those that  we have no reason
to hate; fighting and killing and dying for the whims of some noble.

     I watch a man who I had met last night crash to the ground with a
cry ...

        ... but the ground can't understand.

     The battle is going badly for us, and I watch my friends fall one
by one.  They are  proud men;  strong men; brave  men who  would fight
until they could fight no more. But  they could be proud at home, with
their families, watching a new child  take it's first step. They could
be strong  in the fields growing  crops or strong in  the shops making
horse shoes or plow blades or axe  heads. They could be brave facing a
storm without  shelter, or protecting  a neighbor from a  wild animal.
But they are here; these proud, brave, strong men.

     They are here  to die beneath a  sky which has only  now begun to
weep for them ...

        ... but even the sky doesn't understand.

     The  ground is  cool and  the grass  feels soft,  under the  tree
beneath the sky.  The battle is almost over, and  the outcome assured;
we have lost. I  need no longer watch, for I have  seen all that needs
to be seen. A  warm breeze blows across my face  toward the carnage of
the battlefield. I can smell the scent of wild flowers in the wind and
it makes me smile. I can feel the wetness on my cheeks which must have
1come from tears, but I don't remember  crying. I think of my wife, who
waits for my return.  I think of my children, playing  in a field like
the one before me used to be.  I think of the nobles who demanded that
this war  be fought.  I think of  the men whose  blood now  colors the
meadow.

     Darkness begins to fall in the middle of the day as I think ...

        ... And I don't understand, either.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                         Opus Interruptus
                        by Wendy Hennequin
               (b.c.k.a. )

     Relaxed at last,  Marcellon walked barefoot beside  a woman along
the shore in Dargon. The sand was warm and the water cool, and the sea
air soothed  the High Mage's  mind, overwrought with  conferences with
the  King, War  Councils, nursing  the ill  and wounded  flocking from
Pyridain, and all manner of  interruptions which dissolved his visions
as if they were powdered sugar in a child's drink.
     Marcellon  turned to  the woman  beside him  and smiled.  She had
started appearing  to him  about a  year ago, when  the High  Mage had
first met Luthias Connall and his twin. Perhaps that explained why she
looked as if  she could have been related; her  coloring was the same,
and so was  the shape of her  eyes. She also bore  some resemblance to
Lady Sable: they  were of a height,  and while they were  not cut from
the same cloth, neither could either  outshine the other's own kind of
beauty.
     She soothed  Marcellon's heart.  She always  seemed to  know what
troubled him, and  although the woman seldom spoke of  the High Mage's
anxieties, she calmed them by her presence, for Marcellon had the most
certain feeling that this woman had everything under control.
     He had never seen her on the shore of Dargon before. Once, he saw
her  in a  meadow, on  a moonlit  night, with  a tall,  blond man  who
reminded Marcellon of Richard. Another time,  she sat with a man quite
like Clifton. Once, the High Mage  envisioned her on an archery field,
shooting arrows.  Marcellon pictured her  many times in a  moving, red
room, small and uncomfortable.
     Thus, he called her the Wanderer.
     "Who will be hurt in the war?" Marcellon asked her suddenly.
     "The King will be wounded in the last battle," the Wanderer began
calmly without looking at him.
     The  High Mage  smiled. Of  course she  would know;  the Wanderer
always  seemed to  know  things,  even things  that  managed to  evade
Marcellon's crystal.  That question had  nagged the magician  all day,
but interrupted constantly, Marcellon could find no answers. He should
have known the Wanderer would tell him.
     She  continued,  "Ittosai Michiya,  too,  will  be wounded."  The
Wanderer halted and looked up  at her companion. "Clifton will receive
a severe wound soon, and you must do something, or he will die."
     Clifton? Marcellon's  heart froze.  His daughter's  husband would
die? "What should I do?"
     "That answer will come to  you soon enough," the Wanderer entoned
calmly. "I do not need to tell you everything."
     "What of Luthias Connall?"
     That made the Wanderer smile. "Has he not suffered yet enough?"
     "That is not an answer," Marcellon chided guardedly.
     "Do not  worry about Luthias.  Be concerned instead  about Lauren
and Clifton.  Clifton's wound  is certain;  his death  is not.  And if
Lauren goes to the battle--"
     A bang--thunder?--sounded,  and Marcellon  jolted awake  to stare
furiously  at the  door. Cephas  Stevene,  could he  not even  *sleep*
without interruption?
     "What?" Marcellon  screamed violently, and the  knocking stopped.
Damn it, hadn't he given the  servants strict orders to let him sleep?
For God's  sake, he'd been  up all night  at the War  Council--so many
stupid, mundane  things that  Haralan and Sir  Edward and  the various
military and noble personel could  have handled by themselves, but no,
the King  wanted Marcellon's wisdom  or visions or moral  support. God
knew, but Marcellon  was certain that he instructed  his servants that
1he was absolutely not to be disturbed until at least noon.
     *They*   had  been   doing  it   to  him   all  week--they,   the
indescribable,  ever-present *they*--the  King, Sir  Edward, the  sick
ones, the desperate, the dying,  everyone and anyone--and never was it
worse than it  was now. *They* had stolen the  Wanderer's warning from
him. His  only daughter was in  danger if she went  to the battle...or
maybe Clifton could only be saved if she went to the battle. Marcellon
didn't know, thanks to *them.*
     "Well," Marcellon seethed,  rolling out of the  couch and seizing
the door handle, "which one of *you* is it this time?"
     He threw open  the door and was surprised to  see Luthias Connall
there.  The High  Mage  relented a  little. Luthias  had  been at  the
previous evening's War Council--and had distinguished himself with his
knowledge  of strategy  and  tactics--and if  Luthias  was willing  to
disturb Marcellon this  early in the morning after being  up all night
at War Council, there was a good reason.
     Marcellon looked the young man  over. Luthias Connall was a tall,
handsome, strong man with the gait and bearing of a warrior- -usually.
Today, he held his shoulders straight with great effort, but Marcellon
felt defeat oozing from young Sir  Luthias, as if he fighting a battle
he  knew he  could not  win. The  Count was  tired, haggard,  haunted,
anxious--just as  he had been  during Duke Dargon's trial  months ago.
Hell, Marcellon thought,  staring, he hadn't even been  this bad after
Mon-Taerleor and his cohorts in Beinison had finished with him.
     "Sit  before  you collapse,"  Marcellon  ordered  with the  brisk
authority of a healer. "What is it, Luthias, son?"
     "I  need a  sleeping potion,"  the Knight  stated with  his usual
directness.
     Marcellon practically  shrieked, "You fool!  And you woke  me for
that? Stole the chance to save  my daughter and her husband for that?"
The High Mage subdued his frustration, however. If Luthias had come to
him,  something truly  needed fixing  beyond the  power of  a sleeping
potion. "Why not have you wife make you one?"
     The Count of Connall scowled  through his beard. "Oh, she'll make
one for  me, all right, but  not for her." His  eyes pleading, Luthias
faced the  magician. "If  she doesn't  get some  sleep, it'll  kill us
both."
     Marcellon  sat on  the edge  of his  barely rumpled  bed. "What's
wrong that she's  not sleeping? Is it  the babes? I thought  you had a
wet nurse."
     "We do. It's not the girls, Marcellon. It's me."
     Marcellon fought to  hide a smile. "Most men would  enjoy a woman
who couldn't get enough, manling."
     Worried  as he  was,  young Luthias  still--still!--rose for  the
teasing.  "You--!" he  began, but  he  finished with  a pillow  tossed
expertly at Marcellon's  head. The High Mage murmered a  word, and the
feather missle dropped  inches from his face.  Luthias was sputtering.
"You--you know  better--I mean Sable  isn't--I mean she  is--damn you,
magician."
     The last  was uttered  in half-hearty exasperation,  so Marcellon
didn't take it seriously. Oh,  young Luthias Connall had reason enough
to hate users of magic after what the Beinisonian butchers had done to
him, but the Knight reserved no  ire or prejudice for Marcellon or his
daughter Lauren. These two he trusted.
     "And don't call me manling," Luthias finished.
     Marcellon chuckled at the displeasure  in the Count's brown eyes.
The High Mage held no fear of  Luthias in his heart, just as the Count
harbored no awe of him.  "Come, Luthias," Marcellon encouraged gently,
"what's wrong with Myrande that she isn't sleeping?"
     The Knight's  expression questioned the mage's  tone. "You're not
1angry with me any more?"
     Marcellon waved the  question away with his hand, much  as he had
dismissed the pillow. He could search  the crystal later for a warning
for Lauren and salvation for Clifton. "I know as well as you that your
Lady Sable won't take a sleeping potion without being tricked. What is
it, Luthias, son?"
     "She's worried about me," the Count explained. "She's afraid I'll
die in the war."
     Marcellon considered this. "That  isn't an unreasonable fear. How
soon do you ride out with the cavalry, General?"
     "The  King promised  me I  wouldn't ride  until after  the Melrin
Ball. I can't believe he's still celebrating at a time like this."
     Marcellon  understood  it,  however. The  celebrations  gave  the
message that all  was normal, all would be right  again. Without those
assurances, the  populace would fall  apart. "He has his  reasons, but
I'm certain he won't make you attend."
     "Oh, I'm going," Luthias countered, half-laughing.
     Marcellon frowned  mightily. Damn Haralan!  One of these  days he
was going  to push  Luthias Connall too  far. First,  Clifton's trial,
then Beinison, now,  Haralan was going to force Luthias  to attend the
same ball at which his brother had been murdered a year ago.
     Luthias laughed  outright. "Of my own  accord, Marcellon, believe
it or not. I promised Sable when  I left for Beinison that I'd be back
to dance  with her at the  Melrin Ball. I keep  my promises. Besides,"
the Count concluded, his eyes merry,  "if I stayed home, Roisart would
taunt me  from his tomb, 'Just  another excuse not to  go dancing, eh,
twin?'"
     Well,  something was  getting better,  the High  Mage noted  with
satisfaction. Marcellon  had never heard  Luthias joke about  his dead
brother.
     "Anyway, you'd better give me  the potion. Between her nightmares
and mine, no one in the house is getting any sleep."
     "Your nightmares?"  Marcellon sometimes dreamed them  too, houses
or miles away;  those dreams of torture, longing,  flight, cold, fear,
and murder were incredibly powerful. Marcellon never dared ask if they
were real. He didn't want to know. "The same ones?"
     "Mostly."
     "What are the new ones?"
     Luthias considered. "I'm tied to a horse. The ocean's in front of
me, filled with a thousand ships--ours and theirs. There's a battle--I
move with it, but I can't get  to the ships. I can see Clifton's ship.
It's hit by  something, and I see  Clifton fall, and the  sea turns to
blood."
     "Blood," Marcellon whispered. Clifton  would be wounded and bleed
to death. Oh, granted Luthias Connall  was no mage, and his talent for
magic  was recessive,  but  the Knight's  dreams  occasionally took  a
prophetic turn. Roisart had been more  powerful; if only he had lived,
Marcellon groaned to himself. He could have used the help.
     Then he saw  in his mind a  young man of medium  height with jet-
black hair and  hazel eyes. His face was Luthias',  but the expression
it wore was closer to Roisart's face.
     *Roisart-Talador,* Marcellon thought, and  Luthias was before him
once more. The High Mage blinked the image away.
     "Marcellon?"
     "Clifton is going  to be wounded and bleed to  death," the wizard
explained, rising, for  there was no time to lose.  He glanced out his
window and raised both eyebrows. It was past noon, at least two hours.
He might be able to do it today, on an off chance, if he had help. "If
I can make him a ring--"
     Luthias shook his head. "What good is a ring going to do him?"
1     "I can  enchant it so  that he will  never loose enough  blood to
die." At  the Count's look of  disbelief, the magician laughed.  "I am
not High Mage because I lack power. Still," Marcellon mused, "I cannot
do it alone. Send your wife to me. Part of the process includes making
potions, and she has experience in that area."
     "What about the sleeping potion?"
     Marcellon's mind  raced. "We have  only until sunset  to complete
this," he told the Knight. "The  process must all be completed between
dawn and sunset."
     "Why not wait till tomorrow? You'll have more time."
     Tomorrow? But  who knew when  the battle  would be? That  was one
thing that  frequently enfuriated the  mage. He often knew  what would
happen,  but seldom  knew  when.  Besides, a  feeling  of urgency  was
pushing him. "I must do it today. I need your wife, Luthias."
     "What about the sleeping potion?" Luthias asked again.
     "I'll give  something to her before  I bring her home,"  the mage
promised,  distracted. "I  must  make  that ring.  I  cannot allow  my
daughter's husband to die!"
     He moved  to his  cabinet and  pulled a  lever. A  concealed door
opened; Marcellon did not make access to his laboratory easy. From the
cabinet he took a few of the  move mundane of his needs: oil, sulphur,
and acacia.
     "I wonder,"  Luthias said behind  him, startling the mage  out of
his preparations, "if having a sword like that would be unKnightly."
     Marcellon turned slowly.  "I don't think so,"  the mage answered,
uncertain why Luthias  had asked. "I learned this  spell from watching
the Old Enchanter  in my crystal. He enchanted a  King's scabbard with
this spell, and the  King was a Knight and a  great leader of Knights.
Why?"  Marcellon finally  confronted him,  remembering the  Wanderer's
words. "Do you  want your sword enchanted? You don't  need it. I don't
need to worry about you, Luthias."
     "Oh,  I'm  willing to  put  my  faith  in my  training,"  Luthias
confessed, a little  of his normal confidence seeping  into his smile.
"But if I  had a sword that  would keep me from  bleeding to death--or
better yet the sword hilt, for  any blade can break--I bet Sable would
feel much better."
     Marcellon smiled as he realized  the logic behind the suggestion.
"Send your wife, my friend," he invited. "Have her bring the sword you
will use in battle."

     The Countess of Connall entered,  and Marcellon ached to see her.
She was a  beauty, normally, but the worry had  worn her out. Quelling
sudden fury that  both Luthias and Myrande were being  forced into old
age without  having reached  their twenty-second  year, the  High Mage
smiled. "Welcome. Come in."
     Uncertainly,  Myrande  stepped  forward  and  offered  a  swathed
burden. "Luthias said we would need this, but I have no idea for what.
What's this all about, Marcellon?"
     Marcellon unwrapped the shroud and smiled at the sword within it.
"Luthias intends to use this sword in battle?"
     The Countess  grinned. "Why  not? It  has excellent  balance, and
Carrerra steel  is the best  in the world.  Beinison does know  how to
make its swords."
     The High  Mage raised  his eyebrow.  "And when  did you  become a
weapons' expert, Lady Sable?"
     In response, the Countess gave him an arch look. King Haralan had
been right  when he  said that  Myrande would  have made  an excellent
Queen.  "Being a  Knight's daughter--and  another Knight's  wife--I've
manage to  glean a  few facts."  She paused  and relaxed  her imperial
expression. "Even if this weren't the best sword that Luthias owns, he
1would  still use  it. It  isn't  every man  who wins  the respect  and
tribute of an enemy, let alone a Knight of the Star."
     "It  was  quite  a  battle," Marcellon  agreed.  "Luthias  fought
excellently."
     "I figured Sir Edward knighted him for a reason."
     Marcellon rolled  his eyes  in mock-agony. "You're  developing my
own sense of  humor. Come," he commanded, offering her  hand. "We have
much work to do."
     A knock on  the door halted the mage mid-step.  "Good God, who is
it  this  time?" Marcellon  forced  between  clenched teeth.  Myrande,
trained from  birth as seneschal  and hostess, turned back  and opened
the door. King  Haralan stood behind it, attempting to  blink away his
bewilderment.  "Your majesty,"  Marcellon  greeted him  icily, but  he
supposed he must speak to the man. Haralan was, after all, the King.
     "Good day,  Countess," the  King spoke finally,  taking Myrande's
hand to his cheek. He looked over  her head at the High Mage, who gave
him a cold, furious stare. "Your  sevants did tell me not to interrupt
you, Marcellon, but  there is something I must know.  Can we not speak
privately?"
     Without taking  his glare  off the  King's eyes,  Marcellon said,
"Lady Sable,  will you go into  my garden and pick  seven large valley
lilies? We will need them."
     "As you wish," she answered, ducking out the room's sudden chill.
     "With all  due respect,  your majesty, speak  quickly," Marcellon
ordered, turning  away. "I have much  work to do. There  are reasons I
asked to not be interrupted."
     "I  am  sorry," Haralan  apologized  mildly,  and Marcellon  felt
himself  relenting.  Still,  he  was  furious.  He  was  sick  of  the
interruptions. "I only need one question answered, and I will leave. I
quite understand the need to work uninterrupted."
     Suddenly Marcellon saw a collage  of images of Haralan, trying to
see his sons or catch a nap, trying to write proclamations or pray for
guidance. He was  interrupted each time. He hadn't seen  his two young
sons in  a week.  He hadn't slept  for as long.  The High  Mage sighed
heavily. Kings' burdens were heavy, too. "What is it, your majesty?"
     "Is my brother still alive and well?"
     Marcellon looked up quickly and saw  the pain in the King's eyes.
"Of course. If  anything had happened to him, I  would have told you."
Haralan's blue eyes  calmed like the sea after a  storm. The High Mage
smiled at the King's relief. "The worst he's suffered since he left us
is a few broken bones."
     Haralan managed a weak smile. "That  puts him ahead of you and I,
my friend. Thank you."
     As he turned  to go, Marcellon said softly, "He  misses you, too,
Haralan."
     The King  turned sorrowfully, nodded  once, then asked,  "When is
the last time you saw him?"
     The High Mage  smiled. "A few days ago." Marcellon  called up the
memory,  then searched  for  the  vision. Ah,  there  was the  younger
prince, in his usual place, with his two friends.
     "You see him now?"
     Marcellon nodded. "He is well and quite merry. He is singing."
     "That's like him,"  the King acknowledged. He turned  to go, then
paused. "If a King may ask..."
     The mage rolled his eyes. "What now, your majesty?"
     "What is  of such importance  that you instruct your  servants to
deter even the King?"
     Marcellon  closed his  eyes  and took  a  deep breath.  Haralan's
occasionally pompous attitude always annoyed him. Still, the High Mage
answered, "Preserving the life of your fleet admiral."
1     "Is  he  in  danger?"  Haralan's  eyes  were  wide  and  worried.
Maracellon could feel  the cold terror that gripped  the King's heart.
Good  and skilled--not  to mention  loyal--officers were  difficult to
come by these days.
     "Be  easy,  sire," Marcellon  assured  him  softly, coming  close
enough to touch the King's shoulder.  "I believe the Duke of Dargon to
be in great  danger, yes, but as  long as I can  have an uninterrupted
day's work,  I may be  able to prevent  his death." And  Lauren's too,
Marcellon added. What about that battle?
     "Be assured I will do my part to get you that uninterrupted day,"
the King promised, reassured. "Work well, Marcellon, and thank you."
     Myrande opened the door the instant the King touched the opposite
one, but  she didn't  enter until  Haralan had  left. "Don't  worry. I
didn't hear anything but the last bit.  I don't know, and I don't want
to." Marcellon smiled tiredly and took  the lilies from her hand. "War
isn't my talent."
     "No,  but making  potions  is," Marcellon  agreed, examining  the
lilies closely.  Yes, they  would do  well. "That is  why I  asked you
here."
     "What potions? What are we doing?"
     Marcellon led her  into his laboratory, put the  valley lilies on
the  table,  and  began  pulling ingredients  from  shelves.  "We  are
enchanting a  ring for Clifton and  your husband's sword hilt  so that
they will never  lose enough blood to  die as long as  they wear them-
-or wield or touch them."
     Without turning, Marcellon could feel the Countess' relief like a
long-pined-for breeze. She took a step closer to the table and started
scanning  the   bottles  and  boxes  which   Marcellon  had  selected.
"Hematite,  coral,  beth  root,   acacia,  garlic,  thyme,  fox  tail,
amaranth...We're  making a  clotting  salve and  an anti-  hemoragging
potion?"
     "Triple batches,  and that is  only the first, longest,  and most
tedious  step,"  Marcellon instructed  her,  fetching  the mortar  and
pestle and  two glass cauldrons.  "After that  is done, I  must magick
them so that they will be permanent.  I must cast other spells to make
them both work  together and yet others to have  their effects work by
touch and not absorption or digestion."
     Myrande started  shredding the valley lilies.  Marcellon was glad
he did not  have to lesson her  on how to make the  potions he sought.
"How do we get the sword and the ring to do these things, Marcellon?"
     "That  is the  most difficult  part," Marcellon  sighed, grinding
hematite in the mortar. "The final spell, and the one that is the most
exhausting and exacting--and  therefore the one that  I'll most likely
have to cast  many times to make it work--transfers  the powers of the
potions to the sword and the ring." In another mortar, Marcellon began
crushing red coral. "And we have only until dusk."
     "If  we can't  make it  work  today, we'll  try again  tomorrow,"
Myrande  promised, sprinkling  the valley  lily strings  into a  glass
cauldron and adding the oil.
     "I'd rather  finish today,"  Marcellon grumbled.  "I do  not know
when Clifton will be wounded, but I  know that if he doesn't have this
ring, he will die."
     Myrande shuddered and reached for the cloves. "In that case," she
agreed, grinding  them in the  mortar, slowly,  "we had better  get to
work."

     Marcellon raised his  hands over the clotting salve  and began to
chant softly. The words were old, soothing, like a long- known prayer.
The mage felt heat in his fingers  and knew that his hands had started
to glow. Between two fingers, he crushed a diamond.
1     There was a flash, and Marcellon opened his eyes. "Done."
     Myrande looked from  the High Mage to the caudron  of salve, then
back. "How do you  do that? Can you teach me? If  I could make potions
that would never spoil--"
     Marcellon chuckled gently at her  eagerness. "You may indeed have
a talent for it, Lady Sable. According to Rish Vogel, we have a common
ancestor ten  or twelve generations  back. However, we don't  have the
time now for it. Perhaps after the war."
     Myrande studied both  cauldrons carefully. "How do  you know that
the spells worked?"
     Marcellon blinked at the question.  He had never thought about it
before. "I...just know. I can feel it." The mage wished he had time to
show her  how to feel  such things,  but Marcellon felt  rushed still.
"Come, we have much to do. Move the hemoraging potion toward me."
     Showing greater strength than  her size suggested, Myrande lifted
the glass pot--with effort, the mage noted--and, grimacing, she set it
beside him. The  High Mage stretched his hand over  the salve and then
over the potion.  "Bring me a piece of coral  and another of hematite,
each as big as  your thumbnail. When I hold my hands  open, put one in
each." The Countess of Connall scurried toward the counter.
     Beginning in a  whisper and increasing toward  a shout, Marcellon
chanted again,  the ancient words  in the ancient tongue,  praying for
both mixtures  to work  together. He  turned his  hands over  and felt
Myrande  place the  stones on  his palms.  The wizard  held them  out,
offered them to God on High, raised his voice--
     And  gasped as  if struck.  Marcellon  dropped to  his knees  and
covered his ears at  the force of the fear. There  was fury, too, from
another source, just as criplling.
     The power left him, and he  could feel Myrande's arms around him.
"What is it? Are you well?"
     The High  Mage took deep  breaths. "Something is very  wrong," he
gasped.  "Call for  dinner. We  may  as well  eat now.  Sir Edward  is
coming."

     Although  Sir  Edward  Sothos,  Knight  Commander  of  the  Royal
Baranurian Armies,  hid his emotions almost  professionally, Marcellon
could sense  the fright--he might have  named it panic had  it been in
any other man--clanging like tuneless bell. "What happened?" Marcellon
demanded as he motioned Sir Edward to a chair.
     The  Knight Commander  sat  heavily after  greeting the  Countess
formally but tiredly. "Your excellency--" he adressed her.
     Marcellon dismissed  his fear of  her overhearing with a  jerk of
the hand. "You know as well as I that Lady Myrande can be trusted," he
snapped. "What is it? Say it, Edward."
     The  Galician Knight  took  a  deep breath.  "The  King has  gone
mad--or Sir Luthias has. I'm not sure."
     Cold, steel bands  snapped around Marcellon's heart  like a trap.
That  was all  they needed!  "What happened?"  the High  Mage demanded
again. If Edward didn't spit it out, and quickly, Marcellon decided to
read his mind. This avoiding the question--
     "The  King,"  Sir  Edward  revealed finally,  but  slowly,  "said
something to  me about..." The  Knight Commander paused to  search for
words. "About bringing  back his brother to be Captain  General of the
Archers."
     Marcellon's jaw  dropped. He  stood and clapped  his hand  to his
forehead.  He should  have known  when Haralan  had asked,  he berated
himself silently. "Steward!" the High Mage bellowed. The cowed servant
stuck his  head timidly  through the  door. "Summon  the King  and the
Count of Connall to my presence *immediately!*"
     As  the servant  whisked  himself from  the  house, the  magician
1turned to his  friend. "Don't worry, Edward. The King  isn't mad. What
exactly did he say?"
     Sir Edward  frowned mightily.  "I don't  remember exactly,  but I
thought  it sounded  like a  wish, especially  as both  King Haralan's
brothers are dead."
     Marcellon nodded  grimly. "As is  well known," he  concurred, but
the  falsehood  tickled  his  heart unpleasantly.  His  hasty,  mental
accusation of  Haralan also  bothered the High  Mage; he  knew Haralan
better  than to  think the  King foolish  enough to  try to  bring his
brother home.
     Next to  the Knight Commander,  the Countess of  Connall frowned.
The High Mage raised an eyebrow. "What is it, Myrande?"
     She sighed. "I can't believe he--the young prince--is dead."
     "Believe it,"  Marcellon confirmed with  a nod, though  he smiled
internally at Myrande's  calling a man more than ten  years her senior
"the young prince." Where the hell was Haralan? "Who did he tell this,
Edward? It is imperative."
     Sir  Edward took  a  moment to  remember.  "Myself, Sir  Luthias,
Ittosai Michiya and Ito, Sarah Verde, and Coury."
     Marcellon breathed his relief. Those few could be trusted to keep
quiet. "Good.  Luthias will need  no such instruction, but  the others
must be  made to hold their  tongues. And as  soon as he and  the King
arrive, I hope there  will be no need for him to speak  of it any more
at all."
     "I have already  spoken to Captain Verde and to  Coury. Answer me
this,  old man:  if  Haralan's brother  is dead,  why  is Sir  Luthias
upset?"
     "I'd  like  an answer  to  that  myself," Marcellon  interrupted,
glaring at the unopened door. Where was Luthias? Where was the King?
     "Luthias doesn't think Prince  Richard is dead," Myrande supplied
easily. She  stared out the  window at  the near-setting sun.  After a
moment, she  turned back to  the High  Mage and the  Knight Commander.
"When my father came to Uncle  Fionn with the news that Prince Richard
had been declared dead, we were all appalled. Luthias finally asked my
father how  he had  died. Then  Uncle Fionn laughed  and told  us that
Prince Richard probably was still alive, and that he was only declared
dead so that King Haralan could take the throne."
     Marcellon fought  cringing. That  was too  near the  truth. Well,
leave it to  Fionn Connall not to  miss a trick. And  damn Myrande for
her excellent memory.  She couldn't have been more than  eight or nine
at the time of Richard's "death."
     "I see," the Knight Commander said slowly. Then his eyes widened,
and  this time  Marcellon saw  the  fear plainly.  "Nehru's blood,  no
wonder Luthias exploded! If Haralan could bring his brother back--"
     The High Mage  raised his hand, and Sir Edward  ceased. "I'm sure
Sir Luthias merely misunderstood him."
     "What did my husband do to  the King?" Myrande asked quietly, her
voice testy.  Marcellon smiled  at her  willingness to  defend Luthias
even if he had done treason. Marcellon's own wife had been like that.
     Sir Edward patted  her hand. "Nothing of great  insult or injury,
my lady. He  merely roared, 'Why don't you just  *give* the country to
Beinison?' and marched off with his castellan."
     Marcellon pictured  the entire  situation without benefit  of his
powers:  Haralan's  announcement,  Luthias' explosion  and  departure,
Edward's  cautioning the  ladies to  keep  this quiet,  and his  quick
journey to the High Mage's house. "Well, that's like our Sir Luthias."
     "And  he's right,"  Sir Edward  concluded.  "Or he  would be,  if
Prince Richard were still alive.  As I understand the inheritance laws
of this country,  the chosen child becomes heir.  If Haralan's brother
were alive, then Haralan's right to rule would be uncertain."
1     "True," Marcellon agreed.  "But we needn't worry."  The High Mage
took a deep breath. "I may never  get that ring done," he muttered. He
faced  the Knight  Commander again.  "I'll clear  the matter,  Edward.
Don't worry, but keep quiet."
     "Thank  you," a  relieved  Sir  Edward exhaled  as  he rose  with
dignity.  "Good afternoon."  He moved  toward the  door, then  turned.
"Lady Countess, you have an  excellent memory." The Knight Commander's
scar danced as he smiled. "Do you perhaps remember when we first met?"
     The Countess of Connall gave him  a smug grin. "It was the Melrin
six years ago.  You had come to  judge the tournament and  to visit my
father."
     Sir  Edward  bowed,  and  Marcellon saw  the  Knight  Commander's
pleasure in his face. "I don't recall who won that tournament."
     "My father did," Myrande reminded him, tilting her chin proudly.
     "He was a good Knight," Sir  Edward declared. There was no higher
praise from  the Knight  Commander, as  Marcellon knew  well. Edward's
smile  wrinkled near  his eyes.  "I  do remember,  however, that  that
particular  tourney  was Luthias'  first.  I  turned to  Sir  Lucan--"
Myrande warmed  at the mention of  her father. "--and said,  'I do not
want to meet your squire when  he reaches twenty-one.' It is still not
a pleasant  thought." Sir  Edward paused and  squinted. "As  I recall,
Luthias took third place in that tournament."
     "That's because there were no  bloody Bichanese!" Myrande rose as
if she had been shot from  a bow. Luthias, obviously in pain, stumbled
through the  door, supported on  one side  by his chief  aide, Ittosai
Michiya, and  on the other by  Michya's older brother, Ito.  All three
wore armor,  but Luthias'  breastplate hung  in three  pieces. Derrio,
nervous and anxious, followed behind.
     Myrande rushed to  help. "Lay him down,"  she instructed quickly.
"No, on the floor," she corrected  as Michiya and Ito moved toward the
couch.
     "Your excellency, do you think you should attend him?" Sir Edward
protested, horrified.
     The Countess  laughed. "This  isn't the first  time I've  put him
back together."
     Marcellon entered the fray. "What  have you done to yourself this
time, manling?"  He clucked mildly when  the Count gave him  an acidic
stare. Luthias  would not still  be in a  temper if he  were seriously
hurt.
     "Broken rib, I  think," the young Count groaned  as the Bichanese
gently rested  him on the floor.  Myrande dropped to the  floor at his
side. "I was sparring with Ito."
     "And I thought you were  saving yourself for Beinison," Marcellon
quipped, moving to  the Count's left and kneeling on  the floor beside
him. He reached out his hand and probed Luthias' chest gently.
     "They've  had their  chance  already,"  Myrande snapped,  looking
coldly at the wizard.
     "My armor exploded," Luthias told them, glancing from his wife on
one side  to Marcellon on  the other. "And Ito  hit me again.  It's on
Sable's side, Marcellon."
     "I did not see it until after I struck the blow," Ito apologized,
his Baranurian still somewhat halting.
     "It's no wonder," Luthias agreed,  groaning as his wife found the
injured bone. "Stevene, you Bichanese move like lightning."
     Myrande  snatched  a knife  from  her  belt and  sliced  Luthias'
undershirt  open. Ugly  purple-brown  bruises  decorated the  Knight's
strong chest.  The High Mage  quickly whispered a spell,  and Luthias'
armor fell off.  Marcellon tossed the plates to  the Knight Commander,
who shook his head grimly as he inspected it.
     "I'm  glad  you're on  our  side,  sir,"  Edward told  Ito  quite
1sincerely. The Knight  Commander touched the crushed  plate in wonder.
"I would not like to be your enemy." The samurai bowed, and Sir Edward
looked at his officer. "I doubt it can be repaired, Sir Luthias."
     "That's all right. It was pretty  old." The Count tried to take a
deep breath but found he couldn't.  "Stevene, what I wouldn't give for
Bichanese armor. You can move like the wind in that stuff."
     "And it does not...explode, as you say," Ito added.
     "So you will  have your birthday present  early," Michiya dropped
casually. "It will be ready in two days' time, anyway."
     Despite the pain,  Luthias grinned at the prospect  of new armor.
Marcellon chuckled at the boyish expression  then laid his hand on the
broken ribs and whispered a  spell. Luthias sat up almost immediately.
"I like you, Marcellon. Last time a  broke a rib, I couldn't fight for
two months."
     "You broke more than one this time," Marcellon informed him, "but
I certainly  couldn't keep you off  the battlefield for two  months in
times  like these."  The Royal  Physician  and High  Mage ignored  the
Countess' glare and continued his prescription. "Two days, Luthias. No
fighting." The young Count nodded, and his lady wife helped him to his
feet. "You may, however, be fitted for your birthday gift and dance at
the Melrin Ball."
     Luthias grinned and turned to Ito. "Rematch, next week."
     The Bichanese  turned to  his brother,  who translated  the first
word. Ito bowed. "Very well."
     "What  were  you  doing  fighting with  the  Bichanese,  anyway?"
Myrande wondered as her husband put an arm around her.
     Marcellon smiled  at them, wistfully remembering  such times with
his wife. He quickly supressed the ache.
     "I  have a  lot to  learn  from them,  Sable," Luthias  explained
easily. "Besides, I needed some way to work that frustration off." The
young Count scowled. "God, King Haralan's crazy. How can he even think
of bringing Prince Richard back?"
     "Luthias,  wouldn't  you  bring   back  Roisart  if  you  could?"
Marcellon  asked gently,  and the  Count looked  away, his  expression
amguished. Marcellon hated to bring  up a painful subject--it had been
a year,  less a day,  that Roisart had  been murdered--but he  knew no
better way to  make the young Knight understand his  King. "That's all
the King meant."
     "Why is it  that you do not want this  Prince to return?" Ittosai
Michiya, confused, asked Luthias. "Is he an evil man?"
     "No, he's  great," Luthias  told him,  grinning. Marcellon  had a
quick vision  of young Richard  playing with Luthias and  Roisart, and
smiled too. "He used to teach me strategy by playing toy soldiers with
me." Funny,  that's how  I taught  Richard, Marcellon  remembered. "He
used to  climb trees with  us and  everything. But," the  Count darkly
concluded, "he was supposed to be King."
     "He didn't want to be King any more than you wanted to be Baron,"
Marcellon admonished Luthias sternly.
     "Yet King  Arneth chose him  as heir over King  Haralan," Luthias
reminded the Mage.
     "Why?" Ittosai Michiya asked. "Is not Haralan a good King?"
     "Certainly, and  a better one  than Richard would have  been, but
Richard  was his  father's  favorite," Marcellon  said, pacing.  Where
*was*  Haralan? God,  if he  didn't get  here and  allow Marcellon  to
dismiss these people, he'd never get that ring done!
     "You  are saying  that there  would  be problems  if this  prince
returns?" Ito said, his face stern with concentration.
     "There  will be  no problems.  The  Prince is  dead," Sir  Edward
stated.
     "You wished  to see me, Marcellon?"  the King asked mildly  as he
1walked blythely into the  nest of the Wasp King. The  High Mage took a
step forward,  but Luthias,  holding Myrande with  one arm,  beat him.
"I'm glad to see you, Sir Luthias. I wished to speak with you."
     "I bet," Luthias spat angrily. Sir Edward sent his Knight a stern
look, which Marcellon  knew the Count ignored  deliberately. "How soon
are you starting the civil war, your majesty?"
     The King looked from his Cavalry General to the High Mage. "Is he
well?"
     "I believe  Sir Luthias has  misunderstood a remark  your majesty
made about  bringing back  your brother  Richard," Marcellon  told him
slowly, his blue-green eyes steadily holding the King's.
     Suddenly  white-lipped,  King   Haralan  inspected  Sir  Luthias'
furious face. "I  merely wished I could bring him  back. I would think
you would  understand me,  Sir Luthias,  as you  have lost  a brother,
too."
     Luthias'  anger evaporated  into shock  and confusion.  "You mean
he's really dead?" he gasped.
     Haralan glanced at Marcellon, who  returned the gaze steadily and
nodded.  Shifting his  eyes  back  to Sir  Luthias,  the King  laughed
hollowly, and Marcellon saw the King's jaw shake. "Marcellon swore it.
Are you calling him a liar?"
     "No, of course not," Luthias  reassured him quickly. "But sire, I
thought--"
     "Yes,"  Marcellon interrupted,  then  he caught  the King's  eye.
"Baron Fionn Connall thought perhaps  our declaring Richard dead was a
political ploy to put you on the throne."
     Haralan groaned and put his head in his hands. Marcellon felt his
despair--and the fear, too. If Fionn Connall had seen, how many others
had? "Luthias, I can no more bring  my brother back than you can bring
back yours!"  the King cried.  He seized his tall  Knight's shoulders.
"Can't you believe that?"
     Luthias lowered his eyes. Marcellon sensed the young man's shame.
"Forgive me, your majesty."
     "Sir Luthias," Haralan said slowly, breathing deeply, "if somehow
I could bring my  brother back and I was planning on  doing it, I hope
you would explode  and prevent me. I realize what  would happen if..."
The King looked toward Marcellon. "We all know what would happen."
     "I certainly  hope that you would  not be so rude  about it," Sir
Edward  scolded his  Knight  harshly.  "Courtesy is  the  virtue of  a
Knight, Sir Luthias."
     "And advising  the King is  the duty  of a Knight,"  King Haralan
added softly. "Don't  be so hard on him, Sir  Edward. I understand the
anger he  feels." The King  watched Sir Luthias sorrowfully.  "I, too,
have  lost much  of my  family  and would  not sit  still for  someone
increasing the danger.  Besides, Sir Luthias has  realized his mistake
and  apologized, and  I accept  that." With  effort, the  King smiled.
"Come, Edward, and you, too, Sir Luthias. We have much to do." Haralan
scanned the room. "And no one is to speak of this."
     "Understood, your majesty," Ittosai Michiya said, then he quickly
translated for his brother, who nodded. Derrio covered his mouth.
     "I'll  see you  later, Sable."  Luthias  kissed his  wife on  the
mouth. "How are the sword and ring coming?" the younger Knight asked.
     "The ring!" Marcellon breathed.  "Shoo!" he commanded, waving his
hands  nervously at  the  King,  the Knight  Commander,  the Count  of
Connall, his squire, and the two,  dignified samurais. "I have much to
do. And Haralan, issue a proclamation if you have to, but I can't deal
with any more interruptions, unless you want you Fleet Admiral dead!"
     The King smiled and turned toward the door. "Good day, Countess."
Haralan motioned to her husband. "Attend me, General."
     "As you wish, your majesty," Luthias agreed soberly.
1     Marcellon  heard them  no more,  and  he didn't  notice when  his
assistant  fairly shoved  the Knight  Commander  out of  the room  and
slammed and bolted to door. There  wasn't time to waste. The sun would
be setting in an hour.
     Such an  hour. Marcellon had  to cast  the spell binding  the two
mixtures thrice  before it took. Then  he boiled the mixed  potion and
salve over a heavy fire, too hot for this day, but necessary. Plunging
his hands into the scalding compound, the High Mage cried the spell in
a  loud,  pained  voice.  The  enchantment  sealed  over  the  mixture
immediately, God  be praised, for  Marcellon couldn't cast  that spell
more  than once  a day.  The damage  to his  hands couldn't  heal more
quickly.
     The High Mage  cast a quick look  out the window. A  half hour to
sunset,  perhaps, and  the most  difficult spell  left to  do. Myrande
stood patiently, awaiting his orders  like a dutiful seneschal. "Bring
the burning yellow sand and oil,"  Marcellon requested as gently as he
could. He hands burned, and he whispered a spell to speed the healing.
     Myrande  retrieved the  two substances  from a  nearby worktable.
Marcellon nodded toward the combined potions. When the Countess placed
the two beakers near the cauldron,  Marcellon reached out and dipped a
hand in  each. Almost absently, he  sprinkled the sulphur and  the oil
over the potion.
     "How  does   it  work?"   Myrande  asked,  watching   with  avid,
unconcealed curiousity.
     The High Mage chuckled despite  his scalded hands. "It would take
years of training for you to be able to understand, Lady Sable."
     Myrande considered his  words, then inquired, "How do  we make it
work, then?"
     "Lay Luthias' sword and the  silver ring on the table," Marcellon
commanded. While she did so, he explained, "When the mixture cools, we
will dip the sword hilt and the  ring in it, then set them afire. When
I say  the spell, the  fire and the potions  will be absorbed,  and we
will be done." Marcellon grimaced  at the difficulty of this seemingly
simple process and added, "If it takes."
     "Why wouldn't it?"
     "It's a very difficult spell,  Lady Myrande," the wizard tried to
enlighten her.  "Spells are...fixed, and  if one syllable is  off, one
bit  of  rhythm  a  fraction  late, the  spell  won't  work.  Like..."
Marcellon's mind  searched for something she  could easily understand.
"Like leaving a potion to boil overlong, or underlong."
     Myrande nodded thoughtfully and looked  out the window. "Not much
time,"  she  commented.  Turning   back  to  Marcellon,  the  Countess
wondered, "If necessary, could we finish tomorrow?"
     "We'll have to begin at the beginning again," Marcellon told her,
finishing the delicate mixing. "Give me the ring and the sword."
     Myrande handed both objects to him and watched the High Mage with
blatant  curiosity.  Carefully,  for   his  hands  still  burned  most
wretchedly, Marcellon dipped  the silver ring and the  sword hilt into
the  mixture  of  the  clotting salve,  the  hemoragging  potion,  the
sulphur, and the  oil. After one last glance to  make certain that the
objects were well covered, Marcellon  uttered a single word. Both ring
and hilt erupted in flames.
     "So far,  we do well,"  sighed the mage.  He raised his  arms and
closed  his eyes.  When he  began murmering,  Marcellon felt  his body
shiver, as it should.  He felt power flow down his  arms, and the hot,
white light  burned his hands.  Marcellon felt the great  release when
the light  left his  fingers like harnessed  lightning and  struck the
ring and the sword.
     Marcellon  opened his  eyes and  watched them  burn. If  all went
well, the fire at any moment would be sucked into the silver.
1     The ring and sword hilt burned.
     "Damn,"  Marcellon whispered.  He scrutinized  the worktable.  "I
said the  spell rightly..." When  his eyes  fell on the  cauldron, the
High Mage  reached out and touched  the side. Too warm.  He hadn't let
the mixture  cool enough.  Then Marcellon laughed  at himself.  In his
anxiety, he hadn't let the mixture cool at all.
     The  magician turned  to his  assistant and  smiled ruefully.  "I
suppose patience is not one of my virtues today," he sighed. Marcellon
marched toward the window and yanked the curtain back. Twenty minutes,
perhaps, until the sun set for the day.
     "How much does it need  cool?" Lady Myrande wondered, placing her
hand cautiously on the side of the cauldron. "We haven't much time."
     "We'll wait a few minutes, then try again," the High Mage decided
as he wearily fell into a chair. "I have no wish to repeat this on the
morrow, Lady Sable. Although,"  Marcellon continued, his eyes dancing,
"I doubt  we could have  more...ah...interesting problems than  we had
today."
     Myrande chuckled. "Don't tempt fate."  She handed him a goblet of
wine. "What if we don't get it done?"
     "We'll do it again tomorrow," Marcellon promised her. She sounded
so worried, as if Luthias would be killed before her eyes if he didn't
have the sword by this evening.  The High Mage could hardly blame her.
Roisart  had  been  murdered  in  a peaceful  ballroom,  a  year  from
tomorrow.
     Still, Marcellon didn't want to wait until tomorrow any more than
the Countess did. Clifton's life was  in danger; he, too, could die at
any time. And Lauren--
     The High Mage grimaced as  he thought of his daughter. Marcellon,
now that he knew of its  existence, felt the danger surrounding Lauren
like a stench-filled fog. Lauren, if  she goes to battle...what if she
goes to battle?
     "I'm glad to  know Prince Richard is still  alive," Myrande began
calmly.
     Marcellon started out of his thoughts and stared at the Countess,
who was gazing at the setting sun. After a moment's consideration, the
High Mage answered, "After all that, you think him still alive?"
     The Countess turned  slowly and smiled regally. "Why  not? He is.
He must be."
     Marcellon stared at her sharply and quickly reached for Myrande's
thoughts.  'If Prince  Richard were  dead,  you would  have said  so,'
Marcellon caught.
     "I did  say so,"  Marcellon protested, although  he knew  she was
right.
     "Sir *Edward* said so," Myrande  corrected him smoothly, "but you
didn't,  and  neither   did  the  King.  Besides,   there's  no  other
explanation for your anger and the King's fear."
     She  read people  too well,  that one,  Marcellon concluded.  The
winter in court  had taught her much; Myrande had  learned how to read
eyes and  faces and tones when  words could not be  trusted--too often
the case  at court.  Still, the High  Mage realized  acknowledging her
assessment was too dangerous.
     "Myrande," the  High Mage  sighed heavily, for  he hated  to lie,
"Prince Richard  is dead. He  has been  dead nearly fourteen  years. I
swore it on the Word of God. Would I be forsworn?"
     She  doubted then;  Marcellon  felt it.  Myrande  knew well  that
Marcellon never lied--almost never, the Mage reminded himself.
     But  she  only doubted--and  only  for  a moment.  Myrande  still
believed Richard lived. By not pronouncing him dead at the very first,
the  High Mage  realized that  he  had convinced  stubborn Sable  that
Richard  still  lived. Oh,  Myrande  would  say nothing  more--in  her
1thoughts, Marcellon gleaned the  Myrande's realization of the futility
of fighting the  High Mage--but still she believed. Damn  her, she was
as stubborn as Lauren when Lauren magically knew something.
     Lauren--What would happen to Lauren?
     The mage sprung  from the chair impatiently. As soon  as this was
done, he  would search his  crystal, day  and night if  necessary, and
send a warning to his daughter when  he sent her husband the ring. But
the ring must be finished. As for Lady Sable, let her believe what she
wishes, so  long as  she remains  silent. There was  no time  to worry
about it  now. Marcellon  knew without looking  that barely  a quarter
hour of sunlight remained.
     "Come,"  Marcellon  half-invited,   half-ordered  his  assistant,
"Bring the ring and the sword to me, Myrande."
     Marcellon  took  them from  her  and  dipped them  carefully.  He
immersed the objects in the  carefully concocted mixture a second time
to  be sure  of  their coating.  Once  again, he  placed  them on  the
worktable and set them on fire with a word. Marcellon lifted his hands
in spell and prayer and closed his eyes.
     Marcellon's body quaked gently as the  power of the earth and the
air flowed through his body and  gathered at his hands into hot, white
lighting, pure  and powerful. The  power began to  elongate, lightning
waiting to strike--
     Lightning in a  dark forest, covered with  clouds--great wind and
fire--blood on the  ground--Lauren stood within in,  calling out words
of horror and magic.
     And  the lightning  coursed through  Lauren, fell  on her  from a
stormy sky and fled from her in many directions to sear as many trees.
Lauren screamed with the pain of  a banshee, but she didn't release or
banish the  lightning as  Marcellon had taught  her. Seven  trees were
sinking into the earth that spawned them, and more were burning.
     The lightning  grew brighter, and  Lauren glowed with  its power.
One  more levin-strike,  and  it split  a great  oak  in half.  Lauren
screamed--Marcellon heard  himself scream  her name--and  his daughter
collapsed on a high cliff amidst the cries of children.
     "Is  Lauren  all  right?"  Lady  Myrande  was  asking  anxiously.
Marcellon sensed her  arms around him, but the Countess  seemed so far
away.  The High  Mage  tried to  open  his eyes,  but  the room  swung
dizzily. "Marcellon? Are you all right?"
     "Lauren," the  High Mage murmered, clutching  his head miserably.
"Oh, my baby."
     "Marcellon,  the  spell,"  Myrande  reminded him.  The  mage  was
beginning to feel cold stone beneath him. "It didn't work."
     "Lauren," Marcellon groaned. She had  to stay out of the battles.
He had to warn her. Without opening  his eyes to the swaying room, the
High Mage  climbed to  a standing position.  "Lauren," he  croaked. "I
have to warn Lauren."
     "Marcellon, the spell!" Myrande insisted. "There's no time!"
     "I can't let her die," Marcellon mumbled, stumbling blindly in no
coherent  direction. The  mage suddenly  felt someone  supporting him.
"Myrande, my daughter....the lightning..."
     "We'll warn her," she promised. "I  tell you, we'll warn her. But
Clifton and Luthias--Marcellon, cast the spell!"
     That's  right--Clifton  and  Luthias--but  Lauren--and  Marcellon
feared to call the lightning again, lest it kill his daughter. Lauren!
Lauren!
     "The sun is setting!" he heard Lady Sable scream. "Marcellon! The
spell! Clifton will die! You told me Clifton will die!"
     Clifton--yes--Clifton, too,  must be  saved, for Lauren,  for the
King. But the lightning--
     No, Marcellon  knew his  spell did  not--would not--hurt  his own
1daughter.  Not his  spell, no.  But  I must  warn her!  the High  Mage
thought, but  even as he  did so, he raised  his arms and  created the
spark that set the  sword and ring afire. I must  dip them, he thought
dazedly, but they burned as if  newly immersed in the potions. Slowly,
breathlessly, the High  Mage murmered the words that set  the magic in
motion, that  called power from  the earth and  from the air,  and the
lightning gathered at his hands.
     Marcellon knew  when the  lightning struck, and  as the  fire was
pulled into the sword hilt and the ring, the High Mage collapsed.

     Marcellon  did not  raise his  head from  the table  when Luthias
entered  the sitting  room  well  after dark.  Marcellon  knew it  was
Luthias; he had had plenty of  time to aquaint himself with the rhythm
and sound of Luthias'  walk on the ships bound to  and from Magnus and
in the  long winter months in  Pyridain. Marcellon even knew  when the
young  Knight bent  to  kiss his  wife,  fast asleep  as  a kitten  on
Marcellon's plush couch.  The High Mage sighed; he  had often bestowed
such a caress on his own,  sleeping wife when the King's business kept
him late.
     Ah, Eliza, my sweet Eliza...
     Marcellon heard  the young Count  pause before a side  table, and
the High Mage  would have smiled if  he had the energy.  "You may take
it. It is finished." With effort, Marcellon opened his eyes to see the
Knight, satisfied,  slip the sword  into its scabbard. "It  will serve
you well."
     "Clifton's ring?"
     "It  is on  his  hand as  we  speak." That  spell,  the one  that
transported  the  little  ring  and  the  warning,  finally  exhausted
Marcellon so that even lifting his  head from the table where he wrote
his daughter was nigh impossible. "I could not wait for a messenger. I
saw Lauren's death."
     "Lauren's?"  Luthias questioned.  "Maybe  you should  make her  a
ring."
     "It would not help. She will not die of wounds. I have warned her
to stay away from battle..."
     "Marcellon."
     And the High Mage  knew the time had come. He  had known that for
some time  the questions that  plagued Luthias Connall,  and Marcellon
had known that  sooner or later, the young Knight  would confront him.
Without waiting for  the question to be asked,  Marcellon answered it.
"I did foresee your  father's death. I knew he would  be thrown from a
horse,  and I  did  warn  him, Luthias.  To  his  credit, your  father
believed  me.  Still,  there  was  no way...the  drug  Manus  used  on
Dragonfire worked through  the poor horse's food. There was  no way to
detect  its administration  until it  struck,  and when  it was  over,
well..."
     "And my brother? You were at the ball, Marcellon. Didn't you--"
     "My  visions are  imperfect,  son. Some  are  plain, others  like
dreams...and they only function if there is no change. I never foresaw
your brother's death." Marcellon grasped a breath with tired lungs. "I
saw yours."
     "Mine?" The Count sounded surprised. "But I didn't die."
     "I tell you,  I see things that will happen  if nothing changes,"
Marcellon repeated. "I saw, as if in a dream, your brother invested as
Duke of Dargon, and  he asked me what he should  do now. But something
happened--he saw the assassins, I guess--and he died, not you."
     "Why didn't you  save him?" Luthias demanded,  his voice grieved.
"Marcellon--"
     "I could not have saved him," Marcellon admitted heavily. "I have
great skill in  medicine and magic--but not even I  can bring back the
1dead. The poison  they used on Roisart was  immediate, like ardonatus.
Roisart was dead before he fell to the floor at your feet. He was dead
when you reached him, Luthias. I was farther away. There was nothing I
could have done."
     "Nothing," Luthias  whispered. After  a long silence,  the Knight
said, "It is past midnight, and it's a year he's been dead." Marcellon
heard the  young man shift toward  him. "Do you ever  stop missing the
dead, Marcellon?"
     "No." Tired grief flooded Marcellon's consciousness. "It has been
six  years since  my wife  died, and  there are  still nights  I wake,
expecting her beside me and  grieving to remember her gone." Marcellon
wearily turned  his head and looked  at the Count of  Connall. "Do you
not miss  Sir Lucan still and  your uncle Clifton?" The  Knight nodded
glumly.  "And your  brother  and father...thank  God  your wife  lives
still, Luthias, son."
     "She won't be hurt in the war, will she?"
     The thought startled Marcellon; he  had never even considered it.
"I don't  know. Now take your  wife home, and drink  a sleeping potion
that you  both might sleep  uninterrupted. And if  I can do  the same,
I'll tell you tomorrow."
     Marcellon listened as the Count  of Connall took two steps toward
his wife; again, the young man  paused. "I hate to ask, Marcellon, but
what about me?"
     The High Mage managed a coughing chuckle. "Sir Luthias, they have
sent assassins for  you. They have imprisoned you.  They have tortured
you and drugged  you. They sent a  Knight of the Star  against you- -a
high-ranking one at that--and you defeated him. I don't think Beinison
possesses  anything that  can  kill  you. You  seem  to  be under  the
protection of God Himself."
     "Well, I'm grateful," the  young Knight admitted, chuckling also.
In a more serious tone, Luthias continued, "And I am grateful for what
you have given  me, Marcellon. You saved my life  once, and now you're
preserving--"
     Before the words were finished,  the mage's eyes slid closed, and
he snored  softly. Smiling,  the Knight silently  lifted the  mage and
carried him to his bed in  the next room. "Rest well, Marcellon." Then
Luthias took his sleeping wife, who cuddled  to him as if she were one
of their newly born daughters, home.
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          **   **   **  **    *****
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             **

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1------------------------------------------------------------------------
   (C)   Copyright    November,   1990,   DargonZine,    Editor   Dafydd
. All rights revert to the authors. These stories may
not be reproduced  or redistributed (save in the case of reproducing the
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the author involved.
------------------------------------------------------------------------






1                                                             /
  DDDDD                              ZZZZZZ                //
  D    D  AAAA RRR  GGGG OOOO NN  N      Z  I NN  N EEEE  ||
  D     D A  A R  R G    O  O N N N     Z   I N N N E     || Volume 4
-=========================================================+|)
  D    D  AAAA RRR  G GG O  O N N N   Z     I N N N E     || Issue  1
  DDDDD   A  A R  R GGGG OOOO N  NN  ZZZZZZ I N  NN EEEE  ||
                                                           \\
                                                             \
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--   DargonZine Volume 4, Issue 1        04/05/91          Cir 1127   --
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--                            Contents                                --
------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Slavers                      Max Khaytsus           Nober 18-20, 1013
 Sons of Gateway 4:  Marcus   Jon Evans              N 4, '13-Ja 28, '14
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                            Slavers
                        by Max Khaytsus
              (b.c.k.a. )

     Rien and Kera led their horses into the stalls at the back of The
Tipsy Dragon.
     "Where do I put her?" Kera asked, looking around uncertainly.
     "Towards the back,"  Rien said. "This town isn't safe  for man or
beast."
     "Then Sina should be just  fine," Kera declared, laughing. "She's
neither."
     After settling  their horses  for the night,  Rien and  Kera went
into  the tavern.  "I forgot  to  ask," Rien  said. "How  do you  find
Sharks' Cove?"
     "I  don't like  it. The  people are  so unfriendly...everyone  in
Dargon was nice...even to me."
     Rien  smirked.  "As  a  rule,  the  larger  the  city,  the  more
impersonal it  is. There are  quite a few that  are better at  it than
Dargon."
     He paused at the bar, surveying  the room. Brice was the only one
of  the staff  in the  room that  Kera recognized.  He was  behind the
counter, serving drinks and chatting with customers.
     "Come on," Rien  pulled on Kera's arm. They went  down to the bar
and sat  down at the  far end,  away from the  rest of the  patrons. A
moment later Brice came over.
     "It's  about time!"  he exclaimed,  gripping forearms  with Rien.
"Did everything go well?"
     "Quinn's dead,"  Rien said.  "So's Arvel. Quinn  killed him  in a
joust before I got there."
     "Better inform  his family,"  Brice sighed. "I  thought he  was a
little young to be sent out there."
     "I sent  a message  to his  father and to  Lord Tomich  from Port
Sevlyn," Rien said. "I took Kera there to show her the store."
     Brice  nodded. "Glad  to see  you training  someone. We  need new
blood."
     Kera threw a puzzled look at him, but said nothing.
     "When is your rotation out of here?" Rien asked.
     "Next month. Deber first."
     "And Enneth?"
     "As soon  as your friend,"  Brice gestured  at Kera with  a grin,
"tries her plate on."
     "Who was supposed to replace him?" Rien asked.
     "Arvel, but he  thought he might go to Phedra  since he came here
early."
     Rien dropped his head into his hands. "Send a message to..."
     "Hey, barkeep!" someone  yelled from the other side  of the room.
"How long do I have to wait here?"
     "Go on," Rien said. "I'll take care of it."
     "You took me on as `new blood'?" Kera asked when Brice left.
     "That's what you'll  become if you decide to  stay," warned Rien,
putting his arm around her shoulders. "It's  not that bad a job if you
know what you're doing."
     "Better benefits?"
     "Pays better than Liriss."
     "How would you know what he pays?"
     "Educated guess."
     "Well,  I  suppose..."  Kera  smiled,  stretching  the  words  on
purpose.
     "You really want to try this?" Rien asked.
     "Why not? It's just a job, right?"
     "Good. I'm  glad you  think that  way," Rien  said with  a smile.
"Let's go. I'll sign you up and make your hanging around legitimate."
     They both got  up and went to the back  room. Rien rifled through
the desk and a cabinet and finally turned to Kera.
     "I used to know where everything was," he complained.
     She smiled ironically. "Could be they don't trust you..."
     "Are you sure you want to do  this?" Rien asked. "I don't want to
give you  the wrong idea. This  really is dangerous work.  People die,
sometimes horribly."
     "Understand where I  was before," Kera pointed out.  "I could die
there just as easily -- a disgrunted traveller turning his sword on me
or  another thief  eliminating  competition...or even  the town  guard
having an `accident'. At least here  I would be taking these risks for
a good cause..."
     "Are you sure?" Rien asked again, looking intently at her.
     "Look, you can't even begin to  imagine what went through my mind
when I was told you were killed.  I had plenty of time to wonder about
this type of a lifestyle since then. I'm willing to take the risk."
     "All right," Rien said, "but you  will have to wait until someone
tells me where everything's been moved to."
     Brice stuck his head through the door. "You two want to eat?"
     "Yes," Rien  answered. "We'll  be right  there," then  turning to
Kera, added, "Let's drop our gear off downstairs first."
     The rest of the evening passed  quietly. Rien spent a lot of time
talking with  people he  had not  seen in  months --  comparing notes,
discussing events and making plans. From listening in, Kera understood
that he was of some authority  here and perhaps that authority reached
well beyond this place.
     Before going to bed she tried  on the plate armor Enneth made for
her. To her surprise,  not only did it fit perfectly,  but it was also
comfortable.
     "My  father  was  a  tailor,"   Enneth  said,  chuckling  at  her
confusion. "He  always said no  one had to come  to him for  a fitting
twice. His  secret was not  to use his  arm to make  measurements, but
something exact and solid."
     Kera retired before midnight. Rien was still busy talking and the
group seemed very familiar with each other and Kera felt as if she was
intruding.  She tossed  and turned  for a  long time,  unable to  fall
asleep. The conversation she had with Rien shortly after their arrival
still fresh on her mind. In truth, she was not half as confident about
her choice  as she  made Rien  believe she  was, but  it was  her only
excuse for staying. Not that she believed he'd make her leave.

     "So do you  feel homesick yet?" Rien asked Kera  the next morning
when he was showing her around the city.
     "Sort of,"  she admitted.  "I always thought  Dargon was  a dirty
town, but looking at this..."
     Rien surveyed  the dock  in both directions.  Trash lay  about as
common as the wooden  walk of the docks, which were in  a bad state of
disrepair, with an  occasional sleeping drunk mixed in  here and there
-- a sight  he saw many times.  "If you think this is  bad, wait until
you see Magnus..."
     "We're going to Magnus?" Kera asked, her eyes sparkling.
     "Not  now, but  I'm sure  you'll get  there sooner  or later.  We
travel to all the `exotic' places."
     Kera smiled. "It's quite a change,  being able to travel all of a
sudden. I  never left Dargon before,  you know...just a quick  trip to
the woods or out  to sea once in a while... That  first night we spent
in  the  forest,  I  was  scared  stiff!  Now  it's  starting  to  get
interesting. I just hope I don't get over it."
     "You  won't,"  Rien  assured  her. "Every  place  on  Makdiar  is
different."
     "And have you been everywhere yet?"
     Rien almost let a smile slip  out, but successfully hid it behind
a smug expression.  "No," he said. "The world is  much bigger than you
think," and with those words, tapped Kera on her nose.
     "So where have you been?"
     "Well...I've been to Dargon," he grinned ear to ear.
     "Help!"  a female  shriek pierced  the  usual low  rumble of  the
docks.
     Rien turned in time  to see a young woman jerk  free from a burly
sailor and  start running towards the  buildings at the other  side of
the dock.  The sailor ran  after her,  followed by another  man. Their
path would take all of them past Rien and Kera.
     "Get her out of here," Rien ordered Kera, making a snap decision,
and stepped forward just after the girl ran by. The sailor, hot on her
heels, collided with  him. Both fell to the ground  and the second man
chasing the girl tripped over the pair and fell down as well.
     Rien regained his  feet at the same time as  the sailor. The girl
being chased was gone and Rien got just a glimpse of Kera turning down
another pier. The sailor, barely recovered from the collision, was not
paying attention to Rien, scanning the docks up and down the boardwalk
for a sign of the girl who had escaped him.
     "Watch where you're  going!" Rien shouted and punched  him in the
gut, to keep him occupied. The sailor turned a light shade of pink and
sank to his knees.
     A small crowd was now gathering  and Rien turned to the other man
getting up. "You!" he pointed, but the man took off through the crowd,
after his target. Rien decided to let him go. By the time he could get
through all  the sight-seers, Kera would  have plenty of time  to make
her escape.
     A  new group  of sailors  was coming  up from  the pier  and Rien
pulled up the man that he hit by the shirt front.
     "Let go of  him!" one of the sailors ordered,  rolling up a loose
sleeve on his arm.
     "What's going  on here?" another  voice sounded from  behind Rien
and the crowd parted to let a  pair of city guards through. Rien still
held the gasping sailor.
     "If he can't walk on land, keep  him in the water!" Rien told the
man's assembled companions contemptuously and  gave the sailor a shove
in their general direction.
     One of  the guardsmen folded  his arms  and stared at  Rien. "You
from around here, kid?"
     Rien gritted his teeth. Kid indeed!  "Yeah! What's it to you, old
timer?" Two could play the game.
     "Get lost,"  the other guard told  him and pushed through  to the
grouped sailors. "You boys been docked here long?"
     Rien smiled to  himself. The guards did not normally  pick on the
locals, just  the visitors. It  was one of  the many things  that gave
Sharks' Cove its reputation (and some say it's name).
     "Well,  boys?" the  guard  asked again  as  the sailors  shuffled
before him.  Antagonizing the local guard  was not a good  prospect at
any port, but particularly in Sharks' Cove.
     The man  who tripped over  Rien pushed  his way back  through the
crowd and surveyed the scene. He was empty handed and angry.
     "You, men, get back to work!" he barked and they obeyed. "What do
you want?" he asked the guards.
     "I  want to  know how  long your  boys are  going to  be starting
fights on my streets!" one of the guards snapped at him.
     "We'll be  gone by  morning," the  man said  and walked  past the
guard.
     "Now you  just wait  there!" the  guardsman ordered  and followed
him.
     The man turned around, visibly agitated. "This is a private pier.
Get off it or I'll have the men shoot you where you stand!"
     Rien smiled to  himself and slid out through the  crowd. It would
be  too long  a confrontation  to observe  and he  chose to  disappear
before  anyone recalled  his part  in  the initial  incident. When  he
returned to The  Tipsy Dragon, he found Kera, Adrea  and the girl from
the pier talking in the back room. As he entered, they all stopped and
looked at him.
     "Everything go well?" he asked Kera.
     "No one saw us," she said, assured.
     Rien took a seat at the table. "Don't let me interrupt."
     "You're not," Adrea said. "We just sat down."
     "Good," Rien said.
     "First of  all," Adrea  started, looking at  the girl  across the
table, "my name is Adrea. This is Rien," she pointed in one direction,
"and Kera," she pointed in the other.
     "I am  called Deneen," the  young woman answered her.  She looked
slightly older than  Kera, blond hair, brown eyes. Her  tunic was torn
on the  shoulder from where  the sailor had  grabbed her and  a purple
bruise highlighted her  left cheekbone. "I wish I could  repay you for
what you did..."
     "Can you tell us what happened?"  Adrea asked. She could not help
but be concerned over what she saw.
     Deneen's face  paled a bit.  "Nothing. I  just ran into  a little
trouble."
     "Why were they chasing you?" Adrea insisted.
     "Sailors," she said too quickly. "I guess they've been out at sea
for too long."
     "Is that why your clothing is torn?"
     The girl looked down at her tunic. "Yeah...I guess."
     "And the bruise?" Adrea asked, indicating her swollen cheek.
     "I was hit."
     "You  couldn't  have  gotten  it today.  It's  all  ready  turned
purple."
     "I was hit at home," Deneen corrected herself.
     "Are you from around here?" Rien asked.
     The girl nodded after a moment. "A village up north."
     "We would prefer you tell us  the truth," Rien stated. "There are
no villages to the north or is it in the marsh?"
     "We didn't save you so we could hurt you," Adrea interjected. "We
want to help. Please, tell us what happened."
     Deneen wiped a tear from her cheek. "I was with them for a while.
I..." Her voice cracked. "I can't..."
     "We want  to help," Adrea repeated,  laying a gentle hand  on her
arm. "What happened? Were you kidnapped?"
     Deneen nodded, but still did not look at Adrea.
     "Were they holding you for ransom?"
     The girl  shrugged. "My family  isn't rich...and there  were many
others."
     Adrea shot  a questioning  look at Rien.  `Slavers?' She  did not
need to  say it aloud.  Her expression said  it all. She'd  dealt with
them before.
     Rien's  features darkened  and he  got up.  They took  care of  a
runner the year before. "They said  it's a private pier..." was all he
said.
     "Get Deneen something  to eat," Adrea asked Kera  as Rien hurried
downstairs.
     "I'm not hungry..."
     "Then bring some refreshments. No alcohol." When Kera left, Adrea
turned back to the girl. "Where are you from?"
     "Port Sevlyn."
     "Do you know where you were going?"
     "No..."
     "How long were you on that ship?"
     "A week, I guess. I don't know."
     Adrea thought for a moment. "How many others were there?"
     "About fifty, I think."
     "Do you know  the size of the crew?" Rien  asked from the stairs.
He returned to the table holding a ledger and sat down.
     "No," Deneen answered.
     "They told the town guard that they would leave by morning," Rien
told Adrea. "I'll try to make sure that they don't. According to this,
that  whole block  was  sold  a year  ago  to  Gerald Roderick,  Baron
Morgan's brother...and the previous owner was Gaius Caligula himself."
     Adrea sighed. "So much for it being simple coincidence."
     "Was anyone removed  from the ship?" Rien asked,  looking over at
Deneen.
     "No. We just got here this morning."
     "Were there any plans to?"
     "I don't know."
     "How did you get away then," Adrea asked.
     "Not everyone was  chained," Deneen answered. "I  guess they will
be by now."
     Kera returned from  the bar room carrying a tray  with drinks and
placing it on the table, sat down.
     "Thank you," Adrea smiled to her.
     "Did any of the names I mentioned sound familiar?" Rien asked.
     "Just Baron Morgan,  but I guess everyone in  Quinnat knows him,"
the girl said.
     "What about `Abyssment' or `Quirin'?"
     "Sorry."
     Rien got up and paced a bit.  "Kera, I want you to get some rest.
I'll have a job for you this evening."
     "I want to go to the Abyssment tonight," Adrea said.
     "You  have an  eight month  old  daughter to  worry about,"  Rien
answered. "I will go with Brice. You can watch the store."
     "Rien! She's  old enough for  me to get  back to work!  You don't
expect me to spend the rest of my life here, do you?"
     "When  I need  you  to risk  your  life, I  will  ask you,"  Rien
answered bluntly. "Until then I want you to follow my lead." He closed
the book, looking  at Adrea. The statement came across  very harsh. "I
know you've been here a while and I know you want to get back to work,
but  if  something  happens  to  you   out  there,  I'll  be  the  one
responsible. Just a few more months, please?"

     "If you see anyone, go in the water," Rien instructed Kera.
     "In that?"  she peered into  the murky  Laraka. "I might  be more
willing to commit murder."
     "Watch yourself," Rien said one last  time and dove into the cold
water.
     Kera watched  him swim noiselessly  down stream to the  pier with
the slaver  ship, then  turned to  watch the  shore. She  wondered how
crazy a man had  to be to jump into an ice filled  river in the middle
of winter. Some people just have  this thing for pain. She scanned the
street, trying to  forget what Rien was doing. The  thought alone sent
shivers up  her spine. Just like  the docks in Dargon  at night, there
was no sign of life here.

     Rien let  the current  carry him  down to the  ship a  half block
away.  There were  some lights  up  on the  deck, but  no evidence  of
people, only two guards at the tip of the pier, intensely watching the
area of the docks.
     He  caught  himself  on  the  hull  of  the  ship  and  carefully
maneuvered underneath the  pier. The oars of the ship  were out of the
water, folded against the hull, like some giant wooden bird. Releasing
his grip on the supports, Rien swam back to the ship and around to the
front, fighting the current on the way back. Keeping close to the ship
made it a little easier. The oars  on the opposite side were folded up
as well, but one  of the two steering oars at the aft  of the ship was
not retracted and hung over the rushing water.
     Rien positioned himself under it and  hoping it was secured up on
deck, did his best  to jump up to grab it. It took  him two tries, but
he finally  managed to force  himself out of  the water far  enough to
grab hold of  the oar. The cold  wind almost made him let  go and drop
back into the water, but clenching his teeth, he pulled himself up and
moved, hand over hand, to the rear  of the ship. He looked at the deck
of the vessel and not seeing anyone, swung over the railing.
     After a few moments of waiting,  Rien drew his dagger -- the only
weapon he had  on him -- and made  his way to the mizzen  mast. All of
the mizzen  sails were  down and  the ties  were secured  to a  set of
marked hooks  on the mast.  He found the one  that held the  main rope
support and put  the dagger through it, twisting it  around once. With
any luck  this would  weaken the  rope enough to  snap under  the full
weight of the sail.
     A noise on deck made Rien turn around quickly. A sailor obviously
far gone with drink, made his way up the gang plank and spotting Rien,
headed fo him.
     "Gooth rum,"  the sailor said, his  speech slurred and a  wave of
alcohol made its way past Rien.
     "Appears so," Rien took a step back in disgust.
     "Wan' zome?" the sailor held up an empty bottle.
     Rien shook his head.
     "Suit yourswelf," the sailor coughed and started walking away.
     "Hey, wait," Rien stopped him. He couldn't afford witnesses.
     The sailor turned back with a dejected look on his face.
     "Let me see that," Rien pointed to the bottle.
     The sailor put it behind his back. "No. Is mine."
     "Great," Rien muttered under his breath. "Please?"
     The sailor took a step back and Rien instantly realized something
was wrong.
     "I don't know you," the man declared and Rien smiled innocently.
     "RUNAWAY!" the sailor  bellowed at the top of his  lungs and Rien
heard hurried  movement on the pier.  He charged at the  sailor, using
his body  weight to knock the  man against the starboard  railing and,
breaking through, they both fell into the rushing water of the Laraka.

     Kera stretched  out on the empty  pier, looking up into  the dark
winter  sky. The  bright constellation  of Perantu,  the falcon,  hung
almost directly above her, the  talons reaching towards the ocean. The
pier was dry and small ledges on the sides prevented wind from blowing
across it. She was not concerned about being surprised by anybody. Her
senses improved  vastly during  the time she  had lycanthropy  and she
felt she could rely on them as much as most animals relied on theirs.
     When Rien told her  to get some rest so she would  be ready to do
some work at night,  she did not even think he meant  for her to spend
her time  guarding an empty  pier. Even  Liriss was better  at finding
interesting things for her to do. At least it would be worth it to see
Rien all wet in this weather.
     Sounds of  splintering wood and a  splash in the water  made Kera
look over to  the ship. She saw  a few shapes appear  on deck, rushing
about,  looking into  the  water, but  not much  more.  It was  almost
obvious that  Rien had been seen,  but got away. Kera  glanced back to
the  roadway at  the foot  of the  pier and,  not seeing  anyone, made
herself comfortable with her head propped up on her arms, to watch the
commotion  on the  neighboring dock.  The people  there gathered  in a
group, one in the middle, standing on something that made him two feet
taller. He  swung his arms  out to the  river, then pointed  to shore.
People  started  splintering away  from  the  group. Kera  sighed  and
continued watching. Whatever Rien had  done must have gotten them very
upset.
     The man in the middle of the group jumped down and disappeared on
the far side of the ship, as did the men remaining with him.
     Some  splashing  noises diverted  Kera's  attention  again and  a
moment later two hands  grabbed the the edge of the  pier not far from
her. Rien pulled himself up.
     "What did you do?" Kera asked.
     "I was surprised," Rien said.
     "You?"
     "The man was  drunk. I didn't think he would  be a problem. Come,
we best leave before the guards decide to search here."
     "Dry yourself  off, first," Kera  instructed. "You won't  get any
sympathy from me if you catch a cold."
     Rien grabbed her  arm and yanked her after himself.  "I won't ask
for any."
     A few blocks away from the pier they stopped in an alley and Rien
accepted the towel from Kera. "They  won't be able to set their sails.
When that man showed up I was  hoping he was too drunk to recognize me
for a stranger, but he wasn't as  far gone as I had hoped," Rien said,
drying his hair. He then took the  bag of dry clothes Kera held out to
him  and started  changing. "Hopefully  the crew  will realize  he was
drunk and no slaves are missing and leave it at that. He thought I was
a slave..."
     Kera sighed. "What if he figures out you're not a slave? He won't
stay drunk  forever. He'll tell  them you were an  intruder committing
sabotage."
     "He won't realize it. He's dead."
     "You killed him?"
     "We  fell in  the  water. When  I surfaced,  he  wasn't there.  I
suspect he was too drunk to swim."
     "So what now?"
     "You go back. I need to know  what's happening. I am going to the
Abyssment. Brice should be there by now."
     Kera nodded, unsure  of her task and Rien dumped  the wet clothes
in  a pile  of  trash. He  then  turned to  her and  took  her by  her
shoulders. "Be  careful. I  don't want  to be pulling  you out  of the
river, understand?"
     "I've trailed people before. I know how it's done."
     "Be careful," Rien said again, embracing her. He disappeared down
the street.
     Kera looked  up and down the  alley after he left,  then took the
long way  around to get  back to the  docks. Her greatest  concern was
dodging  the crew  of  the ship  that was  searching  the streets  and
hopefully to stay out  of the way of the town guard,  which as yet did
not know  her and  with any  luck, would  have no  reason to  make the
acquaintance.

     Rien paused  at the entrance to  the Abyssment. The bar  was busy
with  customers; much  busier than  The Tipsy  Dragon on  the best  of
nights. He made his way past a  group of people arguing in the doorway
and located the table where Brice sat.
     "Roderick's at the bar," Rien said, sitting down.
     "I know. He's been here a while," Brice said.
     "The man next to  him," Rien went on, "is the  one from the ship.
He was the one chasing Deneen."
     "He just  got here  a few  minutes before  you came  in. Roderick
appears to have been waiting for him. He turned away a wench when that
man came in."
     "I damaged his  ship," Rien said. "He'll be sorry  he left it. It
will have to stay in port through tomorrow."
     "We may need more than a day."
     "Can I get ya some'ing?" a bar girl came up to the table.
     "Milk?" Rien  grinned. She gave him  a blank look and  Rien said;
"Akvavit." Still puzzled, the woman left to get his drink.
     "Look," Brice nudged Rien, "they're going up."
     Rien looked towards the bar.  Roderick and his companion were now
at the  foot of  the stairs,  giving some instructions  to one  of the
workers. After a few short exchanges they went upstairs.
     "I'll check it out," Rien said, but Brice stopped him.
     "Let  me do  it. I  get paid  to do  this. You're  paid to  cause
trouble."
     Rien  smiled and  sat back  down. "I'll  make sure  the bar  maid
doesn't take anything."
     "Thanks.  That drink  cost  me  a fortune."  Brice  slid out  and
disappeared up the stairs after the two men.
     Rien accepted  his drink from  the bar  girl and settled  back to
watch  the room.  The  beverage  was too  strong  for  his liking  and
although  he  could  not  complain about  his  alcohol  tolerance,  he
preferred drinks that did not distort  their flavor with the amount of
alcohol they contained.
     The Abyssment, owned  by Gaius Caligula, the  resident crime boss
of  the city,  was the  largest tavern  in Sharks'  Cove and  was very
popular with  the local youth  and shady population. If  something was
happening somewhere in  Sharks' Cove or one of  the neighboring areas,
it was a good bet that  the information, if not the people responsible
for the act, would be available in the Abyssment that same night. Most
of the events were directly supervised by Caligula himself.
     Lord Gerald Roderick,  the brother of Baron  Morgan Roderick, was
rumored to have many dealings with  Gaius Caligula, but because of the
political sensitivity  of the issue,  it was hardly ever  discussed in
public and often "over-looked" by authorities.
     All these  threads linked the ship  at the northern docks  to the
underworld of Sharks' Cove, so  gathering information at the Abyssment
was a  sure bet and  as it  usually does, it  seemed to have  been the
right guess.
     "You look  pretty bored," a  female voice  said near Rien  and he
snapped out of  his trance-like train of thought. A  tall, dark haired
woman stood almost directly in front of him. "Mind some company?"
     Rien gestured for her to sit down.
     "You alone?" she asked.
     "Not any more," Rien smiled. "You?"
     "I was. The idiot who brought me here dumped me for some tramp."
     "Better find  out about those  types early in  the relationship,"
Rien said, not unsympathetically.
     The woman nodded, sipping her drink. "You come here often?"

     Having observed  Roderick and his  companion enter a  room, Brice
climbed out the  window at the end  of the hall and made  his way from
window ledge to balcony to window ledge, until he found the balcony of
the room  where the private  meeting was taking place.  Making himself
comfortable under  the window, conveniently  cracked, to let  air (and
voices) circulate, he proceeded to listen in on the conversation.
     "...flat fee!"  Brice caught  the conclusion of  Roderick's angry
statement.
     "We had an agreement," another, more controlled voice replied.
     "You will pay  me what they are  worth, not what you  pay for the
substandard merchandise you deal in," Roderick spoke again.
     "My lord," the  other man insisted, "you are  selling me harlots.
Experienced, but used merchandise."
     "Pleasure slaves, Isom, are better if they are experienced."
     "And willing!"
     Brice shifted a little to be more comfortable, still listening to
the two hagglers inside.
     "When  have you  heard of  a willing  slave?!" Roderick  lost his
cool. "It costs me a lot of  money to kidnap people off the streets. I
can't afford a loss."
     "You old fart, who do you think you're dealing with?"
     A loud slam  made Brice sit upright. It came  from inside, but he
looked down into the alley just to  be sure it was quiet there. No one
was to be seen.
     "You do that again and I'll personally make sure your head is cut
off and tossed into the bay!" Roderick said again.
     "Thirty marks  for the six,"  the other  man said. "Not  a bronze
more."
     "You're going  to go out there  and sell them for  over fifty and
you expect me to take thirty? Forty marks!"
     "Thirty-five."
     "Thirty-eight...No. Don't go. Thirty-three."
     "Bring them to the warehouse tonight."
     Brice heard footsteps, followed by the door slamming, then a deep
sigh and someone pacing the room. The meeting was over.

     "So you just travel around," the woman said to Rien. Her name, he
learned from their lengthy conversation, was Jenye. "Sounds exiting."
     "Actually it's boring as hell," he answered. "And the pay is bad.
You'd think mercenaries get paid well, but that's an old wives tale."
     Jenye laughed. "You know, you don't look much like a mercenary."
     "Do any of us look like our chosen paths in life?" Rien chuckled.
"My last doctor was rolling over  sixty, acting under thirty and had a
beard  that would  look better  on a  goat and  now you're  telling me
you're a physician too."
     Jenye  burst  out laughing.  "You  know,  that sounds  just  like
somebody I know in Magnus."
     Rien cracked a smile. "So what do I look like?"
     Jenye placed her chin in her hand and studied Rien intensely. Out
of the corner of his eye he noticed Brice at the bar looking at him as
well. Brice pointed to the exit  and Rien responded with a signal, not
removing  his attention  from his  companion,  who did  not appear  to
notice the exchange. Brice left the room.
     "You  look..."  Jenye  began  slowly,  carefully  studying  Rien,
"...like an artisan...an artist, maybe...or an entertainer..."
     "I suppose that's better than the last evaluation I received. The
town  guard mistook  me for  a bounty  hunter...of course  the body  I
carried in  with me could  have led them  down the garden  path." Rien
glanced around the bar. There  were plenty of people present, although
it was well into the night. "I'd best be going," he stood up. "It will
be a long day tomorrow."
     "So soon?" Jenye asked. "You haven't even touched your drink."
     Rien glanced down at the Akvavit.  "It's far too strong for me. I
prefer to keep on my toes, not my back."
     "It all depends on what you're doing," Jenye said seductively and
Rien's eyebrows shot up.
     "It does indeed, doesn't it?"
     "Why don't you look me up  sometime soon?" Jenye offered Rien her
hand. "I visit here at times."
     "I just might," Rien said and left after a quick good night.
     Jenye  watched  him go,  then  finished  her  drink. One  of  the
Abyssment's bouncers appeared at her side.
     "Get up," he  pulled her to her feet. "Let's  go." His strong arm
shoved her forward.
     "Hey! I can walk!"
     "Then walk."
     "What's going on?"
     "Lord Roderick wants to see you."

     "You know her?" Brice asked when Rien came out of the Abyssment.
     "No. She came  up and asked for company not  long after you left.
Made me look less conspicuous sitting there. Why?"
     "I saw her talking to the man Roderick and Isom were talking to,"
Brice answered.
     "Isom?"
     "The other man.  The one you said was with  the ship. That's what
Roderick called him."
     Rien  frowned.  "She  could  have  been  there  for  reasons  she
neglected to mention...perhaps I should take her up on her offer."
     "Her offer?"
     "I was under  the impression she wanted to see  me again. Doesn't
matter now. What did you find out?"
     "Isom is  a slave trader. Roderick  sold him half a  dozen slaves
for thirty-three marks."
     "Thirty-three?  Sounds like  he  got taken.  Were  the slaves  up
there?"
     "No. Roderick is  supposed to deliver them tonight.  I don't know
where they  are held,  but they are  to be sold  at some  warehouse. I
guess somewhere along the docks."
     "That doesn't give  us much time," Rien said. "I  don't want them
on that ship and I don't want the ship leaving town."
     "They could  be in any  of a  countless number of  places," Brice
said.
     "Or," Rien turned  to face him, "if  they need to be  near by and
secure..?"
     "Roderick's townhouse," Brice picked up, "or Quirin."
     Rien turned to look at the  silver tipped spire, visible over the
roofs  of the  buildings, pointing  up to  the sky,  somewhere in  the
middle of the Laraka delta. "Morgan is involved?"
     "I wouldn't be surprised if the Baron was involved, but he is out
of town and Gerald always has access to the keep."
     "Why don't I take the keep  and you check on the townhouse?" Rien
offered.
     "You must love that river."
     Rien grinned. "Remind  me to tell you what happened  before I got
here."

     Quirin Keep, built  by Duke Vezakis over three  hundred years ago
was the original fortification for  entrance to the Laraka. Since that
time it was sieged, modified, abandoned and rebuilt a number of times.
Currently it was  nothing more than the residence of  the local baron,
Morgan Roderick, who liked nothing more  than a large moat between him
and his subjects. Most of  the responsibility for Laraka's defense now
fell  to  Gateway Keep,  set  a  few  hundred leagues  upstream  where
Vodyanoy joined the Laraka.
     None-the-less, Quirin  was still a fortified  castle, with guards
and defenses and trying  to swim there in the middle  of a cold winter
night was  far from  an easy  task. Rien  patiently watched  the small
island a half  league, or half fathom, as any  sailor worth his weight
in ale would say,  away for any sign of motion, but  it did not appear
as if  any guards  were braver  than the  weather. Rien  undressed and
after hiding  his clothes under the  pier, went into the  water. For a
second time this  day he wondered about his  masochistic tendencies in
this weather.  Taking a deep breath,  he dove into the  cold water and
swam towards the island visible up ahead.
     It took Rien  a while to reach his  destination, fighting against
the current  that threatened to drag  him out into the  ocean. Sharks'
Cove  was  after all  named  for  the  hungry  fish that  visited  the
Shandayma Bay as much as for the people who lived there. He made it to
the shore of Quirin and dropped on the sand, letting it absorb some of
the water, so the  cold wind coming in from the ocean  would not be as
noticeable.
     After a  few long  moments Rien  pulled himself  to his  feet and
moved up the slope to the road he knew existed above. In one direction
the road led  to a pier where  Rien previously spotted a  ship. In the
other direction was the castle  itself. Rien stood indecisively at the
edge of the road, wondering if it would be better for him to check the
ship, which  could leave  any minute,  if it indeed  was to  ferry the
prisoners  to  the  mainland  tonight  or  the  castle,  where  better
information could be obtained.
     Finally  he  decided to  check  the  ship  first. If  there  were
prisoners on the island, his best  chances lay in making sure the boat
did not leave  with them aboard. Keeping  to the trees at  the side of
the road, Rien started out east, to the island's small port.
     A single ship stood docked, with a small compliment of guards and
sailors sitting around a comfortable campfire on shore. Rien patiently
watched them from the trees.
     The forest around the pier was cleared out and Rien could not get
close enough  to hear the  conversation, although it was  obvious they
were not guarding  anyone. After some time Rien saw  one of the guards
get  up, pick  up his  equipment and  after a  few more  words to  his
companions, start towards the road to  the castle. A hundred feet into
the woods, Rien confronted the man  and with a single hit from behind,
knocked him to the ground.
     Dragging  the stunned  man down  the incline  to the  river, Rien
splashed some cold water on him,  to bring him around, and asked about
the slaves.
     Still a little dazed, the guard  eyed Rien. "Aren't you cold like
that?"
     Rien backhanded him. "Where are the slaves being kept?"
     "I don't know what you're talking..."
     Rien submerged  the man's head in  the water. He had  no evidence
that the man knew, but a strong suspicion existed. A little persuasion
could go  a long way. "Know  what I'm talking about  now?" Rien pulled
the man back up and immediately  shoved him back under. People who had
the  chance  to  think  things  over usually  made  better  long  term
decisions.
     Rien pulled the man up again. "Well? Know the ones I mean?"
     The guard started  coughing and Rien pushed him down  for a split
second and brought him back up.
     "Once more and you stay under for good."
     "The castle..." the guard continued coughing and Rien punched him
in the face, knocking him out again.
     If the  kidnapped people were  in the castle, which  was becoming
more and more  probable, Rien did not  have the means to  get them off
the  island. For  that matter,  he  had no  idea what  to do  himself.
Deciding to accept challenges as they came along -- hopefully one at a
time -- he changed  into the guard's clothes and took  the road in the
direction of Quirin Keep.

     Brice  held still  on  top  of the  broad  stone  wall of  Gerald
Roderick's villa as a guard  walked down the street. `Paranoid,' Brice
thought and  slid down the other  side into the garden.  The house was
set some  distance into the garden  and some of the  lights were still
lit. Brice  stealthily slipped over to  the building and knelt  by the
wall.  It was  not  the  first time  he'd  been  sneaking around  Lord
Roderick's property. The Baron's brother  was suspected of a number of
criminal doings  in the  past and  Brice had  kept track  of him  on a
number of occasions.
     Making sure that no guards were in sight, Brice climbed up a tree
by the  house, moved hand over  hand towards the roof  and jumped down
onto it.  A couple  of sudden  voices made him  get down  while people
passed by the side of the house. The men were discussing horses in the
stables. He  peered over the edge,  watched them go by,  then moved in
the opposite direction.
     The  lights  in  the  small two  story  house  behind  Roderick's
residence that was  used to house staff were still  on. In particular,
the barred window  on the second floor, which was  reserved for people
Roderick did not want to leave, was what Brice was after. He got up to
look into it from where he was. Inside he spotted at least two women.
     Brice sat back down with a sigh of relief. He had found them. Now
he could either stay and see what happened or sneak out and find Rien.
He decided  to stay.  That way  he would  be present  at the  sale and
perhaps be able to interfear.

     Dressed in  the armor of  the guard  he knocked out,  Rien freely
entered Quirin Keep. Everything was quiet, as would be expected in the
middle of the night.  He made his way past a  sentry beginning to fall
asleep in the entrance hall. A bright fire burned in the giant chamber
which  the hall  opened into.  At  the far  end Rien  observed a  twin
staircase, starting at a common point  and splitting right and left as
it spiraled  to a second story  balcony. He traced the  outline of the
second  floor with  his  eyes,  making sure  no  guards were  present.
Everything was  clear and starting with  the first door on  the right,
Rien proceeded with his investigation.
     He found the  back stairs in a small corridor  a few rooms deeper
into the  castle. Once again, there  were no guards or  people present
and he quickly  made his way down  to the lower level.  This level was
dark and cold and smelled of stagnant water, probably because it stood
not much higher than the water level around the island. None the less,
the floor was dry  and clean and after a good  hour of looking around,
Rien was satisfied that there were no prisoners here.
     Rien made his way back up by  a different stairway. It led to the
kitchen,  where for  the second  time  this night  Rien encountered  a
drunk.
     "Have some,"  the bearded  man slammed the  bottle on  the table.
Rien recognized him as the dozing sentry he passed on his way into the
castle. Accepting  the man's  offer, Rien  sat down  at the  table. It
would certainly be  tougher to throw this one into  the water to cover
an escape.
     "Lonely work, sentry duty," Rien said.
     The guard nodded. "You new around here?"
     "I was hired over from the town guard a few days back."
     "Were you now...which part?"
     "Northern strip."
     "Ah. I was working the docks a few years back."
     Rien smiled.  It was  a safe  topic. "Messy  area. I'm  afraid we
always kept as far from there as our patrols could take us."
     "Not my problem any more," the guard shrugged. "Roderick hired me
a few years back. Cleaner, safer, better pay."
     "The Baron?"
     "Oh, no. His brother. You?"
     Rien shrugged.  "Some big fellow with  a scar." There was  one in
every outfit.
     "The one with  the front teeth missing?" the  guard asked. "Yeah,
he thinks he's the next best thing to the king."
     "How'd you get here?" Rien asked.
     "Regular staff shuffling, they say."
     "So  that slave  bit is  only a  rumor?" The  guard looked  drunk
enough for a change of topic.
     The guard eyed Rien suspiciously. "What slaves?"
     Rien leaned back comfortably, self assured. "You know...there are
rumors in the streets."
     "What sorts of rumors?" the guard's eyes narrowed.
     "That the Baron's brother is keeping slaves in Quirin."
     Rien's  companion  roared with  laughter.  "He's  too chicken  to
endanger Morgan. Morgan keeps the sling away from Gerald's ass."
     "At the townhouse then?" Rien asked.
     "Right!"  the  guard  slammed  his  mug down  on  the  table  and
continued laughing.
     Rien waited patiently. "You're serious?"
     "Yeah," the guard went  on. "Why do you think I  was put here? He
doesn't want me to know!" And with that he broke into more laughter.
     "Mustn't be  your day,"  Rien said and  slammed the  almost empty
bottle against his  head. The guard slumped down across  the table and
Rien quickly got  up to leave. He  had lost a lot of  time following a
false lead and now he had to make  it up. With any luck Brice would be
on top of  it. Rien briskly walked  out of the kitchen,  down the hall
and to the exit.
     "Halt!" a guard rushed into his path.
     Rien almost drew the sword.
     "Where are you going?"
     "I'm returning to the dock."
     "I didn't see you come in," the guard said belligerently.
     "I came in over an hour  ago," retorted Rien, determined to bluff
the  situation out  -- one  trace of  his passing  in the  kitchen was
enough.
     The guard  stepped aside with  a muttered curse and  Rien hurried
out. He  quickly made it to  the beach, disrobed and  entered the cold
water. A  half hour  later he was  at the north  shore of  the Laraka,
getting dressed again.

     Brice watched  carefully from the  roof as six guards  removed as
many people  from the servants' building  and led them to  an enclosed
wagon. Each of the  four women and two men were  gagged and their legs
bound (their  arms were all ready  tied behind them) before  they were
deposited in the  wagon. Then two guards got inside,  one took control
of the horses and the wagon was rolled around to the front of the main
building. Brice watched the procedure carefully, memorizing each face,
each  movement. He  did not  feel himself  capable of  challenging six
armed guards,  not to mention  all who would be  within ear shot  of a
struggle, but instead, when the wagon  rolled past his position on the
roof,  he rolled  over the  edge and  onto the  canvas cover  over the
wagon, the top of  which was almost level with the  sloped roof of the
building. He held still  for a few moments, waiting to  see if a sword
was going  to surface  near him  or a crossbow  bolt tear  through the
heavy fabric, but  none did. He successfully made it  on board for the
ride. It did not take long.
     As the wagon stopped, heavy  footsteps sounded on the wooden walk
at the side of the building, followed by Gerald Roderick's voice.
     "Is everything ready?"
     "Yes, sir,"  the driver answered. "We're  ready to go as  soon as
you are."
     Brice raised his  head to look around. He could  just see the top
of the teamster's  head sticking out mere inches above  the top of the
wagon. Somewhere  to the side people  walked by. Someone got  into the
wagon and someone  got out. Brice put his head  back down, releasing a
deep breath. He should have checked  how high the teamster was sitting
before he got on for a ride. It could have been a costly mistake.
     "Bring me my horse," Roderick called to someone. "You, meet me at
the warehouse. You two, go with him."
     Brice pressed himself closer to the  wagon as it moved on. By the
time it reached the gate to  the street, two mounted guards joined the
wagon. Once  it was  outside, Roderick  and a  third guard  joined the
growing caravan. One man took point, with Roderick a little behind him
and the other  two men rode behind  the wagon. All Brice  could do now
was hold on for  the ride and pray that the rear  guard did not notice
him.

     Kera watched  the tall thin man,  who had chased Deneen  when she
first encountered him,  pass her on the boardwalk of  the pier. Out of
the corner  of her eye  she noticed him turn  and look after  her. She
focused her attention  behind her as the  man fell out of  her line of
vision. She  feared he  would follow  her, do  something, but  all her
instincts and training  told her not to make any  sudden moves and not
to act as if she feared him. She continued walking ahead, not changing
her pace, not turning to look,  but all her attention was concentrated
behind her, trying to detect unnatural movement or sounds.
     The man did  nothing to alert Kera  and she did not  turn back to
avoid seeming suspicious or concerned. By  the time she made it to the
corner and  looked back, the  man had turned  down the pier  where his
ship was docked. She turned down the  pier she was at and making it to
the end, climbed up on a  crate and made herself comfortable to watch.
The slaver ship appeared in the  distance, a dark shadow a block away.
After a minute a  group of people appeared on the  deck and after some
shuffling around, left  the ship. They turned north when  they got off
the pier  and started walking  away from  her. Hopping off  the crates
noiselessly, Kera followed the small squad.
     After a few blocks the group turned down a side street and by the
time she  got there, they were  gone. Kera cautiously walked  down the
alley,  looking right  and left,  examining the  road for  any trails.
Behind her she  heard horses and a wagon and  throwing a single glance
back, hurried  on ahead. She  collided head on  with a man  dressed in
light armor who  appeared from nowhere. She was grabbed  and forced up
against a wall by  a doorway as two mounted men,  followed by a wagon,
rode up behind them.
     "Lord Isom!" the man holding Kera called through the doorway.
     The tall  thin man stepped  out. "Good," he muttered,  looking at
the wagon, then turned to Kera. "This is the third time we meet today.
I consider it twice too many for a coincidence. Who are you?"
     "I..." Kera paused as a well dressed man dismounted his horse and
came over.
     "Well?" Isom asked again.
     "I...I was just walking," Kera said.
     "Really now? Walking every place I go?"
     "Who is she?" th other man demanded.
     "Don't worry about her, Roderick. She  will be leaving with me at
sunrise. She obviously wanted to see the ship."
     Kera tried struggling, but the  guards held her tight. She kicked
him and  for a moment he  lost his grip  on her, but another  took his
place.
     "Take her inside," Isom ordered and went in.
     "Bring the ones in the back of the wagon, too," Roderick ordered.
     From his position on top of  the wagon, Brice was able to observe
the  six  prisoners brought  into  the  building, leaving  behind  the
teamster and a guard. The two men exchanged a few words about the work
and the late hour, then the guard  announced that in the course of the
trip, the mead he drank before  had travelled its course and he needed
to have it pass on. [Original text censored for a mature audience.] He
wandered down the alley and the driver leaned back against the wagon.
     Taking his  cue, Brice  crawled up  the top of  the wagon  to the
front, then dropped a  loose loop of rope, hanging off  a hook next to
the driver, around the man's neck and  gave him a shove. The length of
the rope broke the driver's fall and he was able to regain his feet on
the ground,  but Brice quickly pulled  it back up, choking  the man. A
minute later he let the body dangle to the ground and took his seat.
     Releasing the reins leading to the  two horses and picking up the
whip that was  left on the bench,  Brice jumped to the  ground. By now
the guard was  returning and Brice snapped the whip  behind the horses
as hard  as he could.  The animals instinctively pulled  forward, away
from the  sound, wanting to  avoid getting  hit. In their  charge they
knocked  over the  guard and  the wagon  rolled over  him with  a soft
squish, dragging the  teamster behind. Readying the  whip again, Brice
stepped through the door.  He was not sure how he  would deal with the
half dozen men  he knew were inside,  but he knew Kera  would help and
hoped that the prisoners would do the same.

     Rien observed  the action taking  place beneath him.  Both Gerald
Roderick  and Isom  were  in  the room,  along  with  ten guards,  six
prisoners and  Kera. He had  the gut feeling  that she would  get into
trouble when  leaving her  to watch  the docks,  but at  least nothing
serious had happened yet. With any luck, nothing would.
     "Very good,  very good..." Isom  walked around the  bound people,
looking them over.  He would stop at  one or the other,  poke at them,
study their faces, their builds. Each time he would smile a satisfied,
self pleased grin and go on. "Perhaps we can do business again, soon."
He turned to Gerald. "Pay him."
     Out of the corner of his eye Rien noticed the door crack open and
Brice slip in. He smiled to himself. The odds had just improved.
     "If you don't  mind, I'd like to count this,"  the nobleman said,
accepting a pouch from one of Isom's guards.
     "By all means."
     Gerald Roderick poured  the gold coins into his  hand and started
counting off  the thirty-three Marks  due him.  Isom used the  time to
walk over to Kera  and to examine her. He took hold  of her head under
her chin and turned her to face him.  "I will go a lot easier with you
if you tell me  who you are and why you were following  me. Who do you
work for?"
     Kera pulled  free from his grasp  and turned away. She  could not
move more than that because of the two guards holding her.
     "One less. Doesn't matter. Tie her," Isom told the two guards.
     "They're all  here," Roderick  said, finally done  counting. "The
slaves are yours."
     "There is one more matter," Isom said. "The runaway."
     "I am doing everything in my  power," Roderick stated. "If she is
to be found, my men will find her."
     "They'd better," Isom  growled. He produced five  more gold coins
and gave them to Roderick. "Thirty-eight Marks for your cooperation."
     Roderick pocketed the money. "No trouble."
     "Take them out," Isom instructed the guards.
     Rien moved swiftly along the ceiling  beam and jumped down on the
two guards attempting to tie Kera's hands. He landed with both feet on
one man's shoulders, forcing him to the ground. Jumping off the fallen
body, Rien  swung his sword  at the other  man, cutting deep  into his
chest. The element  of surprise was now lost. With  a roar four guards
charged for him.
     Rien backed over the first man he attacked, to stand next to Kera
and readied  for the assault. He  noticed that Kera had  picked up the
fallen  guard's sword,  a loose  rope  still tangled  around her  left
wrist.
     Brice stepped out  of the shadows behind the guards.  One man was
staring up  at the ceiling, expecting  someone else to drop  down. Not
wanting  to disappoint  the  soldier, nor  spoil  the surprise,  Brice
struck with the whip, silently looping it around the guard's neck. The
man screamed a  silent scream, grabbing at the end  of the whip caught
around  his neck.  Brice  yanked him  back and  stabbed  him with  his
dagger. As the  man was falling, Brice had re-wrapped  the whip around
the legs  of a guard  by Isom  and pulled him  over. One of  the other
guards responded, but tripped over the struggling man.
     On the other side  of the room, Rien knocked over  two men with a
low swing of his  sword. Kera met the charge of  the other two, barely
remaining on her  feet, and a second  later Rien came up  on the other
side of the two and struck one down. The other, disoriented by attacks
from the front and behind, stepped directly into Kera's swing.
     The  remaining  four men  on  the  ground surrendered,  but  both
Roderick and Isom were gone.
     "I've got  them," Brice  went for  the door, but  one of  the men
immediately clambered to his feet  and challenged him. Brice threw the
whip, tangling it around the guard's legs. As the man fell back to the
floor, Brice made  it into the alley,  but it was empty.  He came back
inside to  see Rien cutting  the ropes  binding one of  the prisoner's
hands.
     "They got away."
     Rien looked  back, annoyed, but  said nothing. Angry  words would
not change the  situation. He looked down at the  men they had fought,
sitting  on the  floor. Seven  of  the ten  were alive,  but two  were
unconscious from their wounds. "Leave your weapons and go," he ordered
and five men quickly got up and left.
     Rien picked up a  dagger from one of the guards  and handed it to
the woman  he'd cut loose. "Free  the others. The man  who was selling
you is  Lord Gerald Roderick. The  man who was purchasing  you is Lord
Isom. Report  them to the  town guard." He  turned to Brice  and Kera.
"Let's go."
     "Wait! Who are you?" one of the people called out.
     Brice looked at  the woman with a sheepish grin.  "We're the ones
who rescued you."
     Outside  the warehouse  Rien paused,  looking at  the dead  guard
lying in  the street, wheel marks  forming an impression in  his chest
and torso. "What happened here?"
     "The driver must have lost control of the horses," Brice grinned.
"Good thing it worked to our advantage."
     Rien looked over at Kera. "I assume you're all right. If you want
to get some rest, go on to the inn. I want to check on the ship."
     "Rest?  After all  this? You're  kidding! I  couldn't sleep  if I
wanted to!"
     "Let's go then. It's getting light."
     The three started west, towards the docks along the bay.
     "I see you finally learned the whip," Rien said to Brice.
     "I finally convinced  Deven to teach me...but I  don't think he's
seen the light of day since then. How was the castle?"
     "I doubt Morgan is involved  in his brother's doings. Gerald even
rotated  some staff  he didn't  want involved  with his  activities to
Quirin."
     "How did you get here then?"
     "I went  back to  the Abyssment  to have a  word with  Jenye, the
woman you thought was spying on me,"  Rien said. "She was. She sent me
here."
     "She just up and told you?"
     "Not quite. I had to get tough."
     "You beat up a woman?" Kera asked.
     "Not in the Abyssment," Brice laughed.
     "Not that  anyone would notice,"  Rien retorted. "I simply  put a
little fear  of me into her.  She was reasonably cooperative  when she
thought I could do more harm than the people she worked for."
     "I wasn't  expecting you to  show up,"  Brice said. "Nice  to see
you're still resourceful."
     "Was there anyone else that Roderick was holding?"
     "Not that I  could tell. From his yapping on  the ride over, this
appears to be a  market he hasn't had a chance to  exploit yet. I hope
this helps him make up his mind our way."
     Rien nodded. "Hope we can stop that ship."
     "How do you expect to stop it?" Kera asked.
     "When I snuck  on board, I damaged some equipment.  If they don't
notice it  when they  put up  the sails,  one may  tear when  the rope
snaps."
     "But what  if they don't  come back to  repair it? Can't  they do
that out at sea?"
     "They could, but they shouldn't.  I'm more concerned that they've
all ready found the torn rope and replaced it. All we can do right now
is hope it works out."
     "With any  luck," Brice  added, "those  people will  report their
ordeal to the town  guard soon. If not, we'll have  to find some other
way to get those guards on board."
     By this time they were walking  along the docks, towards the pier
where the ship was docked.
     "Where  are you  going after  your  rotation is  up?" Rien  asked
Brice.
     He shrugged. "If nothing comes up, I thought I'd go by Magnus and
then down south. It's getting too cold for my taste out here. And that
reminds me, how was your swim?"
     A smile appeared  on Rien's face. "I'm not paid  nearly enough to
do this three times in one night."
     As they walked  on, he told of his adventures  on the slaver ship
and on the isle  of Quirin. It was not long  before they reached their
destination. The ship was pushing off  from the pier when it came into
their sight and Kera suggested they  watch from an empty pier near by.
Watching from piers  was something she did a lot  of lately, she added
souly.
     The ship maneuvered out to sea on oars alone.
     "Why aren't they raising sail?" Rien wondered aloud. "The tide is
going out and the winds look favorable."
     "I think  we lost  this one,"  Brice said.  "Best find  out their
destination and see if they can be stopped there."
     Rien nodded grimly.  The ship was a good half  league out, when a
couple of sails on the fore mast were  put up and then the ones in the
rear. Rien  held his breath in  anticipation, wanting to see  his plan
work. A long  minute later a few  of the sails were snapped  up by the
wind and fell,  dangling aimlessly in the breeze.  Other sails started
to be lowered one by one, when a cross beam on the mizzen mast tilted,
fell to the deck  and slipped off into the water, taking  a few of the
oars with  it. A sheet  of canvas  remained dangling loosely  over the
starboard side.
     "I guess they're  coming back now," Rien said,  tension gone from
his voice.
     "Just how much damage did you do?" Brice asked.
     Rien shrugged his  shoulders. "I just weakened the  rope. I don't
know what they tangled it in."

     The following  day Rien  and Kera  saw Deneen  off. They  got her
passage on  a barge going  up to Port Sevlyn.  The rest of  the people
captured by the slavers were taken off  the ship by the town guard who
appeared on the pier en masse soon after the crippled ship docked. The
sailors surrendered peacefully after a few heated words with the troop
lieutenant and were all taken into custody. Surprisingly, Isom was not
on the ship and  Rien never got close enough to the  group to find out
why. On the whole it did not matter. The slaver had lost his ship, his
crew and his cargo. It would take him a long time to recover the loss,
if he ever could, but somehow Rien  felt that Lord Isom was not one to
give up easily, if at all.
     "What do you think happened to him?" Kera asked Rien after Deneen
waved for the last time.
     "Isom?  I'd imagine  he had  a different  way of  getting to  his
destination or perhaps  didn't need to go...I doubt we  scared him out
of business."
     "So what now?"
     Rien scanned  the dock  area. Everything appeared  as it  had the
morning  before. People  rushed  about on  errands,  ships were  being
unloaded on the  piers and the customary drunks littered  the sides of
the walks along the buildings.  "Looks like nothing here has changed,"
he sighed. "Not that it ever does. Is there anything you want to do?"
     "We were sight-seeing yesterday," Kera offered.
     They mounted their horses and started  up river. "I suppose I can
show  you the  Abyssment. It's  given me  countless hours  of pleasure
watching the drunks and the winos."
     "Really?"
     "No  place  like  Sharks'  Cove,"  Rien  smiled.  His  expression
suddenly became serious as he spotted  a familiar face in the crowd. A
young  girl with  auburn hair  and  amber eyes,  that stood  out at  a
distance, rode  towards him on  the horse he  took to Dargon  almost a
year ago.
     Something inside him said `Eelail', but instead he raised his arm
and shouted at the girl: "You! You stole my horse!"
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                          Sons of Gateway
                          ---- -- ------
                          Part 4: Marcus

                       by Jon "Grimjack" Evans
                       

     "This  place is  colder than  death," Ne'on  muttered, as  he and
Captain Bartholemew Clay  walked the parapets above  Gateway Keep. The
moisture from their  breath hung lightly in the air  in front of them,
before dissipating like small clouds on a hot summer day. Captain Clay
clasped his  black cloak tightly  around his  chest and looked  at his
lord in wonder.  Ne'on refused to wear any- thing  more than his white
robes and golden belt, to which was strapped a fine silver dagger - of
Galician origin, Clay guessed. Ne'on's  entire left arm contrasted the
rest of his clothes by its black  dye, and the midnight black glove he
wore on  his hand. Ne'on's  Black Arm, Bartholemew mused,  and frowned
for not having noticed it before.
     "Aren't you used to the weather by now, my lord?" Ne'on responded
to the question with a confused gaze, and Clay reinforced his thought.
"You have lived here all your  life, have you not?" Captain Clay often
wondered why his  employer did not wear more  protective clothing; for
warmth alone, if for no other reason.
     "I'm  more concerned  with  Marcus' knowledge,  than my  clothes,
Captain. And my robes provide ample warmth to sustain life in my body,
for  now." Clay  didn't remember  having asked  the question,  but its
being answered  didn't surprise  him. Ne'on had  a habit  of answering
some questions before they were asked.
     Ne'on stopped by a fortification in the wall, and looked out over
the partially  frozen Laraka.  His father had  built Gateway  like any
other  keep of  the day;  but, without  enough funds,  he made  things
considerably  smaller. He  thought his  father had  been a  small man.
"What does Marcus know about this  'High Mage', or whatever his title?
What is there to know about him? Is he just a dealer in the arts? No;"
he answered his  own question, "otherwise, how would he  have known of
Qord?"
     "My lord,  if I may,"  Clay began, and  Ne'on turned to  him with
such a cold gaze he reached to gather more of his cloak about him. The
cold air is increasingly bitter, he thought.
     "Please, my  lord," Ne'on mocked,  "what is  it you wish  to tell
me?" Bartholemew felt no anger at his lord for this remark; he held no
respect  for titles  of  other  men unless  they  were deserved.  This
thought warmed him, and gave him the strength to return Ne'on's stare.
     "As  I was  about to  say, I  spoke with  Marcus concerning  this
'Marcellon' yesterday."  Upon hearing  this, Ne'on's gaze  became more
attentive, his  jaw a little  less hard.  Clay noticed the  signs, and
continued. "Not  only is he an  accomplished wizard, but his  mind has
powers no  ordinary man can  lay claim to.  There's a word  for it..."
Bart's eyes  scanned the sky,  as if searching  for his answer  in the
clouds above.
     "Psychic," Ne'on stated.  "That could be a  problem." Once again,
his gaze fell onto the crystallizing  river, the snow hanging over the
banks as if grasping hold for  life, the occasional rabbit darting out
from a snow covered bush nearby. "Unless I blind him." Ne'on's spirits
rose, and Bartholemew was almost afraid to ask what he meant.

     It is nothing  new, he thought, merely a  substitution for other,
simpler, forms  of sacrifice. Ne'on  repeated this thought  to himself
continuously as he  removed the rabbit from the small  cage he had set
in his  private study. Rather  than waste additional  spell components
which he  could not  spare - he  was already using  his only  piece of
crysthalum,  which  was hard  to  find,  and  harder still  to  polish
correctly - he had to substitute  the life energy of the small animal.
The  light of  the bronze  chandelier was  all that  lit the  room his
father had once filled with bows, swords, and trophies of the hunt. At
least  his use  of the  animal  was for  more  than the  sheer joy  of
killing.
     The small,  pink nose twitched  nervously, the ears  flicked back
and forth, as if the creature sensed its impending death. It struggled
for freedom  as Ne'on  unsheathed his  silver dagger  and lay  it down
within the  pentagram he had drawn  on the floor. He  felt himself cut
off from the rest of the world as  he sat within its bounds, as if his
breath  were  being restrained,  but  he  disregarded that  as  fancy,
imagination.  Taking  from  his  pocket   the  small  blue  stone,  he
remembered how  it had come  from a larger  slab he had  found outside
Qord's hut  in the  Nar-Enthruen. He  had had to  cut that  stone many
times, making sure  the piece was shaped correctly, the  edges not too
sharp, before  he finally came  up with  this piece. Strong  enough to
pass the  magic, he thought,  without shattering before the  spell was
completed.
     Opening the leather-bound tome he had acquired from the remainder
of Qord's  possessions, he  turned to the  appropriate page  and began
reciting a  chant far older  than the walls  of Gateway; or  any other
castle in  Baranur, for  that matter.  The stone  glowed with  a thick
luminescence which expanded to form a small hemisphere, encircling the
outer points of  the pentagram. The spell was cast.  All that remained
was to expand it to the proper dimensions.
     Retrieving  his dagger,  he held  the rabbit  directly above  the
trans- mitter and  slit its small throat, delicately  and quickly. The
blood  poured freely  over the  gem-stone, and  over the  floor below,
caking and drying  almost instantly as the magic  absorbed its energy.
The  blue hemisphere  expanded rapidly,  fading in  proportion to  its
size,  until it  had  completely  surrounded the  entire  keep with  a
near-invisible aura.
     The Garthian Blind  has been cast, and no spell  or psychic probe
will pass  through, he  thought. Unfortunately,  this includes  my own
magic.   Also  unfortunate,   he  continued,   looking  down   at  the
chrysthalum, is  the loss of  the component.  I shall have  to acquire
another piece before I open the gate.
     A stone above  the door to the room glowed  faintly for a moment,
until Ne'on acknowledged its signal. Stepping out of the pentagram, he
took a  deep breath and opened  the door to greet  whoever was outside
the room. It was, he should have known, Captain Clay.
     "What is  it?" Ne'on asked of  his Captain as he  turned from the
door and walked  backed to the table.  He had some cleaning  up to do,
and  there  was  little,  he   thought,  that  required  his  complete
attention. He  frowned lightly again when  he saw the empty  cage, and
avoided it in his cleaning.
     "More  men  have arrived  for  service  in  the Black  Arm,  Lord
Keeper." Clay  cast his gaze lightly  about the room, settling  on the
bloody rabbit. "Taking up fine cuisine?"
     "Don't be glib, Clay; it  doesn't become you." Returning his tome
to  the table,  he flipped  through the  pages as  if searching  for a
spell. "Do you have anything of worth  to tell me, or do you just like
to play in my laboratory?"
     "You mentioned something of a desire  to have a ceremony held for
the  new recruits..."  Bartholemew looked  at Ne'on,  but received  no
confirmation. "I  have planned the  occasion, and wish to  confirm its
date."
     "Where did they come from?" Ne'on closed the tome and reached for
the small decanter on the edge of the table. Lederian red wine is best
at room temperature. "How do you know they are trust worthy? Would you
like a glass," he offered, indicating the bottle.
     "No, thank you."  Bartholemew never drank wine, the  head it left
him with was too slow to keep  up with his normally fast paced line of
work. "And," he  continued, "we don't know we can  trust them. Not all
of them, in any case. I commissioned some acquaintances - five of them
- to find me eight men each. We have fifty new recruits."
     Ne'on almost  betrayed a  sign of surprise,  when he  heard that.
"From whence, then, came the other ten?"
     "It seems," Clay explained, "that the word is out. Your Black Arm
is the elite guard, in Gateway. We have ten men from the populace, the
oldest around forty five, and the youngest, seventeen. Our captains of
the guard are beginning to worry about their status."
     "Tell them  not to  worry." Ne'on stroked  his thin  chin lightly
with his left hand,  as his gaze seemed to settle  on the mountains to
the east. "Let these  be the last of the Black Arm.  Let it further be
known  that if  someone wishes  to be  a member  of the  Arm, he  must
challenge  one of  the  existing members  for  their position."  Ne'on
smiled, having  always believed  in the survival  of the  fittest. His
mental  fitness, he  thought,  would  allow him  to  survive for  many
hundreds  of years.  "And make  sure the  present members  of the  Arm
receive the  best training available.  I want  you to take  a personal
interest in it."
     "I hardly  think that  will be  necessary," replied  the captain.
"The guards here are all specialists  with the bow. I don't think they
would know what to do with a good sword fighter, in close quarters."
     "Unfortunately  for you,"  Ne'on riposted,  "I don't  pay you  to
think. Do as I say, and remember who put you where you are."
     Bartholemew remembered. He remembered well. "Yes, my lord."

               Flames burning, crisping, dying, red skull
               rising, dripping, bloodied, blackened,
               burned, hardened, hot, dark, blackness
               engulfing... he's coming...

     The crystal sphere glowed faintly, clouded, and revealed nothing.
Marcellon  stared at  the ball,  dissapointed. Could  he have  drained
himself so completely, in this last  week, his own powers were failing
him? He had been taxed to some extent, he knew, when the head of Count
Connall had arrived at court without the rest of his body; however, he
should still be able to use the ball uninhibited.
     When the  messenger had arrived  from Gateway, two hours  ago, he
was relieved to be informed of  Ne'on's capture. As he was reading it,
however, the parchment seemed to burn  in his hands, and he dropped it
to the  floor, to the confusion  of the messenger. When  Marcellon had
looked at it again,  it was whole. He dismissed it  as stress, a fancy
of  his over-worked  mind. Finally,  when the  messenger had  left, he
closed the door and saw the image  of a white haired youth, rising out
of a pit of flaming lava, fire  dripping down off a red colored skull.
He knew something was amiss in Gateway.
     He tried  once more, concentrating  on the dry parchment  to give
him a  connection to the keep.  Once more, the ball  revealed nothing.
Then  he  noticed  it:  the  ball  was  glowing,  he  was  making  the
connection.  Fool! He  was tired!  Something was  blocking his  probe,
making him believe  he couldn't establish contact.  The illusion works
best that is not all illusion. Some type of blanking spell was cast on
Gateway - probably a Blind. He tried harder, concentrating, this time,
on the white haired head of the Winston child. The images came cloudy,
but they  were there: Ne'on Winston  sat on the seat  of Gateway Keep.
But where was Goren? Ah, this  image was sharper. Goren Winston lay in
a huddle, barely conscious, in  a dungeon cell. The purple-black color
around  his eyes  and the  swollen lips  betrayed how  the guards  had
treated him. Obviously, this situation demanded outside help.
     He  let the  images cloud,  and fade.  He frowned;  with the  war
coming, he couldn't go  to Gateway on his own. Jordan  had died in the
same camp  as Qord,  some months ago.  His father was  a mage  of some
worth, if he  remembered correctly. What was his  name... Marek? Marek
would be hearing from the High Mage.

               ...reaching, opening, grasping, red liquid,
               sweet, glass, round, smooth, cold, biting,
               dropping, staring, pain, pang, hurt, hand
               on chest, he stares, accusing, despairing,
               questioning, shocked, alone...

     Marcus looked over the grey mermilons to the Vodyanoy river below
the battlements. Where its brother, the Laraka, joined in its eastward
flow, was an outcropping of rock, a ledge which overlooked the joining
of the waters. On a rare day  in Nober, one could see ice worms eating
through the frozen waters to feast  on the dead moss against the rock.
The ice worms had plenty to feed on this year, he thought.
     Watching  the  giant water  bucket  lower  from  the top  of  the
northern  parapet  to the  cold  waters,  he  looked about  the  outer
perimeter of  the keep, worried about  a possible fire. Fires  are the
only  reason they  used  the  bucket, in  times  of  peace, except  to
practice the  drill. He was  relieved when he  saw no clouds  of black
smoke rising into the air. At least the Arm hadn't burned another cart
in the market place.
     Since the Black Arm had  been officially named the personal guard
of the Keeper, several months  ago, their reputation had not improved.
In Nober,  they had stopped paying  for their drinks at  the Riverside
Tavern,  the more  prestigious of  the  two taverns  in Gateway.  When
Marcus  had brought  this fact  to  light in  Ne'on's presence,  Ne'on
decided that his men needed some fringe benefits, and decreed that the
Arm would not have  to pay for its drinks at  the Tavern. This annoyed
Marcus to  no end; there was  already a feeling of  apathy between the
regular guard and the Black Arm, and the tavern keeper was no lover of
Winston blood, that day.
     One day, Marcus had all but seen one of its members burn down the
cart  of one  of  Gateway's  merchants. The  merchant  tried to  press
charges, and  Marcus was willing  to give  him his full  support; but,
Ne'on said no proof meant no  sentence, and the merchant was forced to
swallow his  losses. That was one  less merchant Gateway would  see in
the winter months, when supplies were low enough already.
     At last, Marcus seemed to find some respite. At the end of Deber,
the first month of the new year,  Ne'on had sent some fifty of his men
to parts unknown.  Ne'on claimed they were looking for  a rock of some
sort, a  spell component for  some all  important plan he  had. Marcus
hoped Ne'on knew what he was doing. There was war in the air, Bichu or
no Bichu,  and he knew those  slanty eyed foreigners would  sail right
down  the Laraka,  taking Magnus  in one  bloody day.  With only  nine
members of the Black Arm left  in Gateway, aside from that shifty eyed
captain, Marcus  thought he had  little left  to worry about,  for the
time being. When  the others return, he thought,  Rise'er's feast will
begin anew.
     Marcus' silent thoughts  were slowly interrupted as  he heard the
soft footfall of leather on stone. Looking  up to his left, he spied a
small man dressed in chain mail which  was too large for his size, and
a helmet which had to be pushed  back so that the eyes behind it could
see. The sword  at the man's side dragged lightly  against the ground,
its length only  slightly longer than the man's  legs. Marcus wondered
why the  man didn't carry  a short sword,  instead, when he  heard the
cherubic voice  of his son  cry out from  under the helmet,  which had
fallen back over the boys eyes.
     "Castellan Ridgewater,  sir!" Thomas  had been training  for only
three  months now,  and already  he  had begun  to wear  the armor  of
Gateway. Thomas stood as much at attention as he could, given the over
sized armor he was  wearing, and the weight of the  blade at his side.
He had  originally been  meant to  start his  training with  a smaller
blade; however,  he knew  his father  used a broad  sword, and  he was
determined to be his father's equal, as circumstances allowed.
     "Report, soldier,"  the Castellan replied, resulting  in a bright
smile from Thomas.
     "Request permission to speak freely, sir!"
     Marcus looked questioningly  at his son. He thought  he knew what
was coming next: the other boys training in the guard were planning to
spend a night  in the forest to the south-west  of Gateway, where they
hoped to do some winter trapping. "Permission granted, Thomas."
     "I just came to tell you I'm dropping out of the regular training
stuff." Marcus looked with great  astonishment at his son, standing in
front of him with his oversized attire. Then he noticed the Black Band
on Thomas'  left arm. "I just  spoke with Lord Keeper  Winston, and he
says  he needs  to train  young minds  like myself  for future  pla...
placements in the  Black Arm!" The boy's enthusiasm  scared Marcus; he
had no idea what he was getting into.

     The steel reinforced doors burst open on the main hall, as Marcus
strode through them with anger in  his eyes. "Ne'on," he yelled at the
top of  his voice,  his face red  and his eyes  bulging. Keeper  or no
Keeper, he had some explaining to do. No son of his was going to train
for the  Black Arm,  he would  make sure of  that. "Ne'on,"  he cried,
again.
     "What  is it,  Castellan  Ridgewater?"  Ne'on's smooth,  carrying
voice lilted through the room from  behind a parchment he was reading.
Not removing his gaze from the letter, he continued, "And, please, for
the sake of formality, remember to address me in the proper tone, when
we are in the reception hall."
     "To Rise'er with 'proper tone', Ne'on. What are you doing with my
son?" Marcus  stormed up the room,  stopping directly in front  of the
Keeper. His  fists were clenched  in rage, and  his sword ached  to be
wielded.
     "My lord Castellan,"  Ne'on began with a  lackadaisical air, "you
seem very upset. As far as Thomas is concerned, he is being personally
trained by  Captain Clay  for private  duty. I'm sure  that, in  a few
months, he will be a fine addition to the Arm. I thought I might start
up a  youth program  for keeping  the urchins in  line, what  with the
upcoming war. I  offered to put him in charge,  as their sargent, once
he was properly trained."
     "My son,"  Marcus trembled, "is no  pup to be trained  under that
dog, Clay. I do not want him  in your children's group, and I will not
have him joining any part of your Black Arm."
     Ne'on  lowered the  parchment  he had  been  reading, and  looked
directly at the man in front of him.  "He will be very sad to hear you
are against his  rising in the ranks, Castellan. However,  I think you
will  find  him  working  with  me,  in  any  case.  He  seemed  quite
exhilarated when I told him my  plan." Marcus quickly grabbed the hilt
of his sword, and took a step towards his lord.
     "Keep your distance,  Castellan." The voice came  from behind the
door Marcus  had bashed open when  he entered the room.  Marcus turned
around, slowly, to see four men  in silver chain and black tunics, all
wielding short swords and pointing them at him.
     "Come now,  gentlemen," Ne'on interposed.  He rose from  his seat
and walked  towards the  men, a  half smile of  pleasure on  his face.
"There's no need for aggression.  Marcus, my old friend," Ne'on placed
his left arm over the Castellan's shoulders, "perhaps you need a rest.
You've been  through a lot, these  past months, what with  my father's
untimely demise at  my brother's hands. You haven't had  a vacation in
years,  since your  wife's  unfortunate death  during childbirth.  Why
don't you  travel? Go  on a hunting  trip? Take some  time off  to get
yourself together?" Ne'on started walking  the man towards the door as
he spoke to him,  and now they were at the entrance  to the hall. "How
does that sound to you?"
     Ne'on's voice was smooth, and  soft, and penetrated Marcus' anger
easily.  Marcus felt  acquiescent  as he  listened  to Ne'on's  words.
"Perhaps you're right, Lord Keeper." A confused look came over him. "I
am tired.  Very tired. Maybe  I should  take a small  vacation." Ne'on
began  to smile,  and  Marcus  continued. "I'll  think  about it.  I'm
terribly sorry for the mess I made..."
     "Do  not  worry,  Marcus,  old  friend.  I  shall  take  care  of
everything."  Ne'on gave  a small  pat  on the  Castellan's back,  and
Ridgewater exited the room considerably quieter than he entered. After
Ne'on closed  the door, he  looked at his guards.  "Starting tomorrow,
Castellan Ridgewater  is to be followed  where ever he goes.  I want a
complete and  detailed account of what  he does, who he  talks to, and
how he handles each and every situation. He is an old man; it would be
a terrible shame if he were to have an accident," he added to himself.

               ...hand grasping tight, taught, red, mad,
               tunic tearing, digging, flesh torn by
               fingers, dirty, brown, skin peeling, blood
               slowly dripping, reaching, lifting, pain,
               blood, death...

     The stone hallway echoed the sound of hard leather boots scraping
against the floor.  Marcus turned the corner and  descended the spiral
stone staircase, dug  from the rock on which Gateway  was founded, and
muttered again that it was too small  for a boy to climb through. Once
Marcus  had seen  to  his present  problems, he  would  make sure  the
underground works of Gateway were properly renovated.
     At  the bottom  of the  stair was  a strong  wooden door,  a foot
thick, which had no  key holes, just large bars on  either side, and a
small window to speak through. Marcus rapped loudly on the door, and a
dark  face looked  out from  the other  side. "Let  me in,  Kraig," he
growled, and  lifted the bar  on his side. He  heard the grunt  of the
small man behind the door, and pushed it open.
     "Good  evenin', Castell'n,  what  brings ya  round  this time  o'
night?" Kraig's unshaven face, dark skin,  and bleary eyes made him an
unpleasant sight  in the  flickering orange torch  light, and  his own
smell  was  almost comparable  to  the  fetid  aroma that  filled  the
chamber. Marcus decided not to stay here any longer than necessary.
     "Ne'on's been changing every squirmin' thing else in Gateway, has
he changed anything  down here?" Marcus knew there was  no change, but
he wanted to make sure the other guards were still down here, as well.
     "Aye, the  Lord Keeper's been  busy, of late. But,  there's still
just the  three o'  us. Jess  and Dalia  are back  in th'  other room,
sleepin'."
     "Wake  them,"  Marcus  commanded   him,  "and  bring  them  here,
quickly." When Kraig had left the room, Marcus unlocked the door which
led to the pens, rows of cages only four feet high and four feet deep.
The scum of the river were held there, as far as Marcus was concerned.
Thieves, small-time  pirates, murderers; they  all found their  way to
this area of the dungeon, if the  Castellan was able to catch them. He
could think of a few men he'd like to see there, right now.
     Dalia,  a tall,  red-haired woman  with brown  eyes, and  Jess, a
dark- skinned man  like his brother, Kraig, entered the  room with the
guard. "Here they are, Castell'n. What d'ya need o' us?"
     The three tired, run down, out  of luck guards were at the bottom
of the  river, as  far as  their ability was  concerned, which  is why
Ridgewater had assigned them this shift. Almost nothing could go wrong
down here, where light  of day and fresh air were  as uncommon as good
men. Marcus wasn't sure how he  should handle his situation. The first
half of his  mission had been easy.  He always took a  ride around the
perimeter of the  keep before sunset, and dropping a  packed bundle on
the ice under  the dock by the  northern ford was as  easy as catching
rats  in  the  kitchens.  Now,  however,  he  had  to  depend  on  the
reliability and  discretion of guards who  had no reason to  love him,
and little reason not to betray him.

     The snow crunched softly under his boots, the wind bit lightly on
his unshaven face. The cloak he had was warm, but when the sun had set
completely in the west, he knew he  had better have shelter and a warm
fire. His  body was in  pain, his teeth bared,  and his head  on fire.
Sliding down the  gentle slope of snow  and ice, he dug  into the snow
under the dock for the package Marcus had told him would be there. His
lips  accuse  you,  his  eyes  betray you,  his  soul  is  burning  in
Gil-Pazulirken.
     His bare hands  digging into the soft snow, the  cold creeping up
his sleeves, he felt  the harsh skin of a dead  aelo wrapped with cord
made from a horses tail. The cold dampness on his knees felt warmer as
his  skin numbed;  he knew  it  was getting  late. If  he didn't  find
shelter soon, something away from Gateway and his treacherous brother,
they wouldn't be finding him until the Mertz thaw. That's it, die; let
go. Join your father in the feast of Rise'er. He'll be glad to eat the
flesh from your bones, to revenge himself upon you, murderer.
     Opening the bundle,  he gazed at what the castellan  had left for
him: a tinder  box, a piece of  curved glass, a chunk  of salted meat,
some dried fruit, six arrows, and  his father's bow. He picked up this
last item and tried  to string it. How dare you?  Kill your father and
take his own  possessions? Better to destroy them, than  keep them for
one such as you.
     Try as he might, he was too  weak to bend the bow; he needed food
and water,  and rest. But  where would he go?  He knew the  wind would
bite deep and harsh, as soon as  he stepped out from beneath the dock.
How would he even manage a fire, and with what wood? Better you freeze
here, beneath the dock your father  built with his own hands, like the
wolves on the other side of the river.
     At that thought,  he looked across the water,  about seventy feet
at this spot, and saw the small pack of wolves huddling together where
the dock rested against the embankment. Marcus hadn't chosen this spot
randomly, he  knew how the winds  blew in Janis. Gathering  the bundle
together, he pushed up to the top  of the slope, still under the dock,
and dug  away the snow, which  was less deep, there.  Removing the bow
and arrows  from the skin,  he snapped the  arrows in half,  and piled
them with some  rotting wood from the underside of  the dock. He would
have to wait until the fire was  started before he could burn the bow.
Removing the tinderbox,  he made the best use of  the wood he possibly
could, until the light of dawn should wake him.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
   (C)    Copyright    April    1991,    DargonZine,    Editor    Dafydd
. All rights revert to the authors. These stories may
not be reproduced or redistributed (save  in the case of reproducing the
whole 'zine for further distribution)  without the express permission of
the author involved.






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  D    D  AAAA RRR  GGGG OOOO NN  N      Z  I NN  N EEEE  ||
  D     D A  A R  R G    O  O N N N     Z   I N N N E     || Volume 4
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  D    D  AAAA RRR  G GG O  O N N N   Z     I N N N E     || Issue  2
  DDDDD   A  A R  R GGGG OOOO N  NN  ZZZZZZ I N  NN EEEE  ||
                                                           \\
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--   DargonZine Volume 4, Issue 2        06/03/91          Cir 1129   --
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--                            Contents                                --
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 Two Bits and a Silver II     Michelle Brothers      Sy 20, 1013
 Blood on Oron's Crossroads   Wendy Hennequin        Naia 12, 1014
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1                        Two Bits and a Sliver
                               Part 2
                          by Michelle Brothers
                 (b.c.k.a. )

     Teran glared angrily down at the  open gate of Dargon. Two months
wasted on a wild goose chase and he was finally back where he started.
The trail was probably cold by  now; Eliowy wouldn't be foolish enough
to stay in the  city and that left Teran further  behind her than he'd
been the entire chase.
     He'd spend a fruitless two months searching for his charge up and
down the road to Tench on the chance advice of a person on the street.
The  information--that the  boy  had seen  someone answering  Eliowy's
description leaving  by the main  gate and heading  towards Tench--had
been completely wrong and Teran strongly  suspected that it had been a
plant, although where  Eliowy had gotten the bribe money  and the time
to talk to the boy was a mystery.
     Dusk was deepening  into night, so Teran kicked his  horse into a
trot so he could make it into  the city before the gates closed. While
Dargon did have a smaller, secondary entrance that remained accessible
though the  night, the  graveyard watch asked  too many  questions for
Teran's comfort.
     The gate loomed in the road and Teran urged his mount to a faster
gait, eager to be  off the road, it only for one  night. He deserved a
warm bed and good food before taking up his search again.
     As he  drew closer, Teran could  make out a figure  on horseback,
riding quickly down the main  street, cloak streaming behind. The gate
guards stepped hurriedly aside as the rider charged through the gates.
Teran pulled the  bay off the road. Horse and  rider plunged past, and
Teran caught a glimpse of bright auburn hair in the last of the light.
     Swallowing  a  shout, he  pulled  the  bay  around and  sent  him
charging after.

     `This is getting  to be a habit,' thought Eliowy  in annoyance as
she charged  over the wet sands  and towards the stairs  leading up to
Liriss' private pier.  Behind her the sounds of combat  rose soft as a
whisper over the  beat of the rising surf. The  guards who dragged her
here were being occupied by a lone man, who, for no reason that Eliowy
could see, had come to her rescue.
     One of  the guards was currently  having a drink of  seawater and
the other two were learning the  finer points of losing a sword fight.
In an unoccupied corner of her  mind, Eliowy was almost sorry that she
couldn't stay and help get rid  of Liriss' minions, but getting out of
Dargon was much  more important right now. She'd  openly defied Liriss
and her life wasn't  worth the time it would take for  him to kill her
any more.
     She had  until dawn; Liriss  shouldn't learn of her  escape until
then.
     The stairs  creaked loudly above  the beat  of the waves  and the
soft,  tinkling clash  of bladework.  Slick with  spray, the  banister
imparted a splinter to Eliowy as she  tried to keep her balance in her
hurried charge. Her  arrival at the top of the  stairs was ungraceful;
she  tripped on  the topmost  stair while  looking back  to see  about
pursuit.
     Loud footsteps on the pier sent Eliowy scrambling for the dubious
cover of a small pile of shipping crates.
     A  man, clad  in  chainmail,  hurried past  and  down the  stairs
without sparing  a glance to  Eliowy's hiding place. Shouts  echoed up
the  steep walk,  followed by  more of  the tinny  sounds of  steel on
steel.
     Creeping to  the edge of  the stairs,  Eliowy could just  see the
pier guard engaging  her rescuer in the gathering gloom.  There was no
sign of  Liriss' thugs. The  fight entered  the water and  Eliowy drew
back from her vantage point. In a few short minutes the fight would be
over and by then she'd have to be well away. Better start running.
     The question  was, where  to go.  Liriss' connections  within the
city were so extensive that there was no place she could hide from him
for  long. Going  to Tench  was too  obvious...hiking along  the beach
might be  an idea...  She slipped  away from  the boxes,  mind working
furiously  on coming  up with  escape route  that might  be successful
against a powerful mounted enemy.
     A soft, disgruntled whinny drew Eliowy  to the one thing that had
kept her  in Dargon  for so  long. A  horse lipped  idley at  the worn
railing. For  the first time since  arriving in Dargon Eliowy  felt in
charge of her situation.
     `A quick stop  at the house to get  my stuff and I can  be out of
the city and Liriss' reach by dawn,' she thought as she pushed herself
to her feet and advanced towards the animal.
     A faded blue horse blanket was secured to its back by a well worn
saddle. Empty saddlebags hung on either side of the horse's rump and a
crossbow with a quiver of quarrels dangled from a snaffle on the right
side.
     "Good  horse,"  said Eliowy  softly,  patting  the horse's  neck.
Gratified by the  attention, the animal nuzzled the top  of the girl's
head. Beneath  them, under  the pier,  the sounds  of combat  could no
longer be heard. "Good boy. I'm really sorry, but I need you more than
your owner does, so be cooperative..."
     Eliowy swung into  the saddle and with a clatter  sent the animal
careening down the pier.

     Dust  was  churned  up  and illuminated  by  the  passing  street
lanterns and the last shreds  of dusk sunlight. Buildings flashed past
as Eliowy  guided her mount  through the  main streets that  were less
familiar to  her than  Dargon's back pathways  and alleys.  Few people
were abroad, even this early in the evening. The gang wars kept people
indoors as  sunset drew  near because  in the  dark, it  didn't matter
whose side you were on.
     Fear made her  tense and she gripped the leather  reins in sweaty
hands as she urged  the horse into a full trot, wanting  to be gone as
quickly as possible.
     The brightly lit front and balcony  of the house where Eliowy had
been staying  came into view.  Pulling the horse  to a stop  beneath a
sign depicting a blonde woman holding a sheet to her breast, she flung
herself out of the saddle and hurried up the main steps.
     Warm  colors decorated  the main  room where  half a  dozen women
lounged on  couches and  chairs. Pastel  drapes and  exotic tapestries
covered the walls and candles  brightened the room. A welcoming chorus
followed the girl up the main staircase.
     Eliowy had not had much contact  with the dezins of the house she
was staying in. She was usually out  on the streets when they had free
time and  she'd been  advised by  the proprietress  not to  bother the
women in the evening. Eliowy usually spent her nights practicing sword
work  in her  room,  limiting  her contact  with  the  women to  quick
`hello's, `goodbye's and compliments on some particularly pretty piece
of frippery. She  knew that her housemates were  whores, but pretended
not to notice and for their  part, the prostitutes never asked why the
girl didn't  share their  profession when she  obviously lived  in the
house.
     Liriss  had  known that  she  wasn't  practicing prostitution  to
provide him with his required fee,  but said nothing, assuming that it
would only  be a matter of  time before the girl  couldn't make enough
picking  pockets  to  pay  him  and  resorted  to  the  better  paying
profession of lady for hire.
     Eliowy's room was at the end of  the hall on the second floor and
the heavy  door swung partially  shut as  she ducked into  its dubious
sanctuary.  Like  the  rest  of  the  house,  the  room  was  lavishly
decorated.  Tapestries hung  on the  walls and  a deep,  double doored
window  with a  window  seat let  in moonlight  across  from the  main
entrance. A large  four poster bed dominated the left  hand wall and a
wooden wardrobe covered the right. Thick rugs hid the floor. Light was
provided by  a pair  of lanterns  placed on either  side of  the bed's
headboard.
     The house's  only servant always  seemed to have them  lit before
Eliowy  returned  from  her  day  on the  streets  and  today  was  no
exception.  Warm yellow  light pooled  across  the floor  in a  steady
stream.
     Eliowy headed for the wardrobe first. Pulling open the doors, she
grabbed her worn pack from the  cupbord's bottom. From pegs she pulled
her old travel clothes and threw them  on the bed, followed by the new
pieces that  Liriss purchased for  her. They  might remind her  of his
foulness, but they'd  keep her warm during her trek  away from Dargon.
Winter was just around the corner and leaving now as a sure way to get
caught in the first autumn storms.
     After the  last piece of  clothing was pulled from  the wardrobe,
Eliowy went  to the bed. From  underneath the wooden frame  she pulled
out her sword and scabbard and flung it on top of her clothes. Digging
a little yielded her harp.
     Well worn goldenwood glowed in the light and the strings, made of
costly spun wire, glinted like bits of moonfire.
     Sadly, Eliowy stood and wrapped  the instrument in her old cloak,
placing it  deep in  the bottom  of the  pack. She'd  had to  sell the
harp's case months ago for a little  bit of coin that fed her for less
than a week; true value of the case should have put her up in the best
hotel for  a month, but desperation  and hunger led her  to accept the
first  reasonable offer  she came  across. Guilt  was still  fresh and
Eliowy  was glad  that her  mother wasn't  alive to  hear her  pitiful
excuses.
     Clothes were  piled on  top of  the instrument  to give  it added
protection. She would  detune the strings as soon as  she was clear of
the city to keep them from snapping in the cold; the cloak wouldn't be
enough  to  protect  it  once  full winter  set  in.  She  pulled  the
drawstrings of  the pack tightly shut  then buckled on her  sword belt
and spare dagger.
     The sword  itself was drawn  a second later  at the sound  of the
door shutting completely.
     "Tilden!"  Eliowy lowered  the sword  point at  the sight  of the
hollow eyed ex-scout. "I told you to leave me alone."
     "You're not usually this late," commented Tilden, leaning against
the door and surreptitiously engaging the  lock. "And you rode in from
the direction of the docks. What happened?"
     "Liriss tried to  kill me," said Eliowy, surprised  at how easily
the words  came out.  And how willing  she was to  talk about  it. The
shock of nearly fulfilling the crimelord's death sentence hadn't quite
worn off. "I was late again last  night and he said...he said I needed
to learn a lesson. He was going to...he tried to..." She choked on the
last few words,  the realization that he was going  to use her finally
sinking in.
     Tilden closed  the gap between  them and gently pulled  the sword
from Eliowy's limp hand. He put a comforting arm around her shoulders.
Eliowy didn't notice.
     "I always carry a dagger," she continued, after a moment, staring
blankly at  the open  wardrobe door and  seeing again  Liriss' enraged
eyes glaring at  her from across the room. "So  when he grabbed me...I
cut him..."
     Tilden bit his tongue to  refrain from commenting on this foolish
audacity. No employee, in all the  years that the scout had worked for
Liriss, had  dared to pull a  weapon on Dargon's crimelord,  let alone
take one  to his flesh.  That he hadn't  outright killed the  girl was
surprising; that she was still alive at all to tell about the incident
was a minor  miracle. Tilden listened in fascination  as she continued
the tale, eyes  staring blank and fearful at the  door as she re-lived
the incident.

     The wood paneling of the wall  was smooth against her right palm,
the looped  wire grip of her  knife warming slowly in  her left. Light
glinted off  the blade's  edge, staining the  steel a  dull, burnished
orange. Despite the  tremors running through her body,  her weapon arm
and dagger remained steady.
     "You'll never get away with this, Eliowy," said her target icily,
large hand  pressed firmly against the  long cut on his  chest. Though
shallow, the  wound dripped blood  steadily and clashed with  the rich
gold of his shirt.
     "Don't bet  on that," said Eliowy.  She took the final  step that
brought her  to the door. Fear,  oozing out of her  sub-conscious into
her  body, had  not yet  reached her  mind and  even as  she shook  in
terror, she eyed the man calmly.
     As  she glanced  over her  shoulder  to locate  the door  handle,
Liriss lunged  for her, only to  freeze again when she  turned back to
face  him.  "Just  stay  back," Eliowy  warned,  treatening  with  the
bloodied  knife.  Pulling the  door  open,  she sidestepped  into  the
opening. "If you take one more  step," she said as Liriss moved again,
"I'll kill you."
     "I'll see that you die slowly and painfully for this!"
     "Not if you can't find me."
     Both knew this was no idle statement. Eliowy was very experienced
at running and hiding  and Liriss knew that if he  couldn't get a tail
on her immediately  after she left him,  she was as good  as lost. The
same skills  that kept the  town guard off her  back and had  kept her
safe  through months  of running  cross  country would  keep her  from
falling to Liriss' underlings.
     Eliowy stepped carefully backwards  into the outer office. Liriss
followed, eyes  glittering angrily.  His need  to do  something almost
over-rode the threat  her knife offered and, as  Eliowy glanced behind
herself to spot the outer door, he lunged for her.
     The  knife opened  a foot  long slice  in Liriss'  gut as  Eliowy
brought the  blade around to  defend herself.  With a bellowed  cry of
pain, the  crimelord fell  to his knees,  gasping, arms  clutching his
stomach, trying to stop the blood.
     Little crimson trails crawled down the dagger and across Eliowy's
hand to  disappear into  the embroidered  cuff of  her red  tunic. She
stared at her attacker for an instant, before turning and bolting. The
door crashed back on its hinges just as Liriss collapsed to the floor.

     "I ran into Kesrin in the hall," added Eliowy into the pause that
followed. Tilden said nothing, astounded  that she'd been able to hurt
his former boss so easily. "And  he brought me back to Liriss' office.
Liriss...wasn't in  any condition  to give orders  so Kesrin  sent for
guards to  take me down  to the blocks..."  Her voice trembled  at the
thought of how close she had come to dying in the rising tide.
     "You're lucky to be alive,"  said Tilden, squeezing her shoulders
gently. "The guards let you go?"
     "No...some  man rescued  me.  I...didn't think  it  wise to  stay
around and see if he won or not..." The image of the blonde haired man
fighting with the  two guards rose before her eyes  again. He had won.
He  wouldn't have  attacked the  guards if  he didn't  think he  had a
chance. Which  raised the question of  why he had rescued  her at all.
Eliowy dismissed  the question  immediately. She  didn't have  time to
worry about the reasons behind the  fortuitous rescue. She had to take
care of herself. If he survived the battle and she ever saw him again,
she  would  thank  him  properly.  But until  then,  there  were  more
important things to worry about.
     Eliowy realized that Tilden's  arm was wrapped possessively about
her shoulders and  glared at him. "I  said that I didn't  want to deal
with you again,  Tilden." she said, annoyance pushing  aside her fear.
She ducked under his arm to get away from him.
     "What  Liriss did  to  you was  terrible,"  continued the  former
scout, catching hold  of her collar as Eliowy tried  to duck away. "He
deserved what you did to him. More than what you did. I asked for your
help before and  you said no. Now  you have a reason. Help  me to kill
Liriss!" The wild, almost mad light  that Eliowy was used to seeing in
Tilden's eyes  grew brighter. His  sanity seemed  to slip away  as his
need to kill  the crimelord took over.  He shook her as  she stared at
him. "Help me! You must help me kill him!"
     "Let go!"  Eliowy tried to yank  out of his grip  and did nothing
more than  pull the cloth  of her tunic  tight around her  throat. She
grasped at her dagger.
     "If you won't help me  willingly," threatened Tilden, pulling her
close. "I'll just use you as bait.  To lure that creeping slime to me.
I don't need your cooperation. Just your body."
     Eliowy  could feel  his hot  breath on  her neck  as she  reached
around and stabbed him  in the arm with her knife.  With a loud scream
of surprised pain,  Tilden jerked away. Eliowy slashed  him across the
throat as she turned to face him fully.
     Tiny red bubbles formed at the corner of Tilden's mouth. His hand
reached towards his neck in confused  surprise as he slid to his knees
making no other sound. Eliowy stared at him in fascinated horror as he
slumped to his side.
     She'd  never  dreamed  when  Teran  first  started  teaching  her
bladework that she would ever be  able to kill someone. Too many times
on this paniced escape she'd proven herself wrong. Tears of regret and
fear filled the girl's eyes and she started shaking again.
     Heavy pounding on the door brought her to her senses.
     "Eliowy? Is everything all right  in there? Eliowy!" The voice of
Madame Tillipanary rang faintly through the heavy wooden portal. "Open
the door, Eliowy! What's happened?"
     "Oh, no..." Eliowy  looked away from the door.  Calm settled over
her and she sheathed the knife after  cleaning the point on the hem of
Tilden's dirty shirt.  She pulled on her cloak and  pack, then stepped
to the window.
     The pounding became more insistent.
     Eliowy pulled  open the shutters  of the double  window. Stepping
out onto  the balcony, she knelt  down and let herself  carefully over
the edge, leaving fingerprints, red from Tilden's blood, on the sill.

     Sergent  Coressa  DaVrice  let  her patrol  down  Layman  Street,
keeping eyes  wide open for things  in the alleys and  shadows. Layman
Street and the area  around it within a quarter mile  of the dock were
not the best place  to be caught daydreaming in. Her  troop of six had
drawn  night duty  for  the last  three weeks  and  the territory  had
steadily been getting worse as each week passed. They carried shields,
heavy swords and  wore full corslets in this part  of town these days.
It seemed that the local  crimelord was consolidating his position and
the gang warfare had been bitter  recently. The upper eschelons of the
town  guard were  even  sure  who was  behind  the  trouble, but  they
couldn't  prove anything,  so  the street  fighting continued.  Except
where the guard could stop it.
     "This is absolutely the last time  I put the companies duty up as
stake in  a card game  and win!" DaVrice  muttered to herself  as they
passed in  front of the  most profitable brothel  in town. A  horse in
full riding  gear was tethered out  front. This struck Coressa  as odd
because the  _Lucky Lady_ also  had one of  the better stables  in the
area  and  client's  transportation  usually received  the  same  good
treatment as the client themselves.
     She was about to comment on this to her second when he stepped up
beside her.
     "Um...Sergent?"
     "Yes,  Caisy?"  He was  supposed  to  be  guarding the  rear  and
shouldn't have come forward without  orders. Not that she minded much,
but if the Lieutenant should happen by...
     "Looks like there's someone hanging  from the second story window
of the _Lady_," Caisy informed her, pointing.
     Sure  enough, when  DaVrice looked,  there was  a slender  shadow
dangling over the balcony's edge.
     "You there!" she  called, motioning the three of  the four guards
directly  behind her  to get  underneath the  window. "Stay  where you
are!" Who would be leaving the  _Lucky Lady_ by anything but the front
door, DaVrice wondered  as she led the rest of  the patrol through the
invitingly cracked  door. Not a  thief. The _Lady_ hadn't  been robbed
since it opened ten years ago, despite the amount of wealth rumored to
be  held inside.  It couldn't  be  a `client'  either--if one  started
harassing the employees he left by  the front door, usually with a new
set of bruises. The _Lady_ was strict about screening visitors.
     The cloaked  form resolved  itself into a  slender female  in the
light of the soldier's lantern  as they clustered beneath the balcony.
She let go  at the same time  as the sound of  splintering wood echoed
down  the nearly  deserted street.  A  scream from  inside marked  the
person landing on  the nearest guard. They both tumbled  to the ground
in an untidy heap.

     Eliowy rolled free of the unconscious  guard's body as one of his
companions  grabbed  for her.  She  dodged  the ill-timed  snatch  and
ploughed into the  other one, shoving him aside. He  stumbled and fell
over his fallen partner, while the first one made another grab for the
girl.
     She just  missed catching ahold  of the trailing cloak  as Eliowy
ran for her stolen horse. Grabbing  the reins, she was missed again as
she swung into the saddle. Curses erupted and the guard made a try for
the bridle. Eliowy ran her down, goading the horse into a trot, then a
canter, and finally a dead run.
     Whistles and more  shouts caught on the wind and  followed her as
she headed towards Main Street.

     "...scream so  naturally I  rushed right up,"  Madame Tillipanary
was  saying when  Kalen Darklen  arrived on  the second  floor of  the
_Lucky  Lady_.  Her  well  manicured  fingers  clasped  and  unclasped
nervously in  her pale  green wrap.  "The door was  locked and  when I
knocked and called, there was no answer."
     "So you  had one  of your  bouncers break  the door  in," Sergent
DaVrice said. She  inclined her head to Kalen as  he stepped up beside
her, but kept her attention focused on the woman before her.
     "Bernail, yes. The  safety of both my girls and  my clients is of
great  importance to  me, you  understand." Madame  Tillipanary looked
from the  guard sergent to  the lieutenant earnestly. "Anyway,  HE was
lying on the floor when we got in. And the windows were open."
     "We  arrived upstairs  a  minute  after he  took  the door  out,"
DaVrice directed the comment to Kalen.  "Just about the time our prime
suspect jumped. Roji,  Paone, and Liat let her escape.  I sent them to
try and warn the gate guards," she added at Kalen's frown.
     "Tell me about our suspect," said Kalen, folding his arms. He was
easy-going, but  letting a possible  murderer slip right  through your
fingers was one good way to make him angry.
     "Female, sir,  but that's as far  as I got. Madame?"  DaVrice and
Kalen turned their attention back to Tillipanary. The sheet clad woman
who had been  whispering to her stepped hastily back  and the madame's
expression abruptly smoothed.
     "The child's name is Eliowy K'rill," Tillipanary said. "She's not
one of my girls. A friend of mine asked me to keep an eye on her, so I
gave her one of my empty  rooms." Kalen glanced at DaVrice. Both could
guess who the  woman's "friend" was and why he  wanted the girl looked
after at a  brothel. "She's not very tall," the  madame continued, not
seeming to notice the exchange of  glances. "She was pretty, but not a
great beauty. Fair, oval face, auburn hair and curious golden eyes."
     Kalen gave the woman a startled  look. "Are you sure about that?"
he demanded. "The eyes and the hair?"
     "Yes, Lieutenant, I'm sure," said Tillipanary, puzzled. Under the
questioning look she studied the guard closely. "She was always such a
nice, polite child.  She didn't seem capable of  this..." She gestured
vaguely at Tilden's sheet shrouded body.
     "Be that as  it may," muttered Kalen.  "Sergent, organize another
squad of  six. Search the city  for this Eliowy K'rill  and inform the
other  patrols to  keep an  active look  out. Suspicion  of theft  and
murder."
     "Yes, sir!"  DaVrice saluted crisply  and led the remnant  of her
squad down the carpeted stairs.
     "Only  suspicion...?"  Madame  Tillipanary's  voice  trailed  off
questioningly as the guards disappeared from sight.
     "There  is always  the possibility  that this  was self-defense,"
said  Kalen neutrally.  One time  luck, two  times coincidance,  three
times  a  charge.  Kalen  didn't   think  this  incident  was  just  a
coincidance. Red hair was rare enough  along the coasts to be notable.
And those  eyes... "Until  I have  a chance to  question the  girl, we
can't be positive. If you think of anything else, Madam, please report
it to the Guard."
     "Of course, Lieutenant," said  Madame Tillipanary agreeably. "I'm
sure that you'll want to investigate  further, and there is the matter
of the  body," the woman averted  her painted eyes. "So  I'll have his
hallway closed off.  It's accessible by the back stairs.  If you would
please  use  those,  I  would  greatly appreciate  it.  To  avoid  the
customers, you understand."
     "Of course,"  said Kalen dryly.  "I'll have someone come  to deal
with the body tonight. Good evening."
     The last thing Kalen  saw as he left the room  was the same sheet
clad prostitute  whispering frantically  in her  madame's ear  and the
look of pleased speculation on Tillipanary's face.

     Madame Tillipanary  hurried through the chill  autumn night, wind
pulling at  her heavily embroidered  cloak. She  kept one hand  on the
dagger belted around  her waist, in case one of  the punks thought she
might be  a target. With  the gang wars  in full swing,  being Liriss'
employee was  no longer a  guarantee of  safe passage along  the night
streets.
     She arrived at the steps  of Liriss' town house without incident.
Two personal guards, older men who  had been with the crimelord almost
as long  as Tillipanary herself, nodded  to her as she  hurried up the
stairs and  pulled open  the door.  Of all the  people who  worked for
Liriss, the  madame was the  only one  besides his lieutenant  who was
permitted access to him at any time.
     A gust  of wind  pushed the  woman inside  and set  the expensive
beeswax candles dancing in their suspended chandelier. Shadows capered
around  the sparsely  furnished room,  hiding  doors to  the left  and
right. A staircase crawled up the far wall.
     Her  delicate slippers  made no  sound on  the hardwood  floor as
Tillipanary made her way towards the stairs. Picking up her disaphorus
skirts,  she started  up the  steep walk,  only to  be stopped  on the
landing by Kesrin, Liriss' lieutenant.
     "May I help  you, madam?" he inquired politely,  blocking her way
to  the second  floor. Sharp  hazel eyes  studied the  woman out  of a
neutral expression.
     "I must speak to  Lord Liriss immediately," declared Tillipanary.
She'd  considered  Kesrin a  nuisance  since  the  day he'd  risen  to
prominence from obscurity eight years  ago and she'd never bothered to
hide the fact.  She was certain that his careful,  precise manners hid
something and it  frustrated the madame that she hadn't  yet been able
to figure out what. "Get out of  my way, Kesrin. This can't wait." She
tried to step past him again only to have him interfear once more.
     "Lord  Liriss isn't  seeing  anyone this  evening, madame,"  said
Kesrin firmly, catching the woman's elbow.  "You can tell me, if it is
so important and I'll see to it that my Lord hears of it."
     "Let me go," Tillipanary ordered coldly. "I'll tell Liriss and no
one else."
     "He's  not   seeing  anyone   this  evening,"   Kesrin  repeated,
tightening his grip on her arm when she tried to pull away.
     "He'll see me."
     "He's indisposed."
     "Don't feed  me that  line," snapped  Tillipanary. "He  takes his
girls in his office, not his home. And if you do not let go of me this
instant--"
     "My  Lord  Mardos." A  new  voice  rolled through  the  argument,
followed by a  tall, slender man in well cared  for physician's robes.
"Lord Liriss is resting comfortably. I've bandaged the wounds and left
a jar of medicine  for the pain by his bed. Mix  a spoonful with water
or wine  if he needs it.  And don't let him  up until the end  of next
week,  at least."  The spate  of  instructions preceded  him down  the
stairs as he joined them on the landing. "My Lady." He nodded politely
to Tillipanary.
     "Thank you,  Doctor," said  Kesrin calmly,  while beside  him the
madame paled. "Your fee will be delivered to you in the morning."
     The  doctor bowed.  "Then I  bid you  good evening,  my Lord,  my
Lady," and he swept down the stairs.
     Tillipanary waited until  the door boomed shut  before turning on
Kesrin.
     "What in the name of the Red Garter of Randiriel is going on!"
     "Lord  Liriss  was  attacked  this evening,"  said  Kesrin  after
considering the slender woman for a  long moment. "By the girl he sent
to stay with you."
     "Eliowy," breathed the madame. She shook off the chill feeling of
dread  and explained  softly; "She  killed Tilden  tonight just  after
sundown. The City Guard got involved..."
     "That's not  possible!" Kesrin  burst out, his  unflappable poise
cracking for  once. "I  sent her  to the  blocks tonight.  Just BEFORE
sundown. She's supposed to be dead!"
     "Well she's not!" Tillipanary  hissed, her expression going cold.
"You'd better plan  on doing something about your  lapse, Kesrin. Lord
Liriss will  not be pleased to  hear that she's escaped."  Despite her
concern about Liriss, the madame spared enough emotion to feel pleased
that her hated rival was in a very dangerous situation.
     "I  will deal  with it,"  responded  Kesrin just  as coldly,  his
poised manners  and neutral expression  back in place. "Thank  you for
bringing me  this information.  I'll mention to  Lord Liriss  that you
dropped by."
     "I  appreciate that,"  Tillipanary said,  voice too  sweet. "I'll
drop by  tomorrow to  see Liriss.  He'd best  be alive  tomorrow." She
pulled  away  from Kesrin  and  made  her  way  back down  the  steps,
solitiously accompanied by the lieutenant.
     `Of course Liriss will be  alive tomorrow,' he thought, escorting
the madame  to the  door. Despite  all the years  of planning,  it was
still too soon to move and until the  time was right, he had a part to
play.
     As Tillipanary  disappeared into  the blowy autumn  night, Kesrin
turned to one of the door guards.
     "Find me the assassin, Kendall," he ordered. "And I want him here
yesterday."

     Pale,  early morning  sunlight gilded  the grass  and leaves  and
reflected in bright sparkles from the  stream beside the road. A cloud
of dust settled gently back  to the ground, eddying in mini-whirlwinds
as Eliowy  led her  horse towards  the thick  trickle of  water. Sweat
dribbled down the beast's coat, cutting narrow tracks in the foam.
     "Sorry, boy," she said softly, patting the horse's shoulder as he
wearily bent his head to drink. "But we needed to put lots of distance
between us and  Dargon." The horse didn't react,  greedily filling his
stomach with the  cold water. Eliowy scratched his  ears, wondering if
the creature's original  owner had survived the pier-side  fight. In a
way she  hoped he had.  Someone that kind didn't  deserve to die  in a
battle with  cutthroats. But at  the same  time, she hoped  he hadn't.
Someone that  kind also didn't deserve  to have his mount  stolen. "As
soon as  you're rested,"  she added, "we're  leaving. We're  still too
close to the city for comfort."
     She pulled  the horse away  from the  water so he  wouldn't drink
himself sick, and tied  him to a nearby bush so  that he could browse.
After  quenching her  own thirst,  she settled  by the  stream's edge,
planning to rest until the horse had eaten enough to continue on.
     Good,  paranoid  intentions  fell  by the  wayside  as  weariness
combined with the unusually warm autumn  sun caught up with Eliowy and
she drifted off into much needed sleep.
     A shadow across her face,  blocking the sun's heat brought Eliowy
abruptly out of an uneasy doze. She opened her eyes and had her bleary
sight filled by a horse's nose.
     "How did you get loose," she mumbled, sitting up and reaching for
the  reins. She  froze,  seeing  someone else's  hands  on the  smooth
straps. "Oh no..."
     "Good afternoon, Eliowy," Teran  said quietly, sitting stiffly in
the saddle. The bay twitched its ears restlessly.
     The blue of his tunic matched the rich blue of the sky and Eliowy
found her attention caught by the  embroidery at its neck; tracing the
interlocking patterns  with her vision  meant she didn't have  to meet
her teacher's azure-blue gaze.
     She  climbed to  her feet,  eyes still  fixed on  Teran's throat.
"Good afternoon  to you," responded the  girl, more out of  habit than
politeness.  She  backed  up  a  step, towards  where  her  horse  was
tethered. Teran didn't move. She took  another step back and still the
man didn't  shift. Eliowy took one  more step, turned to  bolt for her
horse and froze.
     It wasn't there.
     She whirled back to face  Teran, eyes wild. His expression hadn't
altered. With  casual deliberance he  swung out  of the saddle  to the
ground.
     Eliowy  twitched, but  stood  her  ground. There  was  no way  to
escape; she  couldn't out-run  him and she  wouldn't return  home with
him. Fear crawled into her throat, drying it instantly, leaving behind
the bitter  taste of panic.  The desire  to be left  alone overwhelmed
her. A hand crept to the hilt of  her sword. The sword that was a gift
from the same man she contemplated using it on.
     Something caught her  back before she could do more  than bare an
inch of  the blade. Perhaps the  memory of the man  beating her around
the practice yard or of him giving  her the blade on her last birthday
penetrated  her paniced  mind. Either  way, she  allowed the  sword to
slide back into its sheath.
     And still Teran did not move.
     Eliowy didn't pause long enough  to wonder why he'd done nothing.
Cloak swirling in a self-created wind, she turned to run.
     She made  it away only  so far as the  edge of the  stream before
Teran caught her  by the trailing cloak. And found  the cloth loose in
his hands  when Eliowy  pulled the  clasp open.  He reached  again and
grabbed the girl's collar, pulling her close before she could slip out
of that too.
     Eliowy's tiny wrists nearly disappeared  in the blonde man's grip
and she  tugged uselessly  against his  strength. Fury  penetrated her
panic and she  slammed her heel down on his  foot, hard. Teran grunted
in pain, drawing his  leg back, but did not loosen  his grip. A second
later he thrust her away from him when she bit him in the wrist.
     "You're not taking me back," Eliowy informed him firmly, suddenly
calm.  Amber  eyes  blazed  like  a torch,  at  odds  with  the  level
declaration. This time  the sword did clear the  sheath, glinting with
the same fire that burned in her  eyes. "I refuse to go. Just leave me
alone."
     "Eliowy, we  need to talk,"  said Teran quietly,  gaze flickering
between her face and the sword. "But not with blades. Put it away."
     "As  soon as  you  go,"  Eliowy replied,  slipping  into a  guard
position. The leather  wrapped hilt felt warm in the  palm of her hand
and as she extended the blade, sparks seemed to glint on its edge.
     Teran drew  up short. His eyes  narrowed as he studied  the girl.
Then he nodded sharply. "So be it,  then." And he drew his own weapon,
matching Eliowy's stance almost exactly.
     Surprise flickered though Eliowy's  eyes, but she didn't hesitate
when he came at her.
     The parry was automatic and strong. As their blades connected the
crash echoed through the air, followed  by a gentle whoosh and a white
hot explosion. The force blew the combatants away from one another and
withered the grass into crumbling grey ash around them.
     A shocked silence  spread away from the stream  on the summer-hot
wind that followed the blast.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                         Blood on Oron's Crossroads
                               12 Naia, 1014
                             by Wendy Hennequin
                       (b.c.k.a. )

I. Martis Westbrook, Knight Captain of the Southern Marche

     I wasn't sure what happened. No--I knew--I *saw*--but even as the
Beinison army thundered into our ranks  and the troops of Houses Bivar
and  Redcrosse and  Othuldane and  Equiville fell  like heavy  hail, I
could not believe.
     I gave the order to retreat. I gave the order to *retreat*!
     "Fall back!" Caedmon,  beside me, shouted. I  heard him--he stood
not yard from me, defending me as I stood stock still in shock. No one
else heard. "Fall back!"
     "Sound retreat again!" I screamed  at the bugler and the drummer.
"Retreat!" I moved my sword arm and prepared to defend myself again as
I  watched--I  stared--as  the  Fist  of  the  Emperor  and  with  its
incredible Cavalry demolished the House troops.
     The idiots *charged*. They actually  charged! I gave the order to
retreat.  What did  they hope  to gain  by sailing  headlong into  the
Emperor's strongest troops? They knew we were outnumbered and that the
best we  had to gain  today was a stalemate  and escape. Why  did they
charge?
     Next to me,  the bugler played the notes of  retreat once more; I
heard  other buglers  throughout the  army  picking up  the music  and
repeating the call. But retreating was no longer enough; I had to stop
the  Beinson  charge.  "Order  the Assault  Brigade  and  the  Archers
forward," I shouted. What I was  doing was horrible; the Archers could
hardly last ten minutes against the Fist of the Emperor.
     Beside me, Caedmon's sword flashed and rang.
     I should have married him this morning.
     "One of us  may die today," Caedmon had said  softly, touching my
mouse- brown hair.
     Looking  at the  Beinison  Knight coming  towards  me, I  thought
Caedmon had been right.
     He was a big man, six feet,  broad, and his armor heavy. I lunged
forward without waiting.
     Unexpectedly, my  sword sliced through  a weak spot in  his armor
and he fell.
     "So  much for  Beinison armor!"  Caedmon called  gleefully as  he
dispatched  his opponent.  Blood spattered  his Knight's  chain as  he
removed his sword from the corpse. "Let's get out of her, Martis."
     But I  couldn't move.  I saw  the men  of House  Othuldane, House
Redcrosse, and House Bivar being slaughtered like pigs in their stupid
charge, and the Fist of the  Emperor pounded the Archers like wheat in
a  hurricane. The  Assault Brigade  fought, bleeding  and dying.  In a
moment, Beinison would overrun us all.
     "Martis!" Caedmon screamed, and the retreat sounded again on drum
and  horn. The  ranks  behind me  were  in chaos;  men  and women  ran
screaming into the hills behind  Oron's Crossroads or the woods beside
us. I could see part of the  Fist chasing them into the woods and hear
the screams of the  Rangers as they fell. The only  piece of sanity on
the field  was the incoherent  voice of Lord  Kinseley--praise Stevene
there were  *some* loyal  commanders left to  me-- rallying  the House
Troops.
     "Dear God," I whispered. "Cephas Stevene, save us."
     The Fist kept  coming and coming. The troops were  done for. Good
God. I had lost--lost!
     Those damn fools! Their charge  was killing them--killing us! The
Fist  poured  over them  like  heavy  rain,  and  I watched  as  blood
splattered  on the  new grass  and brains  spilled out  of heads.  The
shouts deafened  me; I  knew that  the drums  and horns  were sounding
retreat, but I couldn't hear, I couldn't move, I almost couldn't see.
     "Martis!" Caedmon  screamed. Oh, God, I  loved him, and I  knew I
would never see him tomorrow. One of us was going to die.
     "Martis, let's go!"
     A fine  Knight would I be,  a fine Knight Captain,  to be running
from the  field while the  Fist of the  Emperor pounded my  troops and
slaughtered them like pigs. But Caedmon was right; we had to leave. It
would be  enough for the King  to loose these troops  today; he didn't
need to loose the Knight Captain, too.
     So I  moved, finally.  I took  my sword  and turned  with Caedmon
toward the woods. We would have to go through them, back to Westbrook.
Perhaps we could regroup and stop this madness...
     Perhaps we could, with more troops--troops who followed orders!
     Two of  the soldiers of the  Fist stepped between Caedmon  and me
and the woods.  My sword flashed; Caedmon raised his  blade. I struck,
and the blow  rang like thunder. But he was  quick, both hands holding
weapons, and it was  all I could do to keep his  blows from raining on
me. I twisted and  threw a blow from my waist and hip  and arm, as Sir
Edward had  taught me.  It contacted,  shocking my  arm, but  the blow
glanced off his armor.
     "Damn!" I  muttered. I  heard Caedmon  exchanging blows  with the
other one, and I could hear him grunting.
     Caedmon, forgive me. I should have married you this morning.
     The man before  me raised his arms to strike  again. I could hear
the chaos  behind me, and  I cried internally  for those dying,  but I
could not  turn and watch  the horror.  I stepped forward  instead and
jammed my shield against Fist-soldier's right arm. I pushed my armored
knee against his groin. He stumbled; I lunged; he died.
     "Caedmon!" I  cried. He  was still fighting,  and I  regretted my
weakness. Good God, don't let me distract him. God, save him. Save me.
Save us all.
     The man was bigger than Caedmon;  he was huge. *All* the soldiers
in the  Fist of the Emperor  seemed huge. Beinison was  huge. God, how
could  we keep  them out  of  Baranur? No  one has  ever defeated  the
Beinison Empire.
     I stepped forward to help Caedmon.  We had to defeat this man; we
had to leave, flee to the  woods and then to Pyridain. Somehow--how? I
didn't know; I only knew I had to leave. Oh, Caedmon!
     There was  suddenly a Knight  of the  Star ahead of  me--a giant,
hulking man,  left handed.  Caedmon cried  out as a  blow rang  on his
helm. I couldn't  look to see if  he was hurt; the Knight  of the Star
charged me.
     I raised my shield.
     His first blow  nearly felled me by its sheer  force. I staggered
and shook my head  to clear it. Oh, God, I was a  dead woman. Yes, the
dead woman who led the troops to  slaughter (I could hear them now: If
only we  had a  *man* to  lead them!), who  ruined Baranur.  The bards
would destroy me nightly.
     But the Knight waited patiently for me to recover. When I rose, I
saluted him for his courtesy and his honor. Not every Knight practices
his chivalry on the battlefield.
     He  raised his  sword, his  strong  left hand  against my  strong
right.
     We charged.
     Our shields collided like two  strong ships; I shuddered from the
impact. My sword sailed high over his, aimed at his head--
     I  screamed  as  his  steel  sword tore  through  my  upper  arm.
Something made a horrible, ugly,  grating noise. My shoulder wrenched;
the pain convinced me that my arm had left its place in my shoulder.
     I stumbled, slipped  on the bloody grass, and  fell, the Knight's
sword still  gone through my arm  beside the bone. I  couldn't move my
arm.
     I couldn't move my arm! Oh, God, I'll never fight again!
     Then I realized  that death--at best--was staring  me straight in
the eyes and I was foolish enough to be mourning a wounded arm.
     "Forgive me, lady," the giant rumbled, stepping closer. He pulled
the  sword from  me smoothly,  but the  pain increased,  and my  blood
gushed from  my arm  and reddened  the scarlet  ground. "We  have been
ordered to take no prisoners."
     The Knight of the Star raised his sword. "Caedmon!" I cried.
     I should have married him this morning.
     The Knight of the Star fell.
     Caedmon grabbed  me with  his right  arm, and  with his  left, he
retrieved his sword from the neck  of the giant Knight. "And don't you
dare  lecture me,"  Caedmon  snapped, pulling  me  roughly toward  the
woods. "I know it was unchivalrous."
     I shivered within my armor; my sweat was cold. Lecture him? I was
so relieved I couldn't speak.
     "Caedmon," I whispered weakly. I was still bleeding. My God, I'll
never make  it out  of these woods  alive. "Go. Run."  I tripped  on a
protruding root. "I'll never make it. Save yourself."
     I could see his blue eyes  beneath his helm, and they were angry.
"I didn't betray  my Knightly code to leave you  to die," he retorted.
"I won't leave you to die, love."
     I loved him too, with all my heart. "I can't hold you back."
     "Stop talking nonsense and run!"
     I stumbled along, Caedmon half pulling me. My blood pounded in my
ears; the trees flew by in a blur. I staggered over the bodies of dead
rangers;  the Fist  was in  the woods,  slaying archers  like helpless
birds.  I  heard  other  people  running,  crashing  into  the  woods,
hurricane winds driven by the Fist of the Emperor.
     My foot was  yanked, and my face suddenly hit  the ground. My arm
throbbed protest at  the abrupt jolt, and I bled.  Caedmon was pulling
me upright. Dazed, I sat.
     "Your foot's caught," Caedmon informed me. I looked dully; I felt
exhausted. But he was right; my steel boot was pinned beneath a root.
     Weakly,  I tried  to  remove  it; then,  using  my  one good  arm
hindered by my shield, I pulled. My foot would not budge.
     How  marvelous. First,  a paralyzed  sword  arm to  keep me  from
fighting, and  now a  paralyzed foot  to keep me  from fleeing.  I was
dead. The Fist was coming.
     Caedmon raised his sword. He was going to kill me.
     "Stop!" a voice behind him  cried. Caedmon whirled; I looked past
him at another Knight of the Star. He wore a blue tunic over his plate
armor, and at his belt hung a silver horn. He advanced.
     Caedmon looked back at me, then  again at the Knight of the Star.
"Sir," Caedmon said, "will you give me single combat?"
     "I will," the man answered, his voice strong.
     Caedmon went forward, his sword  drawn. He struck the first blow.
I should have married him this morning.

II.  Lawrence Fanez of the Silver Horn, Knight of the Star

     I was, I confess, a little  sorry when the Baranurian line broke.
I am a loyal man; I have given my vow to the Emperor, and I fight here
for his victory. Still, I hate  to see another Knight so defeated, for
the Knight Captain  of Baranur had commanded wisely and  had only lost
by the treason of her own troops.
     "Charge!" Untar  bellowed at the  Fist of  the Emperor. He  has a
loud  voice for  one so  young. Beside  him, the  Fist screamed  their
victory call, and Mon-Taerleor began chanting.
     I seethed. "Your majesty," I begged, cutting my way forward, "let
the High Mage stop his spells. We are winning; we do not need them."
     For  once, the  young  Emperor  saw my  reason.  "Yes, stop,"  he
commanded  Mon-Taerleor, and  the chanting  ceased. Although  he stood
behind me, I could feel the wizard's gaze burning into me.
     Let him  gaze. Let  him be  angered and  chagrined. It  is little
enough after what he has done.
     "They're  going into  the  woods!" the  Knight Commander  called.
"Your majesty, shall we follow?"
     I  stopped my  butchering.  Yes, butchering,  for the  Baranurian
troops were helpless. I looked; my uncle, the Knight Commander, nodded
at me in approval as I waited for the Emperor's order.
     Gow,  let  us  give  chase,  I  prayed.  This  slaughter  is  not
honorable. My Lord, let me have a Knight's combat this day.
     "Yes, Sir  Horace, follow,"  the Emperor  decided. I  saluted him
gratefully;  I was  ill with  fighting a  war on  Amante's terms,  and
gladly I ran to the woods.
     "Sir Lawrence!" the Emperor stopped me.  I slid on the blood, but
paused. When  I looked  at him,  he ordered,  "Take no  prisoners!" He
looked at mine uncle. "No prisoners! Sir Horace, no prisoners!"
     The  buglers  picked  up  the  call:  give  chase,  and  take  no
prisoners. I sprinted into the woods.
     Archers  littered the  ground like  storm-torn leaves.  I stepped
around them, leapt over them, looking  for my battle. May Gow grant me
battle, a Knight's battle. I am weary of the Masked God's slaughter.
     The noise  in the woods was  deafening, like the cries  of my own
brain. I ran,  not knowing whom I  sought, trusting Gow to  lead me to
honorable victory.

     The moon  was rising over the  trees. The moon, My  Lady Alanna's
jewel, given her by  Gow: I will let My Lady lead me.  I fight for her
now, now  that Liadan  is dead.  Yes, Alanna  is My  Lady; her  I will
follow.
     So I ran eastward, listening. A  branch crashed in front of me; I
sprinted. I  heard a man  speaking in  Baranurian, but the  words were
muffled. I entered a clearing.
     His sword  was above his  head, ready  to slay a  helpless Knight
whose foot  was trapped. That I  would not allow, be  he Baranurian or
Beinisonian. "Stop!" I cried in Beinison, and then in Baranurian.
     The  man turned.  He was  a Baranurian;  he wore  no Star  on his
chain. The helpless one twisted to see me too, but could not move much
because of the trapped foot and the horrible wound in the right arm.
     The mobile Knight looked at the caught one, then at me. "Sir," he
asked politely, and I admired his  courage and courtesy in speaking to
me at all, "will you give me single combat?"
     A Knight's battle! Gow guide my arm. "I will," I answered gladly,
and I stepped forward to meet him.
     I allowed him, out of courtesy,  to strike the first blow; I knew
that he  would be tired. The  blow hit my shield,  rattling me without
pain. I struck back, but he deflected my blow with blade and shield.
     I  struck again,  but  missed  when the  other  Knight moved.  He
stumbled on a dead  archer and fell. I paused for him  to rise; I will
not strike a fallen  man. The Baranurian looked up at  me with eyes as
blue as mine own  and nodded his thanks for my  gesture. I switched my
father's blade to  my left hand and offered the  Knight assistance. He
took the hand and rose.
     "I ask a boon," the Knight said softly.
     "What do you wish?" I wondered. What boon could I grant an enemy?
How, will  all loyalty  to the  Emperor and all  honor to  my country,
could I grant this man a boon?
     "I ask that if I am defeated  that you kill me, and quickly," the
Knight asked softly. He looked back  at the wounded one. "I have heard
what the Beinisonians do to prisoners."
     "Have no fear, sir," I answered  him in his own language. "I have
been ordered not to take anyone prisoner."
     "Then have at you!" he cried, attacking.
     I sidestepped, and the blow rang  on my arm, stinging me below my
armor. I  felt the dent  press into my muscle;  I would have  a bruise
there tomorrow if I lived so long. I readjusted my shield with a shake
of  my elbow  and whirled  my sword  above my  head. The  other Knight
caught it and pushed it away.
     I smiled. An honorable, skillful enemy  whom I could fight like a
man and not slaughter like a beast. Gow be praised and thanked that if
I  were to  kill or  to die,  I should  do so  as a  Knight and  not a
butcher.
     I struck  my blow still smiling.  His armor sang with  my soul in
the joy  of the fight.  His blade danced forward  at mine helm,  and I
ducked and  hit his leg in  recompense. He withdrew his  hand to ready
it; I lunged forward but pierced only his quick shield.
     "I hold,"  the Knight said. He  held his shield toward  me, and I
reached for the blade and withdrew it.
     "I thank you." Then I struck.
     The blow thundered in the suddenly  quiet forest. His blade on my
shield sounded like drums. We were  dancing again, and the battle sang
in  our  blood. His  blows  fell  like  hard  hail; I  fought  without
thinking. My  sword struck his arm,  his helm, his chest,  his leg. He
battled me valiantly and struck me back. He raised his blow to counter
my high-flying sword;  I flicked my wrist, and the  blade hit the back
of his helm.  The Knight tried to  hit me, but his sword  slid down my
shield like melting snow. I pushed it away and thrusted.
     A woman suddenly  screamed--the other Knight was  a woman!--and I
knew the  sound--the cry my  heart had made  when Liadan lay  dying in
mine arms--and I suddenly knew what I had done. My blood ran cold.
     I killed her beloved before her. I had committed the crime of the
man I most hated, the one who plunged a dagger into Liadan's back, who
murdered her in her wedding gown,  who served the Emperor as High Mage
and was immune to all justice--
     I was hateful in mine own eyes.
     Slowly, I turned,  and I was shaking in mine  armor at the horror
of it all. She--the other  Knight--good Gow, the Knight Captain!--spat
curses at me as I approached.
     I did not blame her, nor do I now. Have I not cursed Mon-Taerleor
in such a way?
     Her foot was caught beneath a  root, and now I understood why the
man had  raised his  sword: to  cut the  wood and  free the  foot. The
Knight Captain stared defiantly at me as  I lifted my sword and let it
fall.
     She scrambled  to her  feet and faced  me belligerently.  Her arm
bled like a flood. I knew she could not fight me. "Go," I said.
     Hazel-green eyes  stared out at  me angrily.  "Do you know  who I
am?"
     "I know, Dame  Captain." I took the horn off  my belt and thought
of healing  potions. The  silver horn immediately  filled with  one. I
handed it to her. "Drink; it will help you."
     The Knight  Captain fearlessly  downed the  potion and  flung the
horn back toward  me. It bounced on  the gory moss, and as  much as my
heart tore to see Liadan's gift so carelessly handled, I did not move,
but stared only at the Knight Captain steadily.
     Her hazel  eyes glared  like enraged fire.  "Why didn't  you kill
me?" she demanded.
     I blinked, shocked.  "I will not slay a wounded  enemy." I looked
at her  arm; the  potion was already  helping to heal  it, and  it had
ceased bleeding. "You  are too hurt to fight adequately;  I cannot, in
all honor, combat you."
     "And yet  you tell me  to go,"  she seethed furiously,  her words
dripping like poison from a wounded  adder's tooth. "You will not even
capture me?"
     Suddenly,  I  smiled,  vindicated.  "Yea, Dame  Captain,  go,"  I
invited,  almost ready  to  laugh. "I  have been  ordered  to take  no
prisoners."
     Something in  her broke;  her eyes were  no longer  jewel-hard. I
heard a sob catch in her throat, and she turned suddenly and ran.
     "Gow guide your arm next time,"  I wished softly, "and Sanar walk
with you."
     I  turned to  go. I  looked  toward the  dead Knight  whom I  had
killed; I had no more wish to fight today.
     He had  died quickly, as  he had wished.  I stooped to  close his
eyes, then pulled back as I saw the moon glow in them.
     I knelt, put my blade before me,  and rested my helm on its hilt.
"To you, My Lady of the Night,  I dedicate my deeds of arms and honor.
Grant me  your blessing  to act,  with My Lord  your husband,  as your
Knight."
     I fell  silent after the  ritual prayer,  and said one  from mine
heart. "I give you also, My Lady,  my deed of mercy, and beseech mercy
of My Lord  Gow that her vengeance  fall not hard upon me,  for I knew
not he was her lover."
     But let my hand fall hard on Mon-Taerleor for murdering mine!
------------------------------------------------------------------------
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              ****              ****   **  **  **     *****
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          **   **   **  **    *****
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             **

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     (C)    Copyright   June,    1991,    DargonZine,   Editor    Dafydd
. All rights revert to the authors. These stories may
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1                                                             /
  DDDDD                              ZZZZZZ                //
  D    D  AAAA RRR  GGGG OOOO NN  N      Z  I NN  N EEEE  ||
  D     D A  A R  R G    O  O N N N     Z   I N N N E     || Volume 4
-=========================================================+|)
  D    D  AAAA RRR  G GG O  O N N N   Z     I N N N E     || Issue  3
  DDDDD   A  A R  R GGGG OOOO N  NN  ZZZZZZ I N  NN EEEE  ||
                                                           \\
                                                             \
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--   DargonZine Volume 4, Issue 3        06/06/91          Cir 1102   --
------------------------------------------------------------------------
--                            Contents                                --
------------------------------------------------------------------------
 What are Little Girls...?    Bryan Maloney          Yuli 3-4, 1014
 Pact                         Max Khaytsus           Yuli 10-11, 1014
 Fortunes 2                   Max Khaytsus           Yuli 15, 1014
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                   What are Little Girls Made of?
                        by Bryan Maloney
                 (b.c.k.a. )

     Aimee held her breath when  she heard more crashing from outside.
Were the Be-innyson soldiers coming again?  She wished that she was in
the castle with Daddy and Grandfather.  She closed her eyes and wished
harder, so hard  that she could feel her fingernails  digging into her
hands. She  opened her  eyes and  saw she  was still  in Grandfather's
shop. Wishing never worked by itself-- you  had to go and make it work
for even the littlest things.
     She'd  been here  since yesterday,  when the  Be-innyson soldiers
started throwing rocks at the city walls. She'd been taken to Old Town
with the  other children  and put  near the  castle--but she  had left
something very  important behind. When  Grandfather picked her  up and
put her in the wagon to Old Town  her puppy Karl had jumped out of her
arms and run into Grandfather's home.
     Grandfather told her that he'd make  sure to bring Karl if he had
to go to Old Town too. Then  she'd heard that the Be-innysons had made
holes in the New Town wall and were coming in. She was smart enough to
know that Grandfather  would be too busy to find  Karl, so she sneaked
out--it was easy enough with so many children around--to find Karl.
     When she  got to  Grandfather's, Karl was  there--but Grandfather
wasn't. The puppy  was upstairs in Grandfather's rooms.  He had tipped
over a jug of Grandfather's awful, bitter drink and was lapping at it.
Aimee had  to laugh at  the way  the puppy staggered  and yelped--like
Grandfather did  during the  Melrin festival.  Aimee had  gathered the
puppy in  her arms  and was  about to leave  when she  heard marching,
clanking feet.
     She ran to  a rope hanging over  a table and pulled  her feet up,
dangling with one  hand while the other held Karl.  Slowly, the stairs
to  the  attic  came down,  and  Aimee  climbed  them.  She sat  on  a
projecting board she had fastened  to the stairs (when Grandfather was
away once) and pushed them closed. Then she pulled the rope up through
its hole. She carefully made her way  around the holes in the floor to
the attic window. There she lay down to watch the street.
     Soldiers  were coming  from her  left. They  marched in  straight
rows,  making a  terrible  noise.  She could  tell  that they  weren't
Dargon's soldiers. They had square  shields and carried an ugly banner
with a big metal bird on top of it. They had to be Be-innysons!
     Aimee  was  nervous,  but  not really  scared.  She'd  remembered
hearing Grandfather tell Goodman Corambis that the attic had been made
by  smuggil-ers to  hide in  and  see down  below. (The  next day  she
sneaked into  the attic to  see. Grandfather was right--she  could see
everything through  the holes in  the floor. Best of  all, Grandfather
couldn't see her. The ceiling was  built very high with rough logs and
painted to make the holes look like parts of a pattern.)
     Then she  saw Thomas Redcap. He  had been sleeping in  a doorway.
Thomas was always drunk and he  smelled bad, so Aimee stayed away from
him. But nobody ever did anything to him because he never hurt anyone.
Two of  the soldiers  had picked  him up and  were shaking  him awake.
Thomas   woke  up   and   the  head   soldier--did  Be-innysons   have
captains?--said    something    to    him.    Aimee    suppressed    a
laugh--Be-innysons  were stupid  people!  Everybody  knew that  Thomas
couldn't say his own name just after he woke up.
     Thomas just  stared at the  soldier. When the soldier  started to
yell, Thomas  tried to  run. The  soldier took  his sword  and stabbed
Thomas in  the back. Thomas kept  trying to run, but  the soldier kept
stabbing him. Finally, Thomas fell down and the soldier stabbed him in
the neck.
     Aimee started shaking--these were  terrible men! They were demons
like Mother Clariss the Priestess had  told her about! She watched the
men pick up Thomas  and toss him in the gutter.  Some of them actually
laughed! Then  the captain  shouted something Aimee  didn't understand
and the men went into buildings.
     Aimee  froze,  clutching  Karl.  Three  of  them  had  come  into
Grandfather's place!  If they would  kill harmless old  Thomas Redcap,
what would they do  to her? She inched over to  a smaller peephole and
looked into the rooms below. Karl squirmed and whimpered.
     "Be quiet, Karl!" she whispered.
     Karl tried to lick her face.  He began to wriggle more, and Aimee
was afraid  that he would start  to bark. She couldn't  let him go--he
might fall into one of the larger  holes and start to yowl. What could
she do?
     Karl then belched,  softly. Aimee grimaced. he  smelled just like
Daddy  and   Grandfather  did  at  the   Melrin  festival--of  course!
Grandfather kept some of his jugs up  here in the winter so they would
be cold when he  drank them. Maybe he'd forgot to  take some down this
spring. Aimee looked around until she spied a pile of earthen jugs.
     "Will you be quiet if I give you a drink?" Aimee whispered as she
crawled over to the jugs. The  clay stopper was fastened with wax, and
she  had  to dig  at  it  with  her  fingernails. Karl,  smelling  the
beverage, was whining in anticipation.
     Aimee  pulled  the stopper  out  and  poured  some of  the  brown
contents into a depression on the floor. Karl lapped fast and furious.
Aimee then went back to the peephole.
     The soldiers  had come up  the stairs  from the public  rooms and
were searching Grandfather's rooms, turning over everything that could
move. Aimee was glad  that the table was heavy oak,  or she would have
to jump from the  bottom of the stairs when she  left. Finally, one of
the  soldiers found  Grandfather's jugs  he  kept by  the table.  They
laughed and stuffed them into their packs. Then they left.
     Aimee went back to the attic window and looked at the street. The
soldiers  were gathering  together. The  captain yelled  something and
they went  back into lines  and marched away.  After they were  out of
sight, Aimee went to the board  nailed to the stairs and lowered them.
Then she  scampered down and went  immediately to a cupboard  that had
been ripped open. She ran her fingers  on the top of the bottom shelf,
along the outside  rim, until she found a catch.  She pulled the catch
and a  small door on  the opposite wall  swung ajar. This  was another
thing made  by smuggil-ers, according  to Grandfather. She ran  to the
secret cupboard and looked--it was there.
     Grandfather  had once  been  a soldier,  and he  had  kept a  few
souvineers. One  was a big  greatsword, too  heavy for Aimee  to lift.
Another was a decorated crossbow that Grandfather had gotten as a gift
for  helping   in  some   battle  or   another.  The   greatsword  was
gone--Grandfather  took it  with him  probably, but  the crossbow  was
still there, hidden with Grandfather's  other treasures. She knew that
she couldn't wield  it, but she would  still feel safer if  she had it
with her. She grabbed the weapon  and a handful of silver-inlaid bolts
and ran back into the attic, withdrawing the stairs behind her.
     "I know what  I'll do." She thought, "I'll wait  here until I see
some Dargon soldiers  march by, and then I'll come  down and tell them
I'm Aimee Taishent  and they'll take me to the  castle because Daddy's
in the guard."
     She lay down by the attic  window and watched the street. After a
while, Karl staggered next to her and collapsed in a heap.
     "Did you have enough?" Aimee whispered.
     Karl emitted an enormous belch and went to sleep.
     "Karl,   you  smell   worse   than  Thomas   Redcap."  Then   she
remembered--Thomas lay on the street,  dead, holes poked into his body
by  the Be-innysons.  Softly, Aimee  began  to cry.  The tears  flowed
smoothly down  her cheeks until  they dripped  on the floor.  Then she
began to  sob, trembling.  Her throat started  hurting, but  still she
cried. Her  head started  hurting--still she  cried. Aimee  wept until
after sundown. Then she slept.
     She woke the next morning to the sounds of battle. She looked out
the attic  window to see  a mob fleeing  down the street.  Behind them
were more  Be- innysons.  They were hitting  people, not  even chasing
them. Just  running over  them and killing  them. Aimee  suddenly felt
terribly guilty.
     "I'll  never   knock  over  another  anthill.   I  promise."  She
whispered. "Just please, Bright Cahleyna,  don't let the soldiers come
in here."
     The mob  passed and the  soldiers followed them, not  stopping to
look in any buildings. Aimee breathed a sigh of relief. How long would
it be before the Dargon soldiers  came by? Would they ever? There were
so many  Be-innysons, what if they  won? Would they come  and kill her
like they did Thomas Redcap? She started to cry again.
     She stopped when  she heard Karl whining. The puppy  was lying on
his belly, forepaws over his ears, eyes tightly shut.
     "It  serves  you  right,  Karl."  Aimee  whispered.  "Now  you'll
remember how  awful that stuff is  to drink." Aimee then  realized how
terribly  hungry  and   thirsty  she  was.  She  also   needed  to  go
outside--badly. But the Be-innysons were  out there! She looked around
until she saw some old junk in a corner. Maybe there was a chamber pot
in the pile!  Desperately, she climbed into the castoffs  and began to
dig.  The pile  was huge--Grandfather  never threw  anything out.  She
began to tunnel into the heap, which nearly touched the roof.
     "There's my toy cart!" Aimee stated.
     Karl  stood at  Aimee's exclamation  and dragged  himself to  the
pile. He whimpered at his mistress.
     "Karl, I was going  to pull you around in this,  but a wheel fell
off. Grandfather said he would fix it,  but I guess he just lost it in
this mess.  I'll make him put  it together when he  comes back." Aimee
stopped  digging.  Would  Grandfather  come back?  Would  anyone?  She
started to cry, but her sobbing  breaths reminded her of a lower call.
She quested further  into the heap. Finally, she caught  at glimpse of
glazed clay.  Tossing small bits  of junk  aside, she found  a cracked
chamber pot.
     After she relieved herself, she had a terrible thought--"How do I
get rid of this?" she asked herself. Aimee decided that she would have
to leave it here until she could think of something.
     She was still thirsty, though. Aimee grit her teeth and picked up
a jug. She pried it open and took a drink. Yak! It was even more awful
than she remembered. But it helped  her throat, so she drank more. She
put the  stopper on  the jug and  sat down next  to the  attic window,
watching the  street for  Dargon soldiers. Karl  wobbled over  and lay
down beside her. Aimee picked him up.
     "Karl, I wish you were a  great knight like the old Duke Clifton,
then you'd put me on your horse  and we'd ride straight to the castle.
And if  any Be-  innyson soldiers  tried to stop  us, you'd  take your
sword and kill them." Aimee thought about the Be-innysons; she thought
about Thomas Redcap; she thought about the people running away, killed
like ants; and a strange feeling  started inside her. It was cold, but
somehow comforting. The more she felt it, the better she felt.
     "I hate  you, Be-innysons." she said,  and for the first  time in
her life, she knew what that meant.
     Aimee watch  the street until  she had to relieve  herself again.
She went over to the chamber pot--it stank. Aimee sighed, there was no
helping it. Grandfather  would understand about the  smell. She walked
to the chimney  and unlatched a metal door. Grandfather  had put it in
himself so he wouldn't  have to hire a sweep to clean  the flue and he
wouldn't have to go on the roof to clean it himself. The special bendy
brush Grandfather used was on the floor beside the chimney.
     She opened  the door and poured  the contents of the  chamber pot
down the  chimney. Grandfather kept  the flue  closed unless he  had a
fire, so she  knew it wouldn't splatter in the  fireplace and give her
away. She would have to remember to warn him before he opened the flue
next time.  Again she relieved herself  and emptied the pot.  That was
when she heard the crash.
     She crept to a peephole and looked down. A Be-innyson soldier had
chased an older girl into the building  and up the stairs to the rooms
below. He  had a terrible  grin on his face.  He grabbed the  girl and
threw her onto the floor. Then he ripped her skirts and petticoats off
and opened his codpiece. Aimee immediately knew that the man wanted to
sex (or  s-e-x, as  Grandfather always  said around  her. She  was six
already--she'd heard  what grownups did!  Anyway, she'd seen  Karl get
born.), but  the girl didn't  want to--the  soldier was going  to hurt
her!
     A flame started in Aimee's heart and crept up her throat. She was
going to stop him! He was a Be-innyson, and all they ever did was hurt
people. She didn't care  how big he was or what  weapons he had. Aimee
Taishent was going to stop him!  She scampered to the attic window--no
one was on the street. At least  it was only him. The girl had started
screaming. Aimee went  to a peephole and looked down.  She saw the man
forcing the girl onto the  floor. Desperate, Aimee caught the crossbow
on a nail jutting  from a pillar and pulled back  the string with both
hands.
     "Please, Father Ol, keep the string from breaking."
     Aimee pulled, leaning away from the crossbow. The string dug into
her fingers, feeling like a knife. Finally, the catch clicked--the bow
was cocked.
     Her fingers  hurt too  much to move--there  was already  a purple
line across  them--but she forced  herself to  drop the bolt  into its
slot, like  she had seen the  guards do in practice.  Then she started
running toward the stairs.
     On her way,  a flash caught her eye. The  soldier was right under
one of the  larger holes in the floor--Grandfather  called them murder
holes. It was  very big, Aimee had  almost caught her foot  in it. She
looked down and saw the soldier's back, right below her. She carefully
aimed  into the  hole and  and  gasped as  the  bolt slid  out of  the
crossbow and through the hole below. You had to hold the bow straight!
She'd  heard Daddy  tell  that  to his  men,  but  had forgotten.  She
remembered now.
     Aimee heard the soldier shout and then a crash. What would he do?
He couldn't get  to the stairs, she  knew that, but what  would he do?
She looked  down through the hole.  The soldier wasn't there,  but the
girl was. Her head bled and she  lay in a ball, quaking. Where was the
soldier?
     Aimee ran to another murder hole and looked down--no soldier! Had
she scared him away? She ran to  the stairs to lower them, but stopped
dead as  she saw them come  down by themselves. Frozen  with fear, she
watched  as the  Be- innyson  soldier came  up the  stairs, holding  a
pole-arm with a  hook upon it. He smiled at  Aimee and approached her,
weapon held low.
     Aimee  stared at  the soldier  as he  walked toward  her. He  was
talking, saying something she couldn't understand. When he had cleared
half  the distance  between them,  Karl charged  the foreigner  with a
squeaking snarl. The soldier batted the pup aside with his polearm.
     As  soon as  Karl  took to  the air,  yelping,  Aimee awoke.  The
soldier wanted to hurt her! She ran around the soldier, trying to make
for the stairs, but  he just turned and swung his  polearm in front of
her. She tried to duck around the weapon, but the soldier just stepped
and hit her with the haft.
     She fell over,  bruised, and heard the soldier  laugh. She looked
up and saw him heft his weapon,  then he swung it. The blade descended
upon her like a foot upon a beetle. Aimee tensed herself for the blow,
her last, when  she heard a thump beside her.  The soldier had missed!
Was he too drunk  to hit her? She looked at him and  her hopes died as
she heard him start to laugh. He aimed another blow at her, missing by
inches. He was playing with her-- just like boys played with rats!
     Aimee  scrambled backwards  on all  fours; the  soldier advanced,
smirking. He said something in his own tongue and laughed. Aimee still
went  back. The  soldier  stopped  to watch  her.  Finally, Aimee  hit
something--it was  the junk  heap. She  started to  climb into  it and
froze as the soldier yelled and charged toward her, weapon lowered.
     Desperate, she grabbed  at the pile below her. Her  hands came up
with a  piece of wood. It  was the shaft from  Grandfather's old cloak
tree. She had broken it last year  by swinging from it and knocking it
over. Grandfather  was so mad he  didn't even spank her--he  just told
Daddy!  She pulled  up  the piece  of  wood and  held  the end  before
her--the top with a pointed bit.  It wasn't long enough! The soldier's
weapon was  easily twice  as long.  And she couldn't  even pick  it up
besides, the other end was tightly wedged in the pile.
     "I'm sorry, Daddy." she whispered.
     At that moment,  the soldier discovered one of  the murder holes.
His right foot  came down exactly upon  a larger one and  went in. The
bones of  his ankle  ground against  each other  and cracked.  Yet the
momentum  of his  charge was  too  great to  be halted  by this  minor
setback. Instead, his body flew the last few yards through the air and
landed upon Aimee.  His polearm entered the  pile, headfirst, catching
Aimee's skirts upon the hook.
     Aimee opened her  eyes. Above her lay the soldier.  Why wasn't he
doing anything? Then she noticed that  her hands were warm. She looked
down to  wher she had been  holding up the  end of the cloak  tree and
gasped when she saw it go into the soldier. She looked up at the young
man. He  was a youth, with  a light mustache beginning  to form. Aimee
noticed  that his  hair  was  reddish and  looked  very  soft. He  was
motionless, breath coming in ragged gasps. Tears poured from his eyes.
Aimee  watched the  final spasm  shake the  soldier before  he stopped
breathing. Then  she looked  at his  face. He had  the same  look that
Thomas Redcap did when the soldiers cut him down.
     Aimee  went limp  on the  pile, sobbing.  She was  as bad  as the
Be-innysons! She thought that killing  the soldier would make her feel
better, but  it didn't. She felt  awful, even worse than  the time she
had been throwing  stones to knock down apples and  accidentally hit a
squirrel. She  dragged herself out of  the pile, tearing her  skirt on
the hook. Sobbing, she ran down the stairs.
     More than  anything she had  to get away--she'd  killed somebody.
That was the worst thing you could do! Grandfather had taught her that
Ol and Cahleyna  valued all life, and now she  had killed someone. She
had to hide--go where no one could find her. She ran for the stairs to
the street level when she collided with a soft form.
     "Where did you come from?" Aimee heard someone say.
     Aimee looked  up and saw the  face of the girl.  Unable to speak,
Aimee pointed up.
     "You say you came from heaven?"  The girl's eyes were wide. "Were
you an angel sent by Cephas Stevene to rescue me?"
     "No." Aimee  was finally able to  say. "I came from  the attic. I
tried to shoot the bolt at him and he--" Aimee burst again into tears.
"I killed him!"
     The girl held Aimee tighter. "It's all right, honey. He was going
to hurt me, and you only wanted to stop him." Aimee felt a hand on her
chin, lifting her face.
     "I am Marta, what's your name?"
     "Aimee, Aimee Taishent." Aimee said.
     "Are you related to the mage?"
     "He's my grandfather!"
     "No  wonder you're  so brave.  Living around  magic must  be very
exciting. I bet  you can even read." Marta smiled  and stroked Aimee's
hair.
     "It's not all  that exciting." Aimee said, "Usually  he just sits
and studies, except when he has a customer, but I can read."
     "Where is your Grandfather?"
     "He's  in Old  Town.  He went  there  when the  Be-innysons--when
they--when--" Aimee began crying again.
     "It's  all right,  honey. One  way or  another, it  will be  over
soon." Aimee and Marta embraced, each comforting the other.
     After a  time, Aimee snuffed and  said, "Go into the  attic, it's
not safe to be down here."
     "What about you?" Marta asked.
     "I'll be right behind you." Aimee said. Yesterday she had been so
scared that  she forgot  Grandfather's secret stash.  It was  where he
kept all  the wonderful things he  wasn't supposed to eat  at his age.
She crawled under the table  and pushed a knothole--smuggil-ers had to
be the  most fun people. A  small trapdoor pushed up  and Aimee lifted
it.
     Underneath were  pickled sweetmeats and  fish salted so  heavy it
crackled. There were  also some pickled plums from  Bichu. Aimee liked
these, even if  they burned on the  way down and made  her feel funny.
She put it all on the table and closed the trap door. Then she climbed
on the table and put the lot in her torn skirt. After she climbed into
the attic she sat the food on the floor and raised the stairs.
     As  she  finished  pulling  up the  stairs,  she  remembered--the
soldier was  up here!  She couldn't  turn around,  she might  see him.
Aimee stood, trembling, and stared at the stairs.
     "It's all right, Aimee, I covered him."
     Aimee turned around.  Marta had covered him with  the blanket she
had taken from  Grandfather's bed to cover herself up.  She was trying
to pull her ruined skirts around her.
     "Wait, Marta."  Aimee lowered the  stairs and ran down.  For once
she was  glad that Grandfather  got cold.  Sometimes she hated  how he
always had two blankets--it made sleeping with him too hot. She pulled
the  other blanked  out from  under the  bed and  brought it  into the
attic. When she returned, Marta had already started on the sweetmeats.
     "I haven't eaten since before yesterday." she said.
     "Neither did  I." Aimee replied.  "I'll get something  to drink."
She walked  to the  jugs and  got one.  The two  began to  feast, only
pausing to drink the over-warm beer.
     When they had finished eating, Aimee went to the attic window.
     "What are you looking for?" Marta asked.
     "I'm waiting for Dargon soldiers."
     "Oh." Marta sat, quietly.
     After a  time, Aimee  looked back  at Marta.  The older  girl was
sitting,  rocking back  and forth.  Tears flowed  down her  cheeks and
throat. Her body shook with silent sobs. Aimee ran over to her.
     "What's wrong? Are you hurt?" Aimee put her arms around Marta.
     "That man--he wanted to..." Marta put her head down.
     "I could  see that,  but I  stopped him."  Aimee was  puzzled. He
hadn't been able to hurt Marta, but Marta still seemed hurt.
     "I know you stopped him, and he  didn't hurt my body, but he hurt
my  heart." Marta  wiped  her face.  "He  scared me  and  tried to  do
something terrible." Marta began sobbing.
     "He broke the Third Law of your Stevene, didn't he, Marta?"
     "What do you  know about that, Aimee? They don't  teach the Third
Law to little girls."
     "I can  read. Mother Clariss is  a Priestess for Stevene  and she
used to come around and talk to me before Grandfather chased her away.
One time  I sneaked one of  her books out of  her pouch. I kept  it up
here until Grandfather found it. He was so mad--I don't know why."
     "Perhaps your Grandfather is pagan...mine was."
     "I don't know about  that, but he made me pray all  day to Ol for
that."
     Marta looked Aimee in the eyes, "Then you worship Ol?..."
     "Of course I do. Grandfather tells me all about him."
     Marta took Aimee on her lap. "Despise not the pagan, for they may
still be good of heart." she whispered.
     "What did you say?" asked Aimee.
     "Just a little  prayer of thanks that you  were here, Aimee--What
were you saying about the Third Law?" Marta dried her eyes.
     "Well, I think it goes: 'The sexyoual act is a sacrament. It is a
holy gift of pleasure...' that means good feeling, you know."
     "Yes, I know, Aimee." Marta smiled, faintly. "Go on."
     "...'a holy gift of pleasure from  God. He who violates this gift
shall burn,  but she who  is violated...'  Why did Seefas  Stevene say
'she' there, anyway?"
     Marta sighed, "I  think he had some idea what  things are like in
the real world."
     "Okay, anyway: '...she  who is violated is as pure  as before, by
My  Holy Word.  Let  none gainsay...'  That  means disagree.  '...this
decree."
     "Thank you Aimee." Marta hugged the young girl.
     "Do you want to pray, Marta?"
     "I would like that."
     Marta recited the  Plea to Stevene and the Creed  of Mercy. Aimee
listened to  the alian phrases.  Stevene people prayed  strangely, all
full of  begging and  pleading. Praying  to Cahleyna  and Ol  was much
easier. You  just thanked them for  the good things and  asked them to
help with  the bad things. When  Marta was done Aimee  looked into her
eyes. They were brown and dark,  just like Karl's fur--Karl! Where was
he? She looked around the attic and  then, to her horror heard, at the
same time,  Karl barking  from below  and a roar,  like the  parade at
Melrin Festival, coming down the street.
     "I've got to get Karl!" Aimee cried as she ran to the stairs.
     "No, Aimee, the battle's come  this way." Marta grabbed Aimee and
held her tight. "Anyway, you've  already proven that the Stevene looks
after brave little girls and foolish puppies very well."
     "Are you sure?"
     "Yes." Marta lied.
     The two sat by the attic window to watch, fearfully.
     "They're coming." Marta whispered.
     Around the  corner came a  Beinison legion, banner  torn, shields
broken, ranks ragged. Behind them was a veritable mob of an army. Here
a  soldier in  fine armor  hacked at  a Beinison  shield; there  three
street  toughs pelted  a lone  Beinison  with cudgels.  Old men  threw
rocks; young  men wielded spears.  It was a  rabble, but it  drove the
foreigners back. Behind this line  were ranks of ill-matched soldiery.
Dargon  personal guard  mixing  with town  militia. Noblemen  marching
alongside common thugs.
     The two girls watched the  foreigners get pushed down the street,
almost as if the stones of the city had risen against them. Then there
was quiet.
     "Do you think we should go out?" Aimee asked.
     "We ought to  wait for our soldiers to look  for us. Things could
change."
     Aimee nodded, and the two waited, breathlessly.
     Hours later, after sundown, the girls heard noise from below.
     "She's got  to be here!"  They heard a  man yell, "It's  the only
place she'd go!"
     Aimee ran to the stairs and lowered them as fast as she could.
     "Aimee, stop, it could be a trick!" Marta called.
     Aimee, heedless, ran down the stairs, one word on her lips.
     "Daddy!" She ran into her father's arms.
     "I  guess we  found  her, Lieutenant."  a  soldier in  sergeant's
livery said. "Anything else you want?"
     "No, thank  you sergeant."  Jerid Taishent  replied. "You  can go
now."
     "Right!" The  sergeant saluted.  "All right, you  crowmeat, we've
got Beinison cowards to mop up! Move yer asses!"
     The soldiers left at a trot.
     Marta walked down  the stairs, blanket wrapped  around her. Jerid
looked up at the  sound of her. The first thing he  saw were her eyes.
Somehow he couldn't look away.
     "Who is this, Aimee?" Taishent asked.
     Marta blushed and pulled at the blanket.
     "That's Marta, Daddy." Aimee said. "Some man tried to hurt her so
I killed him."
     Jerid winced at his daughter's words.
     "Beggin' yer pardon, sir," the  Sergeant had returned, "but we'll
be needin' ye to help wi' the moppin' up."
     "I'll be right  there," Jerid said. He put Aimee  down. "You stay
here until Grandfather or I come for you. Will you do that? Don't come
out of the attic unless you actually see one of us."
     "I'll  wait right  here."  Aimee said,  seriously. "Karl!"  Aimee
dived under the  bed and retrieved the wriggling  puppy. "You'd better
stay with  me, or  some Be-innyson  will come along  and cut  you into
gloves."
     As Jerid left the shop, his sergeant approached him.
     "Me 'n  the men,"  he said,  "would like to  say that  we're sore
happy that ye lost none o' yer family."
     "Sergeant," Jerid replied, "Thank you--and the men--for that, but
you're wrong." Tears frosted his eyes. "My little girl died today."
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                               Pact
                         by Max Khaytsus
             (b.c.k.a. )

     Kalen stood on  a wharf at the  north end of the  town of Dargon,
looking into the darkening ocean. The  sun, setting to the west, was a
red disc half engulfed by the  water. Menacing red shadows fell across
the port  and the city  walls as a  fresh reminder of  the Beinisonian
invasion only a month ago.
     He paced, looking at the havoc  raised by the fighting. The piers
were ruined, torn  apart so that the Baranurian fleet  had no place to
dock after  the battle was won.  A large, hundred foot,  merchant ship
was almost completely submerged in the water not far away. It had been
in port when the Beinison ships  arrived and minutes later it was deck
deep in the  water. Now the hull  was half buried in the  sand and the
tides were slowly dismantling the ship. There was nothing to salvage.
     The city walls were battered as well. The solid stone was cracked
and chipped and  in one place the  stone wall had all  but crumbled to
dust.
     A creaking of  the wooden walk alerted Kalen to  turn. He noted a
dark shape  walking towards  him from  the eastern  end of  the docks,
almost completely hidden  by the dark. Two days ago  Kalen received an
anonymous note  asking him to  meet the  sender here. The  missive was
brief and  cryptic and could  not be  traced, but the  lieutenant felt
that it was  something important. Ilona insisted that he  not go or to
at least bring guards, but the note explicitly told him to come alone,
so he did.
     The shadow approached and Kalen  recognized it for one of Liriss'
henchmen. He wondered again if it was  a trap or a set-up, but the man
he  was meeting  was not  armed. Kalen  likewise had  not brought  his
sword, but  his eating dagger  could always be  used as a  last resort
weapon, as it has done a few times in the past.
     Kesrin Mardos stopped  a few feet from  Lieutenant Kalen Darklen,
carefully studying the acting Captain of  the Guard. He was carrying a
heavy  proposition,  ready  to  create  a  life-long  associate  or  a
life-long foe.
     "What did you want?" Kalen asked.
     "What my Lord wanted," Kesrin answered without emotion.
     "What did the rat send you for now?"
     Kesrin suppressed a smile. He would  have to use that line later.
He often  thought of Liriss as  a rat, himself --  the same moustache,
grown recently, unkempt  hair ever since the Beinison  invasion, and a
growing need  to be the  master of all he  could, whether it  served a
purpose or  not. Like a  dog on a  stack of hay,  will not eat  it and
won't let a horse near.
     "The rat," Kesrin spoke in a dry voice, it was all he could do to
contain his amusement, "asked me to deliver you a proposition."
     "Which is?"  Kalen was  just as dry.  There was  nothing pleasant
about being propositioned by a gangster  in the middle of the night on
a dark  pier with  no weapons  or guards  in sight.  It would  be like
making a  deal with  the death  god, J'Mirg, or  Amante, or  Nehru, or
Balen-Ruk, or whatever  all those religions called him,  and hoping to
come out ahead. Kalen was not sure where he got all that religion, but
these were all one and the same. In this case Liriss.
     "He wishes to hire you."
     "For what?!"  Kalen exclaimed, realizing  he had begun  to drift.
Working on both sides of the fence was just what he needed.
     "For information! Control!"
     "No," Kalen shook his head,  the grim darkness agreeing with him.
"That's absurd. That's against the law."
     "Hear  me out,"  Kesrin said  calmly. What  was Kalen  expecting?
Information about  a whore-house to  close down?  "We are ready  to do
things for you. We can make you the Captain of the Guard..."
     "You're not the only one," Kalen interrupted.
     "But we can do it now! We know you want it."
     "I'll wait until  Captain Koren retires," Kalen said.  He knew he
was the logical choice for the  position as soon a the present captain
would become tired  of the job, something he did  not expect to happen
for years.
     During  the Beinisonian  invasion  of Dargon,  Captain Koren  was
severely wounded and for  the last month had been in  the care of Duke
Dargon's  personal  physician,  Elizabeth  of the  Pass.  He  was  not
expected to be up and about for  at least another month more and Kalen
held his job  by default, pending Adrunian  Koren's improvements under
the care of the physician.
     "I'll wait  until he  is ready  to step down  on his  own," Kalen
repeated.
     "You will  naturally be provided  with inside information  on our
competition, to aid you in their apprehension," Kesrin continued.
     "You  don't  understand..." Kalen  started,  but  Kesrin did  not
yield.
     "We will  also pay you the  exact same salary as  the Duke. Think
about it! Double the money for one job!"
     "What would you want from me in return?" Kalen asked cautiously.
     "Nothing that you'd have to work  hard for. Just ignore what Lord
Liriss does and make sure his competition stays out of the way..."
     A  rather simple  job, Kalen  thought to  himself, but  still not
worth doing. Money is not everything. There was also a certain part of
living  that's involved  in life  and to  live well  morality must  be
upheld.
     "I can't say I'm interested," he answered.
     "There are others..." Kesrin let the threat trail off.
     "Not others that can make captain," Kalen returned.
     "Not if you're alive," Kesrin agreed.
     "If I  had my  sword, I'd  take you in,"  Kalen said  through his
teeth.
     Kesrin  smiled. "What  for? Being  outside the  city gates  after
dark? Curfew was  lifted a fortnight ago. Or are  you upset over being
threatened? It's only  your word against mine...and  you're the acting
Captain of the Guard." It was not  certain if that last was being used
in a mocking way.
     "If  I had  my  sword,"  Kalen corrected  himself,  "I'd run  you
through." He turned,  walking away from Liriss' right  hand man. There
was nothing to  talk about and nothing to fight  with...or for. If not
Kesrin, then  another. It never stopped.  It was better to  keep known
criminals where they were, in order to track them with ease.
     Kesrin  grabbed  Kalen's  shoulder   and  spun  him  around.  The
Lieutenant cringed from the pain that  shot down his arm. "If we don't
hear from you by tomorrow night, we will assume you made up your mind.
We'll make the same deal with someone else. You are neither the first,
nor the last."
     Kalen grabbed Kesrin's collar, violently  yanking him up, but not
being able  to lift him  off the ground  in this manner.  His shoulder
screamed out in pain again. "Who else, you bastard? Who are you paying
off?"
     Kesrin  broke the  grasp on  his tunic.  "Lieutenant Shevlin  was
working for us.  He died an honorable death. Make  sure you don't wind
up just another body on the street! You have until tomorrow!"
     Lieutenant Kalen Darklen watched Kesrin return into the darkness.
He wanted  to follow,  but the  danger of that  was hundreds  of times
greater than the meeting itself. He watched the man disappear into the
darkness,  then   slowly  walked   back  through   the  hole   in  the
fortification to return home.
     Although the darkness  had only settled, the streets  of the city
were all  ready empty and quiet.  The winding street that  Kalen chose
took him to the deserted market place.  He stood at the opening to the
alley,  studying the  square, wondering  about the  proposition Kesrin
presented. Kalen could  not imagine that Lieutenant Shevlin,  a man he
worked so  closely with for a  number of years, could  be a turn-coat,
but he had no evidence either way.  Shevlin always did his job and did
it well -- he was Kalen's main competition for the position of Captain
of the  Guard --  he was  one of  the most  efficient officers  in the
guard, being  offered twice  to switch to  the Duke's  personal guard.
Yet, Kalen had wondered in the  past about how Shevlin could afford to
buy some of  the things he had  on a lieutenant's pay.  Either way, he
died in the invasion. No answers would come from him.
     Kalen wondered if he should accept  the offer extended to him, to
go in  under cover, to watch  the criminal underworld and  then strike
when least expected, but then he remembered the price he would have to
pay --  Adrunian Koren's life  -- and eventually  his own. It  was too
steep.
     A pair of lanterns appeared on the other side of the square. They
were carried  by six  men -- a  patrol. With a  sigh Kalen  decided to
return home.
                   *         *         *
     Ilona Milnor paced back and  forth in her small rented apartment.
She  had warned  Kalen not  to go  to the  meeting, but  he stubbornly
insisted. When  she said  she was going  to go with  him, he  made her
swear that  she would wait  for him to return.  Now she was  angry she
made that promise. It could have been a trap and she just let him walk
off. She walked  over to the table  on which she had  placed her sword
and belt and  started putting them on, but then  unstrapped the buckle
and returned the belt  and weapon to the table. She  had lost count of
the number of times she went through this procedure this evening.
     Kalen was an ambitious officer. He became a lieutenant after only
five years of service and at the age of twenty-nine was all ready, the
best candidate for the position of Captain of the Guard. He almost got
that that job,  not to long ago. Captain Koren  was gravely wounded in
the invasion and there was some doubt as to weather or not the Captain
would make it. Kalen was one of the few who said he would. He confided
in Ilona that he was afraid  of taking the Captain's place, that there
was still so much  he needed to learn and do before  he could admit to
himself that  he could take care  of the town. For  now, while Captain
Koren was still  recovering from his injuries, Kalen  was getting some
of the experience  he claimed he lacked  and in the last  month he had
done an amazing job of running the city on his own.
     Ilona once again went over to the table, contemplating the sword.
If Kalen was not  back in a few more minutes, she  would go after him.
The thought  of this  made her  chuckle. She  had been  thinking about
going all  evening and accumulated two  or three hours worth  of these
"few more minutes" intervals. This was  it. She put the sword-belt on,
got the sword and went out. The  air outside was cooler, though it was
very humid.  Ilona looked up and  down the street. The  way the street
was situated, Kalen could return from either direction. She hesitated,
not wanting to miss him because of lack of patience and an over active
imagination. Kalen always complained that she was not patient enough.
     As she stood there, contemplating what to do, someone appeared up
the  street, walking  towards  her. Ilona  immediately recognized  the
person as  Kalen. She hurried towards  him, meeting him half  way. She
immediately spotted the red stain on his left shoulder.
     "What happened to you?"
     "It was  Kesrin. He  wanted to talk,"  Kalen answered,  not quite
grasping the question.
     Ilona gently touched Kalen's bloody shoulder. "You fought?"
     Kalen  shook his  head. "Kesrin  grabbed  me to  prevent me  from
leaving. It's not his fault -- he didn't know."
     "Let's  go inside,"  Ilona suggested,  taking Kalen's  right arm.
"I'll take a look at it."
     They slowly walked back to  her apartment, with Ilona thinking of
a good way to get her message,  perhaps plea, across to her lover. His
shoulder  was injured  during the  Beinison  invasion in  Yule and  he
stubbornly refused to let anyone know  about it until they wound up in
bed a  few days later.  It was not a  life threatening injury,  but it
would not heal  without the proper care and rest.  Instead, Kalen felt
the absolute  need -- that misplaced  loyalty of his --  to coordinate
and supervise guard activities until Captain Koren was ready to resume
his duties, ignoring his own needs in the process.
     Inside Ilona sat Kalen down on  the bed and helped him remove his
tunic. The  scab on  his shoulder  was freshly torn  and a  trickle of
blood ran down his  chest. She soaked a clean rag in  a basin of water
and began cleaning the wound.
     "This is the second time this week," she noted.
     Kalen grunted in  agreement. It was hard to tell  if he was being
sarcastic or not.
     "I want you to make me a promise..."
     "I'm  very bad  with commitments."  He tried  to smile,  but only
gritted his teeth as Ilona ran the rag directly across the wound.
     "It won't heal unless you rest," she said as Kalen jerked back.
     Kalen took Ilona's hands into  his. "This town won't stop running
just because I'm sick."
     Ilona looked into  his eyes with a pleading  expression. "It does
not have to. I can do the job. So can Lieutenant Azyn."
     "You don't understand," Kalen  sighed. "Before the invasion there
were four of us to help Koren. You telling me two people and less than
half the regular staff can do the job?"
     Ilona picked  up the rag,  washed out  the blood and  returned to
Kalen. "We don't have a choice, do we?"
     "We do. I'm here. I can do the work."
     "Kalen,  everything  is  returning  to  normal.  The  people  are
beginning to  rebuild. The  looting has  stopped. The  Duke's personal
forces are out on the streets along side the town guard..."
     "...a ship was stolen three  days ago," Kalen interrupted her, "a
warehouse was  burned to cover  a robbery,  we have dozens  of urchins
holding citizens up  in the night and I was  propositioned by the mob.
We need people now more than ever!"
     "Kalen! You're  making it  worse. That wound  is turning  into an
ulcer!"
     Kalen lay  back on  the bed,  staring at the  ceiling. "I  wish I
could say there was a choice, but now there's a new problem..."
     "They  propositioned you?"  Ilona  asked,  Kalen's words  finally
catching  up with  her.  She expected  anything from  the  mob, but  a
blatant offer from the them to pay off a public official was too much.
     Kalen's expression was as grim as ever. "Kesrin told me they will
match what I am getting paid if I help them out now and again."
     "Help  them out?"  Ilona picked  up  the strips  of bandages  and
started wrapping them around Kalen's shoulder.
     "In addition  to the money, they  will insure my standing  in the
guard, provide  leads on  other criminal  dealings and  the like...all
they want is free run of the city."
     Ilona shuddered. "They can't be serious. What did you say?"
     "I said `no'. What else could I tell them?"
     Ilona put  her arm around  Kalen and pulled  him to his  side, to
face her. "Please stop trying to be a hero. Let the wound heal."
     Kalen put his arms around her,  pulling her closer and hiding his
face in her long light brown hair. "I wish I could..."
                   *         *         *
     The following  morning Ilona  left for  work at  sunrise, leaving
Kalen asleep. It was late when they finished talking last night and he
spent the night with her. She hoped  that he would sleep well into his
shift, but knew  it to be an impossibility. The  day went normally; at
least as  normal as  any this  week. Shortly before  lunch she  took a
patrol on a quick tour of the  market place. This was the area of town
that  suffered the  most damage  during  the invasion.  What could  be
easily carried  off was and over  half of what remained  was burned to
the ground. Then, a week after the Beinisonian forces were fought off,
a mob  of people raided  the merchants restoring their  businesses and
destroyed what  was left. The  town guard,  all ready reduced  to half
strength, was  helpless to do  anything and the looting  extended into
the rest of the city.
     It was not  until a week later, when the  remainder of the Duke's
forces were  able to place a  greater effort into restoring  the Ducal
Capital, that peace was restored to the city.
     Duke Clifton Dargon,  who was placed in charge  of King Haralan's
navy, left  for Sharks' Cove where  the Beinison invasion was  in full
swing. Most  of his  troops either went  with him or  were sent  on to
other areas  of the  duchy. Only  fifty or sixty  men remained  in the
town, in  addition to the  sixty-two members  of the guard.  Dargon no
longer needed to be defended  against invasions. Any damage that could
be done  to the city was  all ready inflicted. Besides,  Duke Dargon's
flotilla was to engage the ships that posed the greatest danger to the
city. Any  infantry troop would have  to first take two  other duchies
and then most of Dargon, in order to reach the city.
     A temporary guard station was set  up in the middle of the market
place. In  spite of  the damage  inflicted on the  market, it  was the
first  part of  town to  be almost  completely rebuilt  and return  to
normal. Ilona spotted Lieutenant Jerid Taishent of the Duke's personal
guard  and after  telling her  troop to  spread out  and look  around,
proceeded towards  him. Jerid was  the only man  of any rank  from the
Duke's troops still in the city. The rest, together with Bartol, their
chief, had either left with the Duke or with the troops distributed to
keep peace in the duchy.
     "Are the natives restless today?" Ilona called out to Jerid.
     He turned to  her from watching the mobs pass  by. "They are well
behaved. We arrested three or four since sunrise. What about your side
of town?"
     Sometimes all sides seemed like here. "All right for now. Someone
threw a dead rat through the Guard House window, but little more."
     "No trouble?" Rats were common these days.
     "None that I heard off yet."
     "Are you planning on staying here?"
     "In town or the market place?" Ilona smiled.
     "The market place," Jerid grinned back.
     Ilona shook her head. "Just looking around to see that everything
is all right. You're not here because of those arrests, are you?"
     "I stopped by to pick up  a present for my daughter," Jerid said.
"This war business is a little much for her."
     "You go on, then. I intended to stay here through lunch."
     Jerid saluted  Ilona and  called over  to one of  the men  at the
guard post, "Ryal, get that package and let's go!"
     One  of the  men picked  up a  sizable package  and followed  his
commander.
     Ilona returned the salute as Jerid left. She looked at the market
place, studying  the people  and their  wares. Merchants  and shoppers
alike looked tired and worn out, much as they had the first days after
the invasion, but the bruises and  injuries they wore a month ago were
now mostly gone.  The merchandise also looked better  and better every
day.  New  merchants  came  daily  from the  villages  in  the  south,
unaffected  by the  war,  and  a few  caravans  from  Tench have  also
delivered their wares. Yet, in spite  of all this progress, Ilona knew
that all was  not as well as  it would seem. The  economy was dragging
along and  the prices were  very high.  The local merchants  could not
compete with  those who  travelled to Dargon.  Many lost  their homes,
capital  and stock.  All had  lost family  and friends.  Ilona sighed,
knowing how lucky she was that Kalen was merely wounded.
     During the invasion she, herself, was put in charge of the castle
defense -- the  last line of defense. Someone,  somewhere decided that
since she was  the only female lieutenant in the  duchy, she should be
as far  away from the fighting  as possible, behind the  castle walls,
waiting,  just in  case she  was needed.  And she  was needed  indeed.
Needed to tend the wounded when  they were brought in. Ilona was angry
at the way  she was treated, simply  because she was a  woman. She was
trained as  well as  any in  the guard and  quite likely,  better than
most.  But then,  being behind  the castle  walls, she  was safe,  not
injured, not  violated. It was something  Kalen did not have  to worry
about and there were plenty of things to worry him where he was.
     Looking  around  the  market  place she  noticed  the  old  sage,
Corambis, talking to  a few people on  the corner. His was  one of the
few local  businesses that  did not  suffer the  after effects  of the
invasion.  As  soon  as  his  booth was  rebuilt,  he  started  seeing
customers, all seeking  advice for what to do next.  Ilona hesitated a
moment, then, seeing the people leaving, hurried to Corambis.
     The  sage waited  for her  to approach,  then smiled.  "Good day,
Miss."
     "Good day, Sage," Ilona returned the greeting.
     "Is there a reading I can do for you?" Cormabis asked.
     "I..." Ilona shuddered. She should  have thought first. "There is
something I need advice on, but I can not discuss it."
     The sage  smiled. "State  secrets are the  most fleeting  ones of
all. Come with me. I will only ask what I must."
     Ilona obediently followed the old sage into his booth. `I must be
crazy!'  she thought.  `If he  doesn't sell  me out,  I'll get  killed
pulling this stunt!'
     The sage  absentmindedly held the  door to the casting  room open
for Ilona to come in. "My assistant is out helping a friend of mine, a
doctor, so I have to make do on my own. Please, be seated."
     Ilona took a seat at the table sporting the wheel of life. It was
so new that  it reflected what little light there  was in the darkened
room.
     "From my daughter,"  Corambis said proudly, taking  a seat across
from Ilona.  "She had a  wood-crafter make it as  soon as she  heard I
lost the old one."
     "A good gesture,"  Ilona muttered. "You're a lucky man  to have a
daughter like that."
     "Lucky, yes," the sage agreed, "but  she had it made of pure oak.
Now  I fear  it favors  the Valonus,  but never  mind that,"  Corambis
smiled, pride still on his face. He gave her the velvet pouch with the
casting chips inside. "Hold this while you tell me your woes."
     Ilona accepted  the bag. "I don't  know where to begin.  Some new
information has  reached us  in the  Guard and  I want  to act  on it.
Lieutenant  Darklen may  missunderstand...and  if  Captain Koren  were
around, he would tell me to keep out  of it as well, but I think I can
do a lot of good by acting on it."
     "Give me that," Corambis took the bag from Ilona. "You don't need
a fortune told. You need to do  some soul searching. It's a good thing
I do both."
     Ilona smiled, in spite of herself.
     "Now," the sage continued, "don't think  yours is a one of a kind
problem. We all have to make hard decisions. You must do what you feel
is right."
     "But what if I'm doing something I shouldn't be?"
     "Like what? Taking  advice from someone who knows  nothing of the
problem? What makes me more qualified  than you? That I tell fortunes?
Lieutenant, in true  honesty, this is a case of  the blind leading the
blind."
     "But what if I'm wrong?"
     Corambis shook his head in dispair. "Do you know the problem?"
     "Of course!"
     "And you know how you want to solve it?"
     "Yes."
     "And you believe yourself to be on the right track?"
     "Yes!"
     "Then why are you here wasting my time and your money?"
     Ilona  blushed lightly  in  the  dim light.  "Two  years in  this
position and I still don't have  the confidence I need," she sighed an
offered the sage his fee.
     Corambis sternly pushed the money  back. "If you're wrong, pay me
later. If not, come back and tell me about it."
     "I will, sir," Ilona promised and  left the sage in his booth. At
least now she knew she was  crazy. Corambis was right. She was wasting
time. She was not assertive enough,  not confident of her abilities --
she knew  what she had  to do.  She should just  do it and  accept the
results as they come.
     Ilona again scanned  the market place, walking from  one booth to
another. The crowd had been steadily growing all morning, now being so
thick, it was hard to see more  than two booths away. Ilona fought her
way through the crowd to an  intersection in the rows, where the crowd
was not as congested. "Simon!" She  stopped across from the old sailor
and his stew  cart. The monkey jumped  with a scream and  pulled out a
spoon.
     "Yes, Lieutenant Milnor?"
     "How about some stew?"
     "Which will it be?" he asked.
     "Sun-sweet,"  Ilona answered.  "I'm in  a particularly  vile mood
just now." She took  the spoon from Skeebo and gave  him the coins for
the stew.
     "Here you  are," Simon handed a  steaming bowl to Ilona.  "If you
feel bad enough, then even this will taste good going down."
     "Is it true that only you and Guiseppi have been able to finish a
bowl of this?" Ilona asked, carefully sipping the spicy stew.
     "What do you think?" Simon asked.
     "I think it's a tall tale."
     "Actually it  is," Simon  laughed. "I only  poured myself  half a
bowl and Guiseppi never had taste."
     "Then I'll just have to be the first to do it," Ilona said. "I'll
see you later."
     "Ah!  But it  won't  be legitimate  if  I don't  see  you do  it,
Lieutenant," Simon said and Skeebo took hold of her belt.
     She  petted the  monkey until  it let  go. "I'm  with the  Guard,
Simon. You  know we don't  lie," she told him  and went back  into the
crowd. Behind  her the old sailor  sadly shook his head.  Not all were
pure and innocent and not all were as honest and reliable as one might
expect.
                   *         *         *
     Ilona felt a  little better as she ate the  burning stew. She was
determined to finish the spicy concoction and then go through with her
chosen assignment. If Kalen was not going to take the opportunity, she
was ready to do it on her own.
     Looking about the market place, she noticed a young boy carefully
crawling between the  feet of the people gathered  around a merchant's
table. As  soon as  he was on  his feet, he  started running  and she,
dropping the bowl of Simon's finest,  leapt after him. It was not long
before  the  crowd got  too  thick  to continue  and  after  a bit  of
struggling and dodging,  Ilona grabbed hold of the boy  and pulled him
up to his tip-toes by his ear. The boy was young, no older than eight,
skinny and by the  looks of him, homeless. "So what  did you get?" she
asked him, leading him out of the crowd. The boy did not answer.
     "Ten Bits for that ear!" somebody next to Ilona proclaimed.
     She  looked over  her  shoulder to  see a  man  in his  twenties,
looking anxiously at her.
     The boy  jerked hard, but  she still firmly  held his ear  and he
cried out  in pain.  "If he  does it again,  I'll give  it to  you for
free."
     "You're not going to arrest a child, are you?"
     "Are you planning to adopt him?"
     The young man reached into his purse. "Five Silver?"
     "Are you trying to buy a human being?"
     "I wish to take care of his fine."
     "So he  can rob another merchant  to pay you back,"  Ilona's eyes
narrowed. "Tell your boss I wish to  have a word with him about a deal
he was making yesterday. I know someone who is looking for a job..."
     "I am not  leaving without the boy," the  man declared, seemingly
missing what she said.
     Ilona pushed the child to him. "Tell Liriss he has until sunset."
                   *         *         *
     Kalen stared at  the ceiling, studying the crack  that ran almost
directly above  him, dividing  the ceiling  of Captain  Koren's office
evenly in half.  A sheet of parchment appeared in  his line of vision,
held by Ilona.
     "That's it."
     Kalen thumbed  through the sheets.  "A bit sketchy.  There's more
paper than report. You could fit it all on a page or two."
     "I've got a lot on my mind," she said.
     "Like what?"
     "Like you not getting enough rest."
     "That's not your problem," Kalen said. "I know my limits."
     "I won't  argue with  you," Ilona answered.  "You all  ready know
what I think."
     "I know," Kalen nodded. "Just tolerate me, please."
     "I'd better go."
     Kalen got up. "I'll walk you out."
     Ilona put her  arm around his waist and her  head on his shoulder
as they  walked through  the guard house.  Kalen returned  the gesture
with his good arm. "Do you want an escort?"
     "I'll be fine," she said, hoping he would not insist. He did not.
At the large  double doors they exchanged one final  embrace and Ilona
hurried off  into the  darkness. She  was worried  about what  she was
going to do, but the thoughts of what it might produce in the long run
helped relax her  fears. More importantly, she believed  that if Kalen
was not involved, he would not be compromised as the acting Captain of
the Guard.
     The darkness hid Ilona's figure, draped  in a black cloak, as she
made her way to the oldest part of town, just a few blocks from Dargon
Keep and stopped in the shadows  of a building. When her eyes adjusted
to the added  darkness of the alley, she spotted  a tall muscular man,
also robed in black, walking in her direction.
     Releasing the strap holding her  sword, Ilona started towards the
figure. The man stopped a few feet  from her and she recognized him as
Kesrin, Liriss' lieutenant.
     "What do you want?" he asked.
     "I  wanted to  meet  with someone  of  authority," she  answered,
trying to provoke him on purpose.
     Kesrin did not  appear to be affected by her  statement. "Tell me
first."
     Ilona did not like the sound of  that, but if it was the only way
she could get to see Liriss... She  told him all she had to; perhaps a
little more colorful than it really was, but it was plenty to convince
him to get her a meeting with Liriss.
     Kesrin considered deeply if he should,  but in the end decided it
was  better not  to come  back empty  handed and  took Ilona  down the
narrow winding streets of the old  portion of the city. It was obvious
he  took the  long  way and  Ilona  was pretty  sure  she saw  someone
trailing them, probably to make sure  that she was not being followed.
Finally Kesrin stopped at what appeared to be a random door and opened
it without knocking. Ilona followed him in.
     Inside,  at  the end  of  a  long  corridor,  was a  small  room,
furnished with  a single table  and two chairs.  It was dirty,  with a
musty smell and plenty of dark stains, some appearing to be blood. The
walls and the ceiling were rough and in bad shape.
     "Wait here," Kesrin said once she was inside and left her alone.
     Ilona sat  in one  of the  chairs, looking  at the  single greasy
candle burning  in the middle of  the table. It cast  little light and
there were no windows, not that having any would provide more light on
a night as  dark as this. There  were some noises in  the corridor and
Ilona looked at the door, noticing deep  cuts in its surface, as if it
had been attacked with an axe.
     As she watched, the door  opened and a tall, broad-shouldered man
in his forties  walked in. His eyes  looked tired and the  hair at his
temples was  beginning to turn  grey. The last  year must have  been a
hard one for him.
     As Ilona  studied Liriss, he  took the opportunity to  study her.
This was  not their first meeting.  They last saw each  other a little
over a year ago, in the spring of 1013, at a celebration thrown by one
of the local merchants on his daughter's wedding. Both were guests, on
neutral ground, unable to confront each other, but this was different.
Liriss tossed back his cloak, making  sure that Ilona knew that he was
armed. "It's been a long time, Lieutenant," he greeted her.
     Ilona rose from the chair, politely greeting the crime lord. "Not
so very long, Liriss."
     "Please be seated," he indicated to her.
     Instead,  Ilona  moved away  from  the  table.  "I will  be  more
comfortable standing up."
     Liriss nodded.  "Up to you." Uneasy  silence set in for  a moment
before he continued.  "If you are here to let  me know that Lieutenant
Darklen  is not  interested in  my  offer, I  all ready  knew that  at
sunset."
     Ilona faced Liriss, her face a  calm mask. There was no reason to
stall. They both knew why she was  here and there was no turning back.
"I did not come here for him. I came here for myself. I want the job."
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                              Fortunes 2
                           by Max Khaytsus
                (b.c.k.a.

     Corambis  stood over  the large  table  with the  Wheel of  Life,
scratching  his  head. "Thuna!  Thuna,  bring  me  a pebble  from  the
outside," he called out.
     Something crashed with  a thud in the outer room,  but he ignored
it, pressing his hand down on the velvet table. It tilted.
     "By Kurin's beard! Expert craftsman my ..."
     Another loud crash outside drowned  out the sage's words. "What's
going on out there, Thuna?" he shouted.
     The door opened and Dyann Taishent stepped into the casting room,
holding his hand in the air before him.
     "What is she doing?" Corambis demanded.
     "I'm not sure," Taishent looked back  out the door, "but she told
me to give you these," he dropped some pebbles on the table.
     Corambis shook his head.
     "...and she asked me to tell you to stuff them in your ..."
     Another  loud crash  in  the other  room cut  him  off and  Thuna
shrieked.
     "That  does it!"  Corambis snapped  and  went over  to the  door.
"Thuna, what are you doing?"
     His assistant jumped  into the casting room and  slammed the door
shut after herself. Her dark brown hair was a mess and in her hand she
held a broken stick. "You have a mouse, Sir," she whispered, trying to
maintain dignity.
     "A mouse," Corambis said flatly.
     "Well...a rat...maybe two..."
     "Then chase it out, girl! Get the broom and chase it out!"
     "I can't,  Sir. It ate the  broom." She handed him  the stick she
was holding. Sharp grooves of tooth marks marred it on one side and it
was splintered from being hit on the other.
     "In the  name of Ol!"  Corambis cursed.  "Three weeks and  we all
ready have rats! Here," he handed her some coins. "Go get me a cat."
     "I don't think a cat will solve it, Sir," Thuna muttered.
     "Get me something," Corambis ordered and opened the door.
     Thuna peeked  out cautiously, then  retrieved the remains  of the
broom from the sage and ran out.
     Corambis sat down holding his head.  "Rats all ready. It was fine
when I had the grain merchant next door..."
     Dyann Taishent sat down across from Corambis. "If you're too busy
to do a casting today, maybe we  can sip some cider and then chase the
rats around..."
     Corambis let out  a laugh. "Here, give me a  hand." He scooped up
the pebbles  on the table  and pointed to  one of the  corners. "Press
down on that."
     Taishent put both of his hands  on the edge and tilted the table,
while  the sage  fumbled at  the  opposing leg,  stuffing the  pebbles
beneath it.
     "There," Corambis finally got up. "Stable for now."
     "Rats?"
     "I wish.  Trissa got some  wood cutter to  make me this.  All the
legs are of  a different length. Twenty years bringing  her up and she
gets me a casting table made of oak."
     Taishent chuckled. "How does it cast?"
     Corambis  shrugged.  "Madam  Labin  asked  me  to  cast  for  her
pregnancy. According to my casting, she will have a puppy."
     Taishent's mouth dropped open. "What did you tell her?"
     "I said she  will have a healthy baby...if a  little on the hairy
side. I will have to call her back for a second casting..."
     "Do you still want to do a  casting with the table acting up like
that?"
     "Of  course,"  the sage  said.  "But  we  best  do it  under  the
influence." He got up and took a  jug and two glasses from the corner.
"At least the rats haven't gotten to this."
     "Jerid  has  been raiding  my  house  every few  days,"  Taishent
sighed. "He  took all the  cider and just two  days ago carried  off a
package of kavaliculi. Told me I was too old to eat all that."
     Corambis filled the two glasses and handed one to Taishent. "Live
good while you live."
     "I've got a  new hiding spot," Taishent winked.  "I'll be picking
up some pickled meats this evening."
     "Now,"  Corambis  produced a  bag  of  chips. "The  casting."  He
chanted the incantation,  naming Baranur as the recipient  and let the
nine blue and one red chips fall to the wheel carved in the table.
     The  ally  discs slipped  to  Pyrale,  the torch.  The  adversary
markers landed on  Kafarn, the ship. The other discs  landed in random
areas, some rolling out to the outer rim of the wheel, where the major
power elemental symbols  took form. The red  disc representing Baranur
danced around the table for a time  and finally came to rest on Aurus,
the mistweaver.
     "Be better off chasing rats," Taishent muttered.
     "Allys in water, enemies in fire..." Corambis said. "That's a new
one..."
     "Only  the body  is  on  Valonus," Taishent  pointed  to the  oak
symbol.
     "Usually all of them are there," Corambis sighed.
     Taishent quickly unwrapped his deck  of cards and placed the Fate
card  on the  table with  the wheel.  He shuffled  the deck,  said the
incantation and placed another card on Fate, face down. After a second
shuffling and casting,  he laid a pattern on the  surface. The top row
held Sword,  Wizard and Moon, the  one below it contained  Sorrow, Air
and Fortress.
     "If I  did not know any  better, I'd say we're  at war," Taishent
smirked with sarcasm and turned over the hidden card on Fate.
     "The Jester again!" Corambis exclaimed. "That's the fourth time!"
     "Fifth," Taishent corrected. "I first cast him last summer."
     "Indeed  you did,"  the sage  agreed. "This  makes it  five times
consecutively."
     "I guess we got it all right last summer," Taishent said, sitting
back down.  "The unrest  of the  mob, the actions  of that  coven, the
Duke's trial...the war..."
     "Do the far future," Corambis prompted.
     Taishent recast  the cards and  laid out  the last row  -- Water,
Knight and Fire.
     Corambis fumbled to  refill their glasses with  cider. "Why water
and fire?" he wondered. "Both of us..."
     "Clifton Dargon's fleet?" Taishent guessed.
     "But why the fire?"
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                                                   **
                                                ******  ****
                                                 **   **  **
                                        ****    **   **  **
              ****              ****   **  **  **     *****
            **   **   **  **  **  **  **  **  **
           **   **   **  **  **  **  **  **
          **   **   **  **    *****
         **   **     ***
          ****
             **

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     (C)    Copyright   June,    1991,    DargonZine,   Editor    Dafydd
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1                                                             /
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  D    D  AAAA RRR  GGGG OOOO NN  N      Z  I NN  N EEEE  ||
  D     D A  A R  R G    O  O N N N     Z   I N N N E     || Volume 4
-=========================================================+|)
  D    D  AAAA RRR  G GG O  O N N N   Z     I N N N E     || Issue  4
  DDDDD   A  A R  R GGGG OOOO N  NN  ZZZZZZ I N  NN EEEE  ||
                                                           \\
                                                             \
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--   DargonZine Volume 4, Issue 4        12/17/91          Cir 1215   --
------------------------------------------------------------------------
--                            Contents                                --
------------------------------------------------------------------------
 The Changeling Never Known, Parts I and II
                              Wendy Hennequin        Yule 1, 1014
 Pact II                      Max Khaytsus           Yuli 12-13, 1014
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                    The Changeling Never Known
                            * Part I *
                        by Wendy Hennequin
                   (b.c.k.a )

     Richard just  Richard ducked into  the Sword and  Serpent Tavern,
and, putting  his back  against the  wall, he  searched the  dim room.
Luckily, the  dusky room  matched the  exterior twilight,  and Richard
needed no time for his eyes to adjust. He kept his hand on his cutlass
all the  same. Eel Harbor,  on the shores  of Duchy Northfield,  was a
dangerous place at night.
     "Richard!"  a  voice  called  out,  and  Richard  cursed  himself
although the voice  was a known and friendly one.  The bowmaster hated
to be seen before he himself had  seen. "Richard, come over and have a
drink. Dinner's on the way."
     After  another moment's  quick  survey,  Richard located  Captain
Gaoel  Fynystere of  the Eclipse  sitting in  a corner  table--the one
Richard would have chosen himself, in fact. It was hardly visible from
the doorway.  Satisfied, Richard approached, then  paused hostilely as
he saw the other man at the table.
     After a  moment, Richard  resumed his approach  slowly, carefully
observing  the stranger  as  he  came closer.  The  man  was tall  and
elegantly slim in  the dimness, and he held beside  him a large, lumpy
object which Richard could not  identify at the distance. Another step
and the object became a plump lute,  and the glowing lamp on the table
glittered suddenly on a metal chain hung with pendants. Two more paces
showed  the  man's face  in  the  lamplight: handsome,  dark,  perhaps
Richard's age. Not  taking his eyes off the  stranger's dark, pleasant
ones, Richard sat  in the chair Fynystere kicked to  him, and observed
final  details: the  colors and  cut  of the  stranger's clothes,  the
designs on the medallions, and the other side of his face.
     The clothes  were well made  of fairly expensive  and comfortable
silk--the cloth Richard  preferred for his own  clothes, but Richard's
plain  white  blouse  and  close-cut  breeches  were  not  exquisitely
embroidered with  gold and  silver threads.  The stranger's  taste was
excellent; his  suit was  elegant, colorful but  not gaudy,  and would
look at home here in a tavern or in a nobleman's hall.
     Still, Richard felt wary, as he did with all strangers, and so he
looked at the medallions to see what they could tell him. The first, a
badge  denoting  the  second-highest  rank in  the  Baranurian  Bardic
College surprised  him; Richard  doubted that the  seedy port  town of
Eel's  Harbor ever  sheltered a  bard of  such high  rank before.  The
second medallion,  a gold coin  depicting King Haralan's  head, seemed
inconsequential to Richard,  for he was familiar with  the practice of
bards  wearing their  first coins  as trophies.  The third  medallion,
however, intrigued him: it was a gold executioner's hood.
     The stranger  smiled at him,  and then Richard saw,  with wonder,
the  unusual jagged  scar,  perhaps  a burn,  perhaps  a  cut, on  the
stranger's face.  Richard shook  his head  to clear  sudden, disturbed
feelings from it--there was no reason for them--and smiled back.
     "Richard,"  Fynystere  began, and  Richard  could  tell that  the
captain had already been in his cups, "this is Matteo." A bard with no
other  name? Richard  wondered.  "Matteo, my  bowmaster, Richard  just
Richard."
     "Pleased to know  you, Bowmaster," Matteo said,  and Richard knew
Matteo  was from  Magnus  by  his accent.  Of  course, Richard  chided
himself; the  Bardic College was in  Magnus, and many bards  came from
there.
     Praying  that  Matteo  had  never seen  him  in  Magnus,  Richard
answered formally, "And I you, sir. Tell  me, what does a bard of such
high skill as yourself do in Eel Harbor in a dump like this?"
     "Ask  no questions,  Rich,"  Fynystere growled  one  of the  most
important rules of the Eclipse.
     "Do  our  rules  apply  off  board,  captain?"  Richard  wondered
amiably.
     "Do  you want  me  to start  asking  *you* questions?"  Fynystere
snapped pointedly, and Richard felt a  chill in his heart. His secrets
were deep and dangerous, and the bowmaster guarded them jealously as a
dragon. If he were asked--if anyone knew--
     But Matteo laughed,  and his eyes were shrewd. "I'm  a bard; I'll
tell  freely. I  was  at the  battle of  Oron's  Crossroads, sir.  The
Beinisons weren't gentle with Lady Martis' army."
     Richard abruptly suspected  two things: the man was  no bard, and
he was a liar. No bard of  such high distinction would mistake a Royal
Officer's rank and refer to a  Knight Captain as merely "Lady." As for
the scar--
     "Damn well healed for two months," Richard muttered.
     Matteo laughed,  "Yes, and I  have a good mage-healer,  Hrina, to
thank for it.  Trained by Marcellon Equiville  himself--have you heard
of  him, sir?  The  High  Mage and  Royal  Physician.  Hrina has  been
attendant  on  Lady  Martis  and  myself since  we  were  together  in
Magnus--I an aspirant  to the Bardic College, Lady  Martis an aspirant
to Knighthood, and Hrina a student of the High Mage."
     That explained  the scar  and the  familiarity with  Dame Captain
Westbrook, but Richard still wondered  about some things. "Is it true,
as I hear," Richard began  carefully, "that Dame Captain Westbrook may
never fight again?"
     Matteo nodded sadly.  "My poor lady," he rued,  sighing. "A wound
in  the upper  arm, Bowmaster,  and a  bad one.  By the  time my  lady
arrived back in Pyridain, Hrina could do but little for her."
     Richard found  that odd, and odd  too that such an  old friend as
Matteo claimed  to be  would leave  Dame Captain  Westbrook at  such a
time. "It's a long way from Pyridain," Richard commented.
     "Indeed," Matteo agreed, sipping from  his goblet. "I work my way
north to Magnus, but my business I cannot tell."
     Richard nodded,  satisfied. The  man probably  bore some  sort of
message from Dame  Martis to Magnus--probably to  the Knight Commander
or   the    King.   Still,   Richard   felt    unjustifiably   uneasy.
Something--Richard couldn't tell what--bothered  him about the way the
man spoke.
     "I hear you sing, Bowmaster," Matteo continued. "Your captain has
told me you have even written songs."
     Something was wrong with his  accent. Oh, it sounded like Magnus'
voice, but something  wasn't quite right about it. Perhaps  he grew up
somewhere else first, Richard reasoned.  More to keep the bard talking
than anything  else, Richard replied  casually, "Oh, Bron  of Beggar's
End writes the songs. I merely clean them up."
     "Clean them  up," the  captain grumbled,  reaching for  his grog.
"Clean them up. Why  should you clean them up, Rich?  A song can never
be too bawdy."
     "I meant fixing the rhythm,"  Richard explained, rolling his eyes
in exasperation. He looked back at  Matteo. "Bron has all the metrical
skill of a blacksmith."
     "You  would think,"  Matteo replied  smiling, "that  seamen would
take to rhythm naturally, what with  knowing the tides and the rocking
of the ship and all."
     "Not  Bron.  He's about  as  much  a  poet as  Donegal,"  Richard
replied, relaxing a little.
     "Your leech, I believe?" Matteo wondered.
     "The same,"  Fynystere belched. "Where is  that whoreson, anyhow,
Rich? Wasn't he to meet us here for dinner? And where is that damn cat
of yours?"
     Richard smiled  at the  reference to the  Red Tiger,  Richard and
Donegal's pet and the Eclipse's  mascot. "Damn cat" was what Fynystere
called her  when in a good  mood. "Donegal and Cedric--the  mate--" he
added  for Matteo's  benefit, "--are  off somewhere  getting wild,  as
usual. Kitty insisted on keeping an eye on them."
     "Kitty? Your lady?" Matteo wondered.
     "You could call her that, I guess."
     "A lady on a pirate ship," Matteo chuckled, pulling his lute out.
The  strap touched  the medallions  and moved  them. Matteo  plucked a
string and adjusted its pin slightly.  "I should put that into a song.
Where  did you  find her,  Bowmaster, this  lady who  dares sail  with
pirates?"
     "The  Islands  of the  Sun,"  Richard  answered, staring  at  the
executioner's hood  medal to  shake his  preoccupation with  the man's
accent. "She wouldn't let us leave her."
     "Tell me about her," Matteo said. "What does she look like?"
     "I'll tell," Richard  promised, leaning closer for  a better look
at the pendants, "if you'll tell me where you got that medal."
     "What, the coin  or the hood?" Matteo wondered.  "Surely you know
where I got the Bardic Medal."
     "Of course," Richard retorted, and  his voice was sharper than he
had  intended.  The  man's  not-quite  Magnus  accent  grated  on  him
inexplicably. "I meant the hood."
     "The hood was given to me  by the Lord Executioner of Welspeare,"
Matteo explained  as he tuned  another string. "I've been  thinking of
melting it into a ring. It's rather gruesome."
     Richard couldn't argue with that.
     "And the coin I earned when singing for the Duchess of Narragan."
Matteo  reached  for it  with  his  right hand  and  held  it out  for
Richard's  inspection. "A  gold  sovereign, and  my first  performance
before a noble, too."
     Richard knew  that no bard  whose singing  was worth less  than a
sovereign even  earned the right  to perform  before a noble.  He said
nothing, however, and  stared at King Haralan's  head, stamped rigidly
into the gold.
     Matteo noticed  Richard's gaze  and picked  up the  sovereign. He
looked  down  at   the  King's  head,  then  at   Richard.  "Tell  me,
fellow-Magnan, does it look like the King? I've never seen him."
     He lived  long enough in Magnus  to go to the  Bardic College and
acquire  the city's  accent, but  had never  seen the  King? Richard's
stomach tightened. Something  was wrong with this  man, definitely. It
didn't  make  sense:  Matteo  had  lived  in  Magnus  long  enough  to
acquire--perhaps  *learn*?--Magnus' accent,  but  had  never seen  the
King, who appeared in parades and pageants and law courts?
     Richard carefully kept his eyes  calm despite the sudden quake in
his heart and replied, "I really  don't know. I haven't been to Magnus
in fourteen years. King Arneth was  still alive then, and King Haralan
was a young man."
     Matteo again turned to coin so  he could view the face. "I always
wondered if  this is what he  looked like," the bard  mused. "I should
like to know a King when I see him."
     The food came  then, and Matteo returned to tuning  the lute. The
captain perked up slightly. "Where is that bloody Donegal?"
     Richard rose smoothly and  stilled his nervousness sternly. "I'll
go look for him, Captain."
     Suddenly, Matteo's  eyes widened  in horror,  and Richard  felt a
hand on  his shoulder.  Before Richard  could attack,  Donegal's voice
said, "Sit down."
     Richard nearly jumped  despite the friendly voice. Why  was he so
edgy?
     "'Evenin', Captain,"  the leech greeted with  his normal cheerful
casualness. Suddenly, Donegal's voice changed. "Good evening, sir."
     Richard's hands tightened when Donegal's  tone did. The Red Tiger
nudged beneath Richard's  palm but growled softly  instead of purring.
Suddenly, Richard wanted very badly to leave.
     "What  *is*  that--that--"  Matteo  gasped,  and  Richard's  mood
improved spitefully at the bard's fear. Let *him* be uncomfortable!
     "Damn cat," said Fynystere.
     "Hey,  Rich,"  Donegal  began,  and Richard  could  tell  without
looking that Donegal's usual cheerfulness was now being feigned. "Hey,
Rich, you've *got* to see this wench across the street. She's just the
kind you like--big and--"
     "Let's  go,"  Richard agreed  quickly,  and  he left  the  tavern
without turning.
     "See  you later,  Captain," Donegal  ended the  conversation, and
Richard heard in the leech's voice that he was under strict control.
     "Something's wrong  with that  bard," Richard muttered  when they
had crossed the street. "Something's wrong."
     "You're damn right," Donegal breathed, and Richard, for the first
time that  evening, looked  at his good  friend. Donegal's  white eyes
were wide and wild  in his dark face. "I don't know  who the hell he's
after, but I  can't risk being in there  with him. If he knew  I was a
slave--"
     Richard shook his head. "What  are you babbling about? There's no
slavery in Baranur."
     "He'd drag me back to Beinison--"
     "He's from  Magnus," Richard corrected  the leech, then,  after a
moment, he corrected  himself: "He says he's from Magnus,  but I don't
believe it."
     After a  moment of silence,  Donegal asked quietly, "How  did you
know, Rich?"
     "Something about his accent isn't right."
     "He's not from Magnus, Rich."
     Richard  rubbed  his  arms;  the  midsummer  night  had  suddenly
chilled. "How do you know?"
     "Did you see that scar on his cheek? The hood medal he wears?"
     "Aye." The bowmaster  shivered, afraid of the answer  to his next
question. "What are they, Donegal?"
     "They're the signs of the Masked God, Rich. That so-called Magnus
bard is a priest of Amante the Masked God. He's an assassin."

                          * Part II *

     When  Donegal  na  Valenfaer  returned to  the  tavern  with  the
skittish  Red  Tiger,  he  found only  Captain  Fynystere,  more  than
half-drunk  and  half-  asleep,  at the  corner  table.  Ignoring  the
astonished  stares  and frightened  murmurs  of  the patrons,  Donegal
turned  and searched  the common  room quickly.  That so-called  bard,
thank Sanar, was gone.
     Heaving a  grateful sigh, the  leech slid into the  corner beside
the  captain, and  the Red  Tiger settled  peacefully at  his feet.  A
pretty wench  smiled at Donegal  and motioned  to an ale  mug. Donegal
nodded and began to feel much better.
     "Hey, Captain," he jostled Fynystere, "having fun, sir?"
     Fynystere groaned,  lifted his dangling head,  and gazed blearily
at his  leech. "Oh, Donegal,"  the captain slurred, "you're  back. You
missed dinner. Matteo sings like an angel."
     "Who?"
     "The Magnus bard. Richard really liked him," Fynystere continued,
sliding forward to  rest his head on  his hands. "He took  him back to
the ship."
     "He *what*?"
     Donegal practically flew  out of the chair and ran  for the door.
Kitty, the Red Tiger, sped at his heels.
     Richard took that bard back to the ship?!
     "He's  an assassin,"  Donegal had  told Richard  when they  stood
outside the  tavern two hours ago.  "All the Masked God's  priests are
assassins,  torturers, executioners,  something.  And he's  important,
Rich."
     "What  the hell  is a  Beinison priest  doing here?"  Richard had
wondered, his face pale and his breath short.
     "Going to  kill someone,  I suppose,"  Donegal had  shrugged. The
leech hadn't really cared; all Donegal  wanted to do was get away from
that "bard" as soon as possible.
     "Who?"
     Donegal had been surprised at  the question. "How the hell should
I know?"
     More surprising than the demand were the sudden, violent hands on
Donegal's shoulders.  Richard shook him  once. "Think, damn  you," the
bowmaster hissed, murder  in his voice. "Who could he  be here to get?
You said he's important. What did you mean?"
     Donegal struggled  beneath Richard's  large, hard  hands. "Gold's
the highest rank in their priesthood. That executioner's hood is their
symbol, and it was gold."
     Richard  was silent  a moment,  but his  strong fingers  dug into
Donegal's flesh. "So he wouldn't be here to kill just anybody?"
     "I guess not, but Rich--"
     "My God," Richard abruptly breathed. "Oh, my God."
     Donegal had never seen the  bowmaster so frightened, and they had
faced death--and  worse--together so  many times that--  But Richard's
blue eyes held terror, and  his face was corpse-grey. Donegal couldn't
swear to  it, but he thought  the strong archer was  shaking. "What is
it, Rich?"
     Richard didn't answer.  Face stony, Richard turned  slowly in the
darkness  and began  to move  away as  if sleepwalking.  "Don't worry,
Donegal. We won't let him take you."
     "Wait, Rich--"
     "Bowmaster?" Donegal shrank into the darkness as soon as he heard
the voice; he  did not want that disguised priest  to see him. Richard
turned to the  so-called bard. "Where is your friend?  I've never seen
his like, except among the Beinison slaves."
     The  final word  had sent  Donegal  fleeing into  the night,  and
Donegal had not seen Richard since  then. But he must have returned to
the  tavern; Captain  Fynystere had  said that  Richard had  taken the
"bard" back to the Eclipse--
     Donegal  groaned internally  and quickened  his already-sprinting
pace. Sanar guard him, Donegal prayed. Alanna, guard him on your ship.
     The Red Tiger rushed ahead impatiently, and Donegal increased his
speed with great effort. What am I doing? he wondered at himself. That
priest could haul me back to Beinison--
     And hurl Richard into the grave.
     The  Red  Tiger   leapt  easily  onto  the   gang  plank,  turned
expectantly,  and  waited  for  Donegal. "Go!"  he  breathed,  panting
slightly. "Find  him." The  Red Tiger  seemed to  nod before  she sped
away. Donegal tried to breathe deeply enough to shout, "Watch!"
     The  word came  out less  impressively than  Donegal wished,  but
Morise of  Equiville, the  boatswain, heard. "Ev'nin',  leech," Morise
greeted him casually. "Th' law on yir back?"
     "Richard!" Donegal huffed, trying to  slow and calm his breathing
and his pounding heart. "Where is Richard?"
     "Th'  bowmaster's  b'low  decks  with a  bard  ir  sech,"  Morise
supplied readily. "'E sings richt purty--"
     Donegal dashed for  the stairs and fell down them  noisily in his
haste. "Rich!" Donegal rasped, throwing open the door to the officers'
shared cabin.
     Empty, dark space stared back at him. Donegal grabbed the lintels
for support.
     "Whaire's  th' fir',  Donegal?" Donegal  sprang into  the air  at
Morise's words. "What's wrong wi' yir?"
     Donegal closed  his eyes tightly.  Richard could be in  that dark
room, dead on the floor. How would  he know? How could he know without
lighting the lamp--and giving that false bard time to leap out at him?
Donegal took a deep breath and tried to think. How could he know where
that false bard  and Richard were? "Where's the  bowmaster?" he panted
again. "Morise--"
     "Cap'n's cab'n, I  think," Morise obliged, staring  at Donegal as
if he were mad. "What's in yir, boy?"
     Donegal turned with all the energy  he had left and stumbled down
the hall to the captain's quarters. Impatiently swinging her tail, the
Red  Tiger  waited  at  the  captain's  door.  Donegal  swallowed  and
attempted normal  breathing. He failed  miserably. "Has the  bard left
yet?"
     "No' yet."
     Thank Sanar. Maybe  there was time left to  save Richard. Donegal
staggered the  last few feet and  collapsed beside the Red  Tiger, who
continued to scratch the captain's door impatiently.
     The  bard's sudden,  low laugh  chilled Donegal's  blood, and  he
shivered. "Am I?" he said with a voice pleasantly evil.
     "Do  you  think I  don't  know  the  marks  of the  Masked  God's
priests?"  Richard  challenged  with   even  confidence,  and  Donegal
released a  momentous, grateful  sigh. "I'm  no stranger  to Beinison.
I've seen your like before."
     "Come, be  logical," the pseudo-bard soothed,  and Donegal shook.
"Why  would a  Beinison  priest  be here  in  Northfield--in an  enemy
country, for Stevene's sake?"
     Donegal reached  for the  doorknob as  Richard emitted  a careful
laugh. "Do you think using the Stevene's name will fool me? Or that it
will distract me?" Richard returned, his voice suddenly filled with an
inexplicable power  which made  Donegal shiver  in responsive  awe. "I
know what you are, and I can guess why you're here."
     Donegal turned the doorknob  silently. Locked. Damn you, Richard!
Didn't the man have better sense?
     "Why am  I here?" the bard  demanded, his voice sinking  into the
frigid tones of the Masked God's priests. "Tell me, O bowmaster."
     "Where are the keys?" Donegal  hissed to Morise, who drew closer.
"We've got to unlock this door."
     "None but the cap'n has  keys," Morise whispered loudly. Angry at
his noise, Donegal chopped the air to silence him. "We can't get in."
     "There's got  to be  another set," Donegal  argued. "Rich  got in
there somehow, and we've got to go in after him."
     "And what,  pray, makes  you think that?"  the fake  bard laughed
coldly.
     "You revealed  it through  your carelessness,"  Richard answered,
his voice still flowing with that new might. "It does not matter."
     The  bard  chuckled sinisterly.  Before  he  could speak,  Morise
interrupted, "How're yir gonna get in thaire?"
     Donegal looked  at Morise, and  his mind raced.  "Porthole. Isn't
there a porthole?"
     "Ne'er go through it, Donegal," Morise objected. "T' small."
     Richard's voice raised suddenly  without losing its control. "You
will not kill the--"
     "Oooooh--"  someone  bellowed, and  Donegal  whirled  to see  the
drunken captain  sway into the  hallway. Donegal motioned  sharply for
Fynystere's silence,  but the captain  ignored him. "Ooooh,"  he began
again, then  started to  sing a drunken,  bawdy ballad  with deafening
tunelessness.
     "Then  you  will  die!"  the bard  shrieked.  Something  crashed.
Donegal  heard  Richard  cry  out.  The  Red  Tiger  roared  in  angry
helplessness.
     Donegal sprang  to his feet and  rushed at the captain.  "Give me
the keys!" Donegal screamed. "Give me the keys!"
     The captain  staggered without hurry, singing  his ditty merrily.
"Ooooh," he started the refrain again.
     Glass  shattered. Something  thudded against  the wall.  The bard
snarled. Richard howled in pain, his power gone.
     "Give me the keys!" Donegal  shrieked, taking hold of Fynystere's
shoulders and shaking him. Fynystere  fumbled in both pockets. The Red
Tiger pawed the door anxiously. Something crashed again.
     "Rich!" Donegal called desperately.
     The bard laughed.
     Another thud. Fynystere fished the  iron key ring from somewhere.
A heavy  object slid across  the floor  in the room  beyond. Donegal's
shaking hands  searched the  keys. Above decks,  men were  running and
calling. The world thundered in Donegal's ears. He shoved the key into
the quivering lock and turned it.
     The   Red   Tiger  lunged   into   the   room,  distracting   the
knife-wielding, gory bard who spun and smiled through the blood like a
dragon. The blade rose. Donegal  charged into the false bard's embrace
and cried out as they both fell. Metal clattered on the floor. The Red
Tiger leapt and roared at the bard who reached for the knife. The bard
shouted a curse.
     Suddenly, without willing  it, Donegal rolled onto  his back. The
bard cried  out, and blood  spurted by Donegal's eyes.  Gleaming metal
danced on the edge of Donegal's  eyesight. He reached--it was warm and
slid in  his hand--  and when  it hit  home, Donegal's  wrist wrenched
painfully.
     The bard collapsed onto Donegal's chest.
     Magic hands appeared from nowhere  to haul the bard off Donegal's
body. The surgeon rolled toward  the Red Tiger, who stood protectively
between the bard's  corpse and Richard's bloody  body. "Rich!" Donegal
croaked.
     The bowmaster was still.
     Despairing, Donegal  staggered to  his feet  but crashed  when he
slipped on  the blood.  Feebly, the  leech crawled  to his  friend and
tried to  rip away the  gory shirt.  Even with it  obscuring Richard's
chest, Donegal knew there were at least two wounds.
     By magic, Donegal's  medical bag appeared on his  lap, and voices
buzzed around his head as he drew out his tools--
     "--Did you see Kitty? She nearly bit his hand clean off!"
     "--Wonder what the bowmaster was doing?"
     "--Ain't no bard can fight like that!"
     One  voice was  Morise's. "Stow  th'  trash, and  we'll heave  it
t'morrir when  we set  sail. Can't  be lettin' 'm  know we's  killed a
bard."
     "Water!" Donegal demanded. He was barely conscious of the gentle,
thin hands  of Luen Half-Elven,  the youngest  of the crew,  setting a
small cauldron and a pile of clean bandages near him. Richard's wounds
were deep and dangerous, and Donegal could see nothing else.
     Luen's slender  fingers sponged away  the blood so  Donegal could
see,  and the  frantic surgeon  groaned for  his friend's  life. Blood
gushed from wounds. He tried to thread the needle with a quaking hand.
     Richard cried  out when  Luen touched  him, and  Donegal started,
losing  the needle  completely.  "My brother,"  the bowmaster  moaned,
thrashing. "My brother."
     "Hold him  down!" Donegal  shouted, and several  disembodied arms
appeared to hold Richard still. Luen handed Donegal a threaded needle,
and Donegal stitched.  Richard screamed his pain, but  was held still.
Horror-struck and numb, Donegal stitched.
     And then it  was done. Richard lay still on  the floor, breathing
shallowly  as his  patched  chest  rose and  fell.  There was  nothing
Donegal could do but wait and pray and hope.
     Trembling,  Donegal  fell  against  a wall  and  finally  allowed
himself to  think. "Rich, you're a  stupid ass," he choked.  "Attack a
Masked God's priest."
     "Dead?" Richard  gasped, and  Donegal jumped. Sweat  peppered the
bowmaster's forehead  and streaked his  bloody hair, but he  turned to
Donegal. "Dead?"
     Donegal  pulled  himself  to  Richard's side.  "He's  dead,"  the
surgeon  answered, cradling  his  friend's  head. Unexpectedly,  tears
spilled from Richard's  blue eyes as they closed,  relieved. "What the
hell did you think you were doing?"
     "My brother," the bowmaster  murmured, relaxing beneath Donegal's
hands.  Richard's  eyes  opened   again.  "His  necklace...the  King's
head...his necklace..."
     "What's he talking about?" Luen asked, sliding toward them.
     Donegal wasn't  too certain himself.  "Go tell Morise I  want the
necklace that...bard was  wearing. Now," Donegal snapped  when the boy
didn't move. As  Luen left, Donegal looked back at  Richard. "You're a
god-damned fool, Rich."
     Richard shook his head weakly. "My brother..."
     "And you  may die  for it," Donegal  finished, his  voice rising.
Balancing Richard's head on his  leg, the leech scrambled for bandages
and began to wrap the wounds. "I told you he was an assassin. Why--"
     "My brother," Richard croaked.  "He said...something he said...he
was going to kill my brother."
     Donegal  laughed nervously  and  tucked the  bandage  to keep  it
fastened  securely. "Your  brother?  You've got  to  be kidding.  That
priest was of the highest rank--" Donegal laughed again, frightened by
the  unthinkable,  and  asked   thoughtlessly,  "Is  your  brother  so
important?"
     Richard closed his eyes and nodded weakly. "Essential."
     Donegal shuddered. Who was Richard's  brother, that a High Priest
of the Masked God was sent to deal with him?
     Good Sanar, who was Richard then?
     "Promise me."  Startled out  of his  fright, Donegal  looked down
into Richard's pained blue eyes. "Promise me."
     "Anything, Rich," Donegal vowed,  watching blood seep through the
bandages despite the fine stitching.
     "If I die--"
     "You won't die," Donegal  asserted stubbornly, suddenly unwilling
to face the fact.
     Before Richard could  answer, Luen rushed in  again, panting, and
gave Donegal the  necklace with the three pendants,  which the surgeon
gave immediately to Richard. "Go  get me the healing potions," Donegal
ordered sternly, "quick!" If Donegal  could get enough healing potions
into him--special  healing that  the old leech  his master  had taught
him--he could avoid a fever, increase  the healing, and give Richard a
better chance at life.
     "And a sleeping potion?" Luen wondered, pausing at the door.
     Donegal nodded.  Richard might  need one, in  his pain.  But when
Donegal looked down at his old friend, Richard was already asleep, the
coin on the "bard"'s necklace clutched to his heart.
     In the hallway, Fynystere snored.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                           Pact
                          part 2
                     by Max Khaytsus
        (b.c.k.a. )

     "You did  what?" Kalen demanded,  shocked. Without waiting  for a
more complete explanation, he jumped  out of bed and started dressing.
He had had a bad feeling brewing in his stomach ever since his meeting
with Kesrin. When  Ilona told him the news of  her evening trip, those
fears came to life.
     Ilona stared at him from the bed, full of surprise. Where was the
execution?  Kalen  had   never  reacted  this  way   to  her  personal
investigations  before, but  something  was wrong  now  and there  was
genuine fear in his eyes.
     "What's wrong?" Ilona asked.
     Kalen looked at Ilona, jamming  his tunic in his pants. Obviously
his intentions did not include neatness. "Damn."
     But he did not look angry. He never really looked angry and Ilona
could not recall  any rumors to that effect. None  the less, something
was absolutely wrong.
     "Get dressed and go to the  guard house," Kalen told her. "I want
two men watching Koren at all times."
     "What? What does he have to do with this?"
     Kalen pulled Ilona out of bed  and held her by her shoulders. His
voice was low  and a bit excited.  "I didn't agree to  work for Liriss
because a  part of the  deal was to have  me replace the  Captain. The
only way for me to achieve the  position is to kill him. Liriss agreed
to your proposal just because you're so  close to me. If he puts me in
charge now, the  effect will be the same. Now  get dressed!" His voice
rose only at the end.
     Ilona started dressing, too concerned  about what could happen to
think about what she had done.  Kalen strapped on his belt and grabbed
his sword. "Where are you going?"
     "The castle. I need to be sure nothing's happened yet." He kissed
her quickly, missing her lips, but not making a second try in his rush
to leave.
     Ilona was  dressed and ready  only moments after Kalen  had left.
She grabbed her  scabbard and made for the door,  strapping the weapon
on as  she hurried out. Only  now did she realize  the consequences of
the decision she had made, but  now she was committed, as was everyone
else. It was  not the decision she  would have made if  Kalen had told
her everything, but what was done  was done. Hopefully they could turn
this seeming mistake to their  advantage. If they could dismantle just
a small part of the underground, it would be worth the risk.
     Under normal circumstances if the Captain was killed or even hurt
due  to her  actions,  she would  have resigned  and  faced any  legal
charges that would have been levied, but in this case she did not have
the luxury  of giving up.  That made her  even more determined  to see
everything through and to make the people responsible pay.

     Jerid Taishent tensely paced the  office of Duke Clifton Dargon's
leading general, Captain Lansing Bartol. The Duke was off leading King
Haralan's  fleet against  the  Beinison flotilla  that,  just a  month
before, had attacked the town of Dargon, hoping to secure the Coldwell
as an access  point deep into Baranurian lands, where  it could easily
resupply the army moving up the Laraka towards Gateway. Captain Bartol
himself was currently off in the southern portion of the duchy raising
troops for the King's army, now struggling against the invading forces
on the Laraka.
     With Captain Bartol gone, and all the other Ducal lieutenants out
in various parts  of the Duchy helping with the  recruiting, Jerid was
in charge of the castle and all the troops that were within his reach.
The office was one of the luxuries of carrying such a responsibility.
     There were  certainly better things  to do  in the middle  of the
night than pace an office, but something had happened. A page woke him
up not long  ago, saying that a  man was caught committing  a crime in
the keep itself. There  was more, but Jerid was not  in a condition to
listen to long sentences  and the boy did not look  awake enough to be
making them.  All that was made  clear was that the  crime was serious
and Jerid's presence was required.
     Now  Jerid  waited  for the  man  to  be  brought  to him  to  be
questioned, and Jerid did not know what questions to ask.
     A  knock sounded  on the  door and  a second  later three  guards
entered. It took Jerid  a moment to realize that the  hands of the one
in  the middle  were tied.  "Guralnik,"  he said  to the  only man  he
recognized. With  the war on, the  staff was mixed right  and left and
these days  it was perfectly  normal for him  to not recognize  a good
half of the men.
     Guralnik stepped forward, his scabbard clanking against the metal
greaves on  his outer leg.  "Sir, we caught  this man trying  to break
into Captain  Koren's room. He  put up a  fight when we  first stopped
him.  And he  had  these  on him,"  Guralnik  offered  Jerid items  he
confiscated from the prisoner.
     "Is he  a member of  the Guard?" Jerid  asked. The last  thing he
needed now was a break in. Worse yet, all he needed was one of his own
men trying to kill the town's war hero.
     "He was hired  last week," Guralnik said, casting  his eyes down.
The man was a new recruit.
     Jerid accepted the lockpick and the vial filled with green liquid
from Guralnik  and examined them  closely. "Thank you,  Sergeant. When
she wakes  up, have Elizabeth  examine the  potion. Have her  come see
me...and send a message to Lieutenant Darklen or whoever is on duty."
     "Yes, Sir," Guralnik barked.
     "Have him  sit down,"  Jerid motioned  to the  tied man.  The two
guards brought him to  a chair and forced him into  it. Jerid took the
time to place the vial on the desk and returned to the prisoner. "What
were you after?" he asked.
     The man did not respond, blankly staring at the wall.
     Jerid stepped between  the man and the crack he  was focusing on.
"I asked you what you were doing."
     Again there was no answer.
     "Lock  him  up," Jerid  ordered.  He  was  not about  to  torture
anybody, particularly with as little information as he had. He was not
much for torture anyhow and the Duke  had a set policy on dealing with
prisoners anyway.
     Watching  the guards  lead the  man out,  Jerid retreated  to the
corner of  the room and  considered looking the  man's name up  in the
file, but  he neither  had the name,  nor any idea  of where  the file
would be. Keeping files up to date was the least of his concerns these
days and men and  their records were hardly ever in  the same place at
the same time.
     There was another knock at the door.
     "Enter."
     It opened and Kalen Darklen walked in, a guard on his heels.
     "Am I to  assume my man covered  a league both ways  in under ten
minutes?" Jerid asked. He knew the answer.
     "Can we talk alone?" Kalen asked.
     "Leave us," Jerid told the guard.
     "Is the  room secured?" Kalen  asked when the man  left. Whatever
brought him  here must have  weighted heavily on his  mind. Ordinarily
this  question  was  left  for war  councils  and  strategic  planning
sessions.
     "Better than the Duke's personal  quarters," Jerid said. "All the
spiders report in at midnight."
     Kalen's  expression remained  grim. "I  just spoke  with Sergeant
Guralnik. He told me what happened.  I don't want the prisoner to have
contact  with anybody.  I'll have  him picked  up in  the morning  and
interrogated by my men."
     "Hey, hey! Slow down. I've got  him locked up. He's got the whole
cell block to himself. Why are you here in the middle of the night?"
     Kalen paced  nervously for a  moment, than  sat down in  a chair.
"Yesterda y...night before last, I  received a proposition from Liriss
to join the underworld. In exchange for my loyalty Captain Koren would
be killed  and I  would get his  position. Shevlin..."  Kalen stopped,
wondering  if Jerid  Taishent  was on  the  take. Anyone,  anywhere...
"...Shevlin was  working for them  before he  was killed." He  was not
going to  say a word about  Ilona's involvement just yet,  in order to
keep it safe.  At least this way  she would not be  killed for telling
him what she had done if Jerid  was bringing in extra pay from Liriss.
"I had  a bad  feeling they  might try  to give  me some  incentive to
accept anyway."
     Jerid nodded and picked up the  vial he placed on the table. "The
man had this with  him. I'll have the healer test it  as soon as she's
up."
     "What about security?"
     "The  door's  locked.  There  are guards  making  rounds  in  the
corridors and  there are bars  on the window,"  Jerid did his  best to
relieve Kalen's  fears. There really was  no reason to be  worried. No
one  was going  to  get to  Captain Koren,  particularly  the man  who
already tried it once.
     "Who has the keys?"
     "I do, the castellan has one and Elizabeth has a spare."
     "Do you object if I put my own guards here?"
     "I'll be  surprised if you can  spare them, but I  don't object,"
Jerid answered.
     "So be it. Can you hold that man in isolation until morning?"
     "Yes."
     "I'll be back then."
     Jerid watched Kalen leave, then closed the drawer with the files,
never having  found the right one.  He picked up the  confiscated vial
and  left  the  office,  locking  the door  after  himself.  He  could
understand  Kalen's fears.  The mob  was not  something to  be trifled
with. Liriss was  a criminal with little respect for  law and life and
could cover his tracks well.
     Having  left  the  vial  for the  Duke's  personal  physician  to
examine, Jerid  returned to his  quarters, checking up on  Aimee along
the way -- she was no longer  staying with his father -- and went back
to bed.

     Ilona walked into the guard house and directly up to the guard at
the desk.  The station was  almost deserted, the  way it had  been for
some time. The  casualties taken during the  Beinison invasion reduced
the available force  by half and the recruiting efforts  of a backward
town out on the frontier were no match to what the Baranurian army was
offering.
     "Yes, Ma'am?"  the guard asked,  surprised to  see her at  such a
late -- or was it early -- hour.
     "I need two guards."
     The guard sputtered. "Everyone's on patrol, Lieutenant."
     Ilona looked  around in  disbelief. She knew  they were  short on
staff, but not having anyone available  at all... For an emergency, no
less. This emergency in particular.
     The door  to a back office  opened and Sergeant Cepero  came out,
talking to a  young woman in a guard uniform.  "You!" Ilona pointed to
the woman,  "and you," to  the guard at  the desk. "You're  going with
me."
     Sergeant  Cepero  opened  his  mouth, apparently  trying  to  say
something and not managing. "Isn't it a little late?" he finally said.
"What are you doing?"
     "Lieutenant Darklen  needs two people immediately.  He'll explain
when he gets here," Ilona said.  She realized that she was pulling the
last of  the staff when  regulations required  that a minimum  of four
people be on duty at the guard house at all times. But that regulation
was made for desperate situations just like this and when it came down
to worrying  about other  emergencies and the  Captain's life,  it was
obvious which would take presidence.
     Both the young woman -- Ilona guessed that she was not much older
than eighteen  -- and the other  guard watched her in  confusion, torn
between which  of their superiors  to follow:  the one trying  to obey
regulations or the one with the rank to ignore them.
     Cepero challenged Ilona. "This is  highly unusual. Coming here in
the middle of the night, pulling  guards, and neither you, nor Darklen
on duty."
     Ilona took  a piece of parchment  off the table the  guard sat at
and  scribbled on  it. It  was some  document, but  she did  not care.
"Here. The highest priority I can  authorize," she handed the paper to
Cepero.  He could  not disobey.  He whispered  something to  the young
woman, too quiet for Ilona to hear  and she announced she was ready to
go.
     "My sister's youngest," Cepero explained. "Don't get her into any
trouble."
     "Let's go," Ilona  said and the two guards followed  her out from
under the Sergeant's reluctant stare.

     Kalen met  Ilona and the two  guards at the castle  gate and gave
them their orders. He realized  they were young and inexperienced, but
they were all that was currently  available and due to their age, more
than likely  not asso ciated  with Liriss. He would  select additional
people  he could  trust  during  the night  and  have  them posted  by
morning.
     On  the way  home neither  Kalen, nor  Ilona said  anything, each
thinking their own thoughts, planning out what they were to do next.
     The die  had been cast  and it was obvious  to Kalen that  he was
committed to seeing this business  through. He wanted, desperately, to
do something  about Kesrin's  offer when  it was  first made,  but the
threat to Captain Koren's life held him back. He was glad that someone
made the difficult  decision for him, permitting him  to challenge the
crime that was running rampant in the  city. He wished it had not been
Ilona who forced his  hand, but in a way it was his  own fault; he had
not told her all that happened, so  she acted on what little she knew,
just as he would have. His task  now was to keep the Captain alive and
with a  shortage of manpower  it would perhaps  be the hardest  of all
jobs.
     Ilona, next to him, could not help but feel a little worried over
what she had done. It was her duty  to find out what was going on, not
to  act on  information impulsively.  She  had not  thought about  the
consequences. None  the less, it  was done and  she felt she  had only
herself to blame.  She considered returning to Liriss  and telling him
to forget it, but that was bound  to do little more than aggravate him
and  perhaps make  matters worse.  She glanced  at Kalen,  but he  was
oblivious to  the world, a  thoughtful expression spread on  his face.
This was not the time to bother him with questions.
     "It's still dark," Kalen said suddenly.
     "Yes," Ilona agreed.
     "It's just been a few hours..."
     "Kalen, are you all right?" she grabbed hold of his arm, but then
remembering his wound, released him. He did not react to what she knew
was painful.
     "Get  Taishent. Bring  him to  Captain  Koren's room.  I have  an
idea."
     Ilona watched  him run off,  back towards the castle,  then shook
her head and followed him in.

     Kalen was almost out of breath by the time he made it to the room
where  his Captain  was recovering  from his  wounds. There  were four
guards present; the  two members of the town guard  that Ilona brought
with her  and two castle  guards. They  stopped talking and  turned to
face him,  his own subordinates  at attention,  the other two,  in the
middle of their rounds, simply watching.
     "You," he called the young woman wearing the insignia of the town
guard, "find the physician and bring her here. Wake her up if you have
to. The  rest of you,  bring the assassin and  make sure no  one knows
that you're doing so."
     They all rushed off.
     Kalen felt his shoulder, realizing  that the wound had once again
come open and started bleeding. He held his hand over it for a moment,
thankful that there was no pain yet and then took out his dagger and a
long thin metal bar.  Using the two he bent at  the door and attempted
to pick the lock. It required some doing in the darkened corridor, but
he finally succeeded.
     It took Kalen some determination to  push the door open, but when
he did, he had made up his mind to go through with his plan, no matter
how  dangerous. He  hoped that  the things  he would  now do  could be
justified by a satisfactory resolution in the days to come.
     "What the hell are you doing?" he heard Jerid's voice behind him.
"Can't I even get some sleep around here without trouble cropping up?"
     "Step inside," Kalen said and let  Jerid and Ilona walk past him.
His behavior was strange, but not as strange as it was going to get.
     Captain Adrunian Koren lay in  the large bed, faintly illuminated
by the  dim torch light coming  in from the corridor.  His chest moved
rhythmically up and down, but there was no sign of him being awake. In
fact, Kalen  did not expect him  to be alert  for at least a  few more
days, as  the healer's treatment required  the use of some  drugs that
would concentrate all his bodily energies on regenerating his health.
     Kalen lit a candle and closed the door. "I'm going to give Liriss
exactly what he wants," he said, placing the candle into a tray on the
table.
     "What? You can't be serious!"
     Kalen had come to the decision  to trust Jerid. Jerid, the son of
the mage Dyann  Taishent, had to be trustworthy based  on the fact who
his father was. There was simply no way that affiliation with Dargon's
crime lord would go unnoticed by the mage and knowing Dyann as well as
he did, Kalen had  no doubt that Jerid could be  trusted. There was no
way he could be involved.
     "Liriss wants to  kill Captain Koren to put me  in charge," Kalen
said. "Then  he can use  Ilona to manipulate  me. He extended  her the
same offer he did to me and I  thought it might be worth while to have
her play along. I had the guards get the assassin. When they bring him
in here, play along with what I do  and let me do all the talking. I'm
going to try to convince him we already work for Liriss."
     "He'll never fall for it," Ilona protested.
     "We'll see. We're not losing anything for trying."
     Kalen started pacing back and  forth. "Jerid, you'll have to make
me the Acting  Captain of the Guard because both  the Duke and Captain
Bartol are  out. Ilona will have  to play along with  Liriss and maybe
we'll get him this time. Him and all his men."
     "You're already the Acting Captain," Jerid protested.
     "Yes, but that's in light of the real Captain's pending recovery.
I need..."
     Footsteps in the  corridor made Kalen stop speaking.  There was a
knock at the door. Jerid, closest to it, opened it, letting two castle
guards bring the assassin in.
     "Leave us," Jerid said and the two men left the room.
     "That was stupid of you," Kalen  walked up to the assassin. "Look
at him," he gestured to the Captain lying on the bed. "He's as good as
dead. I have the city and  Taishent commands the Ducal lands. What the
hell are you  people doing?" Kalen emphasized his words  by giving the
man a push with his good arm.
     The assassin's eyes grew wide with surprise.
     "Where the  hell did  you get  the idea that  you needed  to kill
him?"  Kalen continued.  "If  he dies  now, and  by  poison, no  less,
that'll point the finger of blame right at me. You're compromising the
whole deal, not to mention my life!"
     "I..."
     "Who told you to do this?"
     "Uh..."
     Kalen  grabbed the  man  by the  neck and  slammed  him into  the
nearest wall. "Who?! Kesrin? Ovink? Cissell?"
     "Lord Liriss. He ordered the death!"
     "Liriss? That rat  told me not to kill Koren  until he's well and
can be had by a mugger!"
     "It was him, I swear!"
     With lightning speed  Kalen pulled his dagger and  thrust it into
the assassin's chest. Jerid grabbed Kalen's arm and spun him around as
the assassin collapsed to the floor.
     "What the  hell are you doing?"  His own dagger was  out, flat of
the blade against Kalen's cheek.
     Ilona, who  had bent down  to check if  the man was  still alive,
stood up, unsure whose side to take.
     "If he lives, they'll know he  failed and I need him to succeed,"
Kalen let out a sigh. His shoulder  wound started to throb and he knew
he could not fight  Jerid. "This way we can say  he was successful and
was himself killed by the guards."
     "He's dead," Ilona  announced. "No need to discuss what  we do if
he's alive."
     "But Captain Koren is alive," Jerid argued. "Word will get out."
     "There are catacombs under the castle, aren't there?"
     Jerid  replaced  his dagger  and  stepped  away from  Kalen.  "Of
course, but they're sealed off. A  few months ago that crazy mage Cefn
and that guard that used to work for you broke in there..."
     "I remember  her," Ilona said.  "Je'lanthra'en. She came  up from
Magnus, trained with Sir Morion before joining the guard."
     "And then  she and the  mage disappeared after starting  that big
fire on the wharf," Jerid added.
     Kalen nodded grimly.
     "Of course!"  Jerid exclaimed.  "We can hide  the Captain  in the
catacombs."
     "And there are only four guards who know the truth, so we can put
them on  duty there,"  Kalen added. "I've  sent for  Elizabeth. She'll
also need to know."
     "I don't know about pulling that many guards," Jerid protested.
     "We'll need  the guards now that  the Guild is after  the Captain
and these four already know the situation, or at least part of it."
     "For now," Jerid agreed reluctantly.
     "And have the Captain moved before sunrise, so no one knows."
     "What are you going to do?"
     Kalen paused. Everything would have  to be done to appear normal.
"Ilona and I  will spend the night together, just  like we intended to
in the first place."

     Kalen  and Ilona  left the  castle soon  after leaving  the final
instructions for the  physician. The trap was set, now  waiting to see
its prey.
     "Should I contact Liriss again?" Ilona asked.
     "No need.  He'll come to  you. Just  don't be surprised  that the
Captain was  killed and agree  to provide information in  exchange for
information  from them."  Kalen slid  his arm  around her  waist. "And
above all,  be careful and  no heroics.  We're not losing  anything by
trying this. Let's keep it that way."
     "I'll check with you before all my heroics," Ilona smiled.
     "You do that.  If we do this  wrong, it could get  worse than the
war. In this one we won't know who's on which side."
     "It'll be all right," Ilona assured him.
     "I know,"  he agreed, but  to himself  he wondered how  crazy his
idea was and how many people would get killed if he went wrong. But at
the same time  he felt it was  a risk that needed to  be taken. Liriss
had long  been getting out of  hand. Just before the  war started, the
mob became restless. The upper class started taking a beating from the
criminals;  known  brigands and  street  thieves  were found  dead  in
groups; at least one body was fished  out of the sea each morning; two
or  three  shops  burned  every  month.  It was  as  if  there  was  a
territorial conflict  and it was  spilling out  all over the  city. If
nothing else, Kalen was sure of one  thing, this had to stop, or there
would not be much of a city for the Duke to return to.
     Kalen again  squeezed Ilona's  waist tightly  with his  good arm.
"Just be careful."
     "You already said that," she looked at him.
     "I meant it. You're the closest thing I have to a family."
     "And you still don't want to get married?"
     "If we get married, people will expect children and I'm not ready
for that. Not during a war, of all times."

     The knocking at  the door grew more insistent  as Kalen hurriedly
pulled his  pants on. Ilona sat  up in bed, arms  folded, watching him
stumble about, a faint smile on her face.
     Kalen grabbed her  clothes off the chair and tossed  them at her.
"Get moving." He rushed to the  front room, tunic in hands, and pulled
open the door. "Yes?"
     It was  still night outside  and a town guard,  breathing heavily
and sweating hard from a long run, stood at the door.
     "Sir, Captain Koren has been killed!"
     "What?"  The shocked  reaction was  easy. For  just one  horrible
instant Kalen believed  that he had made a mistake  and another killer
succeeded where  the first had  failed. He pulled himself  together as
the guard repeated the report.
     "Captain Koren was killed in his sleep by an assassin. Lieutenant
Taishent sent word just minutes ago."
     Kalen started  pulling the  tunic he  had in  his hands  over his
head, careful of his shoulder wound. "Who did it?"
     "I don't know, Sir. The messenger didn't say."
     "Does Sergeant Cepero know?"
     "No, Sir. He's out on patrol at the south gate."
     Ilona appeared behind Kalen. "What's  happened?" She did not need
to pretend to be sleepy, tired as she was.
     "Something's happened to the Captain,"  Kalen said. "I have to go
to the  castle. You get to  the guard house and  keep everything quiet
until we know for sure."
     Concern was all over Ilona's face.
     "Just do it," Kalen stepped around her. He picked up his belt and
sword off the table. "Stay there until I come or send word."
     He  paused long  enough to  sloppily kiss  her on  the cheek  and
rushed off.
     Ilona looked at  the guard waiting for her and  sighed. "I'll get
my blade."

     Kalen took the castle stairs three and four at a time, rushing to
Captain  Bartol's office,  which  was currently  being  used by  Jerid
Taishent. He  burst in,  almost without knocking,  practically running
down the Duke's new physician.
     Elizabeth  of  the Pass  was  a  tall  blond  woman in  her  late
thirties. She folded  her arms and glared at Kalen,  not moving out of
his way.
     "If you get  hurt tonight, Lieutenant," she said in  an icy tone,
"it may just be by my hand."  Obviously she did not approve of what he
and Jerid were doing.
     Kalen  side-stepped her,  only to  come  face to  face with  Rish
Vogel, who  hurried out of his  way. The old chronicler  was a problem
Kalen never  considered, but now,  if played right, Rish  could become
the only, and the most credible, witness he would ever need.
     "What's  happened?" Kalen  demanded, finally  getting to  see his
castle counterpart.
     Jerid was  calm. "A few hours  ago an assassin made  his way into
Captain  Koren's room  and  killed  him. A  passing  guard caught  the
assassin and killed him in a struggle."
     "Wasn't  the  door  locked?  Where was  the  door  guard?"  Kalen
demanded,  hoping Jerid  was  ready for  an improvised  interrogation.
Everything had to look and sound right.
     "The lock  was picked and  there was no  guard. Just the  one man
assigned to the floor."
     "One man?" Kalen bellowed. "Adrunian  Koren is the highest law we
have in town and you put one man on the floor?!"
     "I know!"  Jerid shouted back. "I  know and I'll have  to explain
all of this to the Duke when he gets back. We're stretched so thin now
that I couldn't even afford that one man." His voice dropped off as he
finished.
     Kalen scowled.
     "Look, it happened!  We just have to deal with  it now, no matter
how we  feel about it.  I'm ready  to take the  blame, but we  have to
solve this first."
     Something clanked and both men looked over at Rish who sat at the
desk, busily  scribbling away on a  sheet of parchment, a  tipped over
bottle of ink by his hand, spilling  dark liquid on the surface of the
table and staining his arm and sleeve.
     Jerid took a  deep breath and slowly let it  out. "You're already
the acting guard captain. We'll hold  a ceremony to reaffirmed it this
afternoon. Clifton will have to make a final ruling when he returns."
     Kalen sank  down into a chair,  rubbing his face as  if trying to
convince himself this was not a  dream. He looked up at Elizabeth. "Is
he...?"
     The physician was not much of  an actress, but she nodded grimly.
"He was poisoned.  I couldn't save him. The assassin  died from a stab
wound to the chest."
     "I  want to  know who  that man  was working  for," Kalen  warned
Jerid.
     "I already have men working on it," Jerid answered.

     Kalen sat in  what officially used to be  Captain Koren's office,
studying the roster of guards and  what what they admitted about their
pasts. He  was hoping  to find  some tell-tale  event or  slip-up that
would  indicate shady  character, but  half way  through the  stack he
still  had  not  found  any  real  evidence  of  false  documentation.
Everything  available was  consistent and  true,  as far  as he  could
determine.
     Tossing the latest file to be examined on the floor, Kalen leaned
back in  his chair.  He had  been at it  all day,  trying to  find any
problem people under his command, like  the one that attempted to kill
the Captain. Instead he was rewarded with eight hours of lost time and
a splitting headache.
     Shortly after noon  he was reaffirmed as the Captain  of the Town
Guard, in view of Captain  Koren's untimely demise and pending Clifton
Dargon's  final appointment  of  him  to the  post.  It  was a  small,
semi-official gathering,  since he was  already the Acting  Captain of
the Town Guard due to his  superior's war injuries. A few minor nobles
and bureaucrats were  invited to be witnesses. A  priest helped Jerid,
the highest  ranking representative of  the Duke's personal  guard, to
conduct the ceremony.  By the time Kalen returned to  the guard house,
the city was buzzing with the news of Captain Koren's death.
     The plan was  slowly coming together, but the trap  was yet to be
set off.  For now  he only hoped  the secret could  be kept  and Ilona
would not run into too much danger.

     Rish Vogel fumbled with the large key ring he had stolen from the
castellan who  had fallen asleep  in a large  chair in the  great hall
right after dinner.  It was a simple  matter to slip it  off his belt.
There were  literally dozens of  different keys  on the ring  and Rish
hurried to open  the door before the guard would  pass this way again.
It took a dozen or so attempts, but Rish was finally rewarded with the
sound of the turning tumblers and the screech of the opening bolt.
     Pocketing the keys,  Rish stepped into the room where  just a day
ago the now  dead Captain of the  Town Guard slept. He  never knew the
man personally, but  had met once or twice in  official capacity, with
the large, powerfully built soldier  with silver-grey hair and a bushy
walrus mustache that made it seem as if he was always smiling, even in
times of crisis.
     Adrunian  Koren  had   been  with  the  town   guard  for  almost
twenty-five years, in which time he progressed from a rookie guardsman
to the  Captain of the  town militia and one  of the closest  aides to
Lord  Clifton  Dargon. His  death  was  a  strong  blow to  the  city,
especially after  his successful  defense against the  Beinison fleet.
This was as large an event as  the deaths of Fionn and Roisart Connall
just a year ago and very bad for morale during the war.
     The chronicaller pushed the door  shut behind himself and studied
the room from where he was. It  was large and bright from beams of the
setting sun.  The bed remained unmade,  a chair lay overturned  on the
floor and in a corner was a pool of dried blood.
     Rish pretended  he was the assassin.  He walked from the  door to
the bed, poured  the vial of poison into the  sleeping man's mouth and
made him swallow. The physician Elizabeth  said it would require a few
minutes to take effect. Would the assassin stay?
     Rish decided he would.
     So the  assassin stayed.  Rish took  a few  deep breaths  to time
himself, all the  while looking around. The chair and  the blood stain
were at opposite ends of the room. Was there a struggle?
     Satisfied  that his  victim was  dead, Rish  walked to  where the
overturned  chair lay  by the  window.  Was this  a way  out? Had  the
assassin thought to use the window to leave unnoticed and tripped over
the chair?  The window opened  to the courtyard.  Not a way  to escape
during day  or night, with  guards and  keep residents passing  in and
out. And  there was no  trace of a  struggle. All other  furniture and
decorations seemed to be in their  proper places. A ceramic vase stood
peacefully on the window table right next to the chair. So why was the
chair overturned? The old chronicler got down on the floor to look for
drops of blood. None. Just the big puddle in the opposite corner.
     Rish scratched his  head. Something was missing. He  lit a candle
to  compensate  for the  settling  darkness,  although he  knew  Jerid
ordered nothing to be disturbed, and  pulling out his quill and a roll
of  parchment,  sat down  at  the  table in  the  room  to record  his
findings.

     Ilona  Milnor stood  on the  second  floor balcony  of the  guard
house, looking  into the darkness of  the street below. The  night was
cloudy and dark,  dark enough that she could not  see the ground below
the balcony.  The air was calm  and heavy, just like  before a violent
summer thunderstorm.
     She pulled her  cloak tightly around herself, trying  to ward the
chilly night air away. The night before she visited Liriss to make the
deal and  now had her  doubts about it.  Liriss acted promptly  on his
plans to  put Kalen in  charge and now her  heart was heavy  with even
more doubts than before. Would the next attempt be made on Kalen?
     She saw a young boy walk down the street and was about to yell to
him about  violating the  curfew, but  seeing him  head for  the guard
house door  did not. She  watched him  until he disappeared  below the
balcony and then  seeing the light from the opened  door decided to go
down. She met a guard half way down the stairs, on the landing between
floors.
     "This was just  delivered for you, Lieutenant," he  offered her a
fist sized box of plain wood.
     "By whom?" She took it.
     "A young boy."
     Ilona pushed past the guard down  the stairs and ran to the door.
The boy  was gone  and the  street was empty  in both  directions. She
waited until a flash of  lightning illuminated the street, then walked
back to the door, where the guardsman waited.
     "I can go look for him," the man offered.
     "Don't bother," she sighed. "The intent was obviously for him not
to meet me. I'll be upstairs."
     Ilona  did not  open the  box until  she was  in Captain  Koren's
office with the door firmly closed behind her. Only after sitting down
did she permit  herse lf to lift  the case's lid. In it,  settled in a
velvet  lined cradle,  lay a  sparkling g  em, clear  even in  the dim
candle light. As she took it out, a note fell to the floor.
     It read: 'You're well on your way. Liriss.'
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1     (C)    Copyright   November, 1991,   DargonZine,   Editor    Dafydd
. All rights revert to the authors. These stories may
not be reproduced or redistributed (save  in the case of reproducing the
whole 'zine for further distribution)  without the express permission of
the author involved.






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  D     D A  A R  R G    O  O N N N     Z   I N N N E     || Volume 5
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  D    D  AAAA RRR  G GG O  O N N N   Z     I N N N E     || Issue  1
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--   DargonZine Volume 5, Issue 1        03/20/92          Cir 1155   --
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--                            Contents                                --
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 Sonnet to the Bichanese      Wendy Hennequin        Yule 4, 1014
 Lessons                      Wendy Hennequin        Yule 8, 1014
 Dummy                        Bill Erdley            Yule 10, 1014
 Pact III                     Max Khaytsus           Yuli 14, 1014
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1                      Sonnet to the Bichanese
                         by Wendy Hennequin
                   (b.c.k.a. )

     I looked up  from the poem I  was struggling to write  as I heard
someone enter,  and then  I lowered  my eyes to  keep from  staring. A
Bichanese man, one of the samurai the Emperor of Bichu had sent to the
King by the looks of his weapons, stood in my cubicle, confused. After
an awkward  moment in which  he searched my  tiny, dank cell  with his
eyes and I didn't dare raise mine, I asked meekly, "May I help you, my
lord?"
     "Please," he  began courteously, to  me of all people,  and Bichu
and Dargon flavored his words, "I think  I am lost. They said I should
seek the  bastard to translate and  transcribe my order, but  I do not
see him."
     My heart  seethed. Oh, I  didn't mind  that the masters  had sent
this Bichanese  lord to me--I  am, after  all, the only  translator of
Bichanese in the city--but they could  have sent him to seek *Fionna*.
I kept my  face docile, though, as I had  long practiced. This samurai
hadn't insulted me, and thus I should not insult him with my anger.
     Even if he had been the one to throw my bastard birth in my face,
I would not  show him my wrath. Oh, they  can all tolerate-- barely--a
meek, gentle, unthreatening  bastard, but an angry one  who fights for
her own justice, never.
     At least, that  is the way of things in  Magnus. My mother should
have stayed  in Dargon  where she belonged,  where bastards  and unwed
mothers are truly tolerated and never  shunned. I'll be very glad when
I have enough money to go there myself and leave Magnus behind me.
     I beckoned the samurai without looking at him. "Come in, my lord.
I am--" I  hesitated to name myself bastard, though  it is true. There
are others enough who so call me. "I am the person you seek."
     The samurai  advanced, and when  I stole a  glance, I saw  he was
smiling, but his  eyes were bewildered. "I do not  understand. You are
no despicable man."
     "Despicable man? What do you mean, my lord?"
     "My--" He  paused and  pondered. "My liege-lord  calls despicable
men bastards. He has never used that name for a woman."
     I tried not to  laugh. For the first time in  my life, I actually
wanted  to laugh  at  the  word "bastard."  "The  word  does not  mean
despicable man, my  lord, though no doubt your liege-lord  so uses it.
Many people do so."
     The Bichanese considered this. "What does the word mean, then?"
     Somehow, I courageously looked the samurai  in the face. He was a
good-looking man, and his slanted,  hazel-brown eyes were serious, and
gentle. I was able to continue  looking directly at him as I answered,
"It means an  illegitimate child." He shook his  head, still confused.
"A child conceived or born while his parents were unmarried, my lord."
     The samurai thought  for a moment, then, as I  lowered my eyes to
avoid offending  with my  direct gaze,  he asked,  "This is  an insult
here, to have unmarried parents?" I nodded glumly and looked away, for
my  eyes  had  flooded.  I  had much  better  control  usually.  "Why?
Luthias-sama--my liege-lord the Count of Connall- -he says such things
often happen in this country, without blame from law or church."
     "Not in  Magnus," I  told him bitterly,  blinking away  tears. He
cares about  a bastard, I  thought. "The new religions  competing with
the Stevene have made our priests very strict."
     "And people insult you with your birth?"
     "In  my case,  it cannot  be  considered an  insult," I  managed,
gulping down my  sobs. I am a  bastard, I have always  been a bastard,
and  I must  survive despite  it. Oh,  God, I  wish people  would just
accept me  despite it! "It  is true. My  parents were not  married, my
lord. I don't even know my father's name."
     "Do they also taunt your mother?"
     My mother. My face warmed with indignation. Only her mistreatment
burned me more than mine. "They did, my lord. God rest her, she's dead
of the Red Plague these six years."
     "But they still call you names, although you were not at fault?"
     I turned toward  the samurai and tried to smile.  "Is it not like
that in  Bichu? I understood that  the Bichanese honor code  was quite
strict."
     The Bichanese  returned my smile  warmly, and mine  drew strength
from his. "No, in Bichu, it is  enough to know one's mother." He began
to search my face curiously, and I ducked my head. "What is your name?
They did not tell me."
     Of course, they  hadn't. "The bastard" is all they  ever call me.
"My name is Fionna."
     "I  am  Ittosai Michiya."  While  I  wondered  why the  name  was
familiar, he seized  my hand suddenly and pressed it  to his cheek. I,
astonished, could  not move. He sat  on the unsteady stool  next to my
table, and when he looked at me, his smile collapsed. "Did I not do it
rightly? Is that not how a man greets a lady here?"
     "I'm not a lady, my lord," I sputtered, trying to yank my fingers
from his. "I'm a bastard!"
     Ittosai Michiya's hand  tightened on my fingers,  and he laughed.
"I cannot catch it, can I?"
     Completely without  my guard,  I laughed  too. "You'd  never tell
from  how the  people  of Magnus  treat  me." I  stared  at him.  This
Bichanese, a  foreigner, made  me forget  myself and  laugh. I  do not
remember the last time I laughed. When he let go of my fingers, I held
the hand out. "What have you brought me, my lord?"
     The samurai gave it to me  without looking at it. "My liege- lord
needs  two copies,  one  in Baranurian  for the  King  and another  in
Bichanese for General Kirinagi."
     I unrolled it  and stared. After several  minutes of concentrated
scrutiny, I managed only to make out Connall's signature. Comparing it
to the rest of the document, I surmised the hurried Count had scrawled
the words out himself, hastily and  impatiently. But then, from what I
had heard  of the Count of  Connall, his hurry might  well be expected
and excused.
     Keeping my eyes  on the illegible scratches, I  said quietly, "Do
you know what it says?"
     "Yes, of course. Luthias-sama told me as he was writing it."
     "Please tell me."
     When Ittosai  Michiya didn't answer,  I looked at him  through my
eyelashes. He wore a bewildered expression again. "Can you not read as
well as write and translate?"
     I have never been bold, but  I looked at this samurai and smiled.
"Only  when the  writing is  legible, my  lord. Your  liege the  Count
Connall is  a great warrior and  a fine general from  all reports, but
he'd never make a scribe."
     The Bichanese chuckled. "I am not surprised."
     "What does it say, my lord?"
     He took a  deep breath. "It is a request  to General Kirinagi for
my official transfer.  I go to war tomorrow with  the Count of Connall
and the cavalry."
     Ittosai Michiya,  I remembered suddenly.  No wonder the  name had
been  familiar; last  autumn, he  had been  tried for  treason. I  had
thought, however, that he was Connall's castellan. Why would he need a
transfer? The obvious answer came: protocol.
     I drew a paper  toward me. "I shall have to  make my own wording,
but I have done such things before," I assured him.
     "Wait--I am not interrupting  other work?" Ittosai Michiya tapped
my poem.
     "No, my lord. That is..." I  wondered how to explain, and looking
at the very bad  poem, I decided not to. If only I  were a great poet,
people might accept me, but I was not one.
     "It can  wait," I told the  samurai, dipping a pen  and beginning
the  Baranurian order.  Translating from  Baranurian to  Bichanese was
easier than writing the original order in the foreign characters. "You
are part of the cavalry?"
     "Yes. My leige-lord is its general, and I am his aide." His voice
held great pride when he spoke of  his lord and his position with him.
"We ride for Pyridain to held the Knight Captain, Dame Mar..."
     "Martis  Westbrook,"  I  supplied. Although  the  master  scribes
rarely let me work on recent chronicles and the other scribes scarcely
ever spoke  with me, I had  overheard conversations. There had  been a
great  battle in  Pyridain  recently, at  some  village called  Oron's
Crossroads.  Baranur had  lost,  and  the Beinison  army  had all  but
slaughtered  Dame Captain  Westbrook's troops.  I glanced  up at  this
samurai who  treated me not  only as  a human, but  as a lady,  and my
stomach tightened. Pyridain? He could well die.
     "Yes,  Dame   Martis  Westbrook  shall  be   our  chief  general.
Luthias-sama shall  be one  of her advisors."  His eyes  searched mine
curiously. "Why do you look at me like that?"
     "I--The fighting in Pyridain is dangerous, my lord."
     The samurai bowed  in the Bichanese way. "That is  the way of the
sword, and I am prepared for death as I strive for life." I shuddered.
Ittosai Michiya laughed. "Do not think  that I wish to die, Fionna. If
I do, I shall...what  is the expression here? I shall  pay hell, for I
promised the Countess that I would see her husband safely home."
     That made me laugh, and I returned to my work. As I wrote my neat
letters, the  samurai held my  incomplete and incompetent poem  to the
one small  candle that tried to  light my cell. I  graciously offered,
though  embarrassment squeezed  my stomach,  "You may  read it  if you
wish."
     "I cannot read your language."  Ittosai Michiya returned the work
to my desk  and reached for one  of the books on my  desk. I continued
writing, quickly and neatly. "Did you do this?"
     I  smiled warmly  at the  awe in  his voice  and glanced  from my
current work  to see what  he held. I  recognized the bright  gold and
blue  illumination  of a  Fretheod  work  I had  finished  translating
yesterday for the University. "Yes, my lord. I did that."
     "You do beautiful work."
     I actually  blushed. I don't  believe I had ever  blushed before.
"I--thank you, my lord."
     "Despite their insults,  they allow you beautiful  things to work
with."
     "Not usually," I muttered, not meaning for him to hear.
     "What do you mean?"
     I blushed  more deeply, this time  with shame at my  words. "I am
the only scribe here who knows the Fretheod tongue, my lord, and that,
and  the money  from the  University, are  why they  allowed me  those
beautiful things to  work with. Usually, I receive  the last, plainest
work."
     "They are fools."
     I said nothing, for I agreed. I continued my work diligently. The
samurai kept patiently silent.
     "You are not married?" he suddenly inquired.
     I laughed again, but my merriment was bitter. My tongue wished to
tell him that no Magnus man would  lower himself to marry a bastard or
even to come near her and speak  with her. For this, I dared not speak
at all.
     The  samurai had  sharp wits.  "They  think they  can catch  your
bastardness? They will not have you?"
     His tone demanded an honest answer. "That is the case, my lord."
     "They, too, are fools, and below you."
     Astonished, I squeaked, "Below *me?* Below a bastard?"
     "Any man  who cannot  appreciate beauty  and talent  is certainly
unworthy of a woman such as you."
     I actually stared at him in acute shock. He could not be serious.
He  smiled  at me  gently  and  chuckled at  what  must  have been  my
completely horrified expression.  Since there was nothing  I could say
to his comment, I continued working as the samurai flipped through the
book, pausing  occasionally. When I  finished the order  in Baranurian
and  pushed it  aside, Ittosai  Michiya  again pulled  my poem  toward
himself. "Why are there no drawings?"
     "It is only the first draft of a poem, my lord." I had heard that
great poets' words  flowed from them; mine were forced,  and they were
far from good.
     The samurai studied them as I  searched my little box for a brush
with which to write the Bichanese characters. A pen would never render
them correctly. "What does it say?" he interrupted me.
     "I--it is a very bad poem, my lord," I stumbled.
     Ittosai Michiya passed the paper to me. "Please read it to me."
     I took  the paper and set  it aside. "It  is not a good  poem, my
lord," I repeated. "I--I would be ashamed to have you hear it."
     "Why?" he  demanded, and I turned  away. For all that  I wished I
were a  great poet,  I knew  that my  words were  hardly worthy  for a
member of  the nobility. I am  no great poet. Perhaps  someday I shall
be, but not yet. "Why, Fionna?"
     "It is  very bad," I  repeated, and I  found it harder  to ignore
this foreigner's gentleness  than all my countrymen's  scorn. "I would
not have you think badly of me."
     "Of you? You have written  poetry?" Because he sounded pleased, I
looked at  him, and Ittosai Michiya  was smiling. "Please, read  it to
me. I too write poetry. I would like you hear your poem."
     "But it is  so bad!" I protested. I knew  how horrid, forced, and
mismetered the words on that page were.
     "Please," the  samurai said again,  covering my hand  gently with
his.
     So I read  the incomplete verse softly before  I turned anxiously
away  to dip  the brush  and  translate Luthias  Connall's order  into
Bichanese characters. Ittosai  Michiya did not speak, and  I knew why.
That poem was so bad.
     "I  do not  know the  Baranurian  forms of  poetry," the  samurai
ventured as I began the second vertical line of Bichanese. "Is that in
keeping with them?"
     "It isn't," I admitted. "I am working very hard, but I can't make
the words fit."
     "It is not  the words," he told  me. "It is the  poem itself. How
can something as ignoble and horrible as this jail they give to you be
made into a beautiful poem?"
     Shocked, I stared at him. "You may be right," I mused softly, and
then I returned to my work.  "Don't the Bichanese write of very common
things?"
     "Yes, but of things of nature and of beauty--a frog, a tree. They
do  not write  of squalor  and oppression,"  he concluded  scornfully,
glaring at his surroundings. "How can this place be worthy of poetry?"
     "But I  wish to be a  great poet someday,  and I will never  be a
great poet if I do not write."
     "That is true."
     I handed the samurai the brush. "Please, my lord, write your name
in Bichanese." He scrawled the  fanciful characters only slightly more
neatly  than his  liege lord  had scribbled  my alphabet,  but Ittosai
Michiya's writing  was at least readable.  I copied his name  onto the
order and continued.
     "It  is true  that you  will not  be a  great poet  if you  never
write," the samurai  was saying as I translated, "but  it is also true
that you  will never  be a  great poet as  you are  now. A  great poet
writes of great things. Nothing great shall happen to you here."
     "I have nowhere else to go,"  I protested, turning toward him. "I
am an orphan, my  lord, and alone. I have no money. If  I had money, I
would go  to Dargon and seek  my mother's kin,  and even if I  did not
find  them, I  would  be  accepted, for  in  Dargon,  they follow  the
Stevene's teachings more closely. But as it is--"
     "Please,  Fionna,"  Ittosai  Michiya  soothed,  taking  my  hands
despite the  fact that  I painted his  palm black, "I  do not  mean to
upset you. You will  be a great poet, but you must  leave. You are too
fine for this place."
     I yanked my  hands from him and quickly finished  the order while
trying hard  to forget Ittosai  Michiya's presence. Forbidding  my own
tears, I handed the samurai the  order in the two languages. "They are
finished, my lord."
     "You are angry with me?"
     The pain in his  voice required me to look him  in the face. "No,
my lord,"  I admitted  as my  heart melted before  the anguish  in his
eyes. I tried to smile, and the tears oozed into my eyes. How could he
think me angry with him? How could  I be angry with the one person who
showed me kindness, who treated me as a human instead of a leper?
     I offered  him my hand in  friendship, for I had  nothing else to
give. "I will not forget you."
     Ittosai Michiya smiled  then and took my hand. I  should not have
been surprised  when he placed my  hand on his cheek  once more. Still
holding my hand, he gazed at me with  such a look on his face, as if I
were a princess in  a tower, a beautiful lady worthy  of a legend. "If
only you and I had met earlier," he said, and his voice was thick.
     Ittosai Michiya  was a  man worthy  of a legend;  of that,  I was
certain. I stepped closer.
     He kissed me  quickly, and before I could recover  from my shock,
the samurai released both my hands. "Forgive me. I must go."
     I  can speak  only a  few words  in the  Bichanese tongue,  but I
managed, "Sionara, Michiya."
     He  smiled at  me bravely,  a  smile that  gave hope  as well  as
absorbed it, and then Ittosai Michiya was gone.
     I faced my  lonely, dark desk and sighed. Once,  only once, a man
looked at me with  kindness and caring, and he went to  war. I felt as
if I  would never see  him again. When  the tears threatened,  my body
weakened, and I put a hand on the desk for support. A paper in a place
where I kept none moved beneath my hand.
     I lifted it and gasped when I realized that it was sprinkled with
Bichanese characters.  For a  moment, I  thought that  perhaps Ittosai
Michiya  had forgotten  the  orders he  had come  to  get. My  stomach
wrenched at the thought of going to the Royal Quarter to deliver them;
if the common people were such  snobs to me, what would the 'nobility'
be like?
     Then again, Ittosai  Michiya was a noble man,  and the characters
on the  paper were in  his hand. "I will  return for you,"  the pretty
lines promised. Following them was a  short haiku poem, from which all
beauty would be lost if the tiny lines were translated, but they spoke
of my eyes.
     Resolved, I folded  the paper gently and put it  in my little box
with my  pens. I  gathered my one  bottle of ink.  "I will  return for
you," Ittosai  Michiya had written, but  he would not find  me in this
place. I had no doubt he would be pleased.
     "Greats poets write of great things," the samurai had said, and I
knew  he was  right.  There  were great  things  happening, great  men
living,  and I  would go  and see  the war  and watch  Sir Luthias  of
Connall  and Sir  Edward Sothos--and  perhaps Ittosai  Michiya--become
great heroes.  And I  would write  great epics  and songs.  Nothing so
wonderful would ever happen here.
     I lifted my pen box and the one, lonely bottle of ink and paused.
One great thing had happened to me  here. Hurried, I sat one last time
at the  unbalanced table, and for  once, the words flowed  easily, and
from my heart.

       Thou saids't, "Had thou and I met earlier--"
       And finished not, nor needed to; thy look
       So sad, profound, thy meaning did confer
       Far better than the words in any book.
       Thou saids't thou knews't regret; now I too know
       Thy prophet's vision, wondrous to the eye
       As roses risen from the Deber snow,
       But wrongly timed, were choked by cold to die.
       But still the roots beneath the snow await
       The spring and summer, time enough to bloom
       When winter's done; do not regret the fate
       Which might delay, but not forever doom.
       And I rejoice, that I have lived to see
       A living man who looked that way at me.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                             Lessons
                       by Wendy Hennequin
                 (b.c.k.a. )

     "It is  not your  place to  lesson my  squires in  courtesy!" Sir
Ongis roared,  "forgetting" the  honorific that courtesy,  custom, and
his superior's rank and title demanded.
     Sir Luthias,  Count of  Connall, Knight  Captain of  the Northern
Marche,  glared at  his  officer  coldly. "You  are  wrong, sir."  The
younger  Knight's jaw  was  as tight  as his  clenched  fists, but  he
managed  to quote  his wife's  father,  Sir Lucan  Shipbrook, who  had
taught Luthias  himself the ways  of chivalry. "'It  is the duty  of a
Knight to correct the behavior of all those who aspire to the chain.'"
     Sir Ongis' eyes narrowed. "My squires behave as I teach them."
     That  much was  obvious. "As  does my  squire," Luthias  replied,
keeping his voice even with great effort. "I taught him to give a curt
reply to anyone churlish enough to taunt him."
     The other Knight  snorted, his contempt for  Luthias obvious. "So
your idea of a 'curt reply' is a blow to the mouth?"
     Luthias' fists relaxed as he  thought of what Marcellon might say
to this  buffoon, and the  young Knight had to  conceal a smile  as he
said it. "My squire is mute, sir. He can only speak with his hands."
     "You--!" Ongis growled,  taking a step closer to  Sir Luthias and
putting a hand on his sword's  hilt. Behind the Knight, Luthias' chief
aide, Captain  Ittosai Michiya, silently grasped  his katana's handle.
"I should teach you a lesson in how to respect your betters!"
     "At  your  leisure, sir,"  Luthias  invited  coolly, keeping  his
temper in check.  He had had more infuriating foes  than this. "I look
forward to thrashing  you as thoroughly as my  squire thrashes yours."
When  Ongis took  another step  toward  him, Luthias  looked over  the
idiot's shoulder at his Castellan. "Shall  I have you escorted to your
pavilion?"
     The Bichanese  offered a smile  and a bow,  as if he  would enjoy
such a piece of work.
     When  the older  Knight  didn't move,  the  young Knight  Captain
walked to the fireside and contemplated  the battle plans he had drawn
in  the  dirt. Sir  Ongis  seethed.  After  a moment,  Luthias  added,
"Dismissed."
     Out of  the corner of his  eye, the Count saw  Ongis stalk toward
his bright pavilion. Michiya smiled, and Luthias returned it.
     The Bichanese  released his katana  and approached. "A  year ago,
you would not have had such an easy time keeping your temper."
     Sir  Luthias  chuckled  and   clapped  his  aide's  shoulder.  "A
Bichanese friend of mine has shown  me the advantage of control." As a
pleasant flush covered Michiya's round  face, a dark shadow, angry and
painful,  floated  through  Luthias'  eyes. "The  training  I  got  in
Beinison helped greatly also."
     The castellan set his mouth. "A harsh lesson, that." Then Ittosai
Michiya smiled again. "It is good to  see that the fool does not anger
you much."
     Luthias  flashed  a  smile,  bright  as the  fire  and  quite  as
dangerous.  "Oh, I  am  angry, Michiya,  and I'd  love  to drive  that
craven, pompous son of a whore into  the ground, but I haven't got the
time to worry  about him." The Knight Captain waved  his hand over his
crude sketches. "I have more important matters to deal with."
     Michiya nodded  and squatted  over the  pictures. "You  are still
certain that the Beinison army goes to Magnus, Luthias-sama?"
     Luthias' certainty knotted his heart. The Beinisons flowed toward
Magnus as steadily as the Laraka river flowed from it. "They won't get
there,"  Luthias vowed,  his eyes  hard.  "If I  have to  die for  it,
Michiya, they won't get there."
     The Bichanese looked  at his leige-lord seriously  and said, "You
may have to."
     Luthias gaze was  serious and sincere. "If that's  what it takes,
I'm willing."
     Michiya smiled like a sunrise. "I  hope it will not come to that.
I promised Myrande that I would bring you home safely."
     Luthias actually laughed. "I wonder  how many people promised her
that."  The King  and  Sir Edward  knew they  could  hardly make  such
promises, but  everyone else seemed  to think themselves  qualified to
reassure  Myrande that  her husband  would return  from war  alive and
safe.  Marcellon's  promise  rested  in the  sword  on  Luthias'  hip.
Michiya's promise danced in his merry eyes. Luthias' vow burned in his
heart: *Sable, I'll come home to you.* Their last night before he left
raced  into his  mind, recalling  the Count's  most urgent  reason for
halting Beinison's  progress--his beautiful wife. "We  have to protect
Magnus, down to the last man."
     "Yes," Michiya agreed with a nod.  "There is much at stake there,
but  do  not worry  about  Myrande  and  the children.  Marcellon  put
protections on his house, he said."
     Luthias laughed shortly. "If she consents to stay in it."
     "Still,  she   has  protection,"   Michiya  reminded   him.  "But
Fionna..."
     "Who?"
     "Fionna," Michiya repeated.
     "Who?"
     To Luthias'  surprise, his  castellan looked away.  "A...woman of
Magnus. She is a scribe."
     A scribe? "Friend of yours?"  Luthias wondered, scribbling in the
dirt.
     "Yes. I--I think I love  her." When Luthias' jaw dropped, Ittosai
grinned up  at his lord, and  his openness disarmed any  teasing words
Luthias might have  been preparing. "That is something  that I learned
from you: how to love a woman."
     The  young  Knight couldn't  decide  whether  to be  repulsed  or
amused. "You'd better  find another teacher. I think  I've pretty well
botched it."
     His friend  shook his head.  "No, Luthias-sama, you  always loved
Myrande well, even when you did not know you loved her."
     Luthias saw  about as much sense  in that statement as  in Ongis'
behavior.  Luthias  needed  to  return  to  concepts  that  he  better
understood. "What do you think?"  the Knight Captain asked, indicating
his diagram with the stick he had used to draw it.
     Ittosai Michiya again surveyed the plan. "Well done."
     "If  it  rains tonight,  we  might  have  a little  trouble.  Mud
could--" Sir  Luthias looked at  the figure  entering the glow  of the
campfire as noiselessly as a ghost. For that--and his mute tongue--the
other squires had named him the Silent. "Come here, Derrio."
     The Knight  inspected his squire  sternly, noting the  blood, the
dirt, and  the bruises. "Brawling  with Ongis' squires  again?" Derrio
hung his  head, but  managed to  nod. Luthias  waited a  moment before
asking, "Did you win?" The boy  grinned. "Good. Now come over here and
look at the plan for tomorrow."
     As the boy  settled near the sketch, Luthias used  his stick as a
pointer and explained,  "We'll meet Beinison here, and  after a while,
we'll retreat  into this  meadow. The  archers will  be hidden  in the
trees around the field. The troops  will split into four parts--one to
protect  the archers  on  each side,  and  the last  to  seal off  the
meadow--and the archers will open fire."
     Derrio studied  the plan  intensely, then looked,  astonished, at
his Knight. The squire cupped his hands, then sprang them together.
     "Yes, of course, it's a trap," Luthias agreed. The Knight laughed
at Derrio's  appalled expression.  "What's wrong?  Don't you  think it
will work?"
     Derrio  shook his  head. He  pointed  an accusing  finger at  the
Knight Captain, another at the battle plans, then shook his head.
     "Unlike me?"  Luthias didn't  understand his  squire at  all. The
young Count had  been trained in strategy for most  of his life. "What
do you mean?"
     Disgusted and  stern, Derrio motioned reproachfully  at the trap,
then  made a  fist,  with  the protruding  thumb  pointing toward  the
ground.
     Luthias stared.  The down-pointing thumb was  Derrio's signal for
"bad"  or "evil."  "It's  not  evil," Luthias  argued.  "This is  war,
Derrio. I'm trying to save lives."
     Derrio jabbed a  furious digit toward the plan and  drew the same
finger across his neck.
     Luthias had to admit it. "Yes, it will kill many, too, but that's
the purpose."
     The  squire actually  snarled. Again,  he signaled  that Luthias'
plan was unworthy and evil.
     Luthias  seized  his   patience  desperately.  Roisart,  Luthias'
year-dead brother, had  never quite grasped the  concept, either. Now,
the  Knight  Captain  found  himself once  again  in  the  frustrating
position of trying to explain war to an idealist. "This isn't a matter
of good  and evil, Derrio," the  Count of Connall attempted.  "This is
war."
     Derrio shook his head angrily,  and Luthias rolled his eyes. This
was  all   he  needed,   Roisart's  idealism  combined   with  Sable's
obstinancy.  Again,  the squire  pointed  at  the sketches,  then  his
Knight, then disapproved once more.
     Luthias hurled  his drawing stick  into the fire  in frustration.
"You  can't judge  me by  my battle  plans!" Luthias  cried. "A  man's
conduct in *peace* makes him good  or evil, Derrio, not his conduct in
war. The only  moral decision in war  is whether or not  to start one.
After that,  it's survival--kill or be  killed, and end as  quickly as
you can."
     Derrio  blinked,   astonished  once  more.  Slowly,   the  squire
indicated the sketch and  held out his hands, palms up,  as if he were
weighing something.
     Luthias  smiled. "Of  course, it's  fair. There  are no  rules in
war."
     Confusion suddenly  rushed onto silent Derrio's  face. Slowly, he
pointed at his Knight, drew his hand across his chest where a Knight's
chain  might fall,  then  made an  odd gesture  near  his waist.  When
Luthias  shook his  head--he had  yet  to understand  all of  Derrio's
signs--,  the squire  tipped his  head back  as if  drinking from  his
curled hand. When  Luthias shook his head once more,  Derrio grabbed a
small stick and wrote in uncertain letters, "Lawrence."
     "Oh." Luthias  recalled the battle  against that noble  Knight of
the Star,  who had gifted  Luthias with the sword  he now wore  at his
side.  "That  wasn't  the  same."  Derrio  shook  his  head  in  utter
bewilderment. "Single  combat does  have rules. It's  not the  same as
war."
     Derrio again shook his head, and  Luthias tried to think of a way
to make  him understand.  "You used to  wrestle Sir  Edward's squires,
didn't you?" Derrio  nodded, uncertain. "You were...playing  a game of
sorts, and there were rules.  With Ongis' squires, though, you're just
trying to beat  them into the ground." Derrio nodded  again, still not
understanding. "When  you wrestle  Sir Edward's  squires, it's  like a
Knight's single combat.  You fight by rules. Thrashing  Ongis' boys is
like a war--the object is to win, and win fast."
     Derrio considered this. After a moment, he pointed to Luthias, to
the  name "Lawrence"  scrawled in  the dust,  then made  a gesture  of
killing. He  looked at Luthias  questioningly, and the  Knight nodded.
"Yes. I  would have  killed Sir Lawrence  if I had  to, Derrio,  but I
would have done it under the rules of chivalry."
     Derrio pointed to  the name, then at the battle  plans, and again
his look questioned Luthias. "If he's there tomorrow, he'll die by the
bow, the same as the rest, if all goes well."
     Derrio opened  his mouth,  pointed at  Sir Lawrence's  name, then
made  a gesture,  same as  the sign  for evil,  except that  the thumb
pointed toward the sky. "He is a  good man," Luthias agreed, "but if I
were in his trap,  he would let me die, too. This  is war, Derrio, and
we all do what we must."
     Derrio tapped his chest with both hands and shook his head.
     Luthias smiled sadly.  "You'll learn." Luthias gazed  down at his
hands;  once  feeble and  trembling,  they  had murdered;  strong  and
steady, they  had killed.  "Believe me, Derrio;  you'll learn.  We all
do."
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                              Dummy
                          by Bill Erdley
                   (b.c.k.a. )

     "Hey,  dummy!  Watch where  you  are  walking!" The  angry  voice
startled  him out  of his  daydream. He  had been  thinking about  the
marches, and about the war, and  especially about *her*; and he wasn't
paying attention to where he was  going. The man that he stumbled into
stopped only long  enough to issue the insult, then  he trudged off to
his own business.
     But his words stayed behind.
     'Hey dummy, watch where you are going.'
     It rang in his mind as he crawled into his bedroll for the night.
     'Hey dummy!'
     He was so tired of hearing that word.
     'Dummy.'

     He drifted off to sleep thinking about the time that he had spent
with Luthias after  he had left the farm. They  first went to Pyridain
City, then they travelled on to Magnus. It was there that he had taken
to  exploring the  city  when  he had  the  time,  which, between  his
training, his schooling, and his chores, wasn't much. He did, however,
discover several places that he  liked: the marketplace, the liveries,
and the docks. He liked the docks  most of all. Coming to the city was
the first time  he had ever seen  that much water in one  place, so he
was facinated by  it: the ships, the sailors, the  cargoes, the waves,
the smells.
     On one such trip, he was walking  back to the castle where he was
staying when he  heard the frightened squeal of a  horse. Turning down
an alley, he saw the horse rearing  back onto its hind legs, eyes wild
and nostrils flaring. On the ground in  front of the horse was a large
snake. He quickly  ran down the alley and dispatched  the snake with a
piece of wood  that he found on the ground.  He then slowly approached
the horse, and carefully reached for  the reins. The horse's eyes were
still wide with  fright, but his motions were smooth  and relaxed, and
his manner non-threatening, so he was  able to reach the reins without
a problem. He stroked the nose of the horse carefully, then worked his
way to  the neck and  shoulders. As the  horse quieted, he  thought to
look for the rider. She lay face down  in a pile of refuse, one of the
many  such piles  cluttering the  alleyway. Holding  the reins  of the
horse low and  tugging gently, he turned it in  the narrow passage and
guided it back  to the trash heap. He carefully  rolled the body over.
She appeared  to be older  than he, but  smaller in stature.  Her long
brown hair was woven into a thick  braid, which was tied at the bottom
with a jet black ribbon. She had a nasty gash on her chin and a bruise
under one  eye that was already  beginning to swell. He  picked her up
and, as gently as he could, draped  her across the horse's back. As he
led the horse back to the keep,  he wondered what the she was doing in
the alley  in the first  place; and what a  small girl was  doing with
such a  large animal. He  stopped several times  to check on  her; she
remained unconsious,  although the bleeding  from the cut on  her chin
seemed to  be slowing. He  reached the  compound and walked  the horse
directly to the stables where Lasran, the stableboy, was busy cleaning
the  stalls.  Lasran,   seeing  the  body  draped   over  the  saddle,
immediately  ran off  to  find help.  Soon two  men,  guards by  their
appearance, appeared and lifted the small form from the horse. As they
hurried into the main building, he  heard one of them say "...gives me
the  creeps. He  must be  some  kind of  dummy, 'cause  he never  says
anything..."

          The snake was huge, with six heads and fangs that
      oozed venom.  The horse faced away from him, and it's
      young rider was oblivious to the danger.
          "Look out!" he screamed, but the voice was only in
      his head.
          The snake slithered closer to the horse and began to
      raise its head.  Even now it was even with the horse
      rider's head.
          He tried to run toward the horse, but several guards
      appeared and grabbed his shoulders.
          "Call to her, dummy.  Tell her that the snake is
      coming."
          The guards began to laugh.  He tried to pull away, but
      they held him fast.  He tried to cry out, but his voice
      was only a wish.  The snake now towered over both horse and
      rider, and it's mouth opened as it prepared to strike.
          "Come on, dummy!  It's up to you!  You'd better say
      something..."  The guards were laughing and poking him.
      He looked at them.  They had no ears!
          The snake struck, and the rider tumbled from the
      horse.  Rolling over and over, she came to rest at his
      feet.  As her face came into focus, he recognized the face
      of his sister!  Through her tears, she whispered, "Why
      didn't you warn me, you dummy."
          Then she died.

     He  bolted upright,  so drenched  in his  own sweat  that he  was
chilled  instantly in  the  cold night  air. His  heart  raced and  he
breathed in short, gasping heaves.
     Just a dream. It was all just a dream.
     Remembering the incident caused a  flood of memories to wash over
him as he tried to go back  to sleep. He remembered at sneaking out at
night; and how he  had learned to limit his visits to  only an hour or
two,  since losing  more  sleep  than that  made  too  tired the  next
morning. Most of the time she would  meet him at a place that they had
aggreed on  the night before.  She spent  many nights showing  him the
city...
     "Hi, Derrio."
     Hi.
     "Where would you like to go tonight?"
     Water. Boat.
     "To the docks? That's a bad place to be at night."
     Why.
     "It's  dangerous. There  are thieves  and ruffians  and drunkards
there at night."
     I. Afraid. Not.
     "I know, but let's go somewhere  else. I know. Some of my friends
like to go down  to an old, abandoned house and  tell scary stories in
the dark. Like to go?"
     Yes. Yes.
     "Ok, follow me."
     As they  ran, he thought about  how much he liked  her, and about
how much  he wanted to  tell her, but "hand  speak" didn't seem  to be
very romantic.
     Once in the old house, he saw a dozen or so people sitting around
a lighted candle.
     "Hi, all. This  is Derrio." Her voice echoed from  the bare walls
of the empty room.
     "Hi, Derrio."
     "Come in and join us."
     "Yes. We have lots of room."
     "Newbees tell the first story"
     "Derrio tells the first tale."
     I. Talk. Not. I. Listen. You.
     "What's wrong."
     "What are you doing?"
     "He's a witch casting a spell!"
     "Ha ha ha. Look at him, thrashing around like a dummy...
     "STOP IT!! He can't talk! That doesn't mean that he's an idiot!"
     "Easy, Risa.  We didn't mean any  harm. Here, you and  Derrio sit
over here and I'll start the first story..."

          "Hey, Dummy!"
          "Dummy, dummy, dummy."
          The children's chant echoed over and over, until the
      voices of the small group sounded like the cries of a mob.
          "Dummy, dummy, dummy."
          Louder and louder the voices grew, until the sound was
      like a physical presence in his head, pounding this way
      and that, looking for an escape but finding none.
          "Dummy, dummy, dummy."
          The pain of the voices was intensifying.  His head
      felt ready to explode.  He opened my mouth to scream, to
      free this monsterous beast from its prison within his
      brain...
              Nothing came out.
              "Dummy, dummy, dummy."
              "Dummy, Dummy, Dummy!"
              "DUMMY, DUMMY, DUMMY!!"

     The  sound that  he made  as he  flew from  his bedroll  was loud
enough to  wake most of  those around  him. Luthias and  Michiya found
themselves standing, swords drawn, before they were consious enough to
realize that there  was no danger. Then, realizing that  it was only a
child's nightmare, they crawled back into their bedrolls.
     But the youth stood still.
     And shook.
     The nightmares  were getting worse.  He had  to find some  way to
clear his mind so that he could get some sleep; but it drifted back to
Risa. Her smile. Her face. Her hair. Risa...

     His  courage was  at a  peak.  It had  been  a day  off from  his
studies, his sparring with Luthias had  gone well, and he had finished
his chores early.
     Tonight is the night.
     He washed and dressed as quickly as  he could. Then he ran out of
the compound and into  the city streets as fast as  his feet would go.
Only when he approached her house did he slow and stop.
     Her parents. How  could he reach her without  seeing her parents?
If they saw him, they would talk to him. What would they think when he
didn't talk back?
     The door opened and a lady stepped out, looking straight at him.
     "Derrio?" Are you Derrio?"
     Yes.
     "Come. Risa is expecting you."
     He moved forward hesitantly.
     "Come, now.  Don't be afraid. You  needn't be shy about  your not
being able to  talk. From what Risa  has told us, you  talk very well;
you just use your hands instead of your mouth."
     He froze! They know!  Oh no, now what do I  do?! They know! "Come
on in, son, before I find it  necessary to come out there and drag you
in. I'll make you  a deal. I won't mind that you  talk with your hands
if you don't mind that I talk with my mouth."
     A hint  of a smile  snuck onto his  face. Some of  his confidence
returned as he entered the house.

     After dinner he  found himself sitting in a small  room with Risa
and her mother.
     "So you came here from the farm."
     Yes.
     "And your parents?"
     Father. Archer. Army.
     Mother. Cook. Army.
     "Do you have any brothers or sisters?"
     Risa's  face held  a look  of  horror as  she tried  to stop  her
mother's question.
     No.
     "Oh, dear. I'm sorry. Did I say something wrong?!"
     Risa jumped in quickly. "Mom, don't ask him about..."
     Wait. No. Fear.
     Sister. Dead.
     Bad. Man. Far. Army. Kill. Sister.
     "Oh. I'm sorry, Derrio."
     No. Sadness.
     "Well, I must excuse myself. There  are lots of chores to be done
tonight. I'll leave you to yourselves."
     I. Help.
     "No, Derrio. I can handle them. You sit and visit." The woman got
up and walked quickly out of the room.
     I. Ask. You. Question.
     Risa smiled. "Of course you can ask me a question."
     He rose from his chair and knelt before her.
     Marry. I.
     She smiled and spoke his language.
     Yes.
     They embraced for  a long moment. Her long brown  hair smelled of
smoke from the fireplace as he ran his fingers through it. Finally she
broke the embrace and spoke. "I must  tell my mother. I'll return in a
moment..." Then she ran out of the room.
     Yes. She  said 'yes!' Just wait  until I tell everyone!  She said
that she would marry me! She said...
     "NO!!! I WILL NOT ALLOW  IT!!!" Risa's mother's voice pierced the
silence. "RISA,  I SAID NO!!  I WILL NOT  HAVE YOU MARRYING  HIM!! YOU
KNOW WHAT  HE IS!!  HOW CAN  YOU EVEN THINK  IT!! I  WILL NOT  HAVE MY
DAUGHTER MARRYING A..."
     The rest was lost  to him as he burst from the  house. But he had
heard enough to be able to fill in the missing word.
     Dummy.
     'I will not have my daughter marrying a dummy.'
     He ran as fast  as he could through the streets  by the docks. It
was late  and the normal dock  traffic was missing. There  were only a
few drunks to witness his flight.  Tears streamed from his eyes and he
ran blindly on, navigating by instinct more than sight.
     Dummy.
     Dummy, dummy, dummy.
     'He must be some kind of dummy 'cause he never says anything...'
     'Ha ha ha. Look at him, thrashing around like a dummy...'
     'I will not have my daughter marrying a dummy...'
     Dummy, Dummy, Dummy...
     WHAM! The  impact made  his head  spin. He  tumbled to  the rough
cobblestones and slid to a halt.
     "HEY!! You should  watch where you're going, lad.  There are some
who would see your  head roll for such an act." He looked  up to see a
man dressed in  a dark cloak sitting  beside him on the  road. The man
reached over and took him by the  arm. "Now, would you like to tell me
what you are running from?"
     No.
     "Are you running from the town guard, perhaps?"
     No.
     "Is someone chasing you, then?"
     No.
     "Well, next time you wish to run from no one, try not to run into
anyone, OK."
     Yes.
     "Why don't you talk?"
     He looked into  the eyes of the stranger, and  for the first time
the man could see the tears within.
     "Can  I help  you?"  The man's  voice was  soft  and filled  with
compassion and gentleness, but Derrio heard it as pity. He pulled away
violently from the  man's grasp and ran away, leaving  the man sitting
there, shaking his head.

          "Aw, poor little dummy.  What's the matter, dummy?
      Why do you run?  Are you being chased?"
          He turns from the cloaked man to look behind him.
      From everywhere on the docks, people approach.  People
      without ears.
          "Dummy..."
          Their words are mere whispers, but the meaning
      tears into his soul.
          "Dummy..."
          They come from everywhere, young and old, men and
      women and children.  All without ears.  All murmuring
      the same thing...
          "Dummy, dummy, dummy..."
          The cloaked man still holds his arm, and he can't
      seem to pull away.
          Here come the guards, earless and chanting...
          "Dummy, dummy, dummy..."
          Behind him are Risa's friends, laughing...
          "Dummy, Dummy, Dummy..."
          Risa's mother is before him now...
          "DUMMY, DUMMY, DUMMY..."
          He looks to his captor, who looks with pity and says
      "Poor little dummy.  Who will help you?  Where can you
      turn?  Can there be any place to hide for a dummy...?"
          "Dummy, Dummy, Dummy..."
          "DUMMY, DUMMY, DUMMY..."
          "DUMMY!!!"

     He wakes with a start and  cries out, but the sound resembles the
wail of a beast more than the cry of a man.
     The voice of a dummy.
     He sits there and weeps.

     Between the memories and the nightmares, the night had not been a
restful one for the squire. The morning brought the remembrance of the
previous day's marches, and the  realization that this day would bring
more. Derrio  was finishing his morning  chores when the man  from the
night before walked by. He noticed Derrio and smiled, "I see the dummy
has mastered the art of standing still, now if he could only...AWK!
     The man suddenly found the point of Derrio's sword at his throat!
With his free hand, Derrio signed violently.
     I! NOT! DUMMY!
     The man tried to step sideways to avoid the sword tip, but Derrio
rapped him on the side of the head with the flat of the sword, cutting
his scalp slightly.
     I! NOT! DUMMY!
     "Hey... Look, kid. I don't know what has you so mad, but whatever
it is, I'm sorry. Ok?"
     I! NOT! DUMMY!
     "Derrio!"
     The  boy froze  at his  Knight's voice,  but did  not remove  the
sword. He heard Sir Luthias' footsteps approach, but did not turn.
     "Put down the sword, Derrio," Sir Luthias said, his voice deathly
stern. "I don't care what he  said--" The Knight Captain glared at the
cloaked man.  "--but a Knight  *never* draws  steel on someone  who is
unarmed." Derrio's hand wavered. "Am I clear, Derrio?"
     Slowly, so slowly, Derrio lowered and sheathed his sword.
     He. Speak. I. Dummy. He. Laugh.
     Sir Luthias frowned. "I see." He  turned to the cloaked man. "Who
the hell are you, anyway?"
     The cloaked man mumbled something.
     "Isn't Beinison  enough for you? Do  you have to make  enemies of
your commander's squire?" Sir Luthias asked in that death-calm voice.
     "Your squire, Sir Captain? But he's--"
     "Well  trained. I  agree. His  draw has  gotten amazingly  quick,
lately, and if I hadn't said something, you would be dead right now."
     "But he's--"
     "Honorable, too. Like  any honorable man, he does not  like to be
insulted."
     "But  he's a  dummy!" the  man finally  got out.  "An idiot,  Sir
Captain!"
     "He  is *silent*!"  Sir Luthias  roared. "My  father used  to say
there was wisdom in silence. Dismissed."
     The cloaked man slunk away.
     Thank. You.
     Sir  Luthias smiled.  "It is  one of  my duties  as your  Knight,
Derrio, to protect you. That man was  a mage, and he could have killed
you."
     He. Say. I. Dummy.
     "I know." Sir  Luthias paused. "Now, about drawing  your blade on
him--"
     Sorry. Angry.
     "I know," Sir  Luthias said again. "But that  doesn't excuse you.
You can't control what you feel--nobody can--but you've got to control
how you act. Your action was wrong, Derrio."
     The boy hung his head.
     "When I drew steel on an unarmed man, Sir Lucan took my sword for
a month."
     Derrio's eyes panicked. Then: You. Draw. Sword?
     Sir Luthias smiled,  then sobered quickly. "Now, I  can't do that
to you in a war zone. But what I am going to do is give you additional
chores to do. We'll talk further about this later."
     Sadly, Derrio nodded.
     Shortly  after  the  midday  meal,  a  small  group  of  horsemen
approached. Luthias  and Derrio stood as  the horsemen rode to  a stop
and dismounted.
     "Sir Luthias, this needs your immediate attention." The leader of
the group handed  Luthias a sealed letter. Luthias accepted  it. As he
opened it, another of the horsemen approached Derrio.
     "A young  lady asked if  I would give this  to the squire  of Sir
Luthias of Connall. Are you said squire?" He held out a small package.
     Yes.
     Derrio  took the  package  and  looked it  over.  Attached was  a
letter, which he opened and tried  to read. He could only understand a
few of  the words. As patiently  as possible, he waited  until Luthias
finished reading his letter and spoke  a few commands to the horsemen.
As they turned and rode away, Derrio handed his letter to Luthias.
     Read. Please.

          Derrio,

              Please forgive my mother for saying those
          terrible things.  We have spoken long about this,
          and I understand her fear.  My father was a
          member of the militia.  He died at Oron's
          Crossroads.  My mother didn't want me to have to
          know the same kind of pain that she has known.
          She said 'I will not have my daughter marry a
          warrior', but I asked her if she would keep her
          daughter from marrying a knight!  You will be a
          knight someday, Derrio.  I know it in the bottom
          of my heart.  When you return, I will marry you,
          with or without my mother's blessing!

              I wait for thee, my knight to be.  Be safe
          and be well.

                  Risa

     He carefully opened the package. Inside he found a thick braid of
dark brown hair, carefully woven into  a small loop and decorated with
a jet  black ribbon. He gingerly  removed it from it's  wrappings and,
with trembling fingers, placed it in  the small pouch which he carried
at his side; the pouch which  contained his only other treasure in the
world.
     A small harp.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                              Pact
                             Part 3
                        by Max Khaytsus
          (b.c.k.a. )

     Ilona  had no  intentions  of showing  the note  or  the gem  she
received during the night to Kalen. Not knowing if he was still at her
apartment, she carefully pushed open  the door and stepped inside. The
door  had the  bad tendency  to squeak  when it  was opened  or closed
slowly and she tried to minimize the sound, but there was still a loud
squeak as the door shut.
     "Shhh..."
     Ilona jumped at the sound of Kalen's  voice. He sat in a chair by
the desk next  to the window, looking outside. That  desk, a heavy old
wooden monster, had  been a gift from Captain Koren  just a few months
before, when new furniture was purchased for his office.
     "I thought you were supposed to be at work by now," Ilona said.
     Kalen put  his index  finger to his  lips. "Tara's  sleeping," he
whispered. "We were up half the night talking."
     Ilona took  a seat  by Kalen.  She had  spent a  big part  of the
afternoon of the previous day  with Tara n'ha Sansela, Captain Koren's
niece, talking  about her  uncle's death, trying  to comfort  her. She
turned the young woman  over to Kalen when she had to  go to her shift
and  hoped the  problem  would be  solved by  the  time she  returned.
Something in Kalen's manner told her there were still things to do.
     "How is she doing?" Ilona asked.
     "She cried herself to sleep," Kalen sighed. "I wish we could tell
her, but it  would only expose her to unnecessary  risks. You know how
much she'll want to see him."
     "Did you get any sleep?"
     "A little," Kalen motioned to a  pillow and blanket in one of the
corner chairs. "She got me thinking.  What if the assassin hadn't been
stopped?"
     "He was," Ilona said, half promising and half hoping. She did not
want to think about the alternative.
     Kalen nodded, but did not speak.
     "You best go. I'll watch Tara."
     "All  right,"  Kalen  agreed.  He kissed  Ilona  and  left  after
gathering his equipment.
     Ilona removed  her own sword  and weapon  belt and hung  the dark
blue guard tabard on  the back of a chair. It had been  a long day and
she felt it would  last much longer. It was barely  noon now. She took
out  the gem  sent to  her  during the  night.  It was  a clear  white
crystal,  two fingers  wide, carefully  cut  into a  flat oval  shape.
Definitely expensive. In fact, more expensive than she could afford on
her lieutenant's  pay. It could be  made into a nice  piece of jewelry
and for  a moment she considered  keeping it. She knew  she could not,
simply because  of who had given  it to her. Besides,  it was probably
stolen. She would have  to check the reports and return  it as soon as
this case was over, but it was nice to dream.
     The note that came with the gem ominously predicted the direction
of Ilona's  career for the  duration of her  tenure as one  of Liriss'
people.  She understood  that,  with time,  the  rewards would  become
smaller and  demands of  the job  would increase.  For now  Liriss was
simply luring her into his trap, to get her in deep enough so that she
would be unable to leave or tell  anyone else. She was glad that Kalen
and Jerid  already knew. They  would help  keep her from  falling into
that trap; the same one too many innocent people had been drawn into.
     Putting everything  in the desk, Ilona  took a peek in  the other
room, where Tara was sleeping. The  Captain's niece was in bed, buried
deep under the blankets. At least she was resting. The things that had
happened were the worst  for her. About a year ago  her own father and
mother were killed  by bandits down in the village  of Myridon, in the
Duchy of Narragan. She had spent weeks finding her way up to Dargon in
hopes of locating  Adrunian Koren, her long lost uncle.  It was a big,
happy reunion when they had finally met and Captain Koren had thrown a
two day long celebration. Koren's own wife, Talei, died in child birth
many years ago and the child died  not long after. When Tara came into
his life, he  once again had a  family and uncle and niece  hit it off
immediately.
     The injuries the  Captain received during the  invasion of Dargon
threw  Tara into  a panic.  She was  helping with  the wounded  at the
castle with Ilona when Adrunian Koren was brought in. It took hours to
calm  her  then,  while  only  the skills  of  the  Duke's  physician,
Elizabeth, kept  Koren alive.  Now it was  different. Everyone  had to
believe  Koren was  dead.  Unfortunately this  included  Tara. In  the
girl's mind she was once again all alone, just like in the fall a year
ago when her  parents were killed. This did not  make the conspirators
feel any better.
     With a  sigh Ilona  returned to  the main  room and  made herself
comfortable under  the blanket in  the corner. She  had been up  for a
long  time, since  the day  she  went to  speak with  Liriss, and  two
sleepless nights finally  caught up with her. She fell  asleep as soon
as she was settled comfortably.

     Having knocked  twice without receiving an  answer, Kesrin opened
the  door and  entered Liriss'  office. The  crime lord  stood by  the
window, sipping wine from a goblet, thoughtfully looking at the events
taking place in the street below.
     "My Lord?" Kesrin said cautiously.
     Liriss  did not  answer,  unblinking eyes  still  focused on  the
market street below.
     Kesrin coughed. "My Lord?" he said louder this time.
     Liriss turned his head to look  at his lieutenant, a scowl on his
face.
     "I knocked twice, my Lord,"  Kesrin explained. "You didn't answer
either time. I thought something was wrong."
     "Sit  down, Kesrin,"  Liriss  said  harshly. He  had  no time  or
patience  to be  disturbed and  his temper  has been  running hot  all
morning, ever  since the news  from the  streets reached his  ears. He
started pacing as Kesrin sat down, passing behind his lieutenant twice
and making him cringe.
     "I want to know who killed Adrunian Koren," he finally said.
     "Sir?" Kesrin  felt sweat forming  on his forehead. "Word  on the
street is that you sent a man."
     "I did not  send a man!" Liriss bellowed. "I  would have told you
to send a man! I want to know who did!"
     "Sir?"
     "Stop saying that! Get  off your ass and find the  man who set me
up!"
     "Yes, my Lord," Kesrin hurried to his feet. He had never seen the
crime  boss so  furious  and even  if  he could  not  provide the  man
responsible, his best option was to get out of Liriss' office while he
still had the chance. He would see immediately to finding a culprit or
a fall guy.
     Liriss watched  his lieutenant  retreat, then slammed  the goblet
down  on the  table. Red  wine slopped  onto the  rich oak  table top,
quickly forming into bubbles of liquid. "Damn them all!"

     Rish  halted at  the far  end of  the corridor,  watching Captain
Bartol's office  door, where Kalen  had disappeared as  the chronicler
was making his way to see Jerid Taishent. Now he paced back and forth,
waiting for  his chance  to see  the castle lieutenant  and ask  a few
questions about the assassin's methods and the investigation.
     Quite some time had passed while  Kalen and Jerid talked and Rish
once again had the chance to  evaluate his research. It seemed strange
that he was faced with so many stumbling blocks while trying to make a
simple historical record. It was  as if information was being withheld
from him  on purpose.  Everyone claimed  not to  be familiar  with the
facts. Rish found this to be highly disturbing.
     The door down  the corridor opened and Kalen stepped  out. He was
about to  close the door behind  him, when he stopped  to listen. Rish
listened, too, but could hear nothing coming from the office.
     "Okay, I'll  do that,"  Kalen agreed.  "And don't  tell Elizabeth
anything. I  don't need her  on my case  again. It's bad  enough Ilona
knows. She  won't let me hear  the end of  it, but at least  she's not
threatening me."
     Something more came from the office.
     "No, not at  all," Kalen spoke again. "A wound's  a wound, right?
You  just keep  your end  up here  and  give me  a yell  if there's  a
problem." He closed  the door and turned, finally  spotting Rish. "Uh,
good afternoon..."
     Rish forced himself to smile. "Good afternoon, Lieutenant."
     "Stalking the castle again?" Kalen asked carefully.
     "No,  I'm   just  waiting  for  Lieutenant   Taishent  to  become
available." The forced smile remained frozen in place.
     "He's in the office," Kalen hurried to say. "Have a good day."
     Before Rish had  a chance to answer, Kalen was  off. Rish watched
him go, a bit puzzled and concerned  if what he had just overheard was
a conspiracy.  If it  was, his  own life  could be  in danger  now. He
hesitated  at the  door, wondering  if he  should knock  or not,  when
suddenly it was pulled opened from the inside.
     Rish stepped back as Jerid Taishent came face to face with him.
     "Rish... Is  there something I can  do for you?" Jerid  asked. He
was obviously unprepared for this meeting.
     "I, uh..." Rish had already decided that he would not do anything
to cast  suspicion on  himself, but  had no idea  what he  should say.
"Ah... I came to tell you somebody stole my ink."
     "Your ink?"
     "My ink."  The story  was still  not complete. "I  have a  box of
ink." Rish paused for a moment,  trying to organize his thoughts, then
went on. "There were still fourteen full bottles there. This," he held
up the bottle  dangling on a rope  off his belt, "is  almost empty and
someone  took my  box.  If it  were  the quills  or  the parchment,  I
wouldn't mind so  much, but ink is so expensive,  there will certainly
be questions."
     "I have an errand to run now,  Rish," Jerid said. "Can I get back
to you later this evening?"
     "Of course," Rish said agreeably. He  needed the time to hide his
ink.

     Ilona  woke to  the sound  of splashing  water. She  rolled over,
realizing she  was on the  floor. The  sounds came from  the adjoining
room, probably Tara  washing up. Ilona sat up with  the pillow between
her back and the wall. She was still tired and sleepy, but it was late
afternoon and there was no reason  to lounge around. There was work to
be done.  She pushed herself up,  letting the pillow and  blanket fall
down around her.
     "Tara?" Ilona stepped into the other room.
     Tara stood at the basin of water, wiping her face with a towel.
     "How did you sleep?" Ilona asked.
     "Well, thank you. I hope I'm not imposing on you..."
     "No, not at all," Ilona said. "I'm glad to have you here."
     "I'd like to go back to my uncle's house," Tara said. "Boxter and
Zed have been alone all day. I need to check on them and feed them."
     "Do you want me to go with you?" Ilona offered.
     "I'd like  to be alone," Tara  admitted. Ilona could see  the red
and a faint trace of tears in the teenager's eyes.
     "Tara..."
     "I'll  be fine,"  the girl  said with  a catch  in her  voice. "I
should be getting used to this now."
     "Oh,  sit down,"  Ilona  said, putting  a  comforting arm  around
Tara's shoulder. "I don't think we ever finished yesterday and I don't
know what garbage Kalen filled your head with."
     "He was very  nice, really. I don't  want the two of  you to have
problems because of me."
     "We won't have problems," Ilona snapped, "Now sit down!"
     Tara sat on the  edge of the bed. Ilona brought  over a chair and
sat down across from her.
     "Look, I wish I could make  you believe that I understand how you
feel. I lost my parents many years ago and I know what it's like to be
alone, and I'm sure it doesn't get easier the second time around..."
     "I'm fine,  really," Tara insisted  again, wiping tears  from her
cheeks. "You don't need to worry."
     "All  right," Ilona  agreed, not  really believing  the Captain's
niece. "But promise that if you ever need to talk, you'll come to me."
     "I promise."
     "All right, then," Ilona still did not believe Tara was well, but
she was not about to force herself  on the girl. In due time when Tara
would be ready, the truth would be told, but until then she would have
to suffer along  with the rest of  the city. "I'm going  to the market
now," Ilona said. "Be sure you're  here for dinner...and I suppose you
can bring Boxter over and keep him  in the stables. I'm not sure about
having a shivaree prowl the house, though."
     Tara remained  after Ilona left and  looked out the window  for a
long time. She was once again on  her own, having lost her family, but
this time there was  no one else she could go to.  This time she would
have to learn to be self sufficient.

     A heavy hand fell on Ilona's shoulder as she made her way through
the crowded market  and although the touch was gentle,  she jumped and
grabbed for her sword.
     "I'm sorry, Lieutenant," Cormabis laughed. "I meant no harm."
     Ilona took  a deep  breath, looking at  the smiling  elderly man.
"It's all right.  I'm just a bit  jumpy today. What can I  do for you,
Sage?"
     "Nothing for  me, thank  you, but  I was  wondering how  you were
doing. I heard about the Captain."
     In  spite of  herself, Ilona  followed Corambis  down the  market
street towards his booth.
     "It's my fault, Corambis. You gave me good advice, but I made the
wrong decision."
     "Did you?" the Sage asked. "Or did uncontrollable events overcome
you?"
     Ilona kept silent  while they walked past a  cloth dealer's stand
where a crowd had assembled. "What uncontrollable events?"
     "Did you hire the assassin to do the job? Did you encourage him?"
Corambis' eyes grew  bright, almost seeing inside  her soul. "Whatever
you did, the assassin was not your direct doing."
     "How do you know that?" Ilona  challenged him. "How do you know I
didn't hire him to do that?"
     "Because I know you, Ilona  Milnor," Corambis laughed, "just like
I knew Dane Milnor and you are every bit your father's daughter."
     "Am I really that predictable?"
     "You?"  Corambis  continued  walking  in  silence,  a  thoughtful
expression on his face. "To an old Sage like me, you are. You wouldn't
trust a crook  as far as you  could spit a mouse and  neither did your
father."
     "I can't spit a mouse all that far," Ilona smiled.
     "Take my advice,"  Corambis went on. "Bad things  happen, but you
have to be strong and prepared. I'm sure your father wouldn't give up,
and neither should you."
     "But my father was a merchant!"
     "Even merchants  can have  strong character,"  Corambis insisted,
"as do their daughters who want revenge."
     For a long time Ilona could  not answer. "He..." She was not sure
what she wanted to say. "It's  been over two decades! You don't really
think that's what I'm after?"
     "Only you can answer why you  joined the guard, but I know you've
hated Liriss  since the day you  learned what really happened  to your
parents."
     Ilona paused  to think about  what Corambis had said.  She always
had a hidden desire to bring Liriss'  empire down, but that was also a
part of  her duty  in the  Guard. It was  her job  and she  started to
wonder if that was why she chose this line of work in the first place.
     "No  one doubts  the need  to rid  the city  of crime,"  Corambis
continued before Ilona  had a chance to justify herself,  "but it will
have to be a gradual process. Don't let your haste interfear with your
progress.  Adrunian  Koren  will  always live  right  here,"  Corambis
touched his finger over her heart, "he knew the risks. Now you must do
your job."
     And with those words Corambis shuffled into his booth, which they
had now reached, leaving Ilona outside to ponder his wisdom.

     Tara brought Boxter, her horse, under the overhang that served as
the stables. She secured him to a  rail by the wall, making sure there
was  plenty of  hay, and  returned to  the street  where Zed,  her pet
shivaree sat waitin g for her, cleaning out the fur on his side.
     "Come along, Zed," Tara called and the animal quickly got up. She
patted the  shivaree as it  brushed past her leg  on the way  to Ilona
Milnor's apartment.
     Boxter and Zed have been alone  at her uncle Glenn's house, where
she had lived  since coming to Dargon  a year ago, for  an entire day,
ever since  she went to  visit her uncle at  the castle. Tara  had not
been able  to speak with  her uncle, the Captain  of the Guard,  for a
month  now, since  the castle  doctor had  put him  to sleep  with her
medicines, but she would come every day anyhow and sit by his side for
an hour  or two and  talk to him. The  physician always said  that the
Captain could  not hear  the words  in his  trance, but  Tara believed
otherwise and continued her daily visits, until the previous day, when
Lieutenants Milnor and Taishent told her that during the night someone
had assassinated her uncle. She had  cried at the loss, remembering of
another loss less than a year ago, when her parents had been killed by
bandits and she  had to travel to  Dargon to meet her  uncle, whom she
had never seen. Passing through the trading village of Tench, Tara had
encountered a  young woman by  the name of  Lana who looked  very much
like  herself and  who tried  to kill  Tara, believing  she was  being
impersonated and her reputation destroyed.
     Tara fled  Tench with a few  cuts and bruises, together  with Zed
and Boxter. Zed saved her life, coming  to her rescue just as her twin
was about to deliver the killing blow.  Zed lost his right ear in that
fight, but mauled her attacker in  his frenzy. Lana was left alive and
as she  staggered off,  dripping blood, promised  Tara she  would come
back to kill  her. At first those  words scared Tara, but  after a few
weeks in  Dargon Tara relaxed  in the safety  of her uncle's  home and
even began  to doubt that Lana  survived her injuries, let  alone that
she could find Tara in Dargon, so many leagues away.
     It has  now been almost ten  months since Tara came  to Dargon to
live with  her uncle Adrunian  Koren. They  both liked each  other and
lived well  as a family.  Her uncle taught her  to fight and  to read,
although she  was still having many  problems with both. Then  the war
came and he was grievously injured. If not for a young mage trapped in
Dargon during the war, her uncle would have died on the battle field.
     Tara paniced at first, when her  uncle was brought to the castle.
She  was helping  treat  the  wounded in  the  Dargon  Keep while  the
Beinison fleet pushed  wave after wave of soldiers into  the city, but
she was never  really prepared for what she saw.  The castle physician
got to him immediately and eased his wounds, although he was still far
from being in good shape. Now, just when it seemed everything would be
fine, he was killed, without even the chance to defend himself.
     Tara wiped the tears that had formed in her eyes and reached down
to hug Zed  who kept circling her with anticipation.  "You're all I've
got left," she sobbed. Zed pressed  his wet nose against her cheek and
a grumble came from his throat.
     "It'll be all right," Tara assured him through her sobs, stroking
his short light brown fur.
     She opened the door and went into Ilona's apartment. The shivaree
followed her in, carefully sniffing  the floor and the furniture. Tara
watched him  look around, knowing  full well  that he should  not stay
here for long,  but she let him  prowl around for the  time being. She
did not  want to stay  long here either.  No more than  another night,
until she could prove to herself  and the Lieutenant that she could go
on alone. Then she would go back  to her uncle's house and live there.
She was his  only living relative and  knew he would want  it no other
way. Then she would have to find a job. She could possibly get on as a
guard or maybe helping  in one of the stores at  the market or working
at the Duke's castle.
     "We're  going to  have to  go soon,  Zed, if  I'm to  be back  by
dinner," Tara  said. The  shivaree trotted  over to  her and  tried to
climb into her lap.
     "Oh, Zed, you're getting so  fat," she complained, gently pushing
him down. "City  living's too good for you. I'll  have to start taking
you to the forest more often."
     He slipped  under the  chair Tara was  sitting on  and reappeared
under the table. After a moment she heard him licking something. "What
did you find?" Tara looked down. Zed sat with his rear to her, licking
at something by the wall. Tara  pushed him aside. "What are you doing,
you trouble maker?" When he looked over at her, she snatched a feather
quill from under his paws. It probably smelled like a bird before. Now
it was  all wet  with shivaree spit.  As Tara got  back in  the chair,
drying the wet  pen, Zed stuck his  head out from under  the table and
licked his chops.
     Having wiped the  quill on her tunic, Tara opened  the top drawer
and put it there, so Zed could not  get to it again. She moved aside a
narrow strip of paper and put the  quill on a small simple wooden box.
She was about  to put the paper  on top of that, when  some writing on
the strip caught her attention. She  looked at it, careful to make out
the  letters. "You're  well on  your way,"  the note  said and  it was
signed, "Liriss."
     At first Tara dropped the paper -- she knew who Liriss was -- but
then picked it  up and read it again, ignoring  Zed's nuzzling at her.
There was no doubt that what  she read was right. Quickly Tara started
searching through the drawer. The  only thing there that obviously did
not fit was  a large gem stone in  the box the note had  lain on. Tara
heard how  expensive these  gems were and  that lieutenants  could not
afford them. Even her uncle, with his pay, would probably have to stop
and think twice if he could afford to buy something like that.
     "Come on, Zed," Tara got up. She put both the gem and the note in
her pocket and hurried for the door. Lieutenant Milnor was working for
Liriss, which meant  Lieutenant Darklen probably worked  for him, too.
She knew they were very close.
     Tara closed the  door after herself and Zed. The  only safe place
now was  the castle where Jerid  Taishent stayed. She had  to tell him
what she learned.
     "Come on, Zed," Tara encouraged  the shivaree and he bounced down
the street after her.

     Corambis shuffled  the chips from  his casting on the  table. "By
Kurin's beard! Twice!" He gathered the  chips in their pouch and shook
it. "Of all the things to cast!"
     He tossed the bag in a box in the corner and went looking for the
other, older one he had. "Trissa, my girl, how could you get me an oak
casting  table?"  He found  the  old  leather  pouch and  checked  its
contents. Everything was there, all ten chips. Before casting, the old
sage walked  to the  door leading  to the waiting  room and  pushed it
open.
     "Thuna?"
     His assistant entered the room.
     "Has Madam Labin come by?"
     "Not yet," Thuna said. "I'll let you know as soon as she does."
     "Did you tell  her to come for  noon?" the Sage did  not stop his
questioning.
     "Yes, I did."
     "Well, rush her in here as soon  as she comes!" he shook his head
and absentmindedly closed the door on Thuna.
     "Now, as  for you..." Corambis  looked at the casting  table. The
wheel, appearing as a giant eye, almost seemed to look back at him.
     Corambis chanted  in incantation, then  read another one  for the
chips in the pouch  he held. After a minute he  was satisfied that the
ceremony was conducted correctly and emptied the bag on the wheel. The
chips unceremoniously slid back to the positions he had seen before.
     "Saren's own curse," Corambis muttered  again. "Why does it never
change? Koren is dead!"

     Jerid  Taishent knocked  on the  door of  his father's  house and
waited. A few  moments passed before the door opened  to reveal Dyann,
the town mage. The old wizard wore a common blue robe with a silk belt
tied tightly around his waist.
     "Jerid!" the  mage exclaimed, then  coughed into his  fist. "What
brings you here?"
     "You do," Jerid came in.
     "I do?" Dyann asked, confused. "I  must be getting old, son. Just
how did I bring you here?"
     "Come on, Dad, you know what I want."
     "I'm just a humble mage. I don't read minds."
     "Dad, I want you to come stay at the castle with Aimee and me."
     Dyann frowned. "I'm  a mage and I  still have my work  to do," he
snapped.  "Just the  few days  that I  lost last  month cost  me three
months of work. I have experiments  and enchantments going on. I can't
afford the time!"
     "Dad..."
     "If that's all you're here for, go away. I'm busy."
     "Well," Jerid hesitated, "I'd also like some advice."
     Dyann rubbed his hands together. "Fatherly advice or should I get
my cards?"
     "Fatherly advice, Dad. I don't believe in that card none sense."
     "Now, don't start that again. You've seen what I do."
     "Dad,  you've spent  all  my  childhood trying  to  teach me  and
nothing came of it. I think I've earned the right to be skeptical."
     Dyann  put his  hand on  his  son's back  and walked  him to  the
kitchen where a meal was set out on the table. "You, my boy, inherited
all of your mother's bad traits..."
     "I'm happy with them," Jerid interrupted.
     "Bring Aimee to live here with me  and I'll teach her. She has it
in her blood. By the time she's your age, she'll be one of the best."
     "I'm thirty-five,  Dad. I  don't want you  torturing her  for the
next thirty years."
     "Oh, Jerid, where did I ever go wrong with you?"
     "I think it happened when you told me to be who I want to be."
     Dyann started  setting another  place at the  table. "I  hope you
haven't been telling this sort of silliness to Aimee, have you?"
     "Yes, I have, Dad."
     Dyann shook his head, pouring soup into a bowl. "Do you know that
during the war she left a chamber pot in the chimney to the big room?"
     "A chamber pot?" Jerid asked.
     "A chamber pot and a filled one, at that." He put the bowl before
Jerid and sat down. "She must've put it there during the invasion, but
since it's  summer, the vent was  sealed. I opened it  up yesterday to
get a big fire going to cook a potion. You should've seen the mess."
     Jerid smiled. "Sounds like she's experimenting."
     "It was  all so  old and dry  and decayed that  I almost  set the
attic on fire," Dyann drew a deep breath.
     "I'll talk to her about it," Jerid promised.
     Dyann nodded. "Now, what did you want to talk to me about?"
     "I wanted you to know what's going on with me, Dad. And what work
I'm involved in and what you can expect..."

     Sitting in the great hall of Dargon Keep waiting for the sergeant
to return, Tara was beginning to  have second thoughts about coming to
see Jerid  Taishent. He did, after  all, live in the  castle where the
murder took place and it would be next to impossible for him not to be
involved in some capacity if outsiders had gained access to her uncle.
She wanted to get up and  leave and pretend that nothing had happened,
but she  did not  have that luxury.  If she left  for no  reason, that
could make the Lieutenant suspicious.
     Tara did  not know Jerid  very well. She had  only met him  a few
times at official functions. She could not begin to guess at what kind
of a person he was, although he did seem like a nice man.
     She did  know Kalen  Darklen and  Ilona Milnor,  or at  least she
thought she  did, before she  found clues of Ilona's  association with
Liriss. Both the gem and the note now lay in Tara's pocket, waiting to
be shown  to the castle guard  lieutenant. But now that  she developed
new doubts about his honesty, Tara did  not know what to do. `Maybe if
I ask him about the funeral,' Tara thought to herself. `Certainly they
can't have the body just lying around for days doing nothing.'
     But for  the longest  time neither  the sergeant,  nor Lieutenant
Taishent came  down the stairs.  Just when Tara  got up to  leave, the
sergeant who met her at the door returned.
     "Lady, I can't  seem to find the Lieutenant  anywhere. Perhaps if
you left him a message, or maybe I can help you with something..."
     Tara shook her  head with relief. "Thank you, no.  I'll come back
tomorrow."
     "Very  well," the  sergeant bowed  and escorted  her to  the Keep
doors.
     Tara left the building, heading for  a post in the yard where she
left had  Zed tied  on a leash.  Seeing her, the  shivaree got  up and
started pulling on the rope.
     "Missed me, did you?" Tara played with her furry friend. She bent
down to untie the rope and heard an elderly voice behind her.
     "Miss,  you're the  niece of  Captain Koren,  are you  not?" Rish
Vogel asked, looking more at the shivaree than at the young woman.
     Tara turned to look at the old chronicler, still holding onto the
rope. She knew who  he was, but little about him  and it surprised her
that he had come to talk to her. The chronicaler's eccentricities were
widely known and she really did not  want to spend the time talking to
him now about what  has happened to her uncle. She  was still having a
lot of  problems dealing with  it herself and  did not need  others to
spoil her mood for her.
     "Yes, I am," she answered politely as Rish came closer.
     "And you're  staying with Lieutenant Milnor?"  the old chronicler
went on.
     "Yes..."
     He was  now so close  that she could  hear him whisper,  which is
what he did. "Have you noticed anything strange?"
     "What?"
     "About the Lieutenant, I mean."
     "Uh..."
     "I think your  uncle was killed by his own  guards," Rish rumbled
on.
     "Why?" Tara interrupted him.
     "I don't know why!"
     "No, I mean what makes you think it was the guards?"
     "I saw his room after  the murder. Everything looked wrong." Rish
stopped and looked around to make sure  they were alone and no one was
trying to listen in. "And the lieutenants are hiding things. It's been
a day  and a half  and no one  has seen the  body yet and  they're not
talking about what they're doing about  it. No one even knows where it
is. And..." he looked around again, "the guard who killed the assassin
is missing. The room was cleaned,  but I don't think they searched for
clues."
     That was enough  to convince Tara that Rish was  on her side. She
looked around as well, then took the  note and the gem from her pocket
and handed them to Rish. "I found these in Lieutenant Milnor's desk."
     Rish read the note, then examined the gem. His hands shook. "This
is it...this is the proof," he muttered.
     Tara took  a step back,  backing into  the post the  shivaree had
been tied to. She was not sure where Zed himself had gone.
     Rish suddenly grabbed Tara's hands  and put the evidence in them.
"Thank you, thank you," he rushed off.
     "Wait!" Tara hurried after him, returning the gem and the note to
her pocket before anyone else had seen them.
     "What?" Rish looked back at her impatiently.
     "What am I supposed to do? I can't stay with Lieutenant Milnor!"
     "You can  and you must!"  Rish insisted.  "Go back and  put those
things where you  found them and don't tell anyone.  I'll take care of
everything."
     "But  I can't  stay with  Ilona Milnor!"  Tara went  on. "If  she
killed my uncle, I can't stay with her!"
     Rish  looked  around,  hoping  no one  heard  the  young  woman's
outburst. "If she hasn't killed you  yet and doesn't suspect you know,
she'll have no reason to harm you. Now go back and do what I say!"
     Tara watched Rish  hurry back to the castle, his  long brown robe
tangling at  his feet. Zed was  back, rubbing against Tara's  legs and
she bent down and hugged him.
     "You'll protect me, right?"
     The shivaree nuzzled her cheek and ear and snorted.

     Rish hurried into his small cubicle of a room and locked the door
behind him. He  had his mystery, his  clues and now his  proof. Now he
just needed a miracle to get it all resolved.
     Taking  a pen  and a  sheet of  parchment out  of his  desk, Rish
started writing furiously.  If it was the last thing  he did, he would
bring order back to the town of Dargon.
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1     (C)    Copyright  March,    1992,    DargonZine,   Editor    Dafydd
. All rights revert to the authors. These stories may
not be reproduced or redistributed (save  in the case of reproducing the
whole 'zine for further distribution)  without the express permission of
the author involved.






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  D     D A  A R  R G    O  O N N N     Z   I N N N E     || Volume 5
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  D    D  AAAA RRR  G GG O  O N N N   Z     I N N N E     || Issue  2
  DDDDD   A  A R  R GGGG OOOO N  NN  ZZZZZZ I N  NN EEEE  ||
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--   DargonZine Volume 5, Issue 2        09/24/92          Cir 1192   --
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--                            Contents                                --
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 Sons of Gateway 5: Goren     Jon Evans              Janis 29 -
                                                        Vibril 27, 1014
 Pact IV                      Max Khaytsus           Yuli 15, 1014
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1                 Sons of Gateway, Part 5: Goren
                         by Jon Evans
                (b.c.k.a. )

     "Saren and Nehru be damned," cried  Goren, as he dove through the
snow towards  the wood  line of  the forest.  The riders  were closing
quickly,  even with  the snow  to slow  the horses,  but his  own feet
weren't as  light in the  high drifts as  he had hoped.  "Finally, the
suffering end  you deserve," he said  to no one. "Payback  is a bitch,
isn't it?"
     Bark splintered  on the tree next  to him, a quarrel  burying its
head  into the  wood. "Why  in the  name of  Ol did  I burn  the bow?"
Strangely, he answered himself: "Because it wasn't yours, usurper."
     In the woods, Goren knew the snow would be lighter. He had hunted
here many  times, in his  youth as well as  recently, and he  knew the
paths that would be  hard to follow on a horse.  There were times when
he came hunting on his own, and  he had missed the aelo with his first
arrow. They  aren't fierce  animals, but  when they're  attacked, they
know how to hurt the men that hunt them down.
     Another bolt, landing quietly and  dangerously close in the snow,
brought him out  of these thoughts, and he hurried  down a little used
path towards  a cabin his  family had used  for years. There  would be
weapons there,  perhaps, and at least  a place to defend  himself from
his attackers.  He didn't know  who these men  were, or why  they were
chasing him  down, and  he didn't  much care. All  he cared  about was
staying alive.  "Do you really  think you  deserve to live,"  he asked
himself, "after you  murdered your father in cold blood?  Let the hand
that serves the poison be cut off."
     Running through  the woods, the  horses losing ground  slowly, he
toppled over  a mound of  snow into a  bank he hadn't  remembered. The
horses were too  far behind to have  seen him fall - he  was safe, for
the moment. He rested.
     "Haven't spent  much time in  the winter woods, have  you?" Goren
whirled to  see another  rider, wearing  the same  white armor  of his
followers. "Just  because you're out  of sight, doesn't mean  we can't
follow your trail." The man released  his blade from its scabbard with
the sharp, crisp scratch of steel on steel. Goren stood up, waist-deep
in the snow covered gully, and  turned to flee. Behind him stood three
more riders,  swords drawn and  dismounted from their  steeds, staring
down at him from the bank of the pit.
     "Now you'll meet the suffering  end you deserve," Goren said. The
four were  mildly amused,  as the  leader walked  his horse  closer to
Winston.
     "I rather  think you're wrong,"  the leader replied,  pulling his
blade back to swing.
     "No, wait! I didn't mean-"  Blackness engulfed Goren as he landed
in the cold, soft snow.

     "He  burned  the bow."  Marcus  stared  silently, sadly,  at  the
remains of a small fire someone  had reported seeing under the dock at
the south ford, two  days past. Marcus had known who  it was, and took
his time  investigating. The curved  wood was charred  beyond definite
description, but  Marcus knew no  rotted plank would take  that shape,
and the blackened remains of six  arrow heads were only just below the
surface of the soot, when he  scraped through it with his knife. "What
idiocy has taken the boy? Bad enough  I had to hit him... never had to
take steps  with Goren  before... couldn't stop  babbling... squirmin'
mess, that boy is..."
     Marcus mounted  his horse  once more, noting  the lack  of tracks
anywhere near the area. No one fords the Laraka in the winter, and the
ripping wind covered well any traces Goren had left behind. Riding the
rest of his nightly rounds, he thought he should have gone with Goren,
but decided  against it. "Who'd be  left to take care  of Kald's home,
with Ne'on running  the place? And besides, I'd probably  have to kill
the men  following me, instead  of just avoiding  their opportunities.
Ne'on needs a lesson in subtilty..."
     As the Castellan of Gateway trotted his horse away from the area,
three  dark  figures  crawled  slowly   over  the  ridge  behind  him,
contrasting the  white landscape  with their  black clothes  and arms.
They had been following  him for the past day and a  half. They had no
idea that he had been keeping track of them, as well.

     Soft warmth,  in the form of  bear skins and female  flesh, awoke
Goren from his fevered haze. He had  been sick with the Red Skull, his
benefactors told him, and they were  glad he was alive. Looking around
him, he saw he  was in a tent some twenty feet  square, with about ten
other men and women. He was also in chains, as were the others.
     "Where  am I?"  he asked  of the  woman looking  down at  him. He
quickly thought of his clothes and checked to see if he was decent. He
was; but not in the clothes with which he had left Gateway.
     As if sensing his thoughts, the woman - or girl, for she couldn't
be older  than 17 summers -  blushed shyly, and began  to answer, when
she was interrupted by another voice.
     "Hell," it stated plainly, in a tone that was at once ancient and
young, rough and gentle. Goren looked to  see a woman of not more than
five heads tall, with the eyes of  an angel lined with more years than
she had lived. "You can go, now,  Vercona; the man appears to be well.
Although I'd take it  easy from now on, if I were  you." This last was
directed at Goren.
     "I'm not dead, and I can think  of worse places to awaken than in
the presence  of beautiful women, so  I think you might  be mistaken."
Goren looked  around. The general  populace didn't think the  jest was
very funny, and the woman wasn't smiling much, either.
     "Then perhaps you should stay here:  women come and go every day,
and the food isn't half bad. You have to pay dearly for it, though; or
you will, as soon as you've been  sold." With a cold stare, she added.
"If you  decide to  live through the  next two weeks,  I'll be  in the
corner. Happy  attitudes and light jokes  aren't going to do  you very
much good."
     Goren decided he didn't like this woman.

     A white clothed figure, sitting tall in the saddle, rode his pale
horse through the snow covered woods 100 leagues North West of Magnus.
His  mount's light,  muffled hoofs  echoed softly  through the  nearby
trees causing small clouds of billowy white snow to fall gently to the
cottony masses  below. Pausing  briefly, he reached  down to  his left
boot, covered with  the grey-white fur of winter  wolves, and adjusted
his stirrup. The howling wind passing  through the trees blew open his
light blue cloak,  revealing his heavy suede  protective vest beneath,
and the short cropped blonde hair  around the fair complexion and pale
blue  eyes common  to  most northerners.  Pulling  the cloak  securely
around his body, he huddled against  the sharp wind biting through his
too-thin clothing, and muttered a prayer  to Stevene as he spurred his
horse into a walk.
     "Stevene, keep  her safe  and whole,  let her  not feel  the cold
sting of winter, and may the Communers  find more need for her in this
life than myself."
     A light figure almost seemed to blend into the gentle snow of the
plains as  it emerged from  the northern edge  of the woods  less than
fifty leagues from Gateway Keep.

     "Fine," he  said, turning from the  exit of the tent  and sitting
down on a red  silk pillow. The pillow was soft, but  it did little to
comfort  him from  the  frustration at  his  failure, especially  with
everyone  in the  tent  staring  at him  with  the  mixed feelings  of
pessimistic knowledge and disappointment.
     "Goren," the angelic voice sighed, and  he felt a firm hand grasp
his shoulder, "I've  tried everything already. You know  that. You are
feeling panic,  now, and  you have to  let it go."  Rho looked  to the
opening of the tent. "It's not strong magic, but it's enough."
     "I  hate magic,"  he muttered,  looking around  him at  the other
trapped souls. "Even more, I hate  being confined!" He stood up again,
and began  walking toward  the flaps.  "I'm going  to break  this damn
force if I have to spend the rest of my life doing it."
     Rho grabbed him and spun him  around. "You may well do that. That
field doesn't wear  down. It's there. Now sit down,  and calm down, or
I'll knock you down." She was  tired of this stubborn man who wouldn't
listen. She was tired of his ranting  and raving. She was tired of his
childish  tirades. She  didn't  understand  how a  man  could seem  so
rational, and  act so  immature. And,  most of all,  she was  tired of
being locked  up, too. His  words had struck a  chord in her,  but she
wasn't going to allow them to disturb her thinking.
     Goren was  tired, too.  This woman had  been demanding  since the
moment he met her. Who did she  think she was, treating him like this?
He was  the Keeper of  Gateway. He was the  nephew of a  respected, if
minor, House of Magnus. And, she was a woman.
     "Get out of my way," he said, teeth clenched.
     "Sit down," she said coolly.
     He reached to  move her. There was a blur  of movement, the blunt
sound of  flesh hitting flesh, a  gasp of air, and  Goren flew several
feet backward, landing  not too softly on a pile  of silk and pillows.
Goren lay doubled over, his breath short and infrequent.
     "Don't  come to  me  again  unless you're  in  the  mood to  take
orders."

     Hanlar moved his large bulk back into the trees, a narrow beam of
energy burning a  thin branch off the tree beside  him. The trees were
safe, he thought,  just out of their distance.  His commanding officer
looked at him  dazedly from behind the large boulder  he was using for
cover.  They all  looked  at him,  asking how  they  were expected  to
succeed where a man his size had failed. The cold winter snow mixed in
with the dirt they  were forced to sleep in, covering  them all with a
muddy  complexion.  They had  quarreled  on  the  way here,  the  poor
travelling conditions  and their bad temperaments  mixing to aggravate
their situation. Some of them had broken bones from fights, cuts where
the fights had gotten out of control.  Two of them were asked to leave
the group. Ne'on would  have to deal with them, if  they lived to make
it back.
     "Why didn't you  keep going?" The commander  looked desperate. He
was only 21 years old, and most of his troops had more experience than
he. Experience  in what, Hanlar  wondered. Most of these  "troops", as
Ne'on called his Black Arm, were cut-throats and thieves, muggers, men
who hadn't worked an honest day in their lives, unless it was to stake
out a prospective target.
     Their commanding  officer was  a man  known in  the Keep  and the
surrounding area. It  had been a politically wise choice  for Ne'on to
put him  in charge. It  had been a  tactically stupid move.  He didn't
want the position. He  had joined the Arm for the  sake of making some
extra money  for his family.  Ne'on knew this,  and asked if  he would
like to make even more. Needing it, he jumped at the chance. He hadn't
known what he was doing.
     "Keep goin'?" Hanlar looked at  his captain in amazement. "Are ye
crazed, boy? Them  wizards jist took out  all me men, an'  me near wi'
'em. 'Ow would you like to be chargin' out there, eh?"
     "If I weren't  the commanding officer, and in  charge of bringing
this  damn precious  stone  back, I  would be  out  there!" Damn  this
corporal, thought sergeant  Howen, he shouldn't dare speak  to me that
way. As soon as this is over, I will discipline him.
     "Well, then,  mister commandin' officer," Hanlar's  face wrinkled
with the sarcasm, "maybe you'd best  be findin' a way tha' what's left
of this troop kin git along into  this devil's hole wi' out yuir help,
eh?"
     "I'm working  on it, corporal."  The sergeant stared back  at the
cave entrance, wondering how he could fight the cold, his men, and the
magicians holding Ne'on's stone, and  still stay alive in the process.
"I'm working on it."

     Marcus glanced behind  him slowly, letting the  men following him
know he  was turing, and giving  them time to hide  themselves. In the
time it  took for them  to get out  of his field  of vision -  one had
jumped  behind  the rain  barrel,  he  noted  by the  barrel's  slight
movement, and  the other had stepped  into the River Snake's  Den - he
was able  to duck  down the alley  to the side  before they  could see
where he had  gone. It shouldn't take  them long to figure  it out, he
thought, glancing at the snow on the ground.
     Looking down  the alley, he noticed  the back door to  the fabric
store, and made his  way towards it. He wasn't sure  if these men were
still Ne'on's guard,  or some of the ruffians the  winter weather, and
Ne'on's new policies, had attracted to Gateway. Before he could get to
the door, he heard their muffled  footfalls behind him. He turned, and
saw the  two men following him.  They weren't dressed like  men of the
Arm, being clad mostly in winter  hides and light cloaks. They paused,
noting the exposed position in which both parties stood.
     "You're either thinking you should  run away now," Marcus said to
them,  unclipping his  sword  belt,  "while you're  still  out of  the
dungeons..." Marcus drew his sword slowly, letting it's scrape against
the scabbard  be heard quite plainly  by the two men.  "..or that it's
time to draw your weapons, and face this keep's Castellan with steel."
Pulling the  cloak off his  shoulders, he  twirled it around  his left
forearm and hand,  resulting in an effective  defensive weapon against
two opponents. "Me... I've already made my decision."
     The two  men paused,  looking at  each other  doubtfully. They're
judging each  other's value, Marcus  thought. After two  seconds, they
turned and ran. The Castellan let them go.
     "They're getting  brave," he  mused. "Sooner  or later,  if those
were Ne'on's men, they're going to have to do something."

     The tent  was wrapped in a  silence broken only by  the sounds of
deep slumber,  and a body  navigating across the pillows  and sleeping
forms.  He crept  closer  in  the darkness,  making  little noise  and
disturbing no  one despite the  sparse light  cast by the  hanging oil
lamp. He didn't need  to see where she lay sleeping; he  knew as if by
instinct. As he  drew closer to her,  he reached his hand  to her, and
gently touched her.
     "Rho," he whispered,  not intending to wake her if  she was truly
asleep.
     "What is it, Goren," she replied.  Her voice was clear and smooth
- she had been awake for some time.
     "I, uh..."  He wasn't expecting  her to  be awake. It  would have
been much easier  if she was actually asleep. He  knew he had intended
to say something to  her, on his way over, but now  he fumbled for the
words. He had a respect for her  which he felt for few people. She had
been  able to  knock him  across  the room.  And, of  course, she  was
beautiful.  "I just  wanted... I  was stubborn...  What I'm  trying to
say-"
     "Goren, forget it." Rho turned to her left side, resting her head
up  on her  left  hand.  She looked  at  him  seriously, gauging  him,
determining his value  at what she had planned. She  decided. "Can you
fight? I mean, not hand to hand, but with weapons?"
     "Can't everyone?"
     "No, Goren,  not everyone can. And  I don't mean just  carry them
and know how to  hold them - any mother's son can do  that. I mean, if
it comes down to it, could I count on your sword arm?"
     Goren  smiled. "No."  Rho gave  him a  dissapointed look,  but he
stopped her before she could reply.  "You'd get your head chopped off,
if you had to rely on my sword arm.  But, give me a bow and I can show
you  some  magic."  He tried  not  to  sound  too  proud of  his  next
statement, but  he wanted  to impress  her. "I  won the  Keep's Silver
Arrow the last  five years in a  row. Of course, Marcus  and my father
weren't competing,  but..." At  the thought of  his father,  he became
quiet and sober. For the first time in over a fortnight, he remembered
his father laying on the ground,  twisted in pain. Rho's voice brought
him back.
     "Good," she said. "Gather all the clothing you can, we're leaving
here tonight."  Throwing off the  blankets she was resting  under, she
stood up fully clothed, and removed a bundle from beneath her pillows.
Goren  ran for  his  own  possessions, waking  several  people in  the
process as he stumbled over their sleeping forms.
     A flickering yellow  light began emanating from  outside the tent
near  Rho's  bed.  It  grew brighter,  turned  orange,  and  darkened.
Suddenly,  the  tent  material  peeled  away under  the  heat  of  the
red-orange flames. The inhabitants of the tent were in chaos, shouting
their surprise and fear, as a white-clad warrior entered the tent.
     "Come on!"  Rho called, grabbing  the bundle and  running through
the opening.  Goren ran  close behind,  clasping a  bundle of  his own
close to his chest.

     Sorya waited in the gathered silence, her brothers and sisters of
the  order huddling  about the  rocky entrance  to their  habitat. Her
light green robe,  signifying her status as Leaf, stood  out among the
browns and greys - the Branches and  Barks - of the rest of the group.
The cold  winter wind  did not  reach into  the cave,  whose enchanted
opening permitted only  gentle breezes to pass  through. Sorya lowered
her blonde-capped head and rubbed the  short bristles of her hair with
her left  hand... for luck,  she smiled.  Glancing up, her  keen brown
eyes sensed something in the distance. Her jaw set.
     "Prepare," Sorya's soft, raspy voice called out.
     "No, wait..."  Haren, one  of the Barks,  called. "I  don't think
it's an offensive attack. Not a direct one..."
     Haren was  the sensitive of  the group.  He could feel  things of
this nature, sometimes, but Sorya wanted  to be sure. Any mistake, and
the Crystal might  be forfeit. No one  was going to take  it while she
was acting leader of the Nar-Enthruen. "Explain," she commanded.
     "It's  movement, that's  all. Not  necessarily an  attack, but...
part of one."
     "Where to?"  He was nervous,  she noted.  So was she.  These men,
from out of no  where, had staged an attack on  the Guild. Normal men,
without even a  magician to help them discover the  illusion cast over
the cave's  entrance. Another  effect of the  Crystal, she  noted. She
wondered if it was losing its power.
     "I can't  say... around...  I don't know."  He dropped  his head,
shamefully, wishing he could have told the group. It would have been a
great deal of help. "Look!"
     In front of the cave, about thirty yards away, stood a large man,
looking battered  and tired  from the  siege. The  leader of  the last
group that had attacked the cave,  Sorya noted. As he stepped forward,
he drew his sword, intending to attack. Easily defeated, she thought.
     "Karin," she called, and the Bark stepped out of the cave to meet
him. The worst aspect of the Crystal, Sorya thought, was that no magic
within  fifty feet  of it  was functional,  unless it  was a  powerful
conglomeration of magi, and that only happened during a Draining.
     Karin stepped out  of the cave, and greeted her  combatant with a
nod. She  expected to  have little  time to cast  her spell  before he
swung his great sword in her direction - her first spell would have to
be a  protective one. She called  on the magic, feeling  it enter her,
shaping its form about her.
     Sharp pain, in  the form of an arrow, entered  her side. A warmth
spread about her left hip, and she could feel wetness running down her
legs. The energy she was summoning began slipping away, she could feel
the spell dissipating. Concentrate,  damnit, she thought, focusing her
mind once again.
     A new warmth, pleasurable, gathered  at her side, and she glanced
over to see Haren sitting next to  her, his hands glowing a light blue
as they touched her wound, the arrow easing out slowly and painlessly.
Another shaft flew  through the air, striking the ground  next to her.
She  knew  she  had to  finish  the  spell,  but  there were  so  many
distractions.
     Haren, run  back inside,she thought.  He was risking his  life to
save  hers; there  was no  way he  could have  covered himself  with a
protective spell before he began healing her. Another idea occurred to
her, and she  began expanding the spell to include  him. It would take
only a moment longer...
     Hanlar's long sword  came down on her shoulder blade  with a note
of finality,  splitting her torso  half way. Karin cried  faintly, and
slumped  onto  the  magus  sitting  next  to  her.  Haren  looked  up,
surprised,  and  shouted  something incomprehensible  to  Hanlar,  and
Hanlar was sent  sprawling backward, a gash opening in  his chest. Two
more  arrows were  fired,  and  these hit  their  mark. Haren  slumped
forward over the body of his dead friend.

     "Gods, it worked!" Sergeant Howen ran forward, his troops staring
at him in  wonder. "Corporal, get up  here, we've got a  man down, and
I'm not losing any more  men. McCullen! Braddock! Hold your positions!
If another one of those robed freaks comes out of that cave, I want it
looking like my grandmother's pin cushion!"
     The sudden victory where defeat had seemed so imminent struck the
men dumb, but they followed the new strength they saw in their leader.
They didn't like him, they had thought he was weak, but he showed them
that  a good  plan  could go  a  long way.  As one  of  the men  began
bandaging  Hanlar, Hanlar  looked  up at  his  commander, twisted  his
craggy face into an exaggerated wink of his left eye, and slumped back
down.
     "Will he be alright, corporal?" Howen was worried. Out of all the
men he had the dubious pleasure to lead, this man was his favorite. He
wasn't particularly nice  to the sergeant, but he  treated him fairly,
and gave him a chance when most of the troops would not have.
     "'E'll be  fine, comman'er. Jist  a bit  o' a scrape...  'e's 'ad
worse,  I can  tell you  that."  The corporal  continued wrapping  the
bandage  around  Hanlar's  newly  exposed  chest,  the  blood  already
beginning to coagulate.
     "Well, just  make sure  that wound  is kept  clean. And  keep him
warm, I'm not losing anyone for  any reason." Howen turned to the rest
of his gathered troop. "The rest of you, form ranks, two rows, bows in
the back,  swords up front. We're  going into that cave  and bring out
that bloody stone."

     "Sorya, they're coming! How are we going to stop them?" The young
Bark,  new to  magic itself  let  alone battle,  cried desperately  to
Sorya. They  all look desperate,  she thought. "They killed  Karin and
Haren, Sorya. How can  we stop their arrows if we  can't even cast any
spells? There's only twelve of us left!"
     Twelve of  us and twenty of  them, Sorya thought, looking  at the
massed  robes  around  her. Twelve  hysterical,  panicking  beginners,
against  twenty  trained  men.  She  thought  about  the  cave,  their
advantages, what  few weapons they  had, and  the men who  were coming
towards the  entrance. She  began to  feel the  uneasy turning  in her
stomach which precluded her own panic, and had to force herself not to
lose control. If  she lost command of herself, the  entire group would
be  cut down  like lambs  for  the slaughter.  Then she  thought of  a
chance.
     "Twelve  will be  enough,"  she announced  to  the robed  figures
around her. "They  can't fire their arrows into  the illusion covering
the cave, and the few magical traps  on the path should slow them down
a bit. Falen, take two men and go  to the chamber. I want you to bring
the Crystal up here."
     Her words  echoed off  the walls,  taking time  to sink  into the
minds of  the magi around  her. Falen  rose, picked two  Barks nearest
him, and left. The others still  looked at her, wondering. They didn't
understand.
     "You all  know the Crystal  can be  used to drain  latent ability
from... incompetent... students. Well, there's another function of the
Crystal that isn't discussed very often-"
     A  scream filled  the  cavern as  a man  crumbled  to the  ground
outside the cave. About twenty feet  from the entrance, the center man
in the front line  grasped at where his left leg used  to be, a small,
fiery explosion burning it completely  from his hip. The advancing men
halted, looking about them carefully. Someone hesitantly stepped up to
help  the now  unconscious  soldier  whose wound  -  mercifully -  had
cauterized with the  injury. A few others began to  back away, until a
yell from their commanding officer  stopped them. Sorya wished that he
had been the one to suffer the  injury - the entire assault might have
been halted right there.
     "As I was  saying, there is another function." Falen  and the two
Barks arrived  with the  large stone,  its mass  being carried  by the
three  of them  between two  large, wooden  poles. The  purple, oblong
stone  pulsed slightly,  slowly, in  the presence  of the  magi. "That
function is to drain life."
     There  was a  subtle  change  in the  expressions  of the  massed
magicians; the change from confused wonder to fearful awe. One of them
spoke the  thoughts of  all the young,  inexperienced magi,  "We can't
manage  the Crystal..  it's too  powerful...  there's not  many of  us
here..."
     The  time they  had left  was drawing  short. The  men had  begun
advancing, again, this time prodding the  ground in front of them with
spears,  branches,  anything they  could  find  to trigger  the  traps
without  being caught  in them.  They would  be entering  the cave  in
another minute,  and then  the slaughter  would begin.  Sorya realized
there was a  second time constraint: the Crystal  was pulsing slightly
faster,  a little  brighter,  it's  dweomer causing  it  to drink  the
plentiful magic  potential gathered in  the room  so close to  it. The
incantation must begin immediately.
     "I tell you, twelve  will be enough! Am I not a  Leaf of the Nar-
Enthruen? Do  I not know of  what I speak?  Or would you wait  for the
soldiers to cut you to pieces? Look  outside, and tell me we are still
not enough to use the Crystal." The magi glanced about themselves, saw
the first man  coming near to entering the cave,  and quickly formed a
circle around the Crystal. Sorya stepped into her place, and began the
spell.

     "Are we  sure this is the  exact entrance?" The corporal  next to
Howen looked at  him with the question. The entrance  was difficult to
detect, at  best, with the  illusion cast over  the cave. It  was only
Ne'on's instructions  that had allowed  them to  find the cave  in the
first place. The  closer you got to it, somehow,  the more defined the
illusion appeared.
     "I'm sure,  damnit, now let's  get in  there. We don't  know what
else they  might have  planned for  us, and we're  running low  on man
power." He yelled  loudly to his men to pick  up their spirits, "Let's
go, men! Give these  demon wizards a piece of steel  to take with them
to Risseer!"
     As  they passed  through the  illusion, they  could see  the cave
entirely, including  the circle of  magi around a huge,  purple stone.
They  charged, fearing  the possible  attack by  the conclave,  but no
wizards turned  to meet their steel.  Suddenly, a man screamed  out in
pain, and dropped to the ground.  Then, another man fell, and another,
writhing in agony for a moment, and laying still.
     "Magic!" cried one of the men.  And the charge stopped yet again.
The bowmen worked their way forward and nocked their arrows.
     "Aim, and  fire at  will," Howen commanded,  and the  arrows flew
out, striking their targets.
     A  feeling  of sickness  came  over  Howen; his  insides  started
turning,  and a  pain crawled  up his  left arm,  working towards  his
heart.
     "Get the  green-robed one,"  he gasped,  clutching at  his chest.
Several  other  men also  stopped  their  attack, clutching  at  their
chests. One fell to the ground, dead.
     More arrows  flew through the  air, some striking  their targets,
most missing  completely. There were  only six more  standing, damnit,
Howen thought.  And thirteen of us.  The odds are still  in our favor.
Blackness closed in around his  vision, his heart rate jumping faster.
The green robe called something  out, and another man collapsed behind
him. Still, he fought the desire to give up, to let the life spill out
of him;  he had something to  live for, a  job to finish, a  family to
support.
     Another magus felt  the bite of an  arrow and the men  of the Arm
closed with their enemy. Swords were  drawn, steel bit into cloth, and
screams  reached  Howen's ears  as  he  felt Celine's  tranquil  pull.
Another  cry, the  sound of  rusted metal  hitting stone,  feet moving
around him. Someone gasped for air.
     Air  began making  its way  into his  own lungs.  His heart  beat
slowly, steadily.  His vision  cleared, and when  he focussed,  he saw
several silhouettes leaning over him.
     "Is he dead?" one asked.
     Then he heard a familiar voice - a voice he was growing to love -
the voice of Hanlar. "He's lookin' you square in the face, lad, and ye
think he's dead?" Hands reached out to grasp him, and pull him up, and
he saw the green  robed magus laying in a pool of  blood by the stone,
Hanlar's own sword sticking out of  the woman's chest like a monument.
Nehru forgive us, he thought, we were fighting women.
     "We'll take  some time 'ere,  lads, to  rest. We'll not  be goin'
any- where, for a scant bit 'o time."
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                            Pact, part IV
                           by Max Khaytsus
              (b.c.k.a. )

     The only instruction in the letter that Ilona Milnor followed was
to come alone  and that was only because she  had plenty of confidence
in herself. She ignored the lines about not carrying weapons or light.
She needed  those, especially in  the middle  of the night  around the
docks, outside the protective city wall. She received her instructions
to come here  just after she reported  for duty at sunset.  She had no
idea who  the note  was from, but  it was delivered  by a  young blond
woman, perhaps  in her early  twenties. She was obviously  upper class
and very polite.
     "Who is this from?" Ilona asked, re-folding the message.
     "I  can't say,"  the  woman  answered, as  if  she  did not  know
herself.
     "And who are you?"
     The woman shrugged. "I'm just a messenger."
     "That's not how I do business," Ilona warned her.
     "Then you'll have to adjust."
     "I could have you locked  up," the lieutenant threatened. She had
no patience for games.
     "Aren't  we past  the time  when they  killed the  bearer of  bad
news?" the  woman continued in  her calm voice.  "I told you,  it came
into my  hands with  intent of  being passed into  yours. Take  it and
follow the instructions."  With those words she turned  and walked out
of the guard house.
     Ilona could have  had her arrested, but the woman  was right. The
days  of  killing the  messenger  were  long  gone. Besides,  she  was
obviously a member of  the local mob and Ilona did not  want to be the
one to cast the first stone. It seemed she was on her way to being one
of the  organization's members and the  means to that end  seemed more
important. If she were to succeed  in infiltrating the mob, a lot more
than one criminal would be her prize.
     Ilona  shone the  light of  the lantern  down the  length of  the
docks,  watching for  movement  and examining  the  rebuilding of  the
piers. Large portions of the dock  were covered with fresh wood, while
other sections  were completely torn  down. Most remained in  the same
bad condition that the war had left them in.
     There were  two large merchant  ships that  had come in  over the
last few days to sell their wares  in town, braving their way past the
enemy fleet  and the pirates. She  shuddered to think how  many others
failed to  make it through.  The ocean  floor must have  been littered
with greedy merchants wanting to make a profit on the war.
     Since most of the pier markers  were lost in the fighting and the
subsequent fires,  Ilona had  to count the  piers before  locating the
proper one.  Like the rest,  it appeared to  have been damaged  in the
fighting and was patched up in some places. She shone the lantern down
the  pier, then  at  the small  clipper  ship docked  at  it. By  some
miracle, some of the ships in Dargon's harbor managed to survive. Many
were only lightly damaged and repair  and raising work had started the
same day the Beinison fleet moved on.
     "I told  you no  lights!" a  harsh male  voice floated  down from
above and Ilona  shone her light up  to the deck of  the ship. Liriss,
the crime  lord of  Dargon stood  on deck, dressed  in a  black cloak,
shielding his eyes from the light. "Come up here."
     Ilona made her  way to the boarding plank and  walked up on deck.
Liriss was alone as far as she could tell.
     "Kill the light," he asked in a quiet voice. "Please."
     Ilona did so. She never imagined he could be polite.
     "Please,  sit  down,"  Liriss   told  her,  standing  before  her
nervously. He was not armed and there did not seem to be a weapon near
by.
     "Why am I here?" Ilona asked.
     "Your first assignment."
     She sat  on the second  step of the  ladder leading to  the upper
deck. "What do you need?"
     "Your help. You're one of the very few I can trust."
     "Me?" She was ready for anything but that.
     "Yes, you. Not even any of  my lieutenants. Not one of the three.
You see,  I was framed.  I never gave the  order to have  your Captain
killed  and I'm  already being  blamed..." He  did not  often let  his
speech trail, but he was obviously deep in thought.
     "What?" Ilona stood up. She was even worse prepared to hear that.
     "I never gave the order,"  Liriss repeated. "Someone else did and
used my name. I suspect that one of my aides did this."
     "But the man said you ordered it.  I was there!" She bit her lip,
realizing she had given vital information away. In the official story,
the assassin  was killed long before  she ever arrived at  the castle.
"And that note from you..." she hurried to mask her slip.
     "Note? What note?"
     "The note you sent last night, with the gem."
     "I  never sent  you a  gem," Liriss  protested. "I  wouldn't dare
leave evidence like that around. And I  sent no note. What did it say?
I must see it!"
     "It said `You're well on your way,' and was signed by you."
     "You  must  believe me,"  Liriss  insisted.  "I didn't  send  you
anything and I did not order Koren's death."
     "Kesrin told  Kalen that Koren's death  was a part of  the deal,"
Ilona said. She intended to corner the rat.
     "For Darklen,  not for  you! I  would have told  you up  front! I
can't afford  the risk  so soon  after trying to  make this  deal with
Darklen. Besides, Koren was too well guarded  for me to send my men on
a suicide mission.  I have too few  people now as it is.  I would wait
until he was home, alone, before acting."
     "You expect me to believe that?"
     "Yes! You must!"  Liriss took a deep breath. "I  did NOT have him
killed. You have access to Darklen and that's all I need for now. I've
learned to be patient rising to where I am. And believe me that I sent
no gem. If I wanted to pay you  off, it would have been done with Rand
gold, just like the Duke pays."
     "Liriss, you're  a thief, a  liar, and  a murderer. Why  should I
believe you?"
     "You have  to." He shifted  uncomfortably. "You must  believe me.
You're an  outsider to my organization.  You're one of the  very few I
can trust. Help me and I'll help you."
     "How?" she sighed. The song was not going to change.
     "You must prove that someone is trying to set me up. And you must
find that person.  I know that he or  she is one of my  people. If you
find out who it is, I will gladly  give them up to you, along with any
evidence you will need to put them away."
     "All right," Ilona  sighed, "but you must tell  me everything you
know."
                        *          *          *
     It  has been  a whole  month since  Aimee Taishent  moved to  the
Duke's castle to live with her father, Jerid, who worked for the Duke.
The Duke  and all  his soldiers  were gone,  even Captain  Bartol, who
always told  wonderful stories, and  her father  was in charge  of the
whole castle. But he  was also very busy and could  not spend any time
with her.
     Once Aimee snuck away and went  to her grandfather's house in the
new part  of the city, beyond  the old city's walls.  There were other
kids where her grandfather lived and  he always talked about magic and
showed her interesting things. But then two castle guards came looking
for her and took her home.
     Her father was furious. He said he did not want her going outside
the castle alone any more and told her stories about bad Beinisons and
that they were still out in the new city, stealing little children and
that is why so many of her friends were gone.
     She cried and cried, until he took  her into the city to show her
that the  Beinisons had gone  far away, but told  her not to  go alone
anywhere anyway.  And then  the guards  would not let  her out  of the
castle by herself. Her father bought  her some new toys that she could
play with, but all alone she could not keep her interest in the games.
     Aimee had prowled  the entire castle by now. She  had been in all
the corridors  and halls  and in  many of the  rooms. She  checked the
kitchen and  the stables  and the  gardens. She had  even been  in all
three spires  of the  keep and  up on  the wall  that went  around the
castle.  All the  buildings on  the other  side looked  small and  the
people even smaller.
     But a  month was  more than enough  time to see  all of  that and
Aimee was  once again getting bored.  She had been sulking  around the
castle all morning when she found  a large wooden door that had always
been locked in  the past, slightly ajar. She peeked  through the crack
and saw a long hallway with flickering torches and stairs at the other
end.
     Aimee  wondered if  she  should  get her  puppy,  Karl, from  the
kitchen, where he  was begging and stealing scraps from  the cook, but
decided that he would bark and  make too much noise and instead pulled
the heavy door open and went inside.
     Behind the  door the corridor smelled  like the ditch out  by the
docks and remembering  the loud and rough sailors she  had seen, Aimee
thought about going back, but at  the same time she desperately wanted
to see what was at the bottom  of the stairs, behind the door that has
been locked for the last month.
     The stairs were narrow and dark  because the row of torches ended
in  the corridor  above, but  light shone  in from  the bottom  of the
stairs. Aimee  carefully made  her way  down to  where there  was more
light. The  walls here looked  grayer and  were much older,  dusty and
cracked  and  the ceiling  had  arches  and  was rounded,  unlike  the
ceilings in the castle.
     There were many doors and cross passages everywhere Aimee looked,
but the  torches marked  a single  path, twisting  and turning  in the
maze.  Before Aimee  could go  too  far, she  heard running  footsteps
behind her and hid in a dark  corridor. A moment later a castle guard,
carrying something in his hands, ran  by, his sword loudly bouncing up
and down on his belt. As soon as he was out of sight, Aimee turned and
ran back up the stairs.
     To her dismay, the heavy oak door was locked.
                        *          *          *
     Rish hid his hands in the folds of his robe, glad that he managed
to get all three letters off by different messengers. He had spent the
entire morning out at the market,  taking his time, making sure no one
knew what he was doing. He was  charged an exorbitant price for two of
the messages, due to their destination  and the course of the war, but
he knew  the people taking them  were reliable and the  messages would
arrive in less than a month. The  third message was not going very far
and Rish expected to get the most use out of it.
     He made his way down one of the keep's main corridors, trying not
to look as satisfied as he felt.
     "Good morning, Lord Chronicler," a maid greeted him.
     "Good morning," Rish smiled back. He felt as if the weight of the
world was lifted  off his shoulders as the letters  left his hands and
felt more personable than usual as a result.
     "You have not seen Sir Taishent's young daughter, by chance?"
     "Of course not," Rish muttered. The child was always lost.
     "The girl has been missing all morning."
     "I..." Rish began when an armored man ran into the hall.
     "Hildy!"
     "Excuse  me,  Lord  Chronicler,"  the maid  hurried  towards  the
soldier.
     Rish proceeded out  of the hall, thinking  about the Lieutenant's
young daughter.  She was a  curious child, always underfoot.  Once she
saw him writing and  asked for a bottle of ink, which  he gave her. By
the following day she had stained  half the castle. He heard back from
Jerid Taishent  about that.  Heard so  much in fact,  that he  was not
going to  give Aimee anything ever  again. To this day,  almost a full
month later,  the servants still found  ink stains here and  there and
had to spend  hours scrubbing them away. And the  ink bottle was still
missing, the girl claiming she had lost it.
     He hoped  she had not  gotten into any  trouble or found  the ink
bottles he stashed away in the the library behind the old books on the
far shelves.
     For now, if he  were to see her, he would  bring her to someone's
attention, but he  would not go searching  for her on his  own. He had
plenty of things to  do and being as busy as he  was with his research
into Captain Koren's death, he  had neglected to maintain the detailed
records he usually made.
                        *          *          *
     "Shut up!" Kalen shouted at the youth. "I don't want to hear it!"
     The young man fell silent.
     "Now," Kalen went  on to one of  the guards, "you throw  him in a
cell and  keep him  there and  you find that  merchant and  ask what's
missing. If it matches, bring him here to talk to me. If not, tell him
to go home and wait. Now get out of here, all of you!"
     "But I  didn't do anything!"  the boy  wailed again as  the guard
turned him to lead him away.
     "Shut up!"  Kalen shouted again. "If  I hear your voice  one more
time, you're not getting out of that cell until you're forty!"
     The teen fell silent with a whimper and the guard led him away to
the back of the guard house.
     "Rough day?" Jerid asked from the doorway.
     "Yeah," Kalen sighed, turning, "but if  that brat was just a year
older,  I'd backhand  him  so  hard... Just  look  at me,  threatening
violence on kids..."
     "If  he  stole  something,  the  least  he  deserves  is  a  good
whipping," Jerid noted.
     "You know  me. I'd just  as soon  let their parents  thrash them.
Come on, we can talk in my office now."
     Jerid nodded. "You know what this is about?"
     "I have a good idea. Some of your men dropped by this morning."
     They  walked  up the  stairs  and  into Captain  Koren's  office,
shutting the door so they would  not be disturbed. Jerid paused at the
door for a moment, looking about the room. It has been months since he
stood here talking  with Adrunian Koren. The  normally spotless office
was a mess with  papers and boxes and a pair  of crates of merchandise
in the corner.
     "What happened?" Kalen asked.
     Jerid had to  force himself away from looking at  the mess around
the room.  "Aimee's missing. I  saw her  at breakfast, but  she didn't
show up  for lunch  and her mutt  has spent the  whole morning  in the
kitchen. The staff has been searching for  her all day. No one saw her
leave the castle. My father hasn't seen her. No one."
     "No one..?"
     Jerid shook  his head. "The  cook, the castellan,  the physician.
She hadn't even gone to the stables today."
     "Do you think she was kidnapped?"
     "What  else is  there to  think?" Jerid  said bitterly,  "but why
would someone go to  all this trouble and how would  they ever get her
out of the castle?"
     "Would Liriss try to use her to blackmail you?"
     "What for? I'm not the one who deals with the grief he causes."
     "I don't know," Kalen said. "It's just a thought."
     "I'd  rather someone  kidnapped  her than  anything else,"  Jerid
admitted. "If  they took her,  she'll be  okay. I'm worried  about the
alternatives."
     "Do you  need more people to  look?" Kalen asked. He  had none to
spare, but he would gladly give some up for a task such as this.
     "I  just want  you and  your  people to  watch out  for her.  She
probably just wandered off on her own like she always does, but I want
to be sure. I'm amazed the guards didn't see her leave the castle."
     "I'll let Ilona  and Caisy know," Kalen promised,  "and we'll let
you know if we find anything. Aimee will be fine."
                        *          *          *
     Unable to open the dungeon  door, Aimee followed the lit corridor
to where the guard disappeared. She  reasoned that it was only a guard
and she  should not have gotten  scared just because it  was her first
time down here. Her father would probably yell at her for coming here,
but at least the guard would let her out.
     She followed the lit torches to another staircase and down again,
deeper  into the  dungeon. The  walls became  darker and  the passages
narrower. The shadows from the  torch light cast frightening shapes on
the walls. Aimee lost her courage  many times, but each time she would
remind herself  that there are no  such things as monsters,  just like
her father told her when tucking her in after nightmares. Shadows were
just dark spots made by things standing in front of the light.
     She  made it  very far  into the  dungeon before  she could  hear
voices.
     "The chiurgeon's  due soon,"  a man said  somewhere up  ahead and
Aimee carefully crept forward.
     "Should I hide the mead?" a second voice laughed.
     "After  begging  the cook  for  some?"  yet  a third  male  voice
queried.
     Aimee crawled up to a doorway  and peered inside. In the room sat
three men and  a woman. Two wore blue jackets  that identified them as
city guards. The  other two wore the Duke's crest,  making them a part
of the castle guard. They all  sat around an old wooden table, playing
cards.  Every so  often one  or another  would take  a sip  from their
goblet.
     "You know,  Elizabeth is  really pesky," the  blond man  with his
back to Aimee  said. "She always complains that  we're doing something
wrong. At least old Griswald let us be."
     "He sold out, Tesky," the man  on his right said. This one seemed
to be  in charge. He  was older and  wore sergeant insignia  and spoke
with a deep, strong voice.
     "And now we've got the war because of him," the last man said.
     "It wasn't  just him,"  the sergeant corrected.  "It was  all the
greedy people willing to sell out to Beinison."
     They finished the hand and moved something about on the table.
     "I'll hide this,"  Tesky got a jug and got  up. Aimee shrank back
as he turned around, but he did not notice her.
     "Let's go check  on the Great One, Altura," the  sergeant said to
the woman. "Arellano, see that the torches are still burning."
     They all got up and left in different directions. Aimee hid in an
alcove as  Arellano passed by, followed  by the man who  took the jug.
Sergeant Guralnik  and Altura  went into  an adjoining  chamber. Aimee
held her breath until  the two men that passed her  were out of sight,
then snuck into the room where the four guards had sat. The cards were
still lying on the table, with some coins and mugs and two daggers. In
the  corner across  from the  second  door lay  sleeping bags,  packs,
weapon belts and some food. Feeling hungry, Aimee picked up a piece of
dried meat, a large slice of cheese and a skin of water. She retreated
into the corridor  without checking what was in the  next room and hid
the meal  up the corridor,  then waited for  the guards to  pass back,
nibbling on the cheese that she had stolen.
     Aimee had  no idea  what the  guards were doing  here or  why the
Duke's physician was coming to visit  them or who the `Great One' was.
All this became  an interesting mystery she felt she  needed to solve.
She picked contentedly  at the cheese, waiting for  her opportunity to
arise.
     "...be fine," voices sounded in the corridor again. "Two or three
days and we'll be  out of here. I doubt there's a  reason to be hiding
for weeks. It's not like we killed the Duke or anything."
     Aimee hid in  the shadows of her  room as the two  men passed by.
She wondered what they were talking about. Hiding? Killing?
     "Well, I  want to  see my  wife before  I become  a part  of this
place," the  other man  complained. "I'm  already beginning  to forget
what she looks like."
     They entered the lit room and  Aimee snuck out into the corridor,
still holding the cheese, and listened in at the door.
     "We'll need to replace the torches at the bottom of the stairs in
an hour or so," Arellano reported.
     "Get 'em when Elizabeth leaves," the sergeant said.
     A chair creaked.
     Footsteps.
     "What happened here?" someone complained.
     "Where?" Altura asked.
     More footsteps. Aimee peeked in.
     "Damn rats!" the  man who carried the jug examined  the pack that
held the food.
     "Put it up  on the chair, Tesky," the sergeant  told him. "We can
live with these rats. It's the ones up above that I worry about."
     Arellano dug into his pack and pulled out a slingshot. "Just wait
'till I see one!"
     Aimee  shrank back  from the  door  in fear,  realizing that  the
slingshot was really meant for her.
                        *          *          *
     "My Lord?" a man bowed before Kesrin. "I have news for you."
     "What is  it?" Kesrin asked  without turning to look.  People had
been having news for him all morning  long and he now wanted some time
to think about the unrest in the ranks of the mob.
     "A letter,  Sir. It was carried  by that merchant who  refused to
pay for protection.  The boys and I  got him outside of  the town wall
just after lunch. He was leaving a day early."
     "Let me see it," Kesrin put out his hand.
     The scroll was handed to him.
     "Did you break the seal?"
     "No, my Lord, of course not! It was broken by the merchant."
     Kesrin's eyes narrowed and the brigand took a fearful step back.
     "You have read it?"
     "Uh... Yes, my Lord. I read it to see if it was important."
     Kesrin unrolled the parchment and  slowly read it, not dismissing
the man.
     "I didn't tell  anyone else, Sir. I was the  only one sorting the
loot."
     Lines appeared  in Kesrin's brow  as he read  on, but he  did not
respond to the man.
     "And, of course,  I thought you might want to  bring this to Lord
Liriss' attention yourself, Sir," the brigand went on.
     "You did  well, Misgen,"  Kesrin said.  "Remember not  to discuss
this with anyone. Come, we'll show this to Liriss together."
     They walked  out the door  and down  the corridor leading  to the
stairs side  by side. As they  approached the stairs, Kesrin  drew his
dagger and sank it into Misgen's back.
     "Are  you sure  you're  the  only one  who  saw  the letter?"  he
demanded.
     "Yes," the brigand gasped. "I was the only one."
     "My Lord won't appreciate others knowing his grief," Kesrin said,
twisting the blade  and pulling it out.  He let the man  fall down the
stairs with a second thrust and continued on his way up.
                        *          *          *
     Aimee recognized the  sound of the physician's  soft sandals long
before the  woman appeared in  the hallway. Aimee hid  while Elizabeth
passed by, then  carefully followed her down the  corridor towards the
room where the guards were staying.
     Maybe now  that the physician had  come down, she would  hear why
the guards were  playing cards in the dungeon and  who the `Great One'
was.
     Waiting for the physician to show, Aimee ate some of the food she
had stolen  and thought  about what  she might  tell her  father about
where she had been. She probably  should have told the guards that she
got locked in by accident and asked  to be let out instead of sneaking
around, and spying on them. It was an honest mistake on her part after
all, but having  heard the guards talking, Aimee's  curiosity grew and
she wondered about just who was in  the next room and why he would not
come out.
     Now that the physician was here,  she could just wait and see and
then sneak out before the others  finished talking and simply tell her
father that she was out on the  castle wall and forgot to come back to
eat lunch.
     Elizabeth  entered the  room where  the guards  were sitting  and
greetings were  exchanged, then she asked  how `he' is and  one of the
men said `he' was the same as they had left him.
     "Some doctor you  are," Elizabeth frowned and  continued into the
next room.
     "Told you," Tesky said to the sergeant, who smiled joyfully.
     "At least she means well."
     Arellano picked up  his slingshot off the table  and followed the
physician. "Better watch her, lest the rats get her."
     "Just shoot her once," Tesky followed him in.
     A moment later Sergeant Guralnik and Altura went in after them.
     Aimee waited a while, making sure  none of them were coming back,
then entered the  room and went to the doorway  through which all five
disappeared.
     She could hear muffled talking as  she reached the door, then saw
the  backs  of  the  people  before her.  They  were  all  looking  at
something, but  she could  not tell  what. A moment  later one  of the
guards moved and Aimee  realized that lying on a bed  was a large man.
The man's hand slipped off the cot and swung limply down to the floor.
Aimee's eyes grew wide and she bit her lip. The man was not moving! He
was dead!
     Then the physician also stepped  away from the bed, revealing the
man's face and  Aimee instantly recognized Captain  Koren, the Captain
of the Dargon Town Guard. She  heard the servants talking the past few
days about his murder and now,  having finally seen his body, she knew
that these guards and the doctor were involved.
     Trying to be  as quiet as possible, Aimee backed  out of the room
and into one of the unlit corridors of the underground maze, hoping no
one realized that she was there and what she had seen.
                        *          *          *
     "My Lord?" Kesrin entered Liriss' office almost without knocking.
     "I said I didn't want to be disturbed!" Liriss snapped.
     "My Lord, this information is of great importance," Kesrin forced
himself  to  remain pleasant,  always  his  most difficult  task  when
dealing with  his boss.  He had  no idea that  Liriss was  troubled to
start with, but he was not sorry to interrupt.
     "Let me have it," Liriss ordered sharply.
     Kesrin delivered  the rolled up  parchment into the  crime lord's
grasp, then stepped back expectantly.
     "Now leave."
     "My Lord?"
     "Leave and close the door behind you!"
     "Of course,  my Lord," Kesrin  smiled uneasily and backed  out of
the room. If Liriss  was in a bad mood now, it was  bound to get worse
as soon  as he read  the letter and  violent mood swings  often caused
violent reactions. As he stepped out  into the hall, Kesrin made hasty
plans to find  something to do in the city,  to avoid being underfoot.
He shut the door firmly behind himself and went.
     As the  door closed,  Liriss examined the  roll Kesrin  had given
him. What  could be so important  that he would have  to be disturbed?
Usually Kesrin  was bright enough  not to  disobey a direct  order. He
unrolled the scroll and read.

     My Dear Captain Bartol,

     I write you  this letter in fear for my  life and the future
     of the  Duchy of Dargon  and our Lord Clifton's  rule. Three
     days ago Captain Adrunian Koren  was found dead in his room,
     poisoned  by an  assassin. Action  was taken  immediately to
     find out who  sent his killer, but as time  went on, I began
     to notice severe inconsistencies in the stories told and the
     actions taken.  Please consider  the following  factors that
     have  forced me  to write  you  this dispatch  and plea  for
     immediate assistance.

     When I personally had a chance to examine the room where the
     Captain was resting, I found that the supposed struggle that
     took  place between  the guard  and the  assassin could  not
     possibly have left the room in the fine condition in which I
     found it.

     More surprisingly, having  locked myself in the  room, I had
     learned that no one outside the  door was able to hear me or
     see the light of the candle that I had lit. Based on this, I
     refuse  to believe  that  a guard  making  rounds found  the
     assassin in  the room  by accident. You  see, the  only keys
     were  held  by your  aide,  Lieutenant  Jerid Taishent,  the
     Physician, Elizabeth  of the Pass, and  the castle Castellan
     Molinar. A guard would be  unable to enter this room, locked
     from the inside, by any legitimate means.

     Even more astonishingly yet,  the guard that apprehended the
     assassin  was   reassigned  the   following  day   and  made
     unavailable to my  inquires. In addition, while  the body of
     the assassin  has been returned  to his family, the  body of
     Captain Koren has effectively disappeared.

     The  final  factor  in  my  decision to  write  to  you  was
     information delivered to my  attention by Tara n'ha Sansela,
     the Captain's  niece. In the possession  of Lieutenant Ilona
     Milnor,  of the  Town Guard,  she had  found a  valuable gem
     stone together with a note from the crime lord of the city's
     underground, thanking her for her  work and making a promise
     of things yet to come.

     In the past three days I have also noticed a newly developed
     comradery between  Town Guard  Lieutenants Ilona  Milnor and
     Kalen Darklen and your  own aide, Lieutenant Jerid Taishent.
     The  three  of  them  have  been  instrumental  in  blocking
     information and dragging out the facts of the investigation.
     I believe that their involvement with the assassination goes
     much further than it first appears and sincerely believe the
     Ducal  seat to  be in  jeopardy. Once  again, I  beg you  to
     return to the capital to relieve the developing problems.

                          < Signed, >
                          Your humble servant,
                          Rish Vogel,
                          Dargon archivist, chronicler and historian

     "Damn them!" Liriss  slammed his fist on the  table, flinging the
scroll across the room. The silver  wine goblet that stood on his desk
tipped  over, spilling  the rich  red wine  on the  table. "The  bitch
tricked me!"
     He shoved his  chair back, furious. Then, after a  moment, a calm
smile spread  across his face. "Just  as well. It always  works out in
the end."
------------------------------------------------------------------------
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             **

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   (C)   Copyright  September,   1992,    DargonZine,    Editor   Dafydd
. All rights revert to the authors. These stories may
not be reproduced  or redistributed (save in the case of reproducing the
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the author involved.





1                                                             /
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  D     D A  A R  R G    O  O N N N     Z   I N N N E     || Volume 5
-=========================================================+|)
  D    D  AAAA RRR  G GG O  O N N N   Z     I N N N E     || Issue  3
  DDDDD   A  A R  R GGGG OOOO N  NN  ZZZZZZ I N  NN EEEE  ||
                                                           \\
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--   DargonZine Volume 5, Issue 3        10/02/92          Cir 1130   --
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--                            Contents                                --
------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Pact V                       Max Khaytsus           Yuli 15-17, 1014
 To Be Continued              Michelle Brothers
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                                Pact
                               Part 5
                           by Max Khaytsus
                (b.c.k.a. )

     Many  hours  passed  before  Aimee gathered  herself  and  forced
herself to look for  a way out. Her father always  taught her that she
should never  be afraid and  running to hide  in the darkness  was the
wrong thing to do.  Of course neither did she want  to let anyone here
know she had seen  them and Captain Koren and that  she knew that they
killed him.
     At first  she ran back  up the stairs to  the heavy oak  door and
tried to get  out, but the door  was locked and banging on  it did not
help. Aimee then went back to the base of the second set of stairs, to
hide in the maze of rooms and  corridors, not far from the guards. She
was afraid of them, but she was  more afraid of the dark, far reaching
tunnels. At least she would not get lost if she hid near the guards.
     Aimee wandered up and down  the passages, looking into rooms, but
never letting  the lit corridor fall  out of her sight.  She heard the
physician leave and  cowered in the corner of a  side corridor, afraid
to breathe,  while a pair of  guards replaced the dying  torches along
the corridor. After they had all  left, she again checked the corridor
and her stash of stolen food, to make sure nothing had happened to it,
but she was still afraid of going to look in the room where the guards
watched Captain Koren's body.
     She was very  tired now and, taking her food,  Aimee retreated to
one of  the rooms  in a  dark corridor  and fell  asleep in  a corner,
wishing she had  a blanket or a  sheet to wrap herself in  on the cold
stone floor.

     Kalen closed the  door to Captain Koren's office and  took a seat
in  the chair  before  the desk.  Across from  him  sat Ilona  Milnor,
surrounded by piles of paper.
     "It's my shift," he said when she looked up.
     She nodded. "We need to talk."
     They had  not seen  each other  for almost a  full day  now, ever
since the last shift  change between them. There was a  lot of work to
be  done, perhaps  too much.  In  the last  day alone  there were  two
murders, one  of a man  suspected of being  an employee of  Liriss and
another of a now dead merchant who  ventured out a day before the rest
of his caravan was due to leave. His two horses, wagon, goods and even
clothes had  disappeared and his  body was simply  left to lie  in the
road, not a quarter league from the guard gate.
     There was also  the usual rash of fights and  thefts and a priest
who showed  up early in  the morning, saying he  had found a  dead rat
floating in  his pool of golden  water. Above all, Aimee  Taishent was
still missing  and after so  much time,  foul play was  suspected. The
guards, who  were already on extra  long shifts, were forced  to spend
more time looking for the girl. Jerid himself had not slept at all and
did  nothing but  continue to  question people  who had  seen her  and
dispatching guards to check all possible leads.
     Ilona brushed  her hair back,  looking through the papers  on the
desk. "It's  been a  busy day,"  she then  got up  and walked  over to
Kalen. "You look like you haven't slept."
     "I did," he answered, "a  little. Sergeant Griebel and I searched
the outside of the town wall earlier."
     "Kalen! That's a couple of leagues!"
     "I know,"  he agreed, "but  Jerid will  kill himself if  we don't
help. I also  spoke with Dyann and  he has an idea that  he said he'll
try tonight."
     Ilona sat  down in Kalen's  lap and put  her arms around  him. "I
don't think Aimee was kidnapped."
     "What?" Kalen tried to look at her, but Ilona did not release the
embrace.
     "I saw Liriss  last night," she said, "right  after I transferred
the shift to Caisy.  Liriss asked me to help him.  He said he suspects
one of his  lieutenants of trying to  ruin him, by setting  him up. He
claims he never gave the order to kill Koren, nor did he send the note
or the gem."
     "Do you believe him?" Kalen  asked, again putting his arms around
Ilona.
     "I don't know...he was surprised when I mentioned the gem and the
note. I think there might be something here."
     "But if that's true, all it means is that he didn't kidnap Aimee.
Someone else could have."
     "I just  have the gut  feeling that she wasn't  kidnapped," Ilona
said. "Other things would have happened by now if she had been..."
     "Who  would  be  setting  Liriss up?"  Kalen  tried  a  different
approach to the problem.
     "Just about any  living being in Dargon. It's not  like he's well
liked."
     "I'd suspect there's someone on  his side," Kalen said. "He can't
be so desperate as to run to us!"
     "Well, a woman delivered the message to me," Ilona said. "I guess
she's one of  his whores, so Madam Tillipanary is  probably still with
him. I  would guess Kesrin is  also loyal, even though  Liriss doesn't
want to believe that."
     "You're probably  right," Kalen said.  "Maybe we can use  this to
our advantage."
     "How?" Ilona asked. "I'm in good with Liriss. I'd rather not have
to start this over."
     "If we could only bring them all down..." Kalen thought out loud.
     Ilona hugged him tightly. "What if we help him now...?"

     "I knew  I saw him here,"  the maid smiled, picking  Karl up from
where he slept in  the alcove by the heavy oak  door leading down into
the castle  dungeons. She brushed  off the  dust the puppy  managed to
pick  up off  the  spotlessly  clean floor  and  handed  him to  Dyann
Taishent.
     "Thank you, my girl," the mage accepted the puppy.
     "I sure  hope you find  your granddaughter, sir," the  maid bowed
and left to resume her duties.
     Dyann looked Karl, who licked his  nose, over and took him to the
kitchen where Corambis  and Thuna were preparing  for the enchantment.
It was late  already, but Aimee had  gone missing for well  over a day
and Dyann was  not going to lose  more time while the  guards beat all
the bushes around town.
     Although it was  almost midnight, there were still  people in the
kitchen, cleaning up  from the previous day, preparing  things for the
next.
     "Blast it,  woman," Corambis snapped.  "I know it's late  and you
just washed it, but I want that pot!"
     "Sage, I warn you," the elderly  matron declared, "if I come down
tomorrow and the pot is dirty, I'll have your hide!"
     "You will be more than welcome to try," Corambis said, taking the
clay pot from the woman. "Thuna, get me those herbs and some water."
     Dyann  submerged Karl  in a  prepared bath  while looking  at the
exchange and smiled.
     "Goodness, what are  you doing to that dog?"  the cook exclaimed,
having finished with Corambis.
     "We shall be  cooking him, madam," the sage snapped  and held the
clay pot out for Thuna to fill with water.
     "You  will do  no such  thing!"  the woman  declared. She  looked
around, then picked up a large roller and looked menacingly at the two
men. "I will not have the two of you cooking dogs in my kitchen!"
     "Relax, madam," Dyann  said firmly. "The dog will  not be harmed.
He is the  subject of our enchantment to find  my granddaughter." With
those words  he wrapped  Karl in  a towel  to dry  him off.  The puppy
struggled,  but soon  settled down  to the  rubbing and  scratching he
received and produced a yawn.
     "Here are the herbs," Thuna put a bag before Corambis.
     "Very good," the sage approved. "Dyann?"
     "Thuna, would you  hold Karl?" the mage asked and  as soon as she
took the dog from him, stepped past the cook to help Corambis with the
preparations. "Be careful not to let him leave the towel," he added as
Thuna adjusted Karl in the bundle.
     The two  elderly men carefully  measured a batch of  herbs, mixed
them in  a clay  pot with some  water, then filtered  the brew  into a
shallow  dish and  offered  it to  Karl, who  started  lapping at  the
liquid.
     "Am I glad I'm not a dog!"  Corambis sniffed the pot with the wet
herbs.
     Dyann also took a sniff. "We made it a little strong."
     "So much  the better," Corambis  muttered. "It will make  the dog
more sensitive."
     The  two men  waited until  Karl  finished the  brew and  stopped
licking the dish. Dyann  took out a tunic Aimee had  left lying on the
floor of her  room and let the  puppy sniff it. Karl  was already very
familiar with Aimee's scent, but the tunic and the potion were used to
reinforce the smell and make him more sensitive.
     Dyann took the dog from Thuna and went into the corridor.
     "Wash the equipment," Corambis  instructed Thuna and followed his
friend out.
     Dyann put  Karl on  the ground  and the two  men stood  over him,
looking down. "Karl, go find Aimee," Dyann finally said.
     The puppy looked up at him and yawned.
     "Karl!" Dyann  warned. He rubbed  the tunic in Karl's  face again
and gave him a push. "Go find Aimee!"
     Karl stood up, but did not budge.
     "He's not a bloodhound," Corambis  sighed, "and he's too young to
understand what we want."
     "He's stubborn just  like Aimee," Dyann said,  slapping the dog's
behind. "Get going!"
     Karl  let out  a yelp  and took  off down  the corridor,  quickly
outdistancing the two elderly men.
     "Well, now you've done it,"  Corambis sighed. "He'll find her and
lose us."
     The two men hurried down the corridor after the puppy. After some
twists and turns they reached the  great hall and stood there, looking
puzzled.
     "Which way?" the mage muttered to himself.
     Corambis pointed in the direction of the exit. "He might have ran
out."
     "Or  back to  the kitchen,"  Dyann pointed  down the  great hall,
where it forked.
     "Let's check with  the guards first," Corambis  suggested and the
two men went to the castle entrance to question the men.
     The two sleepy soldiers on duty  could do little more than shrug.
If there was a puppy that ran out past them, they had not seen it.
     "...but the gates are closed," one of the men assured Dyann. "The
dog won't be able to leave the castle."
     "Great," the mage worded and the two men went back inside.
     "We should  have tagged him,"  Corambis said, "or at  least found
some rope to put him on."
     Dyann nodded.  "Let's check  the kitchen and  if he's  not there,
we'll get some torches and look outside."
     "Let's do that," Corambis agreed.
     The two  men walked up  the steps leading  out of the  great hall
when the maid who had helped Dyann find Karl earlier stopped them.
     "Sirs, did that lazy mutt help?"
     Dyann shook  his head.  "That lazy  mutt ran  off soon  after you
found him."
     "Oh,  sir, I'm  sorry," the  woman apologized.  "I had  sincerely
hopped you'd be able  to find the girl. The puppy  I just saw sleeping
by the dungeon door, just like  earlier. He probably just found a cool
spot on the stone, where the draft is."

     "Who is it?" Ilona asked over  the sound of the rapid knocking on
the door of her apartment.
     "Ovink," a male voice coughed. "Lord Liriss wishes to see you."
     It was a  voice familiar to Ilona  -- she had brought  him in for
questioning a  number of times  -- but it was  also the middle  of the
night. "Do you realize how late it is?" she asked.
     "Yes, but I was told not to return alone."
     "All right, then. Wait."
     Ilona quickly dressed, strapped on her  belt and sword and left a
note on her table for Kalen. It read:

       `Ovink came for me.  I will return by mid-day.'

     She folded the note and left it  on the desk, right under the ink
bottle.
     "All right, let's go," Ilona opened the door.
     Instantly  two men  rushed  in, knocking  her  off balance.  They
wrestled her down to the floor and  tied her arms behind her. From the
other room  Ilona could  hear sounds  of a  struggle and  Tara yelling
something at the men.
     "Let her go!" Ilona struggled  against her attackers, forcing one
man to  lose his  grip on her.  She swung her  legs, knocking  him off
balance and he crashed down to the floor.
     Ovink appeared above  Ilona, holding a dagger. "I'd  hate to have
to cut you  prematurely, Lieutenant," he smiled  viciously in warning.
Ovink  was well  known  for his  bad temper  and  sadistic streak,  in
contrast  to Cissell's  cool  arrogance and  Kesrin's politeness.  She
stopped struggling as he brought the knife a little closer to her neck
and his smile deepened.
     "Good. Tie her  legs." The dagger did not leave  Ilona's neck. It
slid slowly up to  her jaw and then along it to the  back of her head.
The blade  left behind a cold  trail that Ilona could  not identify --
was it blood or just her imagination? The men continued to fumble with
the rope  and Ilona did  not dare breath so  long as Ovink  stood over
her.
     "That's a  good soldier,"  the brigand  chuckled, getting  up and
hiding the dagger before Ilona could see if it was stained with blood.
She could still feel  the lingering chill on her jaw  and neck. A drop
ran down her throat and dripped off  to the floor. Sweat or blood? She
could not  tell by  Ovink's reaction,  but guessed that  it had  to be
sweat. If he  drew blood, he would  do more than just  stand and watch
the men tie her.
     "What do you want?" Ilona asked. "Why did Liriss send you?"
     "To be honest," Ovink's smile grew wider, "Liriss didn't send me.
You see, Liriss needs your help. On the other hand, many of us want to
see him hang...and you're a good device to get the wind blowing."
     Two more men brought out Tara, tied and wide eyed.
     "Let her go, Ovink," Ilona insisted. "She's just a girl."
     "Don't worry about her," the  cutthroat fingered his dagger. "She
won't be joining  you. She's young enough  to get a good  price on the
market. Perhaps even in Beinison, as soon as they win the war."
     Ilona kicked her tied legs at him,  but did not have the reach to
hit.
     "Take her  to the blocks," Ovink  ordered. "And take the  girl to
the pits."
     One of  the men  stuffed a  rag into  Ilona's mouth,  managing to
avoid getting bit. A bag was placed  over her head and she was wrapped
in a blanket.
     There was little Ilona could do  in the way of struggling against
two full grown men while tied and  blind and for the time being had to
accept her fate  of being loaded onto  a wagon. She was  glad that she
left the note for Kalen and that she directed it at Ovink, not Liriss.
If need be, it would save a lot of time and perhaps her life.
     She hoped she would live through Ovink's plans, anyway.

     "Where's Aimee?" Dyann demanded of  Karl. The puppy lay stretched
out on  the floor  by the  heavy oak  door leading  to the  old castle
dungeon, his black eyes looking up at the mage.
     "I know you know what I want!"
     Karl buried his face under his paw.
     "Oh, for Sevelin's sake!" Dyann stood up. "This will never work!"
     "We'll find  her," Corambis assured  Dyann. "We just have  to use
better methods."
     "What  better methods?"  the mage  grumbled. "This  was the  best
one!"
     "Well," Corambis  thought, "you know,  I did a  casting yesterday
while waiting for  Madam Labin to come for her  second casting and the
future showed no  change. I did the same casting  on Clifton and again
on Koren. I had Clifton on fire and Koren on water. And that's wrong!"
     "That could  be interpreted either  way," Dyann said.  "It's easy
going for Koren --  he's dead now -- and Clifton's in  the middle of a
war."
     "But that's now, not down the road!" Corambis protested.
     "For  all we  know  the  war will  last  years," Dyann  retorted.
"That's not a problem with castings."
     "But that's  wrong," Corambis stressed.  "You know how  the table
works."
     "It has a mind of its own, you said so yourself."
     "Through three castings?"
     "Well..." Dyann  scratched his  head. "It could  be a  minor mana
shift."
     "In Dargon? Goodness, no," Corambis  said. "There hasn't been one
for ages, not since the Fretheod ruled!"
     "Then we're probably due for one."
     "That  and Stevene's  return,"  the sage  grumbled.  "I tell  you
there's  nothing  wrong  with  the   casting.  What's  wrong  is  that
something's going on that we don't know about."
     "Perhaps," Dyann  agreed, "but  what worries me  now is  that the
potion didn't work. We made it together. It wasn't wrong."
     "Well, we had a clay pot," Corambis  said. "If it was made of red
clay..."
     "It  wasn't," Dyann  interrupted.  "You yourself  looked. It  was
brown as mud."
     "What then? What are we missing?"
     "We're becoming senile, my friend," Dyann laughed.
     "Indeed," Corambis said.
     Dyann shook his head, "and when looking for Aimee of all people!"
     "Come," Corambis  pulled his friend  away from the  puppy. "Let's
try something else. Let's try some real magic."

     Tara fought  the ropes that  bound her  hands. If she  could only
free them, she could  untie her feet and run. The  window of this room
was on  the second floor, but  it overlooked the docks  and that meant
that  she could  be helped  by  the sailors.  She hoped  she could  be
helped, anyway. The rope that bound  her delicate hands was coarse and
thick, good for  holding a large man  or an animal, but  not enough to
hold someone as small as she. At the same time, the rope was extremely
tough, scratching her hands and making it hard for her to work herself
free.
     She had no idea what she would  do if she could get away from the
men that  kidnapped her. Run to  Rish? Tara knew she  could only trust
him in  this war  between the mob  and the town  guard, but  could she
really safely stay in the  castle? Obviously the mob's infiltration of
the guard was great and one would have to believe that the inverse was
true as well, but who could  be trusted? More importantly, why had the
mob turned on one of their own?
     When being transported,  bound and gagged, Tara heard  one of the
men say that Ilona was no longer something that Liriss could afford to
be gentle with and  that she was a weight he should  no longer have to
carry, whatever that  meant. It sounded like she did  something he did
not like and  would now have to  pay for it. Tara  always liked Ilona,
since that day  she met her when  she had finally found  her uncle. It
was she who would  go shopping with Tara and talk  to her about things
Uncle Glenn tried to avoid. What did Ilona do to make Liriss so upset?
Whatever it  was, it had  to be the right  thing. She always  said how
much she wanted  to rid Dargon of crime. Tara  struggled with the rope
more furiously than  before. If Ilona were to die  before she could go
for help,  it would  be her fault.  She did not  want to  see anything
happen to the Lieutenant, no matter what she had done.
     Tara ground her  teeth into the leather gag securely  tied in her
mouth as one coarse loop of rope slipped off her hand. `One more,' she
thought, `one more loop and I'm free.'
     It was obvious  to Tara why she  was taken. She was  a witness to
Ilona's kidnapping, but having had a  chance to sort things out in her
head, Tara  could not believe that  Ilona had sold out  to Liriss. Why
then did  she plead  for Tara's  release and  did not  once ask  to be
released herself? What good would it do her if Tara could identify her
as a  member of the mob?  Perhaps Rish was  right when he said  not to
trust anybody, but Tara could not bring herself to believe that such a
good friend was responsible for the death of her uncle.
     With one last effort, Tara pulled her right hand out of the ropes
and having brushed the lose coils off her left arm, proceeded to untie
her legs. She still did not know  where she would go. All she knew was
that Rish was suspicious of everyone and that Ilona knew more than she
let on,  but there  were others  in town  who might  be able  to help.
Lieutenants  Darklen  and Taishent  could  be  helpful, as  could  her
uncle's neighbors,  Doctor Savitt or  Madam Labin. They were  of noble
birth and could not possibly be involved in any sort of crime.
     The rope  on her legs  was off and Tara  was quick to  remove the
gag. It skipped across  the room and hit the opposite  wall with a wet
squishing noise.
     The dirty window, covered with soot and tar on the edges where it
was sealed against the elements, was very small, but not too small for
Tara. She looked out through the  torn waxed paper for the sailors she
had seen before, when first brought  into the room. She carefully tore
away more of  the paper covering the window and  looked down. All that
was in her line of sight was  a sleeping drunk, up against the wall of
the building.  Tara hesitated, then  tore the remaining paper  off and
started climbing through the window. Just  then she heard the sound of
a key being inserted into the lock.

     Leaning back in his chair, Kesrin set his jaw, listening to Ovink
tell his  story. He was contemplating  his new plan, made  when Liriss
received the  intercepted note from  the chronicler to the  Captain of
the Ducal forces. Kesrin's ascent to the top had started, but it would
have to be a  slow process, one step at a time. Ovink  was going to be
today's step.
     "...so I thought  we'd keep the girl for the  next time Lord Isom
is in town...  If you don't mind, of course,  my Lord," Ovink finished
his report.
     "That will be fine," Kesrin  approved. "Liriss will be happy with
the extra profit."
     Ovink smiled.  "Yes, Sir.  I'll bet he  will." Ovink  appeared so
happy with his success, that Kesrin had no doubt the man would not see
the wool being pulled over his eyes.
     "You did  the right thing by  bringing the girl. I  had hopped we
could take the Lieutenant alone, but it's just as well. Her death will
give us an entrance and we can put  the girl to good use as well. Just
be sure to have her out of here tomorrow. By tomorrow night this place
will be filled with guardsmen."
     Ovink's smile changed to a laugh. "I like your idea."
     Kesrin chuckled as well. He told  Ovink that a dead member of the
town guard,  and especially a high  ranking member, would be  a strong
incentive for the  authorities to take action -- her  home was already
filled with clues  that would lead the guard to  Liriss -- things like
the gem  and the  note. What  he neglected to  mention was  that Ovink
would  not have  the  time  to leave  town.  "Everything  is set  now.
Tomorrow take the girl  and your men and take a trip  to Tench to sell
her. I shall abandon Liriss for a few days myself and soon we will all
be a step closer to the top."
     "With  your  leave, Sir,"  Ovink  stood  up,  "I will  begin  the
preparations."
     "Just be sure to leave by  way of the pier first thing tomorrow,"
Kesrin reminded  him. "I don't  want the guard to  stop you if  you go
through the main gate."

     Ilona stirred as cold water licked at her side. She had been well
aware of  her unfavorable position,  chained to a large  rock sticking
out of  the water under  a pier,  with a gag  in her mouth.  She tried
struggling against the chains, but they were far too strong for her to
escape. At  first she believed she  was only being held  here, but the
incoming tide made her acutely aware of the danger of drowning.
     Now, as the  water level slowly rose, a lot  of things started to
make  sense. All  those unexplained  drownings, sometimes  one or  two
every night,  made sense.  People whom everyone  knew could  swim well
being fished out  of the ocean early in the  morning as sailors loaded
and unloaded  their ships along the  docks. At times the  dead men and
women had  unexplained bruises on  their wrists and ankles.  Now those
could be explained as well.
     Ilona wondered if she would live long enough to tell others about
this method of execution,  or if she would die when  the tide came in.
She tried working  on the gag, hoping  that she would be  able to call
out for  help, but she  had little hope of  that working. The  gag was
tied tightly  around her head and  refused to budge. Besides,  she was
probably right beneath Liriss' personal  pier. No one would come, even
if they heard.
     Perhaps if Liriss  came down, Ilona mused, but she  knew it was a
slim chance. He  had no reason to  be here. When he  killed people, he
more than  likely sent others to  do it for  him. No one at  all would
find her tonight and by tomorrow it would be far too late.

     As the door to the room she  was in opened, Tara exerted the last
bit of  effort, knowing  full well  that once she  is out  through the
window, her only path would be an uncontrolled downward plunge.
     "Stop!" she heard a male voice shout. She increased her efforts.
     A second  later she was falling  to the ground, not  far from the
sleeping drunk  she saw previously. She  wished it had been  the drunk
she had fallen on -- that way the landing would have been much softer.
     "You! Stop  her!" Tara heard  the same  voice from above  her and
looked around. Except for the drunk, she was alone in the street.
     "Get up!"
     She looked at the man yelling down  at the drunk. "Shut up and do
it yourself, you  bastard!" She slowly got up off  the ground, holding
on to her  skinned arm. Blood dripped to the  ground. To her surprise,
the brigand started climbing out the window.
     Tara slowly backed away, watching him,  then picked up a rock and
threw it at the man. It hit the wall, but was close enough to make him
take notice and give what he was doing a second thought.
     Tara turned and bolted.

     As Ovink left, Kesrin took out  his dagger and balanced it on his
desk, the tip of  the blade cutting into the fine  wood grain. Soon he
would not  need this  desk anyway --  his fist came  down hard  on the
hilt, making the  blade sink into the  wood -- he would  soon be using
Liriss' office.  Kesrin stood up  and walked  over to the  window. The
view. It would also change. Instead  of seeing the docks and the dirty
sailors burning tar  and frying fish, he would look  out at the market
place. One step at a time. Today Ovink, tomorrow Liriss. In a month he
would be  no less than  the undisputed lord of  the city. Lord  of all
that his  window would let him  see and finally, after  so many years,
his heart could finally rest for having kept the promise he made years
ago.
     "Stop!" he suddenly heard Ovink's  voice come through the window,
followed  by a  dull  thud  of something  falling  onto the  boardwalk
outside.
     Kesrin stepped  closer to the  window and looked down.  A teenage
girl lay  on the ground by  the wall of  the building, not far  from a
sleeping bum. She clutched her arm as if she had hurt it in a fall.
     "You! Stop her!" Ovink appeared in  a window of the second floor.
"Get up!"
     Kesrin chuckled  sadly. This was a  man Liriss trusted to  do his
work?
     "Shut up and do it yourself,  you bastard!" the girl yelled back,
getting  up to  her feet.  Kesrin  suspected she  was Captain  Koren's
niece. She looked around, picked up a rock and threw it at the wall of
the building, then, with another  moment of hesitation, turned and ran
down  the  boardwalk.  Another  moment passed  and  a  crashing  sound
signified Ovink  falling out the window.  The man quickly got  up and,
limping, ran after the girl.
     With a soft chuckle Kesrin turned  from the window and walked out
of the  room. The plan was  slowly coming together. Now  the last step
needed to be set into motion.

     Ilona desperately fought  the chain cuffs that held  her arms and
legs to the stone  block now submerged in the water.  In the course of
the last hour  the level of the  ocean had risen high  enough to cover
the rock completely and the water continued to rise. She knew it would
cover her  soon as well.  The shackles on her  refused to come  off as
they had  for countless other  people who must  have died here  in the
last few years. They  were too well made and too  strong to even think
about tearing them free.
     Ilona looked up  at the wooden walk of the  pier above her, where
occasionally a  person or two  would walk by.  She wanted to  yell for
help, but the  gag in her mouth  would only make her choke  on her own
spit. Nothing.  There was nothing she  could do, but at  the same time
she refused  to wait to  let death come and  take her. She  had always
fought and this time would be no exception.
     Uneven splashing of water alerted  Ilona. The noises sounded like
someone walking  towards her,  disturbing the  rhythmic motion  of the
waves. She tried to  raise her head to look, but  a strong wave forced
her back down, making her swallow the salty ocean water.
     A  shadow paused  over her,  looking. Waiting.  Ilona blinked  to
clear the  ocean water  from her  eyes. Kesrin.  He looked  somber and
tired, as a man ten years his senior.
     "You know, it's  strange what twists fate puts on  our lives," he
sighed. "Just yesterday  I wanted you dead, out of  my way. I would've
killed you with my own bare  hands, if necessary, because you were bad
for my business, but now I have to come to you for help."
     Ilona continued  to look at  him, listening, unable to  speak and
well  aware of  the quickly  rising level  of the  tide. Another  wave
passed over her head and lifted Kesrin off his feet.
     "Something changed  last night," he  sighed. "I realized  my life
was in danger and I could do little to help myself. What I want..." he
paced  to the  other  side of  the  rock in  the  stomach deep  water,
"...what I need is  for you to help me. In exchange I  will let you go
and give you evidence against Liriss. Is that fair?"
     Ilona had  little choice now.  She was willing to  promise almost
anything, including this. She nodded.
     "Good," Kesrin said. "You already  know it was Liriss who ordered
Koren's death.  It was Ovink  who kidnapped  you on his  orders. Ovink
will be  heading out of town  early tomorrow by the  East Gate, taking
some men and Koren's  niece to sell to slave traders  in Tench. If you
capture him, he'll  sell his own mother, not just  Liriss." With those
words Kesrin took a  chain with a key from around  his neck and placed
it in Ilona's hand, leaving her to fend for herself.
     "Don't  forget I  did  this for  you when  the  day of  reckoning
comes."
     He disappeared from sight, leaving  behind the sound of splashing
water as he waded towards the stairs.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1     "Can you see anything ahead?" the merchant called up to the lanky
guard in the  lead. His voice fell  dead amid the damp  moss and still
water. "Do you see the castle? Ragan?"
     "No, Burgamy,  I can't  see the castle  yet," Ragan  replied with
exaggerated  patience. It  wouldn't do  to aggravate  the man  who was
paying  him, no  matter what  he thought  of the  heavy-set fool.  "Be
careful," he  warned after  a minute.  "There's a  fallen tree  in the
path. Goddam swamp."
     The sound of dull splashing in the thin veneer of water fell dead
amid the dangling vines and moss. The usual tenants of the marshy area
were silent as the intruders noisily made their way through. Ragan led
his horse around the green  and brown obstacle, leather armor creaking
softly over his cursing. Behind him, rich vermillion cloak dragging in
the scummy  water, paced Burgamy.  He paused briefly and  glanced over
his shoulder at his companions.
     "Are you  all right,  Sister Moya?" he  asked solicitiously  as a
woman, clad in  what surely used to  be a white robe,  appeared out of
the  ragged mist.  He  offered a  plump fingered  hand  to assist  her
forward.
     "I  am well,  thank  you, Burgamy,"  replied  Moya, avoiding  the
merchant's grasp. She paused to allow her mount, also white, to steady
its footing, then continued around the tree.
     Burgamy made a  disappointed sound deep in his  throat and turned
to follow.
     "She won't have you, merchant,"  laughed a voice from behind him.
A rakish figure in gaudy red and  blue appeared beside him, a globe of
bright green trailing  along like a puppy behind. "You  know how those
*devout* Stevenic women are. You won't  see her outside of chapel, let
alone out of her robes."
     "Silence, juggler. I didn't ask your opinion."
     "That's High Mage Tagir to  you," admonished the mage cheerfully.
"Coming, oh  great Sir  Knight?" he  called over  his shoulder  as the
merchant moved off after Moya.
     "Coming, High Mage,"  a voice, followed by a large  man clad in a
remarkably shiny  breast plate and  a green  surcoat. He was  the only
traveller not leading a horse. He paused beside Tagir. "Move it, boy."
     Bringing up  the rear  was a  fourteen or  fifteen year  old boy,
leading a heavy horse, a pony, and  two mules. His worn tunic bore the
same crest that blazoned the shield slung over the knight's back.
     "Yes, Sir Ceneham." Gindar, the squire, picked his sodden feet up
a little faster.
     The motly party  had been tracking around this swamp  for days in
search of a  lost keep that Burgamy claimed was  filled with treasure.
The merchant  had hired his  companions for half of  whatever treasure
was found, to be divided among the five as they chose. Following a few
obscure references in  a an old diary he'd found,  they made their way
into the  marshy tracts  upriver of  Quiron Keep.  Each had  their own
reasons for coming,  be they honor, adventure, or  holy quest. Burgamy
didn't much  care why  they were  there, only  that they  followed his
orders and  abided by their half  of the agreement. There  hadn't been
any difficulties as yet.
     "I've hit solid ground," declared Ragan out of the mist. "And the
fog clears up once you get here."
     "About damned time," Burgamy muttered. "Can you see the keep?" He
laboriously climbed the little rise that elevated him a few feet above
the water line to stand beside the  thin man. Behind them, the rest of
the party straggled up.
     Ragan pointed to a large, shadowy lump in the growing dusk. "That
looks to be it."
     Burgamy's  hungry  eyes devoured  every  curve  in the  indicated
direction before turning reluctantly back to his companions. "Since it
will soon be too dark to investigate, we'll camp here for the night."
     The  squire promptly  dropped the  reins  of the  animals he  was
leading and stared pulling dry fire  wood out of the oiled canvas pack
on one  of the mules.  Ragan's muttered "First intellegent  order he's
given all week," was lost in the  general bustle to set up camp before
sunset.
     Following traditions set from the first day of their journey, the
squire laid out  the fire, and went  to tend the horses.  The fire was
always lit  by Tagir, as  the wood was too  damp to respond  easily to
normal  flames. Ragan  staked out  a perimeter  while Burgamy  and Sir
Ceneham rested  by the  dancing fire.  Sister Moya  had taken  care of
providing fresh drinking  water, since their own stores ran  out a few
days ago.
     She  carried an  iron  pot down  to  the edge  of  the swamp  and
collected as  much water as she  could. Bringing it back  to camp, she
knelt beside the fire, leaning over the pot.
     "We have drinking water yet,  Sister?" demanded Sir Ceneham a few
minutes later, coming closer and looming over the woman.
     "In God's time, Sir Knight,"  replied Moya placidly, not stopping
her prayers.
     "I just  wish God  would hurry," muttered  the man,  pacing away,
around  the fire  and back  behind the  priestess. Realizing  that his
glaring was having no effect, Ceneham went over to harass his squire.
     This too  was a ritual,  and no one  bothered to take  notice any
more.
     The boy took the berating  in stoic silence. When you're finished
with this,  do that. When you  finish with that, polish  my armor, and
make sure there's not a single speck  of rust on it. Since coming into
the  swamp, rust  was  Ceneham's  biggest concern.  By  the time  he'd
finished his  list of orders,  the water  was already being  made into
soup.

     The ruins were silent. A coat of dampened dust layered everything
and tainted sunlight  crept down the holes in the  ceiling through the
remains of  the second floor.  The musty  scent of wet  stones mingled
with the  smell of  rotting plants. Torchlight  caused the  shadows to
dance against the worn stone floor and unsteady walls.
     "This way," said Sir Ceneham,  voice rolling out from beneath the
heavy torch. The  sound of cascading chainmail echoed  slightly in the
crumbling hall. He'd decided that  since there might be wild creatures
holed up in  the keep's remains, that he should  be better armored, so
he could better protect the party.  He cut an impressive figure in the
full armor; it was the first time  he was able to wear the entire suit
on this  little expedition without the  fear of sinking into  the muck
and was enjoying preening in front of  the group. No one paid him much
attention.
     "Are you certain, Sir Ceneham?"  was the return query from behind
the  light. Burgamy,  with Tagir  at his  side, moved  up next  to the
knight.
     "Quite certain," was the sharp reply. Because his back was to the
merchant, Burgamy couldn't see the look of contempt on his face. "I've
walked through many hallways in many keeps. This one is no different."
     "Unless they changed the floor plans  from the last time you were
here," teased Tagir,  his magelight making him  look faintly sinister.
"If you get lost, call. I'll be happy to help you out."
     "Thank you, magician," said  Sir Ceneham through clentched teeth.
He had to force himself to be polite to the cocksure mage. Considering
the man could kill  him with a single spell or two,  it was well worth
the effort.
     "Can we get  on with this?" Burgamy  demanded peevishly. "Where's
the rest of the party?"
     "Listening  to  you  argue,"  said Ragan  bitingly.  "If  there's
anything around, it's sure to know where we are."
     "We  haven't  seen  a  living   creature  since  we  crossed  the
drawbridge,"  scoffed  Ceneham. "And  that  includes  the gods  cursed
insects."
     "Except that squirrel Gindar tossed rocks at," observed Tagir.
     "Don't swear, Sir Knight," said Moya  softly. She held her robe a
few inches off the keep floor out  of habit, despite the fact that the
hem was nearly  black with mud. "Taking the Lord's  name in vain isn't
necessary."
     "I'll decide what's necessary, Sister. Where's my damned squire?"
     While Gindar rejoined the party  from gathering more rocks, Ragan
and Tagir started investigating deeper down the corridor. They found a
door which Ragan  was busily investigating when the rest  of the party
joined them.
     "There seems  to have been a  trap set on the  lock," he observed
professionally, pulling a bit of metal  out of his pouch. "Opening the
door sets the  trigger off. Somebody was obviously  paranoid about his
privacy. It's a pretty good lock to have lasted all this time."
     "Just how  old is  it?" asked Tagir,  curiously peering  over his
shoulder.
     "How should I know? It's not new,  that much I can tell you. Now,
if someone  will push the  door open,  this should keep  the mechanism
from triggering."
     "Be  careful.  There  might  be something  dangerous  in  there,"
whimpered Gindar. Moya put a comforting hand on his shoulder.
     Cautiously, torch  held high, sword  drawn in in his  other hand,
Ceneham kicked the door open. The  worn wood crashed back on its green
brass  hinges.  Silence  rolled  in  after  the  echo  and  torchlight
illuminated the damp, dusty bedroom. Off  in a corner a pair of bright
black eyes watched the group enter.
     "Well, there's your dangerous  monster," laughed Tagir, pointing.
The creature twitched  its bushy tail and cocked its  head to one side
for a better view.
     "A  gods  be  damned  squirrel!" swore  the  knight  angrily.  He
brandished his sword  in the animal's general  direction. The squirrel
sat up on its hind legs and stuffed another seed into its mouth.
     "Oh, allow  me to deal with  it," Tagir said gleefully,  making a
few  slight  gestures.  "Wouldn't  want  you  to  strain  yourself  on
something so deadly."
     A thin jet  of fire leapt out from the  mage's finger towards the
squirrel. With a surprised noise, the animal jumped and bolted for the
door, past the kneeling Ragan.
     The mage laughed again, and  beneath his half helm Ceneham smiled
grimly. His squire  giggled. Burgamy started to search  the room while
Sister Moya looked on disapprovingly.
     The  merchant  was soon  joined  by  Ceneham  and his  squire  in
ransacking the remains of the room.  Ever helpful, Tagir lit his light
and centered himself so that  he could illuminate every corner. Sister
Moya waited  patiently for them to  finish. It didn't take  long. Four
pieces  of tarnished  jewelry  and a  pile of  dead  moths later  they
grouped back together by the white clad woman.
     "This was a bit of  a disappointment," commented Tagir. "I wonder
why the former occupant wasted so much  time on a trap for such paltry
remains."  He glanced  casually about  the  room as  though trying  to
determine something of the former occupant from the wreackage.
     "Let's try and  find the real treasure,"  Burgamy said, pocketing
the dirty bits of gold. "We'll divide this later."
     "Yes, we will," growled Ceneham darkly as the merchant walked out
past the still kneeling Ragan. "Come  on, man," he added, slapping the
mercenary on the shoulder as he went by.
     Ragan fell flat when Ceneham touched him.
     Moya stifled a surprised scream.
     "Oh, yuk," added the squire.
     A short, thick bolt protruded from the back of Ragan's neck.
     Quickly pulling herself together, Moya stepped up to the body.
     "High Mage Tagir, if you please."
     Obligingly the magician allowed his light to fall over the wound,
turning the  blood a  sickly shade  of purple. The  rest of  the party
grouped  around the  priestess  as  she probed  around  the bolt  with
skillful fingers.
     "There is nothing  I can do for him," she  pronounced finally. "I
assume  that the  trap he  discovered  was set  off, as  there was  no
indication of  someone about to shoot  him. The wound was  poisoned as
soon as he was hit. Even if  I could have gotten to him immediately, I
don't think I could have negated the poison."
     The party  was silent while  the nun  prayed over the  body, then
Burgamy shrugged. "Means  a larger share of the treasure  for the rest
of you. Let's go."
     Moya's  head snapped  around  at the  merchant's statement,  real
anger in her  usually peaceful eyes. The rest of  the group walked out
of the room  before she could say anything. Rather  than be left alone
in the darkness, she completed her prayers and rose to leave.
     "Oh,  Lord, this  is a  difficult  path You  have set  for me  to
follow. But follow it I shall, and bite my tongue about my companions,
because I  need them to complete  Your holy task, to  Your everlasting
glory. Go in peace Ragan." Making a gesture of blessing and another of
reverence, she followed the ragged company down the hall.

     Several hours later  they grouped together in  the crumbling main
hall. Shafts of  afternoon sunlight dribbled through  the ceiling that
used to  be the second  story floor. No  sounds beyond that  which the
party made themselves could be heard.
     Pickings had been  lean throughout the first floor.  A few pieces
of old fashioned jewelry in questionable condition and a small pile of
coins were all they had found  for many hours of searching. The second
floor was  in ruins and  the likelyhood  of finding anything  of value
there without a full salvage company was unlikely. Ragged bits of what
might  have once  been  tapestries were  piled on  the  floor and  the
furniture, not  particularly stable to  begin with but  salvageable as
antiques, had  been all but  dismantled by the searchers.  Burgamy was
not happy.
     "If you're trying to find  the main treasury," said Ceneham after
the merchant  finished his stream  of complaints, "then  it's probably
down with the cellars and the dungeons.
     "Underground?" squeaked the squire.
     "Where else, you twit?" Ceneham  cuffed the boy, sending him into
a little heap on the moss  covered flagstones. "What's the matter? You
afraid of the dark?"
     "No, my lord," Gindar mumbled.
     Tagir helped  the boy up. He'd  shut off his light  several hours
ago,  pleading fatigue,  and now  carried a  torch just  like everyone
else.
     "We can  give the  place a  cursory look  at least,"  said Tagir.
"There's enough light for that. We  can investigate further if we find
something."
     "That sounds like a satisfactory course of action," said Burgamy.
"All right, Sir Knight, lead the way."
     Ceneham moved off and everyone  fell in behind, the squire taking
up the rear.

     The passage  that led down  to the  cellars was in  better repair
than the rest of the first  floor. Dust covered the stairs, where wind
couldn't reach and  largish rocks were scattered  around like pebbles,
but the walls were intact and the steps solid. The unsteady torchlight
caused fungi and moss to glow an eerie pink.
     As they rounded the final corner into a small antechamber, a pile
of  rubble  taller than  the  mage  loomed  up  to block  their  path.
Apparently  part of  the roof  had given  way years  ago, choking  the
corridor with dust and dropping the impressive pile in the path.
     Ceneham looked a little annoyed and the squire turned pale.
     "And  how do  you propose  we get  past that?"  Burgamy demanded,
glaring at  the knight and  the mage.  "This was your  idea." Although
ostesibly in charge  of the party, the merchant was  more than willing
to let someone else  make the decisions so he could  pass the blame of
failures off later. Ceneham glared back.
     "Allow  me," said  Tagir,  stepping forward  with  a flourish  of
cloak. He pushed past  the knight and the merchant and  made a show of
rolling up  his excessively full  sleeves. Muttering softly,  the mage
made a  few obscure  gestures and started  shifting the  rubble aside,
into smaller  bundles than  the amount  should have  been able  to fit
into.
     The rest of the party stepped  as much aside as possible to allow
him room to work.
     A pair  of heavy, jagged  boulders became visible as  the smaller
loose debris was cleared away. Tagir  ended his first spell and took a
deep breath. Moya observed him closely, out of professional curiosity.
     "I'll have  to shift the  rock straight up to  get it out  of the
way," he declared. "You'll all have to move into the hall on the other
side, so I'll have someplace to put it."
     "But how will we get back out?" asked Gindar, white faced.
     "There will  be room enough  to move  around the boulders  once I
shift them  away from one another,"  said the mage smugly.  "Now stand
back,  but be  ready to  run through  after I  move it."  He began  to
gesture  and mutter  again.  After  a long  pause  one  of the  stones
shuddered and began to rise. To  get it clear of the intended walkway,
Tagir had to  levitate the rock over  his own head, which  he did with
agonizing slowness.
     He nodded significantly  to the party as the  boulder reached the
designated threshold  and watched  as they passed,  one by  one beyond
him. Turning his his attention to the  place he wanted to put his rock
in, he prepared to muster more power to do it.
     Then his eyes went wide as he spotted something on the stairs.
     It smiled at him, winked, then flickered into something else. And
in that brief instant of Tagir's  shock, he lost control of the spell.
The rock landed with heavy finality, tiny plumes of dust rising to the
ceiling. The mage's four companions stared in silent horror and shock.
     Moya fell slowly to her knees and started offering the prayer for
the dead.
     "What do  you think  went wrong?"  whispered Burgamy,  staring, a
little glassy eyed at the dusty stone.
     "Perhaps it  got too  heavy," Ceneham said.  "He did  indicate it
would be  difficult." He  didn't sound very  confident. Both  men knew
that keeping the rock in the air was well within Tagir's powers.
     "The damned squirrel is back," declared the squire abruptly.
     The two  men looked to  where the  boy pointed. Atop  the boulder
that had crushed  Tagir, the dark brown squirrel stared  down at them.
Its tail twitched and it turned, vanishing into the shadows.
     Ceneham cuffed his squire again .
     "It wasn't important," he said sharply.
     "I think it would  be a good idea to go back up  and camp for the
rest  of the  day," offered  Burgamy hesitantly.  To his  surprise the
knight  nodded  in  agreement.  Ceneham touched  the  nun's  arm  with
uncharateristic  gentleness  to get  her  attention  and repeated  the
suggestion.
     Sister Moya started, looked up, then stood.
     "I think open air would be a good idea," she said quietly. "And I
feel the need for purification."
     Strangely, the knight made none of his usual caustic remarks. The
four  made  their  way  back  up the  narrow  stairway  and  into  the
over-grown courtyard. By unspoken agreement,  no one wanted to shelter
in the great hall. Their horses  and pack mules were still tethered by
the remains of the fire.
     "If  nothing else,"  commented Burgamy  while Moya  purified more
water for  the evening meal  and the squire polished  Ceneham's armor,
"you'll get a larger share of the treasure."
     Moya actually stopped in the middle  of her prayers and turned to
glare at  the merchant. "That  is the second  time that you  have said
that," she said angrily. "There are two men dead and all you can think
of is gold?"
     "Sister, I  don't know why  you came  along, but the  others were
just treasure  hunters and  adventure addicts," said  Burgamy frankly,
looking steadily at Moya's face for the first time during the journey.
"They knew  the risks, just like  they knew the rewards,  so save your
recriminations for the sinners and your pity for the masses. Ragan and
Tagir knew  full well what  they were  getting into and  don't deserve
your sympathy."
     "And  do you  feel  the same  way, Sir  Knight?"  Moya turned  to
Ceneham, trying with  only moderate success to hide her  horror at the
merchant's coldness.
     Ceneham looked  up from  peering over  his squire's  shoulder. "I
agree with the merchant, Sister,"  he said calmly. "They were seasoned
professionals. They  knew the potential consequences.  Save your worry
and your prayers for the people who can benefit from them."
     Moya stared at the two men  for a minute more before turning back
to her  pot of marsh  water. Anger smoldered  in her eyes.  She hadn't
been prepared for such callousness when she undertook her holy journey
and joined with these companions. Some of Moya's faith faltered as she
listened to the camp sounds and knelt beside the pot.
     It took longer then usual to get fresh water that night.

     With  two of  their  party  members dead,  it  was necessary  for
everyone, including Burgamy and Sister Moya,  to take a turn on guard.
Gindar woke the merchant just after moon rise for the second watch. At
the  knight's insistence,  he  carried the  squire's  short sword  for
defense, and Ceneham's shield was leaned  against a log so it could be
banged in case of an emergency.
     Barely  an hour  had passed  and  already Burgamy  was bored  and
sleepy. Resolutely  he started wandering  around the perimeter  of the
camp with a torch trying to stay  awake. He allowed his mind to wander
a little with  thoughts of himself, Sister Moya, a  few common objects
he kept around  his shop in town, and the  wonderful things they could
do together.
     As he  made another  circle around  the tiny camp  a motion  by a
boulder   caught  his   distracted  attention.   Burgamy  stopped   in
mid-fantasy and mid-turn, gripping the short sword a little tighter in
his sweaty palm.
     "Who's there?" he demanded hoarsely. As  far as he had seen, none
of his companions had  gotten up or even moved since  the start of his
watch.
     There was a  soft rustling of dry tipped marsh  grass and a woman
stepped around the shadowed rock.
     She  was tall  and slender,  wearing nothing  except the  mane of
red-brown hair that spilled over her  forehead and down her back. Pale
moonlight silvered  her limbs from  behind and the  torches flickering
yellow glow caused  shadows to dance on her taut  stomach and breasts.
Her eyes were  fathomless black in the uncertain light.  She smiled at
the merchant, revealing long, even teeth in the yellow torchlight.
     "How did you get here?"  Burgamy asked, cautiously moving closer.
He wondered  if he had  dozed off during his  watch after all  and was
having a better dream than chaste Moya could ever provide.
     The woman's smile deepened and she slipped around the rock with a
ripple of heavy hair.
     "Hey! Come back here!"  Abruptly more confidant, Burgamy followed
the elusive figure back into the first floor ruins.

     They found Burgamy's body laying in the middle of the great hall,
stark naked,  without a mark  on him. His  clothing was nowhere  to be
found and  no reason could be  found for him  to have come out  to the
great hall.
     Sister Moya dropped her cloak over the body then blessed the dead
man while the squire triumphantly declared; "I told you I woke him up.
I didn't shirk my duty!"
     "Silence,  boy," growled  Ceneham, adding  another bruise  to the
morning's set.  Gindar accepted the  cuff silently, and glared  at the
knight after he turned away.
     "We'll need  to bury  him," said Moya  finally, gathering  up her
skirts and standing.
     "We don't have the time," Ceneham  told her. "We need to find out
what killed him."
     "We can't just leave him here!"
     "We don't  have a choice, Sister.  And you didn't seem  to have a
problem with  leaving High  Mage Tagir  or Ragan, so  I don't  see the
trouble now." Ceneham  turned away. "Now come on, if  you're coming. I
want to check out that corridor where we lost the mage. The last thing
we  need is  something trying  to  kill us  before we  can finish  our
business here."  He marched off, calling  for his squire to  come help
him with his armor.
     In the  silence of the great  hall, Moya again knelt  and settled
herself to pray.
     "Highest," she whispered  softly. "I have erred. I did  not do my
duty by my companions and thereby to  You in their hour of need. I beg
Your  forgiveness. Whatever  they were  in life,  they are  Yours now,
either cleansed  or damned.  Aid me  then, in granting  a last  bit of
decency to their bodies, along with my prayers for their souls."
     A soft  white glow  grew around  Moya after  a few  seconds, then
spread towards  the body  of Burgamy.  It touched  it and  leapt away,
dividing itself to go to the lower level and Tagir's resting place and
along the wall to where Ragan lay.
     For  an instant  the  glow became  incandescent,  then it  faded,
leaving behind only Moya's dingy white cloak. The priestess opened her
eyes and sighed deeply with fatigue. Only rarely did she try spells of
such complexity, for just this reason. She spent a few more minutes in
contemplation and prayer before getting up to join her companions.

     The dust  had settled in little  swirls around the rock  that had
killed Tagir and the footprints  from yesterday were wiped clean away.
Ceneham strode past without so much as  a glance down, but Moya made a
gesture of blessing and warding and the squire went pale again.
     They edged past the offset boulders and down another short flight
of stairs  to a  heavy door.  Time, in conjunction  with the  damp had
warped the wood and turned the  brass binding a sickly shade of green.
Cobwebs choked the corners of the frame and the ancient keyhole.
     Ceneham made a  quick survey of the barrier, then  held his torch
back for  the squire  to take.  With several  powerful thrusts  of his
mailed shoulder,  the door bent back  on its hinges, then  fell to the
cobbled floor with a dull boom,  ripping the now useless crossbow trap
out of the wall. Stale, musky air whispered up the corridor.
     Gindar jumped at the quick succession of sounds, and Moya winced.
The knight took the torch back and stepped over the ruined planks into
the  cellar. Pale  torchfire trebled  as  Moya and  the squire  joined
Ceneham, reflecting  off dank  walls covered in  something flourescent
and yellow. The  mold gathered the light and aided  in brightening the
dim chamber.
     Chests were stacked along the walls, with tatterd, moldy bolts of
cloth leaning against them. Something long  and wide lay in the center
of the room, covered in oiled canvas.
     Gindar gasped softly.
     "I'd say that  we found the treasury,"  rumbled Ceneham, flipping
open one of  the tattered lids. Leather bags, some  with holes worn in
them, lay piled inside, and bits of gold and silver glinted through in
the wan light.
     "I thought  we were looking  for what killed Burgamy,"  said Moya
sharply.
     "You  thought wrong,  sister." Ceneham's  voice was  harsh. "He's
dead, just  like the others.  If what came  after him comes  after us,
I'll kill it. But until then,  it's stupid to go looking for trouble."
He turned back  to opening the chests. Gindar joined  him, raising his
torch high.
     Furious,  Moya  glared at  the  knight's  back, then  turned  and
marched out of  the cellar. He was  a lost cause, and  she was worldly
enough to realize this, but she didn't have to stay in his company.
     Ceneham didn't acknowledge the  nun's leave-taking except to note
absently that there  was a little less light to  see by. He considered
the holy woman to be little  more than a nuisince, useful only because
with  her on  the expedition  they would  neither starve,  nor die  of
wounds taken in  combat. As a result of the  sudden lessening of light
and his slight preoccupation, Ceneham misjudged the composition of the
next thing he  picked up. The little  box shattered in his  hand as he
grasped it like one of the heavy leather bags.
     Marsh nuts scattered over the damp floor.
     "Ridiculous!"  Ceneham stared  at  his fistful  of splinters  and
nuts. "Who the hell is stupid enough to keep nuts in boxes! Boy!"
     "Sir?" Gindar  appeared by  his elbow, trying  hard to  conceal a
smile.
     "Leave that torch and go get some more. And that lantern the mage
toted about with him. And make sure that damned nun didn't stray." The
knight dusted  his hands  off and  his feet crunched  on shells  as he
wandered around the cellar searching idly.
     Gindar quickly found two rusty  scones to deposit the torches in,
then hurried  back up  the stairs  and into open  air. His  relief was
indescribable.  He didn't  like  the  way the  shadows  moved in  that
cellar. He'd never  really liked cellars in general, but  this one was
worse than any of the others he'd been in.
     He trotted through the remains of  the great hall and back out to
the  campsite where  Moya  knelt in  prayer. The  torch  she had  been
carrying was stuck in the ground beside her, burning fitfully.
     "Run off, indeed," sniffed the  squire to himself. "She can't run
off any more  than I can." In  her case, she didn't  have the survival
skills, in his, Ceneham would find him,  no matter where he ran to and
make him wish he'd died. "Soon," Gindar thought, grabbing a handful of
unlit  torches, then  turning to  root though  the dead  mage's packs.
"Soon, I'll know everything  he does and I'll be able  to do more than
run." But  until that mythical time,  he would follow and  obey to the
best of his ability.
     Arms filled with the lit and unlit torches and the battered metal
lantern, Gindar made his reluctant way back down to the cellar.

     Moya was  started out  of her meditative  prayer by  the squire's
paniced screaming, echoing from the guts  of the keep. She started up,
stood uncertainly for  a second trying to place  the disturbance, then
ran into the great hall.
     Gindar nearly ran  her down in his haste to  escape the crumbling
walls. In his panic, he didn't recognize the hands that reached out to
try and halt  his headlong flight. He struggled wildly  as Moya pulled
him around and forced his back to a crumbling wall.
     "What is it?" she demanded, giving the boy a brisk shake. "What's
happened?"
     It took a sharp slap to get anything coherent out of the boy.
     "C--C--Ceneham!" he stuttered out  finally. "He's dead! Ripped to
pieces!"
     "Lord  above grant  us mercy,"  breathed Moya.  For a  second she
wondered  what could  have been  big enough  to kill  the knight,  but
silent enough not to disturb her or the squire. Keeping a firm hand on
Gindar's  skinny wrists,  she  pulled  him back  down  to the  cellar,
repeating like a litany that "God will protect us...God *will* protect
us..."
     Sir Ceneham was  indeed dead, although he was not,  as Gindar had
said, ripped to pieces.
     His breast  plate was  rent open,  not with the  clean cuts  of a
sword, but by four jagged gashes, as though some other-planer creature
had  tried seeking  his heart.  Beneath his  helm, Ceneham's  face was
twisted into a mixture of fear and  surprise. His heavy sword lay in a
far corner of the cellar--in two pieces.
     The only  other thing in the  room besides Moya, the  squire, the
piles of  boxes, and the  cloth wrapped  bundle was a  squirrel busily
stuffing  marsh nuts  into its  mouth. There  weren't any  signs of  a
struggle.
     Gindar whimpered from where Moya had  left him by the door, then,
with a  strangled sob, bolted  back up  the stairs. Moya  jumped after
him,  clentching her  will against  the sickness  in her  stomach. The
thought  uppermost in  her mind  was that  the boy  could not  survive
alone. And neither could she.
     "Wait!"  she  shouted after  the  squire.  "If we  separate  were
doomed!"
     But Gindar,  frightened and sickened beyond  hearing, didn't even
slow down. Doggedly Moya followed him  through the great hall and past
their camp. She hiked up her robes  as he charged blindly off into the
swamp, continuing to call after him to wait.
     Branches and vines  tangled in her way, and the  smell of rotting
leaves was kicked  up more strongly for the  pairs passing. Strangely,
no  animals  were disturbed  by  their  charging blindly  through  the
undergrowth.
     Moya lost the squire briefly in  the growing mist, and only found
him again after he shouted in  surprise. She reoriented herself in the
general direction the sound had emanated from, and ran after.
     She  came  upon him  suddenly.  Moya  stumbled  to a  halt,  then
scrambled back a few steps as  her worn boots began sinking into black
mud.
     Gindar  floundered  in a  mud  pit,  his paniced  thrashing  only
drawing him  deeper under the  sticky mud.  His screaming was  all but
incoherent from  terror. Moya  cast about for  something to  throw the
boy, calling platitudes  all the while, but by the  time she turned up
with a branch long enough to  reach him, Gindar's head was beneath the
mud's slick  surface. A hand  grasped briefly, futilely at  the knobby
root Moya  extended, but despite the  nun's impassioned encouragement,
he was never able to catch hold.
     The last of  Sister Moya's companions sank out  of sight, without
so much as a bubble to show where he'd gone under.
     For several long minutes the nun  stared at the patch of mud that
now looked no  more dangerous than any other patch  of cleared ground.
Then she dropped the root and went to her knees.
     "How could You do this to  me, oh Lord," she moaned, rocking back
and forth  without even realizing it.  "How could You do  this to Your
faithful, on Your holy quest? How? Was I unworthy? How? Why? How did I
fail You? How?"
     Moya  kept repeating  this, and  variations until  it was  nearly
dark. Night sounds and something hitting  the back of her head finally
roused her to partial reality.
     She coughed, voice raw from her prayers and tears, then jerked as
another nut  bounced off her  arm and landed  in the moss  beside her.
Bemused, the nun stumbled to her  feet. "Must get back to camp..." she
mumbled. "Complete  holy service...keep vow...at the  keep..." And she
tottered off, deeper into the dusky, glowing swamp.

                          To Be Continued
                                by
                         Michelle Brothers
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                                                   **
                                                ******  ****
                                                 **   **  **
                                        ****    **   **  **
              ****              ****   **  **  **     *****
            **   **   **  **  **  **  **  **  **
           **   **   **  **  **  **  **  **
          **   **   **  **    *****
         **   **     ***
          ****
             **

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     (C)   Copyright   October,   1992,  DargonZine,   Editor   Dafydd
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1                                                             /
  DDDDD                              ZZZZZZ                //
  D    D  AAAA RRR  GGGG OOOO NN  N      Z  I NN  N EEEE  ||
  D     D A  A R  R G    O  O N N N     Z   I N N N E     || Volume 5
-=========================================================+|)
  D    D  AAAA RRR  G GG O  O N N N   Z     I N N N E     || Issue  4
  DDDDD   A  A R  R GGGG OOOO N  NN  ZZZZZZ I N  NN EEEE  ||
                                                           \\
                                                             \
------------------------------------------------------------------------
--   DargonZine Volume 5, Issue 4        10/15/92          Cir 1130   --
------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- Archives at FTP.EFF.ORG (192.88.144.4) in pub/journals/DargonZine  --
------------------------------------------------------------------------
--                            Contents                                --
------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Pact VI                      Max Khaytsus           Yuli 17-19, 1014
 Beginnings                   Max Khaytsus and
                              Michelle Brothers      Mertz - Sy 5, 1015
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                                 Pact
                                part 6
                           by Max Khaytsus
              (b.c.k.a. )

     "Sergeant, sergeant!" a female voice echoed down the corridors of
the catacombs beneath Dargon Keep.
     Aimee, looking around the maze she was in, turned and bolted. Did
someone see  her? What happened? She  ran into the first  dark doorway
she saw and hid in the corner of the room.
     "Sergeant!"  The  female  guard  ran past  Aimee's  room  without
slowing down.
     Aimee made herself as small as  she could, hoping the woman would
not come back and find her.  Long moments passed with Aimee not moving
from her hiding place, not even daring to breathe, then she heard more
footsteps as people ran back down the corridor.
     "Are you sure?" she heard the Sergeant's voice.
     "Sure seemed  like he  was. And just  like Elizabeth  said, too,"
Altura answered. "I didn't wait around to see. Arellano is still there
in case something happens."
     "You best go get the physician, then," the sergeant answered.
     Through the doorway to the room  she was hiding in, Aimee saw the
female guard hurry towards the stairs  leading out of the dungeon. The
sergeant's  heavy  footsteps  could  be heard  heading  in  the  other
direction.  As soon  as all  was  quiet, Aimee  snuck up  to the  open
doorway and looked into the  corridor. She desperately wanted to leave
the dungeon, thinking Altura would leave open the door into the castle
hallways, but instead,  impulsively, turned the other  way, heading in
the wrong direction,  wanting to see what had  happened that Elizabeth
had to be called.
     Keeping as  quiet as  she could, Aimee  carefully snuck  down the
corridor  after  Sergeant Guralnik,  towards  the  room where  Captain
Koren's body lay resting.

     Dyann Taishent angrily slung a handful  of mud into a clay jar on
the table  before him. The  vessel shifted  away from him,  making the
cooks in the kitchen turn and look.
     "Careful, careful,"  Corambis tutted. "You know  what will happen
if Madam Sepagary sees you treat her dishes that way."
     "I'll seal her mouth  shut with clay if she so  much as thinks of
opening it!" Dyann snapped.
     Thuna,  watching the  two men  work  and helping  them when  they
needed something, let out a laugh.
     "What  is  it, girl?"  Corambis  asked.  His assistant  had  been
unusually quiet all morning, after the failure the night before.
     "I'm sorry,  sir, but I  can just imagine Madam  Sepagary serving
the Duke with her mouth full of clay."
     Corambis and  Dyann both chuckled  at that, but the  mage's laugh
quickly disappeared, replaced by a grim expression.
     "Don't worry,  we'll find her,"  Corambis assured him.  "This has
never failed before."
     "Last time we did this, it blew the top off old Sweeny's tower!"
     "That was  his own  fault," Corambis said.  "Anyone who  keeps so
much dung around and plays with fire is asking for it to happen."
     A laugh escaped Dyann's lips. "Oh, that expression on his face!"
     Corambis also  laughed. "But  then the  other spell  never failed
either," he added thoughtfully.
     "I've been thinking about that," the mage admitted.
     "And are you thinking what I'm thinking?" Corambis asked.
     Dyann nodded.  "That would explain the  mutt's new habits...let's
take a look before we start blowing doors off hinges."
     "Well, at least one door,"  Corambis said. "Thuna, repack the ash
and the spirits of hart's horn. We'll be back soon."

     Long before  Aimee could  get her  courage up  to enter  the room
where the  guards were,  she heard hurried  footsteps in  the corridor
behind  her and  darted into  the  room across  from the  one she  was
looking in. From across the corridor,  she could still hear the guards
talking  quietly  in   the  second  room,  now   overshadowed  by  the
approaching footsteps and female voices.
     "...Lieutenant Taishent both know, but  I want to be sure first,"
the physician said.
     "He didn't say anything," Altura  answered, "but we really didn't
wait. Sergeant Guralnik bid me to find you immediately."
     Aimee watched the two women  enter the room and disappear inside.
She waited  for a while, then  not seeing anyone exit,  snuck into the
room to see what was happening.
     "...healed  over pretty  well," the  physician commented,  "but I
don't want you going  anywhere. A few more days of  rest will have you
solidly on your feet."
     Aimee carefully snuck up to the doorway and peeked in. The guards
were once again gathered around the Captain's bed.
     "There will  be a scar," the  physician went on, "but  I can give
you some salve to clear that  up. It won't disappear, though. That was
a pretty big gash."
     "A  soldier  isn't a  soldier  without  scars, doctor,"  Sergeant
Guralnik said.
     "Well, I  don't know  about you or  the Captain  here," Elizabeth
said, "but I know most women prefer men whole." She looked down again.
"It's really  up to you. I'm  just offering you  what I think to  be a
good solution."
     Who was  she talking to? Aimee  edged forward a little  more, her
curiosity getting the better of her.
     "Why am I  in the catacombs?" a weak, but  deep voice sounded. It
was the voice of Captain Adrunian Koren!
     Aimee gasped,  realizing as  she did  so that  she had  given her
presence away.  The four guards  and the physician turned  towards her
and between them she spotted  Captain Koren's face, eyes open, looking
at her.
     Aimee took a  step back, tripping over something at  her feet and
falling over backwards. A loud yip sounded as she fell to the floor.

     "I tell you that door has been  closed for over a year!" the keep
castellan declared,  hands on  his hips. "The  Duke ordered  it locked
ever since that thief broke into the vault!"
     "Open that door now, you tub of lard, or I'll give you a hex free
of charge!" Dyann demanded of the large man.
     "`Tub o'  lard'? You old windbag!  I'll show you a  tub of lard!"
The castellan stepped forward, pushing the old mage back with his huge
stomach.
     "Castellan,"  Corambis   pushed  the   two  arguing   men  apart.
"Castellan, if you don't open this door for us, we'll take it by force
and  then  instead of  replacing  the  key  on  your belt,  you'll  be
replacing the  door on its  hinges. Do what will  be right for  all of
us."
     The castellan grumbled.
     "Please," Corambis insisted. "We just  need to look around. We'll
be quick."

     Karl darted out of the way with a yelp as Aimee fell over him and
quickly scrambled up to her feet.
     The  six  people in  the  other  room  stared  at the  girl  with
astonishment. None of  them expected her to be here  and for a moment,
no one knew what to do.  The girl quickly scrambled up and disappeared
from site.
     "After  her!" Guralnik  was the  first to  recover and  the three
younger guards charged out of the room, after the girl they knew to be
lost. Her seeing Captain Koren mattered in  that no one was to know he
was alive and she could ruin the entire plan of eliminating crime from
Dargon.
     "What is going on?" Koren groaned, trying to sit up.
     "Don't exert yourself, Captain," Elizabeth forced him to lay back
down.
     "Sir, there's been a lot that happened in the last month..."
     "The war? How's the war?"
     "Dargon is safe,  Sir. We ran them all off!  The Duke even chased
them."
     For a moment Koren smiled. "And the Southern Marches? The eastern
boarder?"
     "Captain, you need to rest!"  Elizabeth cut in, stopping Guralnik
from revealing the bad news.
     "Perhaps it would  be better if one of your  own men briefed you,
or perhaps Lieutenant Taishent," the sergeant caught on.
     Koren nodded. "Did Darklen make it?"
     "Yes, Sir."
     "And Azin? Shevlin? Milnor?"
     "Lieutenant Milnor is all right, Sir," Guralnik said, "Lieutenant
Azin is with the Duke's  forces...Lieutenant Shevlin..." He glanced at
the physician, but went on. "Lieutenant  Shevlin held the West Gate to
the last man. I'm sorry, Sir. He didn't live to see us drive the enemy
away."
     Koren  nodded with  a  sigh, his  expression  grim. "And  Lansing
Bartol?"
     "He's well."
     "Have Kalen come  see me if you  refuse to let me  get up," Koren
told Elizabeth.
     "I'll pass  on the message,"  the physician said, not  having the
intention of  saying anything  to the  lieutenant for  at least  a few
days. "Send for me if you need anything."
     "Before you go," Koren  added, preventing Elizabeth from leaving,
"tell me why that girl was being chased."

     The castellan fumbled  with his keys until finding  the right one
and inserted it in the lock. "Just to show you no one ever goes here,"
he complained, twisting the key in  the door. "Why, even I haven't set
foot  in here  since winter  and the  only other  key's in  the Duke's
study. Look!"
     The  door swung  open  to  reveal a  corridor  lit with  torches,
alternating on the opposing walls. The  dust was disturbed with a well
defined trail.
     "No one, eh?"  Dyann snapped. "I knew that mutt  kept coming here
for a reason!"
     The castellan angrily removed a torch from its sconce and hurried
down the corridor. "We'll just see who's been here!"

     Aimee ran down  the lit corridor as quickly as  she could manage,
with Karl right on her heels,  jumping and barking loudly. Behind them
Aimee could  hear the  running feet  of the guards.  She did  not even
think to  run into  one of the  dark rooms or  side tunnels.  Not only
could she get lost there, but Karl's insistent barking would only help
the guards find  her faster. She did  not know what she  would do upon
reaching the  heavy oak  door, or if  it would even  be open,  but she
could always kick and scream and maybe someone on the other side would
hear her and tell her father.
     Aimee breathlessly scrambled up  the stairs, almost tripping over
Karl. She could hear the guards not  far behind her. She darted out of
the corridor,  now running  after the  puppy, looking  for a  place to
hide.  As  she   turned  the  corner,  she  spotted   three  men,  her
grandfather, one  of his friends  and the castle castellan.  All three
stood astonished, looking at her.
     "Grandfather!" she wheezed, breathless from her run and dashed to
hide  behind him.  Right  on her  heels the  three  guards turned  the
corner.
     The  old  mage held  his  granddaughter  behind  him and  took  a
confident step forward. "What do  you want from my granddaughter?" His
words boomed in the corridor.

     "You  know," Ilona  said to  Captain  Koren, "you  and Kalen  are
equally pig headed! Like you came  from the same mold!" Their wait for
the others to arrive was taking longer than either of the two expected
and Ilona decided to  use this as an opportunity to  take care of some
unfinished business.
     The guard captain laughed. "How so, Lieutenant?"
     "Kalen was injured in the war," she told him, "and now he doesn't
want to take the time to let that damn wound heal!"
     Koren laughed. "I remember just over ten years ago bandits set up
camp four or five leagues south of  town and were exerting a road toll
from caravans  and travellers. Kalen  was just a rookie  then. Captain
Tamar Armstrong was the head of the guard -- it was a few years before
he went to serve as a general in the King's army -- and he sent me and
some men, including Kalen, to break that band up..."
     The  Captain  fell silent  as  Elizabeth  walked into  the  room,
followed by Kalen and  Jerid. "Didn't I tell you to  stay in bed?" she
demanded.
     "I've stayed  in that  bed for a  month!" Koren  snapped. "Wounds
heal better when they know they need to heal."
     "I'll have  a sleeping potion mixed  in with your food  next time
you eat," the physician threatened.
     "Kalen," Koren ignored  the physician, "have you  ever told Ilona
of your first great adventure?"
     "When I  was two?" Kalen  looked a  bit shocked that  the Captain
would remember a story told at a party where everyone had a little too
much to drink. He fought back a slight flush that covered his face.
     "No, in the guard!"
     "I haven't, Sir," he wiped his brow with his sleeve.
     "Well, do and get those wounds tended to."
     "Wounds?" Elizabeth turned to Kalen.
     "Don't you touch me," he warned her.
     "Did you two get everything straightened out?" Koren asked Jerid.
     "We did, Sir,"  he said. "Aimee found the door  open, wandered in
and got locked in here. I  should have thought to check the catacombs.
That is just like her."
     Koren chuckled. "I can understand her  fright when she saw me not
moving. I'd have run, too, if I were her age."
     "All's  well that  ends well,"  Jerid said.  "Next time,  I hope,
she'll be smarter than going where she shouldn't be. That scare was so
bad for  her, I won't  even punish her for  being irresponsible...even
though I should."
     "Good," Koren approved. "Now, about Liriss."
     Everyone pulled up a chair and sat down around the Captain, ready
to plan.
     "Jerid, I want  you to extend your patrols to  the docks. I don't
want a single ship to leave before we're finished."
     "You can be sure of that, Sir," the castle Lieutenant answered.
     "You, Ilona,"  Koren went on,  "I want  you to secure  the market
place when Kalen  takes Liriss' hold. That way we'll  cut off the best
way out of town."
     "Sir, if  I may,  I'd rather  be there as  it happens.  With your
permission, I'd like to have Caisy do that job."
     Koren thoughtfully twisted his mustache.  "Let's get back to that
in a moment.  Kalen, I want that building surrounded  and broken into.
Use all the force you can. This is an excuse to kill criminals without
having to  answer for it. Anyone  who doesn't yield when  told doesn't
get a second chance, clear?"
     "Yes, Sir."
     "And since  Kesrin is willing to  turn evidence, try to  take him
alive, but if that doesn't happen, I won't be too concerned.
     "Elizabeth, I'll  need to  rely on  you to  doctor my  people. We
simply don't have  the manpower to do everything. I'll  need my medics
in the raid itself. I want you and what physicians and healers you can
scrounge  up to  be ready  and  close by.  Stay with  the patrols  and
they'll bring you in when it's time."
     Kalen looked at Elizabeth, expecting her to protest the plan, but
she did not  say a word. In a  way, Kalen hoped that he  could avoid a
mass slaughter  and he knew  that in  an ideal situation,  his captain
would have wanted the same, but he also realized how understaffed they
were and how important it was to end the criminal reign over the city.
Perhaps Elizabeth knew it as well  and held her tongue for that reason
alone.
     "Now," Koren turned  back to Ilona, who waited  for his decision.
He had no doubts that she was among the best officers he ever had, but
he needed to hear her reasons and push her a little, to see if she was
willing to push back. "Ilona, any reasons?"
     Ilona  did not  answer for  a few  moments, putting  her thoughts
together. "Captain, I'm a Dargon town  guard," she said. "I want to be
there because that's my  job. That's what I signed on  to do. I'm here
to  protect, not  be protected.  Isn't it  enough you  barred me  from
fighting in the war?"
     "Your efforts were  important where they were  applied," he said.
"Elizabeth tells me you were invaluable."
     "But you  put me in the  keep so that  I wouldn't be hurt  in the
fighting!"
     Koren smiled. "Yes, I did. It was  both for you and Kalen. One of
you  worried was  enough.  I  couldn't afford  to  have  both of  your
performances affected."
     "Then overlook that I'm a woman this time," Ilona asked.
     Koren shifted in  his bed. "I understand you're on  the take with
Liriss?"
     "Of course,"  the Lieutenant smiled  back. "He's been  sending me
jewelry." A few of the gathered laughed.
     "Kalen, how  injured are  you?" the Captain  asked his  second in
command, ignoring the laughter.
     "I'm fine, Sir."
     "Fine like me?"
     Kalen did not answer.
     "I want you to take charge  of the market square," Koren decided.
"Ilona will lead  the raid. And after  you're done, I want  you to see
Elizabeth. I  may be as  stubborn as  a mule when  it comes to  my own
health, but I'm smart enough not to risk my best people needlessly."

     Ilona  waited patiently  until all  of the  twenty people  in the
raiding party gathered  in the alley. They had  surprised two brigands
here and took  them prisoner with minimal resistance. Now  they lay on
the  ground,  tied,  waiting  until  the raid  was  completed,  to  be
transported to  the guard house.  It would be  a great success  if the
rest of the raid went as smoothly.
     Looking  around in  the darkening  alley, Ilona  wondered if  she
should wait until it was completely dark, but not wanting to waste too
much time. Each  minute she and the  guards were here was  a risk that
they would be  noticed from inside the building.  The sergeants slowly
gathered around her, waiting for instructions.
     "Caisy,"  Ilona turned  to the  man  next to  her, "first  floor,
straight  through. Hold  the rear  stairs  and the  exits. Tess,"  she
turned to the  tall red-headed sergeant that could put  fear into most
men she fought. "Second floor. No  risks. As soon as you're done, back
Caisy."
     "Yes, Ma'am."
     "Garay, Streed  and DaVrice, you're  with me. Go easy  on Kesrin,
but bring  everyone in.  The third  floor is the  only place  I prefer
prisoners to bodies. Everyone clear?"
     All the guards nodded.
     Ilona signaled for  Caisy to begin and two of  the Sergeant's men
quickly broke down the door. Caisy led his small group in, followed by
Tess' larger unit.
     "Go," Ilona nodded  to the three guards remaining  with her. They
went in and, drawing her sword, Ilona followed.
     The building was dark inside, not  yet lit to accommodate the the
setting  of  the sun.  The  first  floor  corridor was  mostly  empty,
although sounds of a fight could  be heard from further down, where it
took a turn. Caisy  and his men secured a good  half of the building's
first floor and were now working at the other end of the corridor.
     Ahead of Ilona, her team's heavy footsteps sounded on the stairs.
Not wanting to let opportunity slip by, Ilona quickly followed them up
the stairs.  As she passed the  murky second floor, she  heard someone
yell "archer", but  there were already plenty of people  on this floor
to take care of the problem and she had a job to do one floor up.
     Hoping that the alarm would be  taken care of by the men assigned
to the floor, Ilona continued up the stairs.

     The  instant  the outside  door  cracked  and swung  open,  Caisy
followed his men into the building.  They both paused to fight the two
brigand guards at  the door and he ran past  them, towards the stairs.
The flood of  men that followed through the doorway  carried the fight
after him  and the  two brigands were  quickly overpowered  and thrown
behind the stairs.
     Caisy himself  ran deeper  into the  building, looking  for other
inhabitants.  At the  stairs  he found  another  man, wearing  studded
leather decorated with  metal, a sailor's cap and a  wild glean in his
eyes. "Yield!" Caisy ordered. Wearing the  dark blue tunic of the town
guard he did not feel the need to declare himself.
     Instead of  surrendering, the  brigand drew  his sword  and leapt
over the banister. Caisy backed up, blocking the first strike with his
sword.  The man's  attack  was  so determined  that  he quickly  found
himself on  the defensive. Two more  blocks and a parry  later had him
five yards further down the hallway.
     "Damn you!"  he swung his  blade across the corridor,  making the
man pause  his advance to  avoid getting  hit. Behind him  Caisy could
hear  a battle  cry and  someone's rushing  feet. He  decided to  risk
facing the  new opponent, hoping that  his own men, now  moving up the
corridor, would take care of the crazed brigand from the stairs.
     He turned,  bending down,  swinging his sword  at knee  level. It
impacted with  the new  opponent, changing  the war cry  to a  yell of
pain. Instead of attacking, the brigand simply collapsed over Caisy.
     "The door!" Caisy indicated to the other alley doorway to the two
guards that caught up to him.
     Another  armed man  rushed  at  them from  the  back stairs.  The
corridor was not wide enough for the three men to fight together.

     Tess followed  her men up the  stairs, knowing full well  that at
least three  or four of her  people were still in  the entry corridor,
helping Caisy's  men. This was a  large reduction in strength,  but it
was a necessary loss.  No part of the building they  had been in could
be left unsecured.
     She made  it to  the top of  the stairs to  find her  men already
engaged in combat. With a quick  and precise thrust of her sword, Tess
cut  deep in  the side  of one  of Liriss'  henchmen and  proceeded on
without stopping. The second floor  corridor was clear, but there were
plenty of rooms to worry about.
     Tess opened  the first door she  came to and stepped  inside. She
ducked under the  fist of the man  who met her and  quickly pulled the
door  shut, catching  the thug  in  between it  and the  frame. As  he
screamed, she hit him  with the flat of her blade  and shoved him back
in to the room.
     Two other men rushed  at her, but only one at  a time could fight
successfully  through the  doorway. Tess  met the  first one  with her
sword as her own men rushed  down the corridor behind her. She blocked
the first swing of the sword  with hers, then followed through and cut
deep into his shoulder.
     "Yield!"
     He did.  His companion  also tossed his  sword down,  having seen
what had happened to his friends.
     "Get out here," Tess ordered, stepping back.
     The three men came out into the corridor.
     "Face down, on the floor!"
     A yell made everyone look up as a half dozen men charged down the
corridor, holding  a bench sideways, knocking  everyone over, sweeping
them backwards  off their feet. The  bench slammed into the  three men
Tess challenged, then into her. She lost her sword as she slammed into
the wall and  the next thing she  knew, she had a set  of hands around
her throat and a heavy body on top of hers.
     "You son of a bitch!" she yelled  at the man and grabbing hold of
his  shoulders, slammed  him sideways  into the  wall. The  man's head
impacted the fine grain wall with  a crack. It took three full thrusts
to get him to let go of her neck and by that time she was covered with
his blood, dripping  down on her from the injuries  to his skull. Tess
shoved the unconscious  body off her and  got up, only to  see the man
she wounded earlier holding her sword.
     "Poetic, isn't it?" he turned the blade, wet with blood.
     "Not  for you,"  Tess  drew  her long  dagger,  preparing for  an
unbalanced fight.
     "Archer!" someone further  down the corridor yelled and  as if on
cue, the brigand with her sword fell over, an arrow shaft in his back.
     Tess also dropped down, hoping it was only one archer and that he
did not have many arrows. She  could see pretty far down the corridor,
but not far enough to distinguish what  was going on at the other end.
As she looked, she  again heard a rush of running  feet and rolled out
of the way, towards the wall, as the men with the bench charged in the
other direction. There were only four of them now and with her dagger,
Tess managed to put  a deep cut in the leg of the  man on her side. He
stumbled, ham  strung, and fell  forward, pulling the bench  down with
him. The bench end ground against the wall and the whole column of men
went tumbling down.
     Tess quickly grabbed her sword off  the floor and got up, only to
have another arrow  whiz by her ear. That made  her back up, carefully
looking down the corridor where her men were fighting in small groups.
Three of the men  that carried the bench got up off  the floor, two of
them drawing their swords  and the third bent down to  get his off the
floor. As  she prepared for  fighting two  men, one of  them staggered
forward and fell, with an arrow in his back. His companion spun around
to see  what was happening,  giving Tess  a perfect opportunity  for a
strike. She did not let it go to waste.

     Having  heard someone  yell "archer",  Caisy rushed  up the  back
stairs, leaving  his men to secure  the first floor. Two  of them were
wounded, one  unable to continue  to fight,  but the battle  there was
almost over.
     On the landing, Caisy stopped just short of being hit by a sword.
He was  at a great disadvantage,  having to fight a  man towering half
his  height over  him, but  that  was the  luck  of the  draw and  the
disadvantage of being lower down on the stairs.
     Yells of combat could be heard both above and below as he blocked
the vicious swings  of the blade of  the man on the  landing. One hard
blow  forced Caisy  to  fall back  three steps,  but  as his  attacker
followed him down,  Caisy lunged at his feet, making  the man lose his
balance and tumble down over him.
     The way was clear and deciding  to let the five guards downstairs
deal with  the swordsman, Caisy  rushed up to  the landing and  up the
second flight of stairs. In the  growing darkness of the second floor,
Caisy could  see men fighting down  the corridor and an  archer in the
foreground, letting an arrow lose from his long bow.
     The man was  dressed in a light tunic reaching  down to his knees
and had no sword.
     "Put it  down!" Caisy ordered  as the archer drew  another arrow,
but instead of complying, the man  tried to catch the arrow's notch on
the string of the bow.
     Caisy swung  his sword,  not wanting to  become the  archer's new
target, but the  man was barely at  the tip of the  sword's reach. The
weapon hit the bow, shearing through  the narrowest part of the weapon
and breaking the string, making the shattered bow snap out with a loud
crack. The  archer screamed in pain  as the broken string  cut through
the flesh of  his unprotected forearm and the bow  twisted in his hand
like a  writhing snake. The arrow,  barely caught on the  torn string,
jumped off the bow and stuck in the wall not far away from Caisy.

     Ilona made her way up the stairs on the heels of Sergeant Streed.
An unconscious guard already lay at  the top of the landing. The first
set of doors on each side of the corridor was open. Sounds of crashing
furniture could be heard from the door on the left side.
     "Help him," Ilona  pointed Streed to the room, not  sure if Garay
or DaVrice was in there.
     As Streed  disappeared in the room,  Ilona made her way  down the
corridor to the end of the  building overlooking the market place. The
central  room  on  the  far   wall  was  suspected  of  being  Liriss'
headquarters and  pausing only long  enough to ready her  sword, Ilona
burst in  through the door.  The first room  was empty. It  was richly
decorated with rugs  and pieces of art. On one  wall stood a luxurious
sofa with soft  pillows scattered at its base. Across  from it stood a
large cabinet displaying bottles of liquor and spirits.
     Not wanting to waste the time exploring the room, Ilona rushed to
the next  door and burst  through into an  office with a  large window
showing the last of the setting sun's  light over the town wall a half
league away. At the desk in the  center of the room sat Liriss, facing
Ilona, full  of surprise. It took  Ilona a moment to  notice the young
woman who had  brought her Liriss' message a few  days prior, standing
in the shadows at the wall to her left.
     "What is this?" Liriss asked, surprise evident in his voice.
     "It's a raid, rat."
     "You can't do this!" he got up, then calming himself, added, "you
have to  believe what I told  you three days ago.  I'm not responsible
for Koren's death!"
     "What about two kidnappings?"
     "What kidnappings?!"
     "Do you  know what the  sad thing  is?" Ilona asked.  "I actually
believe that for the first time  in your miserable life you're telling
the truth. You  usually gloat over your victories, but  ever since the
war started, you've been running like a scared rat. You're free to go,
assuming you can get out of this building. If not, that's your luck."
     Ilona  paused, thinking  about  the young  woman.  Should she  be
arrested or let go?  "You..." It would make more sense  to let her go.
That way there would be no  witnesses to her releasing Liriss, to make
a bargain to be set free.
     "You  have to  let her  go!" Liriss  hurried to  say. "I'll  turn
myself in if I must, but you have to let her go!"
     "Who is she?" Ilona asked.
     "Please!"
     Ilona knew  that she had little  time herself. "Go, both  of you,
but next time you won't get off this easily!"
     Without waiting  for Liriss to  respond, Ilona rushed out  of the
room, knowing full  well that her people would be  looking for her. In
the long hallway she found Garay guarding two men and a woman.
     "Lieutenant, are you all right?" he hurried to ask.
     "Fine. What's happening?"
     "The first floor  is secured and the second is  being cleaned up.
Sergeant Caisy sent three men to give us a hand here."
     One of the  doors slammed open and one of  the guardsmen shoved a
beat up man out. Ilona hurried to finish the sweep of the floor.

     Captain  Adrunian Koren  sat in  bed in  his second  floor castle
room, twisting his mustache, watching  Kalen pace before him. The news
from yesterday's raid was both good and bad. Four guards dead, a dozen
wounded, three of them badly enough that they would be off duty for as
long as a month, but that was  nothing to compare to what had happened
to Liriss' men.
     "The  whole corridor,"  Kalen repeated  himself. "It  wasn't like
this even  in the invasion...  Wall to wall  blood. The men  said that
before I got  there, you couldn't put a foot  down without being ankle
deep in blood..."
     "How many?" Koren asked, his voice a mere whisper.
     "It's hard  to say.  You had  to see  it... We  took thirty-three
alive, about half were whores who  refused to fight. Half a dozen were
barely children.
     "The men pretty much fought with  all they had. I understand some
went after our people with furniture  or whatever they could lift. One
man attacked Caisy swinging part of a dead body..."
     Koren shook his head. "How sad we've come to this..."
     "I'd guess there were two or  three dozen dead total," Kalen went
on. "We  took them by complete  surprise. There was no  way they could
mass an organized defense."
     "I wish  I could give everyone  some time off to  get over this,"
Koren said,  "but getting over our  own losses will be  hard enough. I
can't afford to let anyone take time off now."
     Kalen nodded.
     "And Liriss?"
     "I'm sorry, Sir. It was my  fault. We could have arrested him for
trying to bribe me."
     "Kesrin,  not   Liriss,"  Koren  reminded  the   Lieutenant.  "He
protected himself well."
     "Either way,"  Kalen answered.  "I should  have arrested  him for
what has been happening."
     "You told  me you  didn't think he  was responsible,"  Koren said
thoughtfully.
     "Not after  his meetings with Ilona,  but he's still guilty  of a
lot that happened before this."
     "But that's the..." there was a knock on the door "...thing. Come
in," Koren shifted in bed. "If  we could prove it without overstepping
our bounds, this wouldn't be a problem."
     The door opened and Ilona Milnor came in.
     "I just feel guilty that he would charge on that horse right past
me and I couldn't lift a finger. Wouldn't." Kalen glanced at Ilona. "I
should've been smart enough to have a few men with horses."
     Ilona looked down, avoiding his eyes.
     "What's done  is done," Koren  said. "He's not our  only problem.
Kesrin's with  him because  we made a  deal and one's  as good  as the
other. Hopefully this  will put them out of business  for a few months
at least."
     "Do you really believe that?" Kalen asked.
     "No," the Captain  sighed. "If not them, someone  else will come.
It never stops."
     "Kesrin gave us a statement before  we let him go at noon," Ilona
injected. "What he  claims happened was Ovink found  out about Liriss'
attempts to  bribe Kalen  and ordered  your death,  Sir. He  wanted to
start a war  between us and Liriss  and lay low until we  won. Then he
would set up his own shop..."
     "His one  error was that  he underestimated Kesrin,"  Koren said,
"but that's the way  things go in a nest of wasps.  I don't suppose it
will take Liriss and Kesrin too long to rebuild."
     "Especially considering  the number  of men that  escaped," Ilona
added. "Tess said they were jumping  out of windows, afraid they'd get
killed whether they surrendered or not."
     "They'll  need   time  to  get   over  the  scare,"   Koren  said
confidently, "and to lick their wounds.  And we need time to take care
of ours.  But we'll be ready  next time and you'll  have horses, right
Kalen?"
     Lieutenant Kalen Darklen smiled. "Yes, Sir, I will."
     "Well,  then," Koren  turned to  Ilona. "What  did you  come here
for?"
     "To ask you how you were and if you needed anything."
     "I feel  like a  tired old  bull that  needs to  get back  on his
feet!" Koren's voice boomed. "Keep that  guard house in shape! I'll be
coming home soon."
     "And Tara, Sir?"
     "Better than I understand she was.  I saw her this morning. She's
been through quite a scare."
     "If  you don't  mind, Sir,  I'll ask  her to  stay with  me until
Elizabeth lets you go."
     "That will be fine, Lieutenant. And thank you."
     "My pleasure, Sir. One more thing..?"
     "What is it?"
     "About  replacements  for Lieutenants  Shevlin  and  Azin. I  was
wondering  if  I  could  give you  a  recommendation."  Ilona  glanced
cautiously at Kalen as she said that and he nodded his approval.
     "Who did you have in mind?" the Captain asked.
     "Sergeant Caisy. He did a fine  job handling the extra shift over
the last month.  And Tess, if Azin  decides to stay with  the Duke. If
anyone, it was she who made last night a success."
     "Tess? The Lederian? She studied with Lord Morion, didn't she?"
     "Yes, Sir. The whole town knows that by now."
     "Get  me their  service records  and  we'll take  a look,"  Koren
agreed.
     "I best go, Sir," Kalen said. "My shift starts soon."
     "Go, nothing. You  need to see Elizabeth,"  Koren ordered. "Don't
think I've forgotten.  Have Tess do your job today.  We'll see how she
does."
     "Yes, Sir," Kalen sighed.
     "And you make sure he gets there," Koren told Ilona. "Dismissed."
     "You let  him escape,  didn't you?" Kalen  asked Ilona  once they
left the Captain's room.
     "You mean Liriss?" she asked.
     "Yes, Liriss."
     "Yes. Are you angry?"
     Kalen put his arm around Ilona.  "No. I don't think he was guilty
either, but he still needs to be punished for his past."
     "We'll get him," Ilona said confidently.
     "We will," Kalen agreed.
     "You know that woman I told  you about, the one who delivered the
message to me in the guard house?"
     "Uh-huh."
     "I saw  her again  in Liriss'  office when I  let him  go," Ilona
said. "While I  contemplated whether or not to let  her go, he offered
himself for her!"
     "Liriss?" Kalen asked in disbelief.
     "Liriss."
     "I wonder who she is..."
     "So do I," Ilona said. "You  didn't see her in the market square,
did you? She wore a light colored skirt and a green tunic."
     "I may have...I  wasn't really watching for unarmed  women at the
time."
     Ilona sighed. "I hope we find out some day. It struck me that she
was very important to him."
     They soon  reached the physician's quarters  and Kalen hesitantly
knocked on the door.
     "Don't look so intense," Ilona mocked him. "It won't hurt a bit."

     The market square was once again busy, oblivious to the raid that
took place there the night before. Shoppers rushed about from booth to
booth, haggling for the best deals.  Shop keepers waved their arms and
yelled,  expressing the  quality of  the products  and the  unbeatable
price they had to offer.
     "And  you can  let  this  lay around  for  months," the  merchant
explained to Dyann as he paid out the money. "It will be good at least
through Deber."
     "I'm not buying it to let it  lie around," the mage said. "When I
buy food, it's to eat it."
     "After  you buy  it,  do with  it what  you  will," the  merchant
snapped and  turned to the  next customer,  no longer having  to worry
about making the  sale. The mage sighed and walked  across the crowded
street to Corambis' booth where Madam  Labin was still telling him how
appreciative she was of his services.
     "And thank you again, Sage," she said yet again. Dyann heard that
exact phrase before he left to buy  the pickled sweet meats he was not
supposed to eat.
     "My  pleasure," Cormabis  answered with  what appeared  to be  an
exasperated smile and a forced pleasant voice.
     "And don't forget that I need to  see you again in a few days. No
later than the end of the month, so you be sure to have your assistant
stop by my house and remind me."
     "Of course, Madam," Corambis' smile did not fade as he spoke.
     "Well,  actually you'd  better have  her drop  by tomorrow,"  the
woman went on. "My maid made this wonderful new cake that I'd like you
to see. It tastes just heavenly,  but it's..." she looked around "...a
Beinison recipe  and I'm  just not  sure if that's  good or  bad." She
crossed herself. "I'm  sorry Cephas. So you must tell  me before I try
it again, with the war on and everything."
     "I'll have Thuna stop by tomorrow," Corambis promised.
     "Thank you again, Sage," Madam Labin repeated.
     "I'm always glad to help out," he released a deep breath.
     "And I  also want  you do a  reading for my  sister. She  will be
going to Asbridge early next month and  you must help her plan for the
weather. I hear the  rains are due to be stronger  this year than last
and I want  her to be ready.  She just doesn't believe me  when I tell
her!"
     "Of course. Just have her stop by  and I'll be more than happy to
help."
     "That's just so  kind of you," Madam Labin went  on. "You know, I
was told that..."
     "Excuse me," Dyann rushed up to them. "We need to talk. Would you
please excuse us, Madam?"
     "Well, if you  need..." Madam Labin began, but  Dyann had already
pulled Corambis aside. "Well, how rude!" she exclaimed.
     "I'll  kill that  woman,"  Corambis confined  in  his friend.  "I
swear, she'll not last long if she continues to visit me."
     Dyann laughed. "That's why I don't sell my advice."
     "Did you hear about the raid?" Corambis asked.
     "Every word of  it, from Jerid. Just look at  that empty building
now. I hope they tear it down!"
     Corambis looked north to the  old three story structure. "If they
don't, we can. Get Sweeny and Arbogast and some others..."
     "We're all in our sixties," Dyann reminded Corambis.
     "Well, yes, but..."
     "I wanted to talk to you about Adrunian Koren," Dyann said.
     "Yes," Corambis'  eyes lit  up. "I told  you that  casting didn't
lie!"
     "Which still  leaves us with  a problem," Dyann pointed  out. "If
the casting was right, what's going to happen to Lord Dargon?"
     Corambis  scratched his  head.  "I  wish I  knew  what that  damn
casting meant..."
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                            Beginnings
                       by Michelle Brothers
                         and Max Khaytsus
            (b.c.k.a. )

Mertz, 1015

     Pristine  sails rose  stark  and white  against  the sullen  sky,
flapping slightly  in a  salt encrusted  breeze. Dull  sunlight raised
bright  patches on  the ship's  worn  wooden railing.  Nicks and  cuts
caused by sword strokes and  grappling hooks caught and pooled shadows
like the blood that had so recently washed the vessel's deck.
     Tarilane sat on a barrel filled  with fresh water and sadly noted
the still  present marks of  war; a pale stain  on the deck  that salt
water could  not scour away,  carefully mended rents in  the otherwise
perfect sails, and the swords that the sailors still wore. She touched
the hilt  of her  own blade  reflectively. The war  was over,  but the
peace was tenuous at best.
     Shakin had not been  directly involved in the Beinison/Baranurian
conflict. Located to  the southeast of Beinison, the  huge country had
simply never felt  the need to conquer the  intervening territories to
gain control of  the independent state. That Shakin  also produced the
best alchemists and  physicians on the continent and  could deny their
services  to anyone,  made  the  decision to  let  them alone  easier.
Leaving  them autonomous  was  easier than  being  denied medical  aid
sometime in the uncertain future. The Shakinian crown, held jointly by
the  Royal  Consorts, having  no  interest  in land  acquisition,  had
remained neutral, as they had throughout the war torn centuries.
     This was  not to say  that they did not  take part in  the latest
squabble between the  two powers. Healers and alchemists  were in high
demand by both sides, and since past attempts to limit enemy access to
Shakinian healing resulted in the  complete withdrawal of all support,
both sides  were allowed to bargain  for these services. If  it had no
other  exportable resources,  Shakin's highly  skilled physicians  and
herb mixers more than made up for the lack.
     The country  itself had remained  physically apart from  the war,
being  on the  wrong side  of Beinison  to experience  the devastation
directly, until  their neighbor,  Kimerron, a tribal  country Beinison
did not  consider worth their time  to subdue, decided that  it needed
more land.  Thinking their large  neighbor was busy with  other games,
Kimerron attacked  from behind, making deep  incursions into Beinosian
territory. After recovering from the shock of the unexpected bite, the
tip of one of Beinison's many fingered army crushed the raiders.
     Tarilane had spent  most of her life in  Sahni, Shakin's capitol,
learning the  alchemist's trade. The  skirmish right on  her country's
border  provided her  with  plenty of  opportunities  to practice  her
lessons--both healing  and sword.  Because her master,  Derimiahn, was
one of the most skilled alchemists of his time, he was in great demand
by  the crown  to assist  the  physicians in  easing the  pain of  the
refugees and  in providing  components to  the royal  mages. He  was a
gentle  man, who  refused  to use  even  one of  the  many titles  the
Consorts had conferred upon him during his life, but at the command of
his royal cousins,  travelled to the front to represent  them with his
art.  Tarilane,  his  second  eldest  apprentice,  had  the  honor  of
accompanying him,  while the eldest  apprentice attended the  shop and
the youngsters.  Together, master and student  labored beside healers,
trying to save the lives and limbs of the young victims and beside the
mages  to  provide ingredients  to  fuel  protective spells.  Tarilane
learned more in the months spent  building potions for the healers and
mages  than she  ever  could  have during  the  normal  course of  her
studies.
     They had  returned to Sahni  a bare two  weeks ago and  five days
after the homecoming, Tarilane found herself on her way to the nearest
port, Derimiahn's last words echoing emptily in her ears.
     "You have learned  all that I can teach you,  Tari. I release you
from the  rest of your  apprenticeship before  you watch the  walls of
this shop grow too small around your  spirit." He placed a hand on her
head in  almost fatherly benediction.  "Know that you have  pleased me
and show great promise. You will do well."
     And he left her.
     Tarilane  found herself  standing alone  in her  cramped cubicle,
watching the dividing curtain-wall rippling  in her master's wake. She
did not follow; could not have thought of anything to do or say if she
had.
     She took  her leave of the  other apprentices at the  night meal,
which Derimiahn was conspicuously absent from, and spent hours talking
with Shauvandier,  the senior apprentice, plotting  a destination. The
youngesters helped  out by packing  her few belongings  while Tarilane
and Shaw pored over a worn map.  The single, barely full bag waited by
the   front   door  with   the   tiny,   hastily  gathered   pile   of
parting-gifts--Sonshallan,  the next  oldest apprentice  gave her  his
first blown potion  bottle, a lopsided affair that  would barely stand
upright. Castellei,  next in line, gave  her a writing pen,  with soft
apologies that he could  not afford ink or a case  yet, and Shaem, the
youngest, gave her her favorite string  of blue beads. Later she would
find the  green scarf Shaw had  stashed in his herb  storage chest for
the last few months in the top of her pack; his final gift to her.
     Much later, after the children  were tucked away in bed, Tarilane
shared a glass of mead with Shauvandier before the dying fire.
     "Is there anything else you  need?" he asked softly, watching the
firelight play across Tarilane's features,  catching in her pale brown
hair.
     "Courage,"  she  quipped  back  with a  faint  smile  that  faded
immediately. "Seriously,  Shaw, it's like  leaving home for  the first
time. Except  this _is_ the  first time.  I don't remember  living any
place but here. I'm really scared."
     "You'll do  fine, little sister."  Shauvandier pulled her  into a
gentle embrace.  "Master's right  to send  you off...I've  watched you
prowl the house and watch the road  like you wonder what's at the end.
You'll  do fine.  You're good,  practical, everything  that it  takes.
Don't worry so  much. And don't forget  to keep a sense  of humor," he
added, taking her by the shoulders  and shaking her a little. "You get
too serious sometimes."
     Tarilane  chuckled softly,  unable  to deny  the accusation.  She
could be  very intense when working,  to the exclusion of  the gentler
emotions. "You always know the right  things to say, Shaw. You're like
the brother I never had."
     They sat  in companionable silence after  that, until Shauvandier
shooed  Tarilane off  to  bed.  As she  drifted  into sleep,  Tarilane
remembered  their ill-fated  attempt to  deepen their  friendship into
something more  personal. They had just  gotten themselves comfortable
on the bed when Derimiahn pulled the dividing curtain aside.
     He  said nothing  for what  seemed  like the  longest time,  then
pulled  it shut  again.  They  had parted  as  soon  as his  footsteps
disappeared down  the stairs, the  ardor of the moment  chilled. After
that, they  never felt quite right  about the quick kisses  and stolen
caresses, even though the Master never said a word about the incident.
The  decision to  keep the  relationship  platonic was  made not  long
after, and neither one could say they regretted the decision.
     Tarilane  recalled all  of this  with a  faint flush,  and chided
herself for getting lost in memories.  The present was what she had to
worry about now, not the elusive  past. Salt breeze cooled the burning
in her  cheeks, catching the  scarf that had been  Shauvandier's final
gift to her and causing it to  dance. The loneliness she had been able
to hold at  bay during the journey  to the coast rolled  over her with
the slap of the water against the hull.
     "Lady?" The  sea roughened  voice shattered  her mood  like waves
breaking on rocks.
     Tarilane was  glad for  the interruption; she  had had  enough of
remembering. She  slipped off  the keg  and turned  to face  the First
Mate,  noting the  cutlass belted  to his  side. Pirates  and warships
still roamed the sea, not realizing  that the war was over. Or perhaps
not caring.
     "Yes? What did the captain say about the job?"
     "Cap'n says,  if'n y' kin  cook, y'  kin have passin',"  the Mate
said. "With  th' clear understand'n  that y'  pull y'r own  weight. We
won' coddle y'.  This ain't no easy  job. Fact `tis, we  lost our last
cook t'  pirates." He  folded his  arms, waiting  for her  to politely
decline. He either  did not see or did not  believe the sword attached
to her waist.
     Tarilane laughed. "Sir, I spent six months near to the war border
and  I don't  wear this--"  she  patted the  hilt of  the broad  sword
"--because it's  pretty. Sometimes  it was the  only thing  that stood
between my Master  and those who would have stolen  what we would have
given freely. I'll be fine. And I'm a darned good cook."
     "Hope so, f'r y'r sake,"  said the Mate doubtfully. "'Cause we'll
put y'  over th' side if'n  y' can't cook.  I'll show y' where  y'r t'
sleep."
     Tarilane grinned and followed him towards the galley.

                             * * * * *

Sy 5, 1015

     "I really  hate this,"  muttered Darion, just  loud enough  to be
heard by the  youth he rode beside.  The clop of the  horses hooves on
the cobblestones effectively prevented the whisper from traveling much
farther. He hunched a little in  his dark tunic and studied the houses
and businesses.
     "What?" replied his companion with a mocking grin. "Coming out in
daylight or riding?"
     "Bodyguarding," Darion  snapped, careful  that his voice  did not
carry over the steady beat of  the horse's hooves. "I don't like doing
this. You do. I'm not a fighter."
     Ranth chucked,  remembering their  last bar  fight, a  few nights
ago. They had gotten into a brawl  with a pair of burly sailors out of
Lediria over a dice game and Darion had taken quite a beating, serving
more as a distraction than an actual participant.
     "Gotta  step  out of  the  shadows  sometime, my  friend,"  Ranth
advised. "You can't spend the rest  of your life creeping down alleys.
Come  to mention,  you  have been  doing a  lot  of midnight  prowling
lately. What's been up?"
     Darion  opened  his mouth  to  respond,  but  the man  they  were
following interrupted harshly.
     "Pipe down, you two," he ordered, without looking back.
     "Yes, my  lord," Darion  and Ranth  said in  chorus. The  man did
glance back  at this, and glared,  one hand on the  heavy, peace-bound
dagger at his hip. He hated when  his proteges did this, and they knew
it. The knife promised what would happen to them if they did it again.
     Darion and  Ranth traded glances as  he turned back to  study the
heavily trafficed  avenue. Lord Silvas was  in a poor mood  today, and
they did  not know what had  caused it. Deciding that  being silent on
the  matter would  greatly  increase  their life  span,  they made  no
further comments.
     Lord Silvas  was not  a man  to be trifled  with. A  high ranking
member of  Comarr's booming Thieves  Guild, he  had taken the  pair in
when they were just runny nosed  urchins on the streets. To Ranth, the
larger of the two  boys, he gave an education in  combat and arms. For
someone of his age, just over  eighteen years, he was quite handy with
any  weapon that  came  into reach.  He  would make  a  fine guard  or
mercenary in the not so distant future.
     Darion was taught  the art of spying. Tall, slender  and agile he
could sneak into and out of places with ease, and, unlike his partner,
Darion was literate, so that he  would know exactly what parchments to
acquire on his regular trips into Ciara's merchant quarter.
     Since the  day Silvas  picked them  up, Ranth  and Darion  were a
team. They did  everything together, from their first  drink, to their
first theft. Though  not exactly a kind master, Silvas  did teach them
the necessary skills  to survive on Comarr's seedier side,  as well as
other cities.
     Buildings grew  up around  the little group  as they  rode deeper
into the Ciara's business district. The  air filled with the sounds of
hurrying people  and street haukers;  mingled scents of new  bread and
garbage drifted out from taverns and  inns. Above it all, a faded blue
sky reflected  the smoke  from the many  chimnies, confusing  the true
white clouds.
     Lord  Silvas  pulled  to  a  halt before  a  dry-goods  shop  and
dismounted.  His  bodyguards  followed suit.  Darion's  gaze  scuttled
restlessly along the avenue, marking  the people who passed, the dusty
goods in the store's display window, an odd mark burnt into the shop's
door jamb, and the bar across the street.
     He nudged Ranth, who was keeping  an eye out for obvious threats,
and motioned  quickly at the  building across the street.  Ranth wiped
his answering smile off his face as Lord Silvas turned to them.
     "Keep an eye on the horses," he ordered. "I have some business to
attend to. I will return shortly."
     "Yes, my lord," Ranth and  Darion acknowledged, careful to not do
it in chorus this time. Silvas disappeared into the shop in a swirl of
cloak.
     "Hot out, isn't  it," Ranth said, after a pause,  eyeing the bar.
When Silvas said `shortly' that usually meant long enough for a drink.
     "Sure is," agreed Darion, as  he watched a gaily painted carriage
rumble past.
     "Could stand for a drink to cut the dust."
     "Same here. So long as you're buying. It's your turn."
     "Since when?"  Ranth glared at  his friend. "I bought  the rounds
last night!"
     "Yeah, you  did," confirmed  Darion. "But I  paid Olivia  for you
last night, because you'd drunk all your silver. You owe me at least a
drink for that, if not more."
     "You did?" Ranth looked confused.
     "Sure did."
     "Did I have a good time?"
     "I assume so. I had to carry you home."
     "Oh." Ranth studied  the stitching on his horse's  tack. "In that
case, I'll buy you a drink."
     "Or three," laughed Darion. "Let's go."
     Leaving  the horses  tethered  in  front of  the  shop, the  pair
trotted across  the cobbled  street and into  the Silver  Platter. The
interior was  well lit for  a tavern, and  much cleaner than  the ones
Darion and Ranth were used to frequentinging. The smell of alcohol was
strong in the air, but the floor and tables were clean and the patrons
fairly  well dressed.  Ranth  looked  a little  out  of  place in  his
battered corslet, but, as usual, that did not bother him in the least.
     They walked up to the bar, noting that the place was doing steady
business despite the earliness of the hour.
     Finding a space was easily  done; Ranth squeezed his bulk between
a half drunk  merchant and a tipsy  youth. He pounded his  palm on the
counter a little.
     "Two glasses of  ale," he called over the high  pitched babble of
the common  room when the woman  behind the bar turned  in his general
direction. Two battered  mugs appeared a second later  and passed into
Ranth's possessions after an exchange of coin.
     "You know," commented Darion as they sipped at the frothy glasses
in a  corner. "I'm broke.  I spent my last  copper on that  spice cake
this morning."
     "Then I  guess it's  time to earn  another stipend,"  said Ranth,
swallowing a great mouthful of ale. "Picked out a bird yet?"
     "The scarlet jay  you stood next to at the  bar," Darion replied,
nodding in that direction. "He's paid in silver twice and doesn't show
any sign of leaving."
     "All right. I'll distract him, you pluck him."
     Darion disappeared into the crowd, while Ranth shouldered his way
through the bodies to the bar.  In the process he tipped the remainder
of his drink all over the front of the red clad man's fancy tunic.
     "`Ey! Wash it,  y' clunsy oav!" The man rounded  on his attacker,
slopping rich purple wine out of his glass as he turned.
     "So sorry, my  lord!" apologized Ranth, brushing  futilely at the
spreading brown stain, causing more  wine to spill. He glanced quickly
down and saw that the purse was gone and Darion was no where in sight.
Ranth  set out  to  extricate himself  from  the situation.  "Terribly
sorry. Let me buy you a drink to make up for the trouble."
     "I don'  wan' a  drinth," slurred  the merchant,  weaving around,
trying to  orient himself on the  youth. "`Y damned bashterd!"  And he
cut loose with a wide roundhouse swing that missed Ranth entirely, but
ploughed satisfyingly into the next nearest person.
     Ranth ducked away into the crowd  as the merchant swung again and
the cry of `fight' rocked the rafters.

     Darion  sauntered back  across the  street, casually  tucking the
stitched leather pouch into his pocket. He leaned against the flank of
his horse and watched the entry to  the Silver Platter. The sound of a
soft crash drifted across the bustling  street and he winced a little.
A soft rustle behind him caused him to turn quickly.
     "Ready to go,  my lord?" he asked, seeing Silvas  stepping out of
the shop.  Darion's sharp  eyes noted  the dagger at  his side  was no
longer  peace bound  and he  filed the  scrap of  information away  to
contemplate later.
     "Where's Ranth?" Silvas asked  sharply, straightening the sleeves
of his dark tunic, baleful gaze pinned on Darion.
     "He--had to go to the  alley," lied Darion quickly. Not original,
but  better  than telling  the  lord  that  they  had left  his  horse
unattended so  they could both get  drinks. A loud crash  sounded from
across the street and the youth forced himself not to turn to look.
     The stool flew out the  splintered shutters of the Silver Platter
and skidded to a  halt in the middle of the  street, nearly tripping a
horse.
     "Then he can catch up," Silvas decided, mounting. "Let's go."
     Darion did  look back  to the  bar at  that statement  and Silvas
turned his  glare onto him. "Are  you worried that Ranth  can't handle
his business on  his own?" he asked bitingly. "Or  did he go somewhere
else."
     "Uh, no, my lord." Darion  mounted quickly and fell into position
behind  his  master  without   another  backwards  glance.  Ranth  was
perfectly able  to take care  of himself, Darion reminded  himself. He
was a  natural with most  weapons and could hold  his own in  either a
formal fight or a brawl. Better than Darion could, in fact.
     Hard on the heels of this  thought came the clatter of hooves and
Ranth pounded up to his place beside his partner.
     "Have fun?" asked Darion in undertone.
     "Yeah. Took a right cross for you."
     "Everything  come  out  all  right?"  asked  Silvas  caustically,
without looking back at the pair.
     "Yes, my lord!" Ranth responded quickly. "What did you tell him?"
he demanded quietly of his friend.
     "Nothing terrible," grinned Darion. "Stick close, though. He's in
a mood again."
     "Figures."
     "I'll give you  your cut when we get back,"  Darion added after a
second.
     "Good."
     "Any other stops,  my lord?" asked Darion when  his master turned
to glare at the pair of them.  The innocent look on his face fooled no
one.
     "No. Now shut up."

                             * * * * *

     Tarilane clutched the straps of  her bag and surveyed the streets
and buildings  past the bustling  pier. Like  the port city  Karine of
Shakin,  Ciara was  busy,  filled with  people  ignoring one  another,
hurrying about their business. Salt air  mingled with the smell of tar
and fish,  smell she had gotten  used to during her  time aboard ship.
Dappled afternoon sunlight speckled the  sky and a stiff breeze caused
her cloak to flap sharply. Reflexively  her fingers reached up to make
sure the dark green scarf around her neck had not blown away.
     The scents from Shauvandier's herb chest still clung to the silky
fabric  and Tarilane  felt  the  now familiar  tug  of loneliness  and
homesickness.  She sighed  and  made  her way  off  the pier.  Letting
herself sink  into depression was  hardly the way to  achieve anything
constructive. She set her mind to working out her upcoming problems.
     She needed to find a place to stay first, so that she could start
to make serious  plans. Tarilane wanted to open a  shop of her own--an
apothecary. She  had grown  up in  Master Derimiahn's  shop--could not
remember living any place else, in  fact. He claimed that he found her
sitting on  his doorstep one day,  a precocious two year  old, with no
way of telling where she had come from. He had kept her because it was
more trouble to try and take her  into town, than to simply raise her.
At least, so  he said. Tarilane always suspected there  was more to it
than that,  but had  never been  able to find  anything else  out, and
eventually,  it did  not much  matter  any more.  After sixteen  years
surrounded by the work, she realized that  she did not want to live or
labor anywhere else.
     Watching Derimiahn mix potions was  one of the earliest childhood
memories she had. As she grew  older, Tarilane was allowed to join the
Master and  his apprentices,  never less than  five, usually  seven or
eight in all, on their forays to  gather wood and herbs. At the age of
nine, she was officially apprenticed  and started learning to identify
plants in  all seasons, learned how  to blow the little  glass bottles
that would  eventually contain the  concoctions they made;  learned to
prepare  the condiments  that mages  would eventually  use to  produce
miracles--the liquid  and powder magic  that was the trademark  of the
alchemist,  that  mages could  not  work  wonders without.  She  spent
tedious hours learning to read,  write, and figure, keeping the shop's
tally-books current  and accurate.  Long hours spent  learning, before
she was ever allowed to create anything.
     Since  the day  she had  made her  first simple  potion, Tarilane
realized that  she wanted nothing more  than to have an  apothecary of
her own, and  her Master, seeing the drive and  the talent, taught her
everything  he  could.  Now,  freed  from the  onerous  duties  of  an
apprentice and ready to pass through journeyman to master, she did not
know how to proceed.
     `Inheriting a  shop would have  been easier,' Tarilane  sighed to
herself. `But no use in wishing for  what I haven't got, so I'd better
make the best of what I have.  Enough silver and coppers to put a roof
over my head for  a few days, at least, and the  food the Captain gave
to me should last about as long.'  One clean set of clothes, the heavy
cloak around her  shoulders, the pack, and her parting  gifts were the
sum total of  her possessions. Hardly enough to open  a shop with, not
that she would  even consider selling them. `I'll start  looking for a
job tomorrow...'
     The scuffle  of Tarilane's salt  encrusted boots was lost  in the
general bustle of the street traffic.

                             * * * * *

     Lord Silvas'  residence was well suited  to his high rank  in the
underground and to  his front as a wealthy merchant.  A six foot stone
wall surrounded the  house and the small, tree  filled garden secluded
him from the  outside world. Traps were hidden in  the green expanses,
just in case a guild member got  greedy. The house itself was only two
stories tall and  constructed of grey stones a little  darker than the
wall. Gates kept out any curious passers-by.
     Inside, the  house was subdued rather  than ostentatious. Nothing
spoke of overt wealth, but everything  had the stamp of quality. There
were  a few  extravagances. Glass  window panes  replaced dull  common
shutters  and heavy  velvet  drapes concealed  the  interior from  all
outside viewers.  Rugs, in the few  places Silvas was willing  to have
them, were plush and colorful.
     Ranth and Darion sat in the fanciest room in the house, the front
room,  usually  used for  receiving  guests.  Pictures and  tapestries
covered the walls and the furniture was deep and comfortable. Sprawled
in velvet covered chairs they  played cards with their latest pickings
as stakes.
     Ranth flipped a well worn card  at his partner and waited. Darion
studied it, then compared it to the others in his hand.
     "Well?" Ranth said impatiently.
     "Well what?"
     "What's your bet?"
     "I'm thinking about it."
     Ranth  waited, tapping  his toes  against the  heavy rugs  on the
floor.
     "Young  masters." The  quiet voice  caused both  youths to  jump.
"Lord  Silvas requests  your  presence in  his  study immediately."  A
slender woman stood  in the doorway, in the black  gown Silvas had all
his house staff wear. Ranth and  Darion were positive the woman worked
for the Guild,  but so far had  not been able to prove  it. Her manner
was ever that of a well trained  servant, and they always seemed to be
too busy to follow her when she had her day off.
     She waited patiently by the door while the pair redivided the pot
and made a  show of reshuffling their hands back  into the deck. Ranth
pocketed the deck as they followed her into the hall.
     Lord Silvas was  seated in a comfortable  chair, taking advantage
of the late afternoon sunlight to read a letter that had arrived while
he was  out. He  looked up as  Ranth and Darion  entered the  room and
arranged themselves before him.
     "You've learned  quite a  bit in  the last  few years,"  he said,
closing the letter with a low rustle. He studied the pair for a minute
before continuing.  "Now it is  time for  you to practice  what you've
learned on  your own. I want  both of you  out of the house  by sunset
tonight."
     Darion and Ranth stared at him in shocked silence.
     "You're kicking us out?" asked Ranth.
     "Isn't this a little sudden?" said Darion at the same instant.
     Silvas looked amused,  the faint smile smoothing  the worry lines
around his eyes for just an instant.
     "Yes,  I'm kicking  you out."  He directed  his first  comment to
Ranth. "And no, it isn't sudden. You're both capable of taking care of
yourselves and I don't want to deal with you any more."
     "We'll do fine," said Ranth confidently.
     "I don't  doubt it. And  I'll be checking  to make sure  that you
only  take what's  yours, so..."  Silvas  let the  sentence trail  off
threatingly,  dark eyes  piercing the  two youths.  After a  moment he
found his place in his letter again and started reading.
     Ranth and  Darion recognized  a dismissal when  they saw  one and
headed for the door, trading uneasy glances.
     "Don't forget to watch your  backs out there." Lord Silvas' voice
followed them out  into the hallway. "The Guild will  contact you when
you have  proven yourselves."  When Darion glanced  back, the  man was
still busy with his letter.
     The pair  climbed the stairs to  their room in silence,  with the
black clad servant trailing after them.
     Packing was a five minute  affair; Lord Silvas had not encouraged
having  many  possessions.  Darion  had  leather  armor  that  he  had
purchased just a  month ago, a short sword, and  some daggers, plus an
extra set  of clothing and his  lockpicks. Ranth carried a  full broad
sword and a battered metal  corslet that provided better than adequate
protection. Both  weapon and mail  were highly polished, for  if Ranth
had any loves, it  was that of weapons and combat. He  too had a spare
set of clothes, and each carried a pack, where they were able to stash
several  days worth  of food  when they  thought the  servant was  not
looking.
     They found themselves staring at each other as the front gate was
shut firmly behind them.
     "We never  did find out  if she  works for the  Guild," commented
Darion irrelevantly, watching  the woman make her way  back inside. He
turned back to  his partner. "So what  do we do now? I  feel like I've
just been stabbed in the back."
     "We always  knew this would  happen," countered Ranth.  "Just not
this soon..." He sounded less confident than he looked.
     "Why did  he say `The Guild  will contact you when  you've proven
yourselves'?" Darion wondered aloud. "The Guild's always eager to make
up the money they spent on training people as soon as possible."
     "He probably  just forgot," Ranth  said, looking up and  down the
street.
     Darion turned to look back at  the house through the heavy gates.
"He didn't forget. He _doesn't_ forget. You know that."
     "Ah,  forget it,"  Ranth pulled  his friend  away from  the gate.
"We've got things to  do. Tomorrow's the first day of  the rest of our
lives."
     "So what do we do today?" asked Darion.
     "We go get drunk. Then we find a place to stay."
     "Sounds good to me."

                             * * * * *

     The Sailor's Rest  Inn was not exactly on the  wharf. It was well
over five blocks away from the port, in fact, the scent of the sea and
fish barely  tainting the air. The  worn sign had a  sailor in classic
pirate costume laying  in a hammock painted on it  and was nailed just
above the front door. Inside, the common room was large, lit by ship's
lanterns giving the place a ship-like atmosphere.
     Tarilane found the place after  wandering around the city streets
for several hours.  It was the cleanest places she  had run across all
day, and with night falling, the  young woman decided that it would do
for the night. Bargaining with the innkeeper brought the price down to
something reasonable and Tarilane had gotten dinner in the bargain.
     She sat beside one of  the greasy windows overlooking the street,
picking at the fish  stew she had been served. At  least the bread was
almost fresh and  the ale was not  bad, and was cheaper  than the mead
she wanted to buy.
     Tarilane watched the people coming and  going from the inn as she
slowly finished her  meal. Lower ranking ship's  officers, rather than
rough sailors  made up  a good  part of the  crowd, along  with lesser
merchants and  people who could not  afford a better place,  but would
not go to a cheaper one. People like herself.
     Ordinarily  she had  no interest  in  watching people,  but in  a
strange city  keeping track of  the patrons gave  her an odd  sense of
security.  And  it beat  thinking  about  what  she  was going  to  do
tomorrow.
     As  she watched,  an armed  man entered  the inn,  followed by  a
heavily  painted  woman,  and  a  second later  by  two  youths  about
Tarilane's own age. All four stopped briefly at the bar to get drinks,
then the woman wandered off into the  crowd. The man stayed at the bar
and the youths commandeered a table as close to a corner as they could
get.
     Tarilane's attention wandered to the  next arriving people and to
the last few bites of fish stew still left in her bowl.

     Out of  the corner of  his eye Darion kept  a close watch  on the
shifting  humanity that  surged  past  the edge  of  their table.  The
location was  not far enough  out of the press  of bodies as  he would
have liked, but  it afforded a reasonable view of  the room, and Ranth
could always  watch his back.  His eyes  skipped over the  people, and
settled on a young woman seated near  the front window of the inn. She
was reasonably good  looking, so when she stood and  made her way past
the table, he smiled up at her,  hoping to gain company for the night.
She did not seem to notice.
     Ranth laughed at him when he swore.
     "That's  twice," he  grinned,  taking a  large  swallow of  beer.
"You're going to bed lonely tonight."
     "Not a chance," retorted Darion. He took a long pull from his mug
and wiped  his mouth on his  sleeve. This was the  pairs second tavern
for the evening, and both were more than a little tipsy. Darion poured
himself another mugful of  beer and set the jug down  in the middle of
the table.
     "Hey,  leave  me  some!"  Ranth snatched  the  pitcher  back.  He
refilled his own mug, managing not to  spill to much of the dark brown
liquid.
     "We'll need to get a job tomorrow," Darion advised as they slowly
went  about emptying  their glasses  again.  "Want to  check with  the
Guild?"
     "Nah. Let's try something different for a change," said Ranth.
     "Like what?"
     "Caravan guarding?"
     "You trying to get me killed?"
     Ranth  chuckled,  then hiccuped.  "Let's  talk  about it  in  the
morning, when you're sober enough to  listen to reason. We should find
a place to stay for the night. And before you ask, no, we can't afford
to stay here."
     "Think one of your so called friends'll put us up for the night?"
Darion's  eyes gleamed  in the  flickering lantern  light and  his red
cheeks took on a burnished orange glow.
     "We can always ask. Let's go."
     Ranth lumbered to  his feet, followed by Darion.  While not quite
drunk, both were sufficiently inebriated  that they did not walk quite
straight. As  they passed one of  the barmaids, Darion tripped  over a
crack in the floor boards and stumbled into her.
     "Hey, beautiful,"  Darion smiled  at her,  helping her  to steady
herself. "Want to get off your feet for an hour or two?"
     Ranth had  to help  Darion steady himself  after the  maid's slap
knocked him sideways.
     "What'd I say?"
     "I'd say you're going home lonely," snickered Ranth.
     "Thanks a lot," muttered Darion. "I don't feel so bad though. You
don't have anyone either."
     "I've got you and I haven't even been trying."
     They stepped  out into the warm  summer night. The air  was still
and almost as  hot as the interior  of the inn itself.  The street was
quiet and  empty, with  street lanterns shedding  pale light  over the
cobblestones. Out  of habit each  checked a direction  for potentially
dangerous oncoming traffic.
     "Let's stop at the alley," said Darion abruptly.
     "You should have  gone before we left." Ranth veered  to the left
and into the  dark alley-way. "Bet I  can hit higher on  the wall than
you can."
     "No way!" retorted  Darion, following him in. "Not  a chance. And
no hands this time," he added, unfastening his breeches.
     "You've got to be joking!"
     "Don't think  you can do it?  Silver says you can't.  There. Just
try and beat that!"
     "No problem. Hah! You owe me a silver."
     "No way! That is not--" Darion  cut himself off abruptly and held
up a hand so that Ranth would not jump in.
     "What?" hissed his friend.
     "Listen!"
     "To what?"
     "Shhh!" Darion cocked  a hand to his ear,  exaggerating the order
for his friend to keep his ears open.
     Ranth cocked his head to one  side and concentrated. He heard the
soft chatter of  children's voices just seconds before  the pack burst
out of the shadows to mob them.
     Shouts bounced  off the walls  as the group divided  and attacked
each of  the young men with  sticks, rocks, daggers, and  their little
bare  hands. Surrounded  on  all sides  by  raggedly dressed  urchins,
neither was  able to  get an  arm free  enough to  successfully defend
himself.
     Someone yelled in triumph as Darion stumbled.

     Tarilane opened her  eyes to the dark beamed  ceiling, the voices
from her uneasy  dreams solidifying into reality  and drifting through
her window. Annoyed,  she pulled open the shutters to  give the little
brats a piece of her mind, just in  time to see one of the youths from
the tavern bowled over by a pile of children.
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--   DargonZine Volume 6, Issue 1        05/27/93          Cir 1220   --
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--                            Contents                                --
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 Place Unto Wrath             Max Khaytsus           Yule 12-18, 1014
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                         Place Unto Wrath
                          by Max Khaytsus
              (b.c.k.a. )

     "We've been  through this before,"  Rien said with a  sigh. "He's
only a Baron. There's nothing to be worried about."
     "Yes, but you deal with nobility every day."
     "No I don't," Rien protested. "Maybe once every few days..."
     "That doesn't help me any," Kera answered.
     "Just act normal. You did fine with Count Connall."
     "I saw him three times during our entire stay and he got stranger
every time."
     "Really?" Rien asked. "What makes you say that?"
     "Isn't it  obvious? He's  into swords and  archers and  duels and
contests. He even challenged  you to a match! I bet  you he won't live
to see thirty!"
     "It's only  a hobby.  He didn't appear  suicidal to  me. Besides,
he's dead already,"  Rien said, referring to the news  he had heard of
the young  Count's head  being delivered  to the  Crown Castle  by the
Beinison ambassador.
     "See, what did I tell you?" Kera laughed. The news of the count's
death during  his diplomatic  mission to Beinison  reached them  a few
weeks back  while they  were still  in Sharks' Cove  and even  in that
city, contaminated  by crime and corruption  to its core, the  mood of
the people turned dark at this signal of the coming war.
     Rien  laughed as  well, although  there was  nothing funny  about
Count Connall's death. It was a way to relieve tension, as the war had
already began. "I don't consider the Beinisons cutting his head off to
be a hobby. Those are the fortunes of war."
     Kera fell silent for some time  and the horses continued down the
road. After they left Sharks' Cove in Firil, Rien decided to go to the
Duchy of  Arvalia to see some  old friends, while waiting  for the war
between Baranur and Beinison to take a definite turn. They were out on
the road now for almost two months  and according to Rien, less than a
days ride from Valdasly Keep, their destination. It appeared that Rien
had known Baron ReVell Dower, the  man whose lands they now travelled,
for a long time, but as always, he neglected to give all the details.
     "Who do you think will win the war?" Kera asked.
     Rien remained silent for a while. "Will it make a difference?"
     "Well, sure. You can be out of a job."
     "You assume that Haralan Tallirhan pays for what I do..."
     "Well, even if  he doesn't, if the Beinisons win,  we will all be
subject to their control."
     "Being subject  to someone's control  is a relative  thing," Rien
said. "You're subject  to Baranurian control now. A king  is a king, a
bureaucrat a bureaucrat. What's the difference?"
     "But in Beinison there's no freedom. They practice slavery..."
     "Not the Evil Empire story  again," Rien sighed. "Don't you think
they view Baranur the same way?"
     "How?"
     "Well, how'd  you like to  visit Sharks' Cove not  knowing anyone
there? This  is a perfect example  of a population out  of control and
the government not  doing anything to fix it. Many  say that your odds
of getting  killed in Sharks'  Cove are  better than anywhere  else on
this side of Cherisk. And if a  murder takes place out in the streets,
the town guard  will simply dump the body into  the bay unless someone
steps forward to claim it and pays  them to investigate. Is that how a
town guard is to function? What about Nistak in the south of..."
     "You support them?" Kera asked, shocked.
     "Beinison? Not at all. I don't support either side. I simply made
the  point that  each  side has  an opinion  which  is equally  valid.
Morality always stood on  shaky ground. Who is to say  I am more moral
than those I fight?"
     "You still haven't answered my question."
     "Who I think  will win the war?" Rien fell  silent once again. "I
don't know. Wars  are unpredictable. Sometimes one man  can change the
tide  of a  battle and  like I  told you,  it makes  little difference
should  Baranur lose.  Untar  won't  be able  to  enslave two  million
people. He may  make an example of  a town here or there,  but for the
most part life will go on as it always has."
     "Is there someone you want to win?"
     "I  would prefer  Baranur to  keep its  lands. No  change is  the
easiest change to deal with. Do you have an opinion?"
     "I want Baranur to win. It's my home."
     "An understandable choice," Rien nodded.
     "I'd rather there was no war," Kera sighed.
     That was something Rien could agree  with as well. War, no matter
for what  reason, brought more  pain and harm in  the long run.  If he
could, he would try to stop it, but he had not the power to do so. The
war was  on. Many cities  in the east had  fallen and before  a victor
could be declared, many more would fall, perhaps on both sides. All he
could do  now was go home  and make sure  that his own tribe  would be
ready, should the events come to the worst.
     "It's too late for hoping," he sighed. "Just wish for a favorable
outcome now."
     They rode in silence for a while longer, stopping at the crest of
the hill  over which  the road  passed. Ahead of  them spread  a green
valley with a small village at the  foot of the hills and a stronghold
a few leagues across the valley, on the side of the mountain.
     "The keep was  built almost two centuries ago,"  Rien said. "Back
then this was the frontier with  barbarian tribes coming down from the
west and the  north. All sorts of things that  became legends over the
years."
     "You mean like you?"
     Rien  smirked and  looked back  into  the valley.  "Even me."  He
examined  the  dense  forest  to  the south.  It  covered  the  valley
uniformly, a  vast dark green venerable  mass, reaching as far  as the
eye could see. "That's Charnelwood. The name means `Darkling Forest'."
     Kera reached out to touch Rien. "I'd rather live in a house."
     He put his  arm around her, in spite of  the awkwardness of doing
this on horseback. "It's my home -- I was born here."
     "Why is it called that?" Kera asked.
     "The forest?" He looked at her. "Charnelwood?"
     "Darkling Forest?"
     Rien  took a  deep breath.  "Legend says  that demons  roam these
lands. Sometimes people  will go into the forest and  never come back.
Some come back years  later, as if only a few days  in their lives had
passed. Locals  say that they  can hear the  demons at night  and some
even claim to see them."
     "You're kidding, right?" Kera said.
     "I'm not. No one  ever walks on the south side  of the road. Just
look at it. See  the way the grass is barely  worn there? A generation
ago this road was  a good ten yards closer to the  edge of the forest.
To the locals, the legends of demons are very real."
     Kera shivered and locked her arms around Rien even tighter.
     They remained  quiet for a  time, watching over the  valley, then
Rien raised  his arm and  pointed off into  the distance. "Do  you see
that mountain with the flat top?"
     "The big one?"
     "The same. That's Mount Voldronnai, the only volcano this side of
Magnus. It has been dormant for over a century now."
     "Looks just like any other mountain.  Why don't we come back when
it's doing something?"
     Rien smiled and kicked Kelsey into motion. "Could be a long wait.
Volcanos have been known to sleep for centuries."
     "Then  we definitely  shouldn't wait,"  Kera guided  Hasina after
him. "I've got things to do... Rien, I still don't know what to say to
the Baron..."
     "Just act normal."
     "What's normal?"
     "Cut it out or I'll leave you in the village."
     Kera sighed. "I'll just keep quiet and out of sight."
     Two hours later, in late  afternoon, they rode into Valdasly Keep
on  the side  of the  mountain. Rien  and Kera  dismounted as  a guard
approached them.
     "Please inform his Lordship Baron  Dower that Sir Keegan requests
an audience," Rien told the guard before he had the chance to speak.
     The guard froze in place for a moment, considering his options --
Rien was not dressed as knight normally would -- then quickly returned
to the keep.
     "Must be new here," Rien shrugged to Kera. "He forgot to bow."
     "Huh?"
     "He didn't recognize  the name," Rien explained.  "The name Dower
was changed by marriage. The original name was Keegan."
     "So now you want them to bow to you?"
     "It'd be nice," Rien smirked.
     "After all that stuff you said about ego..."
     "Got to have fun at someone's expense."
     "Like mine?"
     "You have little amusement value."
     "Then I guess I'll be sleeping in a different room tonight."
     "I'll have them not give you blankets."
     "And you think that will bring me to you?"
     "I certainly hope so."
     "My price is higher than that of a blanket."
     "That's good. You do more than just lie around."
     Kera embraced him with a laugh. "What are you going to pay me?"
     "I am not paying you. The League  will pay you as soon as the war
is over."
     "Does  it matter  which  side wins?"  Kera's expression  suddenly
became serious.
     "I don't think so. It depends on who gets killed, but in the long
run I suppose it will..."
     Kera sighed. "I don't know why  I keep starting to talk about the
war. It scares me like there's no tomorrow."
     Rien  nodded. "Not  thinking  about  it won't  make  it go  away,
either."
     "Neither will thinking about it," she said.
     "Rien!" a voice called to them and  they turned to see a tall man
in his early forties approaching with the guard.
     "ReVell," Rien  smiled and gripped  forearms with the  man. "It's
been a while."
     "It  has indeed,"  the man  answered,  then glanced  over at  the
guard, standing  behind him, watching  the exchange. "It's  all right,
Crane. Sir Keegan is an old friend."
     The guard bowed politely and returned  to his post by the wall of
the keep.
     "ReVell,  this  is  Kera,  my apprentice,"  Rien  introduced  his
companion. "Kera, meet Baron ReVell Dower."
     They exchanged greetings and then all three went inside the keep,
leaving a servant to deal with the horses.
     "What's  this  with a  knight  having  an apprentice?  What  ever
happened to squires?" ReVell asked in the great hall of the keep.
     "This world has  too many squires and knights," Rien  said with a
sigh. "Enough to justify having a war to reduce the number..."
     "Now, Rien..."
     "Well, it's true,  isn't it? Untar thinks he  has enough. Haralan
thinks he has enough. They fight."
     ReVell shook his head. "You know that's not how it works."
     "We never agreed in our philosophy on politics," Rien said.
     "No, we did not," ReVell  agreed, "but that still doesn't explain
why you have an apprentice instead of a squire." His voice was strict,
as if questioning a child.
     Rien looked  back at  Kera who was  walking quietly  behind them.
"She is not a combatant. She will do better with a normal life."
     "With you?"
     Rien threw a sideways glance at ReVell and the Baron laughed.
     "I'm sorry," he said after a moment. "I made an assumption."
     "No, no," Rien sighed. "You're quite right..."
     They all ascended the staircase in silence and ReVell told one of
the servants to show Rien and Kera to their rooms, adding to Rien that
spring and summer  had become tourist season with  every other soldier
in  Arvalia coming  to Valdasly  for training.  "The castle  is almost
full, the barracks  are almost full. I had to  order an extra building
built so  the soldiers won't sleep  in the barn, not  that the cavalry
minds..." When  the servant was ready  to show Rien and  Kera to their
rooms, the Baron left.  "I will be at the Arena,"  he told Rien. "Come
down when you're settled. We have much to talk about."
     Rien and  Kera followed  the servant down  the corridor  to their
rooms, set  next door  to each  other. Both  faced south,  towards the
great green  forest that stretched  across the valley. Rien  paused at
the window, looking out at Charnelwood. Kera stood behind him, but did
not want to disturb him.
     "So is the Baron that bad?" Rien suddenly turned.
     Kera shook her head. "He didn't do more than greet me."
     "I'll take that as a `no'."
     "Why were you two arguing over whether I should be a squire or an
apprentice?"
     "The Baron  is a soldier  first and  foremost. He feels  the best
defense is a  strong offense. You will  hear a lot about  the war from
him."
     "It doesn't sound like you two are very good friends," Kera said.
     "We  learned  to respect  each  other's  quirks," Rien  answered,
putting his saddlebag on a chair. "I don't remind him of the harm that
war does  and he doesn't  comment on how  I treat knighthood.  Are you
hungry?"
     Kera shook her head. "I'll make it to dinner."
     "Then let me show you around," Rien said.
     They walked  around the castle  for a while, Rien  describing the
significance of paintings,  busts, weapons and armor  setup in various
rooms and corridors, then they went outside.
     "You sound as if you live there," Kera noted to Rein.
     "I did, for a while," he  answered. "Obviously I still visit. Let
me show you the Arena as well."
     "The Arena?" Kera asked, hearing the term for the second time.
     "A lot  of people  are trained  here for  the Duke's  troops. The
Baron's military influence  extends over the entire  Duchy. He himself
became a knight  at a relatively young age. Perhaps  that's the reason
he's so deeply involved with warfare."
     "So you didn't find Count Connall very strange?"
     "Not so much strange as  frightening. I am concerned that someone
so young would worship warfare."
     As they  turned the corner  on the west  side of the  building, a
large field revealed itself. It  was partitioned with small fences and
men, alone and in groups, practiced in different areas.
     "How did you come to know the Baron if you two are so different?"
Kera asked.
     "His father introduced us."
     "So he knows you're not..."
     "He does," Rien answered calmly. "But his son does not."
     A group of a dozen men in armor ran by, heading for the field and
Rien pointed to a platform stretching parallel to the keep at the edge
of the Arena. "Up there. You'll see better from above."
     Kera climbed up the narrow  ladder leading onto the platform with
Rien  directly behind  her.  They walked  quietly  down the  platform,
watching the action  in the Arena. Below them two  heavily armored men
entered  one of  the  fenced off  areas and  drew  their swords.  Kera
watched their match in awe until one knocked the other off balance and
the fight ended.
     "Rien?"
     "Hmmm?" he continued looking at the men below.
     "What if I want to become a knight?"
     He turned his head. "Why?"
     "I've been thinking about what the Baron said."
     "I meant, what do you expect to gain by it?"
     "A silly title, I guess."
     "Silly is right," Rien turned back  as the two men prepared for a
second match.
     "I'm serious, Rien. I want to learn."
     "To fight? You don't need a title for that."
     "Why are you against it?"
     "I don't think this is something you need."
     Kera's eyes blazed with anger.  "I am perfectly capable of making
my  own  decisions!" Her  exclamation  was  loudly punctuated  by  the
restarting of the fight below.
     "The decision  is as  much for  me as it  is for  yourself," Rien
said. "I will not have a squire for the wrong reason."
     "Then how do you want me to convince you?"
     Rien had  to think about  the answer he  would give. He  was very
much against Kera's wish to be a knight, but at the same time, did not
want to be unreasonable. She deserved  a chance to explain herself and
some time to  deal with and think  about what she needed  and what she
thought she wanted. "By  sunset tomorrow I want you to  give me a good
reason for me to take you as a squire."
     Kera thought for a moment. "I can give you one right now."
     "If it's not good, I won't give you a second chance."
     "It's good," Kera  said, her voice growing more  confident as she
spoke.  "I want  to become  a knight  because I  want to  be somebody.
Because most  great women became great  because of the men  they stood
by! Because I don't know who my parents  are and had to grow up in the
streets!  I  am a  commoner  with  no way  to  progress  in this  damn
chauvinistic society, other than by an ability to fight!"
     "Quite true," Rien nodded.
     "I am not finished!" Kera yelled at him, but did not go on.
     "Well, continue," Rien prompted her. "I apologize."
     "I was  going to call  you a few  choice names," Kera  sighed. "I
guess I'm not ready..."
     "You do  realize there  are not  a lot of  women who  choose this
path. That attaches a certain stigma to those who do."
     "I know," Kera nodded. "I'm willing to face that."
     Footsteps  sounded on  the  platform and  Rien  glanced over  his
shoulder. "We'll discuss this later," he told Kera, straightening up.
     "Sir Keegan!"  the visitor's  voice boomed.  "I've heard  of your
sudden arrival! What brings you here?"
     "Sir Brand!" Rien greeted the man.
     Kera  watched them  for  a  minute, then  went  further down  the
platform, watching the field and wondering about her choice. She could
tell  by Rien's  eyes that  he had  an answer  before she  was halfway
through her reasons. She turned to look back at the two men, wondering
what  that  decision was.  The  choice  that  she  made was  rash  and
impulsive, but  she also believed in  everything she said and  that at
this point it was one of the few paths open to her.
     Rien remained busy  the rest of the afternoon and  Kera spent her
time watching  the men practice in  the field. They met  again shortly
before dinner, but before they could  talk, Baron Dower walked over to
them. He eyed  Rien critically, examining his plain clothes  -- a well
worn tunic, pants and dusty boots. "What is this?"
     Rien turned, watching the Baron as the man walked around him.
     "You look  like a peasant!  This will  never do, Rien.  You're my
knight,  back  home for  the  first  time in  two  years  and look  at
yourself! You look like a commoner.  A landed knight!" He scolded Rien
as one would a little boy caught making trouble. "I want you to change
into armor, chain  in the very least, sword,  cape, crest, everything!
And don't bother showing up for dinner before that."
     "Yes, Sir," Rien  muttered as the Baron left,  looking after him,
clearly unhappy, but not hostile.
     "Is that  how I have  to talk to you  to get anywhere  with you?"
Kera's voice reminded Rien of her presence.
     "You learn to make sacrifices for family," Rien sighed. "Come on.
You may as well look civil, too."
     At dinner, after  they changed, Kera managed to spend  only a few
minutes with Rien before a group of men dragged him off to the far end
of the table. She talked some with  the people who sat by her, all the
while looking to the  far end of the table, where  Rien sat with Baron
Dower  and other  decorated men.  She was  both angry  that they  were
separated, but glad  she had the opportunity to be  alone and think. A
lot  of the  discussion was  about  the war  and the  battle plans  of
Baranur and the cities that had fallen in the east.
     Kera hurriedly finished her meal and  went up to her room. Before
long there  was a knock  at the door and  Rien entered. She  looked at
him, trying not to betray what  she was feeling. Somehow she could not
get over  the bitterness  of their  last talk.  She wanted  to achieve
something during her life and he was blocking her ability to do so.
     "I'm sorry  about dinner," Rien  said, sitting down.  "I couldn't
say `no'."
     Kera shrugged. "I understand." She tried to, any way.
     Rien nodded. "About what we discussed earlier today..."
     Kera looked  up and challenged his  gaze. She wanted him  to make
the decision for her. She knew he was right when he said that women do
not often become  knights and that it  would not be an  easy path, but
she did want to take it, in spite of the fear and difficulties it held
for her.
     Rien stood back up to pace, as  he often did at times like these.
"Do you realize what you asked for?"
     "I think so."
     "Do  you  understand  the   restrictions?  The  limitations?  The
duties?"
     "I know it won't be easy."
     "In training  to become a knight  you'll have to learn  more than
combat. Arts  and philosophy are  equally important. You will  have to
understand  specific  virtues  and  carry rigid  codes  of  honor  and
morality."
     "Do you do all of that?"
     Rien paused. "I'd like to think  of myself as an honorable, moral
person. By the standards under which I grew up, anyway."
     "What about the way you killed Sir Quinn?"
     "There's no  honor among thieves," Rien  said without hesitation.
"This too  is a part  of the morality.  `Thou shalt be  everywhere and
always  the champion  of  the  Right and  Good  against Injustice  and
Evil'," he quoted the Baranurian  code of knights. "Sometimes you have
to let evil  be your good, so  your tasks are achieved,  and not worry
about how you  reached your goal until later, when  you are judged for
your actions. Is  this something you can live with?  Not being able to
turn down  a plea  for help?  Not having the  privilege to  overlook a
wrong?"
     "If I don't try, I'll never know."
     Rien turned  to look out the  window at the darkness  outside. He
felt he was being defensive explaining why  he did what he did. He was
not the one on trial here. Kera  was. It was a decision about her that
needed to be made.  He knew what he wanted. He  feared what he thought
was right. He was no knight, although he held the title. He would have
acted differently if he believed in  the code. He would have done what
Arvel had  done upon encountering  Quinn, but  he chose to  handle the
situation  differently --  not by  honor, but  by cunning.  He quickly
turned,  grabbing  hold of  Kera's  arm  and  pulled her  to  himself,
embracing  and kissing  her, much  to  her surprise.  She resisted  at
first, then put her arms around him, feeling his arms under her tunic.
Was  this a  sign of  acceptance? In  her arousal  she tried  removing
Rien's tunic, but he pushed her away.
     "You can't do this if you're a squire."
     Kera took a few steps back in frustration. Her shocked expression
changed to barely visible tears. "Why are you trying to scare me off?"
     "Because I want you to understand  what it is you asked for. It's
not a  romantic dream or a  game. You can  never go back. As  a squire
you'll receive  less respect from knights  than from a commoner.  As a
woman you may receive none."
     "But if I make it!"
     "You'll still  be a woman knight,  never quite as good  as a man,
never the image of the legend!"
     "The Baron doesn't seem to have the problem!"
     "The Baron knows  that the value of a soldier  is above the value
of the soldier's  gender! He doesn't care who holds  the sword so long
as they can fight. And fight on his side!"
     "Then why can't you have the same respect for me?"
     "Because I  don't want you to  make a mistake. I  didn't become a
knight because I  wanted to. I became one because  it was a necessity.
You don't have to live the same life."
     "But I want to!"
     Rien sighed.  He had no  doubt that she  did, but he  feared what
that meant  both to her and  to him. They were  already from different
worlds. This would  only serve to make them more  different. "I'll ask
ReVell to find you a sponsor tomorrow."
     "What about you?"
     "I'm personally involved."
     "But you just said it would have to stop."
     "I don't think I could remain objective."
     "I think you can," Kera protested. She wanted to be a knight, but
she  did not  want to  lose Rien  in the  process. He  saved her  from
Liriss, something she  wanted to happen for years. He  took her in and
protected her and helped her and  taught her new things. She wanted to
continue to learn and she wanted him to teach her.
     Rien studied Kera. "I'm glad you believe in me, but..."
     "No, wait. What are you afraid of? Getting the urge to sleep with
me? What about  when I become a  knight? Would you sleep  with a woman
knight?"
     The question had been forced. "Is our sleeping together normal?"
     "Why isn't it?  Men and women who're attracted to  one another do
it all the time!"
     Rien lowered his  head. "Kera, I'll outlive you  by centuries. In
twenty or thirty years, when your hair  is grey, I will look every bit
as I do now."
     Tears appeared in her eyes. "Don't you think I know that?"
     "We're from  different worlds. What  kind of  a life can  we have
together? How could this have gone as far as it did?"
     Kera sat down. "That night in the forest, after we left Dargon, I
wasn't really interested in you...I just wanted the sex."
     "And after you got it?"
     "I don't know.  I was tired of  all the damn pity  and sympathy I
was getting from you. I guess all  I needed was a little spark to fall
in love with you."
     Rien did  not move,  still standing  by the  window where  he had
stopped. "I can't permit myself to admit that I care. I'll only end up
hurting you in a relationship such as this."
     Kera turned away from Rien, but she  did not try to hide her pain
from him. She could  hear the pain in his voice  and agreed with every
word he said, but  could not bring herself to face  the reality of the
situation. Were she giving advice to someone else, she would urge them
to forget it and live their own  life, but coming to the same decision
for  herself was  almost  impossible.  She turned  back  to Rien,  not
wanting this  to be the last  day of their involvement.  "Can you just
turn around and walk away as if this never happened?"
     "No," Rien shook his head. He did  not need the time to think. He
knew the problem well. "I know better, but I can't."
     At least he was being honest. "Then what do you want to do?"
     "I'd be lying if I said I knew."
     "Then why don't you take me as  your squire and we'll see what to
do next..."
     "I don't like temporary solutions," Rien said.
     "I'm willing to listen to more lasting ones."
     "I don't have any. None that I want to use."
     "Then why not do it this way and see how it goes?"
     "Because it'll only get harder."
     "I know," she answered. "I don't expect it to be simple." She got
up and  approached him. "It's going  to hurt us both  sooner or later,
but I don't want it to be today."
     Rien studied Kera for a moment longer. "I'll talk with ReVell. We
can have the ceremony tomorrow."
     Kera put her arms around him. "Thank you."
     Rien returned the  embrace. "Don't thank me yet. You  may come to
hate me for this."
     She turned him and pushed him down on the bed, kissing him again.
He did not resist. "One last time," Kera pulled at his tunic.

                            *       *       *

     "I just don't understand you," ReVell Dower complained to Rien.
     "I'm afraid I don't understand  myself either," Rien answered. "I
find these  days that I surprise  myself more often than  those around
me."
     The  two men  stepped into  the court  yard of  castle, from  the
archway  leading to  the great  hall,  among the  dispersing crowd  of
people. Rien stopped abruptly and looked back at Kera, standing at the
far end  of the room. She  smiled and he let  a ghost of a  smile come
across his face.  It was official now. She was  his squire. He quickly
turned and hurried after the Baron.
     "It  wasn't because  of what  I said  yesterday, was  it?" ReVell
asked, glancing sideways.
     "Not really," Rien answered, "but  I think it hurried the process
along."
     "I'm glad  you agreed  with me," ReVell  said. "It's  unseemly to
have a knight followed around by an apprentice. People talk."
     "I  know," Rien  sighed.  "They  did. This  was  the only  viable
option."
     "Are you glad you did it?"
     "I don't know. Only time will tell."
     "Rien,   there's   one   more   thing..."   The   Baron   paused,
uncomfortable. "This is rather hard for me to say and I realize I have
no business bringing it up, but  according to my servants you and Kera
slept in your room last night."
     Rien looked  away. "Look, I can  only deal with one  problem at a
time. Don't you think I know what the problems are?"
     "I  think you  should think  about your  position and  how you're
using it.  Now, if one  knight took another's  squire to bed,  I would
look the other way, but your  own squire? Do you realize the magnitude
of a scandal you can cause?"
     "I know. I'm working on it. It's not just me."
     ReVell shook  his head. "I ordered  my people not to  discuss it.
Please don't give them a reason to."
     "I won't," Rien promised.
     "`Thou shalt never  lie and shalt remain faithful  to thy pledged
word.'"
     "I won't do anything to embarrass you or myself here."
     "All right."
     The two men continued walking along the castle wall.
     "Rien, I must talk to you about  the war. The Duke has charged me
with  building and  leading the  forces he  is to  contribute to  King
Haralan's army  in Leftwich and Bivar.  I know your skills.  I want to
assign you a detachment."
     "Please don't ask me, I won't accept," Rien said.
     "`Thou shalt make war  against thine enemies without cessation',"
the Baron reminded him.
     "The Beinison aren't my enemies. Those who attack my people are."
     "`Thou  shalt love  and uphold  the  country in  which thou  wast
born.'"
     "My country is the forest south of here," Rien said.
     "You know  the country  those words  words represent  is Baranur.
They always  have, to  all who  have sworn the  oath. `Thou  shalt not
recoil before thine enemy.'"
     "Stop quoting the pledge to me,"  Rien said, realizing he did the
same thing to  Kera the night before. "The entire  staff has been told
to stand down.  We were all told to  leave and stay out of  it. I hear
some people even went to Duurom to pass the time."
     "Everyone?" ReVell asked, just to be sure.
     "Some couriers  are still on, but  it won't last much  longer. We
can't be expected to keep order in time of war."
     "So  you're here  just to  visit  home?" ReVell  said, with  some
disappointment in his voice.
     "Just like I told you yesterday. I'm here to restore old ties and
make sure my home will be safe."
     ReVell glanced around  and together with Rien  moved further from
the castle. "Flint Venture is due in  any day now. I wanted to ask him
to talk with the tribes, find out what  we can count on. I pray to any
deity that  will listen that  the war never come  this far, but  if it
does, I want to  know that everyone is ready for  it. Perhaps it would
be better if you talked to them."
     "That's what I'm here for," Rien  said in a low voice. "I'll have
to arrange  everything tonight. I want  to be ready by  the time Flint
arrives."
     Flint Venture was somewhat of a local legend, a commoner hero who
one day picked up a sword to right all wrongs that bandits and looters
caused in  the mountains. With  time he attracted  a band of  men much
like himself  and restored  order to the  wilderness roads  where town
guards and constables did not travel and the Ducal Guard did not often
pass. In  time he  met and  became an  unofficial liaison  between the
forest  elves  and  those  few  outsiders  who  knew  of  the  tribe's
existence. He and his people now  guarded the region for a good decade
and in that time came to  be friends with the secrets that Charnelwood
hid.
     "Rien?" ReVell yanked his companion's arm. "Pay attention."
     "Sorry.  I was  thinking what  can be  done if  the war  comes to
Arvalia. I understand Pyridain and Westbrook have already fallen."
     "That's  why it's  so critical  that I  gather the  men for  Duke
Glavenford," ReVell stressed.  "He wants the troops  backing the heavy
infantry in Leftwich in two months!"
     "Glavenford? Jastrik's cousin? The short one?"
     "The same. Duke Jastrik was killed  a few months ago. Haven't you
heard?"
     "No. Who was it? Did they catch the killer?"
     "I  don't know,"  ReVell admitted.  "Last I  heard, it  was being
`handled'."
     Rien  nodded at  the news,  not  really giving  it much  thought.
"Let's hope  it doesn't come  to having to  defend Arvalia, but  if it
does,  we'll be  ready.  I'll leave  now  and let  you  know what  the
decision is."
     "Very well. I will see you at dinner, then."
     "I doubt I'll make it back," Rien  said. "I may have to spend the
night in the forest."

                            *       *       *

     As the lunch  time ceremony ended, Kera waited  patiently for Sir
Bonhan to  come for her.  She watched Rien and  Baron Dower go  off to
talk  in the  court yard,  deeply occupied  in their  discussion. Rien
turned at  the doorway and  looked in  her direction. Kera  smiled and
noticed a trace of a smile on  his face, but he then turned and walked
out of the great hall after the Baron.
     She looked  about the chamber,  studying the faces of  the people
around her. Someone  greeted her. Another person  congratulated her on
her new status. Finally a stout muscular man to who she was introduced
early in  the morning walked  up to her.  "Follow me, Kera."  She did.
This was  Sir Bonhan,  the man  in charge of  the Arena  outside. Rien
introduced them  at breakfast and  told Kera  that she will  spend the
week under his supervision in the  fields. Sir Bonhan was in charge of
all the  squires and  men-at-arms and  even the  knights who  used the
Arena.
     "I want to see  how well you can use a sword  before I assign you
to a group,"  Sir Bonhan said as  they left the building.  He led Kera
into the Arena  and selecting a fenced off area,  drew his sword. "Are
you ready?"
     Kera drew  the sword she  had worn to  the ceremony, as  Rien had
instructed  she do.  It was  the sword  that had  belonged to  Garwood
Quinn, which she  took upon their escape from Phedra.  A fine blade of
good quality metal, probably a family heirloom.
     "Are you ready?" Sir Bonhan repeated.
     Kera nodded and Sir Bonhan  instantly swung his weapon. There was
barely  any time  to  parry the  attack. The  force  of the  vibration
descended into her arms, almost making  her lose her grip on the hilt.
She took  a step back  and blocked the next  swing with a  little more
confidence. It was  not as simple an attack, but  the blow was weaker.
This  continued  for a  few  more  moments  until the  knight  finally
growled, "Swing back, you coward!" She did and soon the match became a
more even give and take.
     After a  few minutes  Kera was  instructed to  stop. She  did and
replaced the sword in its scabbard. Sir Bonhan did the same.
     "Not  bad," the  knight  commented, "but  it's  not good  either.
You'll need to do  more than be able to beat a peasant  if you want to
be a  knight. You stand  like a  girl and you  swing like a  girl. And
there's no muscle in your strike."
     Kera was about to comment, but  bit her tongue, thinking it would
be better not to anger the  knight. Sir Bonhan might have been shorter
than she, but he  was as wide as he was tall, all  muscle by the looks
of his arms and he was obviously an expert with the sword. "Yes, Sir,"
she sighed.
     "Come along. I'll show you who you'll practice with."
     As they passed the elevated platform along the edge of the field,
Kera noticed Rien standing up  above, watching. Sir Bonhan stopped and
she stopped  behind him. Rien,  seeing this, stepped over  the railing
and jumped  down, landing solidly on  his feet. Sir Bonhan  headed for
Rien and Kera stood, waiting in  uncertainty. What would a good squire
do in a situation such as this? Wait or follow? She chose to wait.
     "How did  she do?" Rien  asked in a  quiet voice when  the knight
approached him. He did not want Kera to hear.
     "Rather well,  I must say. She  has some of your  style. Have you
been teaching her?"
     Rien nodded,  maintaining his expression. "We've  been practicing
off and on."
     "I'll  put her  with the  intermediate group,"  Sir Bonhan  said,
straightening his belt. "But she still has a way to go."
     "Thank you," Rien  answered. "I didn't want to think  I did a bad
job, but I'd still prefer someone like you to train her."
     "It will be a pleasure, Sir Keegan."
     Rien turned to Kera who was watching them with curiosity. "I have
to leave on  business for a while. I should  be back tomorrow evening.
Stay with your training."
     "Yes, Sir," Kera answered. She wanted  to do more -- ask what the
business was, where. Perhaps even offer to go with him, but she had to
fit the  mold of a  perfect squire,  to live up  to what she  said she
wanted to be. She was there to listen, not question.
     Kera spent the  day in the field with a  group of students, being
trained to endure the requirements of combat. At first she feared that
she would  be clumsier than her  seemingly skilled peers, but  in time
realized that she was not among the  worst in the group. Yet, in spite
of this, she faced some humiliation, being the only woman in the group
and as far  as she could tell,  in the whole field, but  even then she
did her best to stand up to bullies which tried to poke fun at her.
     The training session lasted until  dinner, by which time Kera was
too  tired to  worry about  the sword  in her  hands. She  ate dinner,
ignoring the usual roar around the  table and retreated to her room as
quickly  as  possible.   Tired  and  aching  from   the  workout,  she
immediately went to bed, wondering about the business Rien had to take
care off and  what she had gotten  herself into. She was  not sure how
long  she could  last at  these practices  or how  long the  practices
themselves would last.

                            *       *       *

     Kera opened her  eyes to bright sunlight falling on  her from the
open shutters. Her arms  and legs were sore and her  back hurt and she
suspected she  knew what had caused  all this pain. Getting  up with a
groan, she  washed, got  dressed and  went downstairs  to eat.  It was
about an hour past sunrise, but  practice was not to start until after
lunch.
     She sat down  at the long dining table in  the great hall, across
from the kitchen, with her meal  and after rubbing her stiff shoulder,
started  on  the food.  Unlike  lunch  and  dinner, breakfast  was  an
informal meal, not held to a rigid time schedule and people drifted in
and out at irregular intervals.
     One of the men Kera saw in the Arena the day before sat down next
to her  with his  breakfast. "Good  morning," he  smiled. "I  hope you
don't mind me joining you."
     "Good morning,"  Kera answered. She  tried smiling, but  even the
muscles in her jaws ached, perhaps because of all the scowling she did
the day before.
     "Kiyan Kanne," he introduced himself, "Sir Hyde's squire."
     "I'm Kera,"  she managed to  squeeze out  a smile. "I'm  with Sir
Keegan."
     "I know. I saw the ceremony yesterday. Congratulations."
     "Don't congratulate  me just yet.  I don't know what  I've gotten
myself into."
     "Tough day yesterday?"
     Kera nodded, attacking her  breakfast. "Swinging that sword lunch
through diner is not something I've done before."
     "It'll get  better," Kiyan assured her.  "It was the same  for me
when I started training. You'll build the endurance you need."
     "Are the sessions always lunch through dinner?" Kera asked.
     "They've been  that way  for the last  two months,"  he answered.
"Sir  Bonhan tortures  his own  squires in  the mornings.  I guess  he
doesn't want any interruptions."
     Kera smiled. "Tortures?"
     Kiyan smiled  as well. "I  can't think of  a better word.  He has
them get up at the crack of dawn  and suffer out in the Arena. Then in
the afternoon they torture us."
     "Really? I thought that man was a knight!"
     "I'm sure  he's closer  to being  one than  either of  us," Kiyan
said.
     Kera spent  the remainder of  the morning with  Kiyan, discussing
the training and the Arena and the knights.
     After  lunch she  returned  to  the Arena  for  the  rest of  the
afternoon. The practice  did not go any smoother, but  Kera was better
prepared and when one of the bullies tried to show that a woman should
not be using a sword, Kiyan tried  to stop him and ended up starting a
fight.
     Sir Bonhan was not pleased when  he heard of these happenings and
made a general announcement to the students that this sort of behavior
will not  be tolerated. Men-at-arms  or squire, those who  went beyond
the requirements of their training would be severely disciplined.
     After that, the day went a lot smoother.
     At  dinner the  war  with  Beinison was  the  topic  of the  day,
something that  Kera did not  find pleasant  to listen to.  The latest
word was  that Pyridain  and Westbrook  were completely  overrun, some
talk of  a flotilla  heading for the  Laraka. Casualties  sounded like
numbers  from the  King's treasury.  She  sighed, trying  to pay  more
attention to her soup  than the knight at the other  end of the table.
If Kiyan were around, Kera thought, she could try talking to him about
something  else,  but  for  the  first time  during  the  day  he  was
conspicuously missing.
     When dinner  was over, Kera  went outside. The  atmosphere around
the table had gotten her completely  depressed and she was hoping that
a stroll  outside would  make her feel  better. She took  a seat  on a
fallen tree trunk  outside the keep's walls, looking at  the forest in
the valley  beyond the rolling foothills.  All was dark and  calm. She
strained her sight to see down the hill, hoping for a glimpse of Rien.
     Soft footsteps sounded  behind Kera and she turned  to see Kiyan.
"Beautiful, isn't it?" she asked turning back to the darkness.
     "It's cooler than it's been the last few nights," he answered.
     Kera instantly  remembered that  her own  vision was  much better
than  that of  the people  around her.  If he  was lucky,  Kiyan could
barely see ten or twenty yards ahead of himself.
     "It beats fighting out in the sun," Kera added. "You didn't go to
dinner?"
     "No. Sir Hyde didn't approve of my being in a fight today. He had
me eat alone."
     "I wanted  to thank you for  helping me out in  the Arena today,"
Kera said. "I'm sorry if that caused problems."
     "No, not at all," Kiyan hurried to say. "It was the least I could
do. And Sir Hyde just told me to chase skirts on my own time."
     Kera  did not  answer,  not sure  what to  say.  Was he  implying
something?
     "So why would Sir Keegan want a female squire?" Kiyan asked after
an uncomfortably long stretch of silence.
     "Why did Sir Hyde want a male squire?" Kera asked.
     "This is  going to sound very  bad," Kiyan started, "but  men are
the ones who are supposed to fight."
     "You're right,  it sounds bad,"  Kera said. "Why  shouldn't women
fight? They work in the fields side by side with men, work in markets.
One for one, we're quicker, have  better balance and our tempers don't
need work. I once  knew a criminal who would only  hire women to thief
for him."
     "What about physical strength?"
     "Oh...I  think it's  fine  for  a man  to  be  a labourer,"  Kera
laughed.
     "I've always been taught that  men are supposed to protect women,
care for them," Kiyan explained.
     "I don't see why. I've been  taking care of myself since an early
age. I think  I did just fine..."  She wanted to say  more, but feared
her past life may interfere with her future and left it at that.
     "So why do you want to be a knight? There's a war on!"
     "Because it's  out there, it's  something to do. Because  I don't
want to be just another woman."
     "Hmmm... And to think I just did it for fortune and glory."
     "Are you getting any?" Kera asked.
     "I think I'll have to go  to war for that," Kiyan answered. "What
do you think about the war? It's the topic of the day, it seems."
     "Have you  ever had  the feeling  that if you  get a  good nights
rest, all  your problems will  solve themselves?" Kera  asked. "That's
how I feel about the war."
     "I want to go to war,"  Kiyan admitted. "It's selfish, but I want
to be a hero."
     "But what if you get killed?"
     "Then I'll know I've tried...well, not me. I won't be around, but
others will and that'll be enough."
     "I don't understand you..."
     "Me or my wanting to do something great?"
     "Both," Kera sighed.
     "I guess  that puts us  on equal  footing," Kiyan said.  "I don't
understand why you  want to be a knight. You're  a pretty young woman.
You can probably have any man you want. Why wield a sword and fight?"
     Kera  looked  away.  "Sometimes  it's  really  tough  for  me  to
understand why I do the things I  do, much less try to explain them to
others. I just don't  want to be dependent on someone  else. I spent a
large part  of my  life that  way and I  don't want  to live  that way
again."
     "I guess that makes sense," Kiyan agreed.
     Kera got up,  dragging her cloak after her. "I'd  better get some
rest before  tomorrow." She  could not  concentrate on  worrying about
Rien with Kiyan present and she still had all the aches and pains from
the practice and  feared that she would feel even  worse when she woke
up in the morning.
     "I'll walk you in," Kiyan offered.
     "Sure," Kera nodded. "Are all the men here training for the war?"
     "Just  about. A  lot are  being  trained for  the regiments  Duke
Glavenford  will be  sending  to Leftwich  and  Bivar next  month...if
they're still around."
     They crossed the court yard and entered the keep.
     "Does Sir Keegan have any plans for the war?" Kiyan asked.
     "Not that I know of," Kera said.  "I hope he doesn't want to join
in."
     "If he doesn't, it'll give me  that much more room to be heroic,"
Kiyan smiled.
     They reached Kera's room. "Thanks for walking me in," she said.
     "My pleasure," Kiyan answered. "Not a  lot of women I can do this
with around here."
     "Glad I could help."
     Kiyan leaned forward to kiss her, but Kera pulled away, surprised
it took her so long to react.
     "I'm sorry, I can't," she said.
     "No, it's  my own fault," he  hurried to say, taking  a few steps
back. "I assumed I could get away with it. Still friends?"
     "Still friends," Kera agreed. "Good night."
     Kera sprawled out  on the bed, wondering if  she acted correctly.
She was not sure what to expect from Rien anymore, but did not want to
tempt fate. If she  were to have a choice, she  would choose to remain
with him. She  got up to look  out the window, which  was barely level
with the wall, but not facing in the right direction. Kiyan was a nice
young man. Someone  she could see herself with, but  could he give her
what Rien had given her? Perhaps if she got a good nights rest, things
would indeed appear clearer in the morning.
     With a sigh Kera returned to her bed and quickly fell asleep.

                            *       *       *

     Kera woke  up in the  morning to  someone shaking her  awake. She
grabbed the  arm with one hand,  thinking to pull her  dagger with the
other, but she had left the daggers packed away, it having been a year
since she last slept with them.
     "You're a little jumpy," Rien sat down on the edge of her bed.
     "A simple `good morning' would've been better," Kera relaxed. Her
last two days had been very difficult,  having to put up with a lot of
men trying to  prove their superiority to her, half  of whom she could
take down on a bad day. She  was tired and jumpy and was not expecting
Rien to show up in her room. It was still dark outside.
     "I tried that," he answered. "Did you wait up for me last night?"
     "No. I was too tired to stay up."
     "Is Sir Bonhan running you hard?"
     "Yes." She  looked around. By  the looks  of the sky  outside the
window, it  was still  a while  before sunrise.  "Go away.  It's still
dark."
     "It'll be light within the hour. Get up."
     "Unlike you,  I need to  sleep," Kera  complained, but sat  up in
bed, tossing her legs over the edge.
     "I'll wait outside," Rien stood up.
     "Wait. I don't mind if you stay."
     He walked over to the window and looked out.
     "How was your trip?"
     "All right. I'll  have to go again  in a day or  two." Rien could
hear Kera  getting out of  bed and the  floor boards squeak  under her
feet.
     "Why am I getting up now?"
     "Because I told you to."
     "Rien!"
     He turned  to her, then looked  away while she put  on her tunic.
"To run down to the village."
     "What for?"
     "Exercise."
     "I get plenty of exercise already."
     "You need conditioning."
     Kera remained quiet  for a while. Rien continued to  look out the
window. He  felt uncomfortable in his  new position as her  knight. He
never liked the  hierarchy of command and the status  levels that were
placed on society. Kera was never subordinate to him before. Having it
be this way now was unnerving.
     "Rien?"
     "Yes?"
     "Why did you look away a moment ago?"
     "I'm waiting for you to dress."
     "But why  aren't you looking  at me?  It's not like  you've never
seen me naked before."
     "You're my squire."
     "That doesn't change it! Look at me!"
     He turned reluctantly. Kera stood dressed by the bed, arms folded
over her chest.
     "Well?"
     "Let's  go.  I  want  to  get to  the  village  and  back  before
breakfast."
     Kera did not  move for a moment, still expecting  him to give her
an answer, but when he opened the door and stepped out, she sighed and
followed him.
     "The village is five leagues  away," she pointed out, catching up
to Rien.
     "You're healthy. You'll make it." He walked to the stairs without
stopping to wait. "How did your training go?"
     Kera wondered if she should answer. "What's troubling you?"
     Rien glanced over at her. "The war. It's not going well."
     Kera sighed. "Will you be joining?"
     "Not unless it comes this far."
     "That's not it, is it?"
     "I'm also uncomfortable with you being my squire."
     "You weren't uncomfortable when you held me captive in Phedra."
     "Kera, you're making this harder than it has to be."
     "I'm sorry," she said without  hesitation. She was pushing him to
act the way he always did and he was not going to comply.
     "How was your training?" Rien asked again.
     "Pretty good, I guess. I win as often as I get beaten."
     "I'll help you practice as soon as I have the time to do so."
     "Thanks."
     They walked out of the keep and across the court yard.
     "Is it  safe to go  by the forest at  night?" Kera paused  at the
gates as the two guards at it shifted sleepily.
     "With me, sure," Rien smiled. "Are  you ready? Let's see how much
endurance you have."
     "You know how much endurance I have," Kera smiled seductively.
     "Kera."
     "All right, I'm ready."
     They ran  west, down the road  into the valley where  the village
lay cradled  between the Skywall  Mountains of Arvalia. It  started to
get light  soon after their  departure and by  the time they  made two
leagues, it was almost completely light,  although the sun had not yet
risen over  the mountains.  The road  was the same  one by  which they
arrived three days ago and Kera was already somewhat familiar with the
forest on the south side. While it was still dark, the forest appeared
as a  giant black mass,  trees barely distinguishable from  the ground
and the  sky. But with daylight  Kera cautiously crossed to  the south
edge of the road and ran there.
     Rien paced  her during  the entire  run, careful  to keep  to her
pace, at times purposely slowing down to  force her to do the same, in
order not to tire out too soon. The run was easy, down hill the entire
way to  the village, and he  was confident that in  her condition Kera
could easily make  the five leagues. When she crossed  the road to run
closer  to  the  edge  of  Charnelwood,  Rien  glanced  at  her,  then
suppressing  a smile,  also crossed  to the  south side,  a few  yards
closer to  the legends of  the demons  and spirits that  populated the
forest.
     The sun  was above  the hills  by the  time they  made it  to the
village. They  slowed to a  walk before passing  the first hut  at the
edge of the  village, both breathing hard. Kera wanted  to sit down to
catch her breath and shake some sweat off, but noticed a well directly
ahead of them and followed Rien.
     "How did I do?" she asked Rien between gasps.
     He smiled  at her, a happy  smile, not the concerned  look he had
when she first saw him today. "All right."
     Kera smiled also.
     "Don't drink too much," Rien cautioned her at the well.
     "We're not running back, are we? If you make me run back," Kera's
breathing was beginning to return  to normal, "I'll never forgive you.
I'd rather be tortured."
     "Really?" Rien  asked, the smile still  on his face. He  sat down
with his back against the well, face wet with the water he splashed on
himself.
     "You wouldn't!"
     "I won't.  I should remember this  is your first day  and you ran
quite a distance."
     Kera slid  down next to him,  catching her breath. First  day. He
did not think she could keep it up for more than one, did he?
     "Are you doing all right?" Rien looked over.
     "Uh-huh," Kera exhaled. "Why do you want me to run?"
     Rien pulled  himself up and  planted his back firmly  against the
well.  "Fighting  will  build  your muscles,  help  you  develop  some
agility, teach  you to  use a  sword, but  it won't  make you  last in
combat. Running builds endurance, helps you reach extremes."
     "Right."
     "Sir Bonham won't have you run. He hates running. Short as he is,
almost anyone  can outrun  him and he  hates that. But  if you  go out
early enough, you'll see him and his squires running around the Arena.
He knows what good it does."
     Kera remained silent  for a few minutes longer,  until Rien asked
her again how she was.
     "You tell me," she answered.
     "You're not  the best  long distance runner  I know,"  Rien said,
"but most people can't run five leagues, either. Even down hill."
     Kera smiled, but  looked away. "I don't think I  could've done it
before I met you."
     "City dwellers usually can't."
     "Do you want me to run back?"
     Rien looked at her. "Do you want to?"
     Kera shook  her head.  "I don't  think I could  make it  up hill,
especially after just running this distance."
     A woman  with a large clay  pot approached the well  and stopped,
looking at the pair.
     "Good morning to you, madam," Rien smiled.
     The woman  suspiciously walked  around to the  other side  of the
well and  proceeded to fill  her pot  there. Kera snickered,  but said
nothing.
     "We'll increase the distance gradually," Rien said.
     "How gradually?"
     "Not tomorrow. I want to see you run the same distance tomorrow."
     Kera sighed. "You don't mean every morning, do you?"
     Rien nodded. "Every morning."
     "I haven't seen you run every morning," she said.
     "I haven't had much opportunity. It's time I started, too."
     The woman finished getting the water  and walked back to her hut,
suspiciously glancing over  her shoulder at the couple  sitting by the
well.
     "She doesn't like us much," Kera noted.
     "She doesn't know  we're from Valdasly," Rien said.  "The Keep is
very respected here.  Because it's a garrison,  there's little trouble
that happens on  this road. If not Flint, then  ReVell himself has the
bandits removed."
     "Who's Flint?" Kera asked.
     "Flint Venture is  hard to explain," Rien answered.  "He lives up
in the hills somewhere and sends  regular patrols to watch the region.
He and his men are self appointed guardians of the villages near here.
No one really knows why Flint chose  to do what he does, but he's been
doing it for  a while and everyone  knows of him. Maybe  he'll stop by
the keep and I'll introduce you."
     "This is a strange place," Kera sighed.
     "Stranger than Dargon?" Rien got up.
     "Much stranger. Demons, guardians, knights, volcanos."
     Rien laughed. "Arvalia's a busy place."
     Kera got  to her feet  and drank some  more water from  the well.
"We're not going to run, right?" she asked as an after thought.
     "We won't," Rien promised. "Come on. It's time we started back."
     They started  down the  road, quietly at  first, then  Kera asked
Rien about  his trip and  the one  he was expecting  to take in  a few
days.
     "I informed my  tribe about the war," Rien said.  "Should it ever
come this far, Baranur doesn't know about the life in the forest. They
will have to fight for their own land."
     "Will you fight with them?"
     Rien nodded.  "Remember I told you  I was a landed  knight? These
are my lands," he pointed to the forest south of the road. "It's where
I was born and I have to defend it."
     "I heard the  servants talking about the demons  and evil spirits
in the forest," Kera remembered. "Sounded just like what you said."
     Rien  smiled. "The  tribes  like  to cause  trouble  to keep  the
natives restless.  You see, many years  ago, long before either  of us
was born,  even before there  was a  Baranur, there were  wars between
your kind  and my kind.  Since then most  Eelail chose seclusion  as a
method of maintaining safety. By playing tricks on the natives, making
them believe the  forest is haunted, we  can set aside a  part of this
world for ourselves."
     "Why did they fight?" Kera asked.
     "I don't think anyone really knows anymore," Rien said. "Many say
that back  in the  days of  the Fretheod  the two  races first  met at
Wudamund, a Fretheod garrison, and the wars began. No one knows why. I
heard  stories that  a  fortune teller  predicted  that when  Wudamund
falls, so  will the Empire and  King Althweil believed it  and was too
scared of  the Eelail to  let them alone.  Others say that  the Eelail
knew of the legend and wanted to tempt fate and bring Fretheod down to
its  knees. It's  up to  you  what you  believe, but  the Eelail  were
defeated and fled and within the century the Empire crumbled as well."
     "What do you think happened?" Kera asked again.
     "I don't  know. And I don't  think there's any one  old enough to
remember, even among my people."
     "What about Eliowy and Teran?"
     "My people  broke into many tribes,  all over the world.  I guess
Rubel  has one  of the  many tribes.  The tribes  in Charnelwood  have
stayed  very secluded  over the  centuries.  I'm the  first to  leave.
There's been no other contact with human civilization."
     "But you're half human," Kera protested.
     "Don't you ever stop asking questions?" Rien asked.
     "No."
     He sighed and took a look at  the forest. The trees swayed in the
light wind  and shook their  leaves. He  knew that the  forest watched
him, felt himself watched. It was a bond that he could never break, no
matter were he went.
     Kera, too,  looked into  the forest. "It's  a creepy  place," she
commented. "It gets so dark in there, so quickly."
     "I wouldn't be  surprised if no human stepped off  the south edge
of  this road  in the  last decade,"  Rien said.  "Certainly no  local
villager."
     Kera hopped off the road into the dark green grass at the edge of
the forest. "I'll be the first," she laughed.
     Rien followed her  off the road. "Be careful.  Trackers have been
known to get lost mere feet from the edge of the woods."
     "Rien, is that a fairy ring?" Kera asked, looking down.
     He glanced down  at the dark patch of grass  in which Kera stood,
surrounded  by clusters  of  mushrooms. "...you  demi-puppets that  by
moonshine do the green sour ringlets make, where of the ewe not bites;
and you whose  pastime is to make midnight mushrumps,  that rejoice to
hear the solemn curfew..."
     "Oh, didn't...uh, what's his name?"
     Rien put his finger to Kera's lips, shushing her.

             Oh, well done!  I commend your pains,
             And everyone shall share i' th' gains.
             And now about the cauldron sing,
             Like elves and fairies in a ring,
             Enchanting all that you put in.

     Kera smiled. "You're good."
     "I only  quote what was written  almost a five hundred  years ago
for  the Bardic  College in  Magnus,"  Rien replied.  "What keeps  the
curious away is that same superstition."
     Kera suddenly grabbed  hold of him and pulled  him close, kissing
him. Rien resisted for a moment, but then gave in.
     "What was that for?"
     "I missed you."
     "Just don't let anyone else see you missing me like that."
     "Yes, my Lord," Kera laughed.
     Rien guided her out of the fairy ring and they walked back to the
road.
     "What about the  fairy rings?" Kera asked as they  moved on. "How
do they happen?"
     "Nature has  a lot  of secrets," Rien  explained. "We  don't make
them, if that's what you mean."
     "Is it true what  they say about what happens to  you if you step
in one?" Kera asked.
     "So  many questions,"  Rien looked  at her.  "They just  mark our
territory and  keep the  superstitious away. We  have other  means for
keeping the non-fearful at a distance."
     They   returned  to   the   keep  midmorning,   the  road   being
predominantly up hill,  and had breakfast, not having a  chance to see
each other again until dinner.

                            *          *          *

     The following morning Kera was ready  when Rien came to her door.
She knew  he would want  her to  run and did  all she could  to insure
being awake in time for his arrival.
     Rien paused,  a little  surprised that she  was waiting  for him.
"You're up early this morning." He  knew well of her tendency to sleep
late.
     "I want  you to take  my wanting  to become a  knight seriously,"
Kera answered.
     "And how long will that want last?"
     "Until I become one or until I no longer have the desire."
     "And what  if next month I  find you lounging around  in bed when
there's work to be done?"
     "Then I'll no longer be your squire."
     Rien studied  Kera carefully.  There was no  light and  she could
just see the glint of his eyes in the dark, watching her. She wondered
who could  see whom better, if  he could detect the  flush building in
her face, hear the fear in her voice.
     "Do  you  realize  what  you're saying?"  Rien  asked.  His  tone
remained the same, as if he was blind to all that she felt.
     "I'm not going to give you cause to be upset with me," Kera said.
"I will do all that you expect."
     He turned to the door. "I know  one of us will be sorry this ever
happened. I just wish I knew which one."
     Kera caught  up to  Rien in  the corridor. "What  do you  mean by
that?"
     He shook  his head. "It  won't be easy for  you to get  where you
want to go. And I'm not the easiest man to get you there."
     "I think you'll do fine."
     He smiled at her, a faint trace barely detectable in the dark. "I
appreciate your  confidence, but I fear  you may come to  hate me long
before you get where you want to be."
     Kera took his hand into hers. "I don't think I will."

                            *          *          *

     It  was shortly  before dinner  when Rien  informed Kera  that he
would be  leaving again in the  evening. He could not  promise when he
would  be back  this time  and she  did not  press for  him to  make a
commitment. She would stay busy  here, training in the Arena, running,
doing whatever else  was required of her while he  was gone. They said
their goodbyes soon after dinner and  Kera watched Rien, the Baron and
another man,  who appeared  mid-day, select two  guards and  ride away
from the keep on  the road towards the forest. She  stood in the great
hall arch,  watching them ride out  of the keep, thinking  back to the
discussion she had with Rien earlier in the day.
     "I want you  to run every morning," he told  her, "whether or not
I'm here, whether or not I can do it with you."
     "For how long?"
     "Until I tell you otherwise."
     "Will you be back soon?"
     He  did not  answer for  a while.  "I don't  know. A  council was
called. All four tribes together, for  the first time in ages. I don't
know."
     "You keep abandoning me," Kera reproached him.
     "There's a war on out there,"  Rien explained. "I may not want to
fight in it, but if the circumstances  force me, I may have no choice.
I have to  make this choice much in  the same way you made  the one to
become a squire  and eventually a knight. It's a  form of survival for
both of us."
     She wondered through dinner what he  meant when he said that. Why
was it survival? Why was it the same for both of them? He did not have
to fight. He could always leave, go where there is no war ... and then
it began  to make  sense. He made  the choice to  take his  own choice
away. He would stay  no matter what, just like she  told him she would
do all she could to become a  knight. They both had the choice to walk
away and forget the difficulties they would be forced to face and both
decided to confront what may prove  to be an extremely difficult path.
It was a decision not to give up.
     Not giving it  another thought, Kera charged down  the steps into
the  court yard  and  to  the stables  where  Hasina  was being  held.
Practically knocking over a stable boy, Kera leapt on the thundersteed
and yanked  the rope holding  the horse off  its hook. "Come  on," she
prompted the mare, not even bothering  to take the time to saddle her,
and charged out of the castle after Rien and the men with him.
     It took  some time for Kera  to catch up to  the five individuals
ahead of her, on  the road towards the village, and  when she did, two
were dismounted, preparing to enter the forest. She ran Hasina off the
road and stood in the tall grass, watching from a distance. She wanted
to talk  to Rien,  but this  was obviously neither  the time,  nor the
place. After some time, she saw  Rien slap Kelsey's side and the horse
wandered off.  The other man  preparing to go,  the one who  came that
afternoon, lead his  horse beside himself as they  entered the forest.
Baron Dower and his two guards  waited for a while, the Baron pointing
to something in the forest while  talking to the guards, then they all
rode in the direction of the village.
     Kera waited in the field,  watching the forest and wondering what
it contained that  had to be so jealously guarded.  Were the Eelail so
different from  humans that  wars had  to be  fought? What  did Rien's
people think  of the outside world  and whose side would  they take if
the war came to Arvalia? She could  not help but wonder how Rien's own
birth came to be.
     Something howled  in the  forest, a long,  drawn out  eerie sound
that carried in the wind and echoed through the hills. Kera, shivered,
scanning the edge of the forest, looking for what it was that made the
noise. She  felt Hasina tense under  her, also cautious of  the sound.
Only the  swaying branches of trees  greeted her, waving as  wind blew
through them. Uneasy,  Kera turned Hasina and kicked  her into motion,
guiding her  out on  to the road  and bringing her  to a  full gallop,
wanting to  leave behind the portion  of the forest that  produced the
scream, having no wish to meet whatever had made it.
     Kera returned  to the  keep shortly  after sunset,  worried about
Rien and  not having had a  chance to talk  to him before he  had gone
into the forest. She wondered who that  man with him was and where the
Baron and his guards were headed.
     In the  stables Kera dismounted  Hasina and  led her back  to her
place. "You have an easy life, right?" she asked.
     "I can handle her, Miss," the stable boy came out of nowhere.
     Kera looked  at him, maybe  eight or  nine, skinny, with  a dirty
face.  He  looked like  a  boy,  not  like  the children  that  Liriss
collected, the  sickly starved  urchins no  longer caring  about their
lives, doing whatever it took to survive through the day. She wondered
how she had come  to be his ward, who her real  parents were. Did they
work for him? Where  they important to him? Why had  he kept her? From
the earliest memories she had, she had been with him.
     "Miss? It is my job," the boy said, again asking to help with the
horse.
     "I believe  you," Kera said,  "but I'd  like to groom  her myself
tonight. Thank you."
     After the boy  wandered away, Kera found a brush  and a bucket of
water.
     "Maybe you'll accept help from  someone more your age?" she heard
a familiar voice, but did not turn.
     Kera laughed. "I'll do it myself,  if you don't mind." She turned
Hasina and tossed some more hay in the stable before her. "But I don't
mind if you stay and talk."
     "I  think I  will," Kiyan  Kanne came  closer and  leaned on  the
wooden inside wall. "I thought that was you I saw on this beast."
     "Hasina's not a beast," Kera said. "She just has no manners."
     "Yours?"
     "Sir Keegan's. He likes fat horses."
     "A thundersteed's more than a  fat horse," Kiyan said. "You often
ride bareback?"
     "Not really. Not on Hasina,  certainly. Today was the first time.
I just needed to get out fast.  She's rather hard to control without a
saddle."
     "I can imagine. The smaller horses  are better for that." He bent
down and  moved the  water bucket  closer to  Kera, as  Hasina shifted
away.
     "Thanks."
     "I missed you the last couple of days."
     "I was busy  with Sir Keegan," Kera lied. She  still was not sure
what to do about Kiyan.
     "Listen, about two nights ago..."
     Kera looked at Kiyan. "I'm not angry, really."
     He smiled,  a slight  flush in  his cheeks.  "I was  wondering if
there was someone else."
     "Not really," Kera sighed. "Not anymore."
     "What happened?"
     "I  became a  squire." She  really did  not want  to explain  the
details of her current situation.
     "He didn't like your choice?"
     "Something like that. It made all the difference to him."
     "And you can't let go?"
     "No."
     Kiyan put his hand on Kera's  arm, drawing her attention. "I like
you, Kera. I'm just asking for a chance."
     She shook  her head. "I can't.  Not now." A tear  rolled down her
cheek. "I hate what  he's doing to me, but I must  be patient. I don't
want to lose him."
     Kiyan wiped the tear with  his hand. "Don't overlook those around
you in your struggle."
     "I wish things were different," Kera  said. "I like you, too. You
were one of the few to accept  me here, rather than pressure me for my
choice. It's good to have a friend like you."
     "Come  outside,"  Kiyan  said.  "I  think  we're  disturbing  the
horses."
     He lead  Kera out of the  stables, his arm around  her shoulders.
"It'll be fine, really."
     "What will?"
     "I don't know. Whatever it is  you want. I just have this feeling
you were born lucky."
     "I  don't know,"  Kera said.  She  certainly did  not feel  lucky
having lived the childhood that she had.

                            *          *          *

     That night Kera  had a hard time falling asleep.  She wondered if
she was making  the right choice and  if she would regret  making it a
year  or  two  down  the  road.   She  liked  Kiyan,  his  easy  going
personality, his willingness  to talk and help forget,  his ability to
just listen. She felt that if it were him she had met just over a year
ago in Dargon,  she could have had  a life with him just  as easily as
with Rien.
     When she first met  Rien, it took her a while  to realize that he
was reaching out to  her, giving her a chance to  leave Liriss. He did
not need her. He simply wanted to  help. If she had a chance to relive
that part of her life, she  would act differently towards him, knowing
what she now knew. Back then she did not realize how much trust he put
in  her and  understood it  only when  they were  caught in  the store
robbery in Tench.
     Tench. Before she met Rien, Kera  had not been further than a day
or two out of  Dargon. Now, in less then a year,  she had gone through
four duchies, some of them more than once. She had a life of adventure
with him, a chance to see and experience what so few others could. She
knew Kiyan could not  give her a lot of that, at  least not until well
after he would become a knight.
     She did like  Kiyan. He was her age, full  of life and adventure,
wanting to change the world by himself. Keeping in mind what Rien said
to her a few days before, she  knew she needed to make a decision that
would effect her  the rest of her  life and she was not  sure what the
right choice was.
     The sky started to turn light without Kera getting any sleep. She
sat up on the bed as a rooster crowed outside, remembering her promise
to Rien.  No matter  what, she  intended to go  through with  that, to
become a knight.
     She ran  the five leagues  as she  promised, in the  large meadow
northwest of the keep.  She did not want to go  near the forest alone,
particularly when  it was still  partially dark outside. She  felt the
running come easier as she went on. It took longer for her to lose her
breath, her feet felt  firmer on the ground as she  ran, but she still
had not noticed any effects on her training in the Arena.
     Having finished  sufficiently early, Kera went  to have breakfast
while only a few  of the keep's inhabitants were up.  She did not want
to  see Kiyan  so early  in  the day,  having spent  the entire  night
thinking about him and knowing that  he tended to sleep late, finished
all her chores in  the keep early and again left  for the meadow where
she ran.  She wanted  to relax  for a while,  to forget  her troubles,
maybe even take a  swim in the near by creek.  Anything to forget what
troubled her overnight.
     There  were  no  plans  for  the afternoon  as  yet.  Sir  Bonhan
cancelled the day's  practice the day before, in favor  of pitting two
of  the three  regiments present  against  each other.  She would  not
participate, but could attend and watch. She knew Kiyan to be a member
of  the Fourth  Arvalian Militia  and that  they were  one of  the two
regiments to participate in the mock battle.

                            *          *          *

     Baron Dower  stood on the  Arena platform, arms  folded, watching
the two regiments clash in the practice field below. The dull clanking
sound of padded weapons against metal armor, stomping of feet, yelling
and grunting, all carried a long way.
     "The Fourth is losing ground," Sir Bonhan commented. "They didn't
reinforce the middle."
     ReVell nodded, watching the growing bend in the line.
     A hand reached out past the Baron  and placed a stack of coins on
the railing before Sir Bonhan.
     "What's that for?"
     "Ten silver the Fourth will win," Sir Hardin said.
     Sir Bonhan thoughtfully looked over  at the old knight. "You have
much faith in your squires. Ten silver it is."
     ReVell picked up one of the shiny coins. Shapkan silver. "Been to
the market again, Clev?"
     "Nothing like  a new  shield to  put the  sun in  the eye  of the
enemy. So they may see the strength of the Stevene."
     Sir Bonhan grunted. "Why be scared of a dead man?" He slammed his
fist on the  railing, causing the coins to fall  to the ground. "Scare
them with  Nehru, Saren,  J'mirg, Da'athra'a,  even their  own Amante,
Gow, Erida!"
     "You cracked the rail again," ReVell noted.
     "I'll bring you a new one from Tasantil!"
     ReVell looked  back into the  field. The Fourth  Arvalian Militia
regiment now  suffered a  deep bow in  the middle of  the line  as the
First pushed on. "How soon will the troops be ready?"
     "They were ready before Melrin."
     "I mean completely ready," he said.
     "I deem them fit to back  any regular light or medium infantry or
archer regiment."
     "We must be ready to march as soon as the word is given."
     "Even now, my Liege," Sir Bonhan answered.
     A smile crossed ReVell's face. "Soon."
     The  Fourth pushed  an offensive  against the  left flank  of the
First, catching  them by  surprise, crushing the  men trying  to force
their way  to the  middle of  the line. They  hooked around  the edge,
rushing in on the rear of the regiment.
     Sir  Bonhan  leaned  forward, watching  closely.  "Cormack,  take
note!"
     "Yes,  Sir!"  a  voice  sounded from  further  down  the  crowded
platform.
     The hook tightened.
     "They made a mistake."
     "It's exercises like  this that teach us best,"  Sir Hardin said.
"Let  them make  all  the mistakes  they will  right  here. The  First
pressed too hard. They wanted to break the middle. Now they'll know to
guard their flanks."
     The battle was in its last leg.
     "They  both  have  good  form, gentlemen,"  ReVell  said  as  the
fighting stopped. "My compliments."
     "There's still  work to  be done," Sir  Hardin said.  "They'll be
moving against a real army next time."
     "Cormack, get all the company  officers to gather in the library.
No dinner until we sort this out!" Sir Bonhan barked.
     "Don't be too  rough on them," the Baron advised.  "It was a good
trial."
     "It won't be a trial against the Beinison army."
     Two men on horseback, the  Senior Captains of the regiments, rode
up to the platform and saluted the knights on it.
     "Gather your Captains in the library," Sir Bonhan called down.
     "Well, let's  go, gentlemen," ReVell  said. "It was a  good show,
but I don't intend to sit through dinner in the library."
     The mass of observers slowly  emptied from the platform, everyone
talking about  the combat at the  same time, hurrying to  take care of
their postponed  or neglected duties.  The men in the  Arena separated
out into  groups, rubbing  their bumps and  bruises, thankful  that at
least this time their weapons were simple padded sticks.
     "How did you like it, Kera?" ReVell asked as he passed by her.
     "I've never seen anything like it, Sir!"
     "For your  sake, girl, glad as  I am you  wish to be a  knight, I
hope you never see real battle."
     "I wish Sir Keegan could've seen it," she said. She knew he would
be willing to give detailed explanations, answer questions she did not
want to ask the Baron himself.
     "I'm sure he's seen many like it," the Baron said. "Even the real
ones."
     "Will you be going to war?" Kera asked.
     "I  have to.  I'm  the  Militia Captain  for  Arvalia. Where  the
militia goes, they go because I lead them."
     "Have you been in a war before?"
     He laughed. "Never in one this big. The largest troop I lead into
battle in the past has been a single regiment. This will be a learning
experience for all of us."
     They stopped in the court yard, before the archway into the keep,
where two soldiers supported a third man in dirty worn leather, barely
able to stand on his own.
     "Baron!" one of the soldiers called.
     The man being  supported instantly looked in  their direction and
struggled to correct himself.
     ReVell Dower walked  over to them, Kera  curiously following him.
"What happened here?"
     "I have a message for Sir Keegan," the man said.
     "Keegan isn't here now. I'm Baron Dower. What is the message?"
     "I'm sorry, Sir, but I can only give it to Sir Keegan."
     "Sir Keegan  left yesterday.  He will  be gone  a few  days," the
Baron said.
     "Where did he  go?" the messenger asked. "I'll deliver  it to him
there."
     "You can't  go where  he is. You  can wait here.  Are you  sure I
can't be of help?"
     "I'm sure, your Lordship."
     "Get  the healer  and  see  to his  needs,"  ReVell  said to  the
soldiers and left to talk to the captains of the regiments.
     Kera  watched  him go,  but  remained  as  the soldiers  sat  the
messenger on the ground. "I'll get Lord Ealhfrit," one said and left.
     "Is there  something I can  do to help?"  Kera knelt down  by the
messenger. "I'm Sir Keegan's squire."
     He looked her  up and down and  smirked. "I ran my  horse to near
death to get here. I must speak only with him."
     Kera  looked towards  the  main gates,  immediately spotting  the
horse that looked like every dog in the duchy had chased after it.
     "The best thing you can do,"  the messenger went on, "is bring me
to Sir Keegan. Or bring him here."
     Kera looked  around, then moved  so that the courier  was between
her and the remaining soldier. "Are you with the trouble shooters? The
League?"
     His eyes narrowed. "What do you know?"
     "I told you, I'm  his squire. I've been with him  for more than a
year."
     "It's very important that the message reaches him and I must give
it to him myself!"
     "How important? I can go find him,  but if I do, I'll be breaking
a promise. Will it be worth it?"
     "I think it will. And tell him if I don't hear from him tomorrow,
I'll have to break the seal."
     Kera stood  up as  a tall  grey haired  man in  green-brown robes
walked  down the  stairs with  the soldier  that left  minutes before.
"I'll try to find him by tomorrow," Kera promised. "Wait here."
     She ran  to her  room, changed  into travel  clothes, to  be more
comfortable in the woods, strapped on  her sword and inserted a dagger
in her belt. She  did not think she would need her  pack, but the bow?
Kera hesitated,  looking at  the unstrung  instrument standing  in the
corner of  the room. She remembered  the animal scream from  the night
before and considered the adequacy of her sword. Yes, she may need the
bow.
     Taking the keep's steps three or four at a time, she ran outside,
heading for  the stables. No time  to saddle Hasina. She  already knew
the mare  could be handled bareback.  Another few moments and  she was
ready to go.
     "Kera!"
     She pulled Hasina to a halt just short of the gate.
     "Kera!" Kiyan  ran over to her.  "I've been looking all  over for
you. Where were you all day?"
     Hasina snorted, as if sensing Kera's urgency.
     "Kiyan,  I  need to  find  Sir  Keegan. Congratulations  on  your
victory. We can talk when I get back."
     "I can go with you," he offered.
     "There's  no time,"  she  answered, kicking  Hasina into  motion.
"I'll see you soon!"

                            *          *          *

     Kera dismounted Hasina in mid-gallop  and left her grazing in the
meadow on the north side of the road. She speculated that if Rien left
Kelsey, the walk was not all that long and besides, a horse that large
could be in  quite a disadvantage deep in the  forest. She crossed the
road to the south side and paused, looking into Charnelwood, listening
for any unusual noises, such as the  one she had heard the day before.
Everything  seemed  quiet, with  just  the  sounds  of birds  and  the
rustling leaves  enhancing the peace  of the wilderness. Kera  threw a
glance back at  Hasina, peacefully grazing in the meadow.  She did not
worry about leaving  the horse. She knew both Kelsey  and Hasina to be
trained well  enough not to trust  strangers and to come  when called.
Looking around once again, Kera slipped into the green forest.
     Everything there seemed  as normal as the forests  she had gotten
used to  in the  northern portions  of Baranur.  It was  a combination
green leaf and  pine forest, very dense in some  parts, somewhat clear
in others, but everywhere she looked,  it seemed that a human foot had
never disturbed the ground. The  forest floor was littered with fallen
leaves and branches,  without any evidence of footprints,  much less a
path of any sort.
     After  a league  of walking  and over  an hour  of searching  the
ground, the  only tracks  Kera could  find were her  own. With  a deep
sigh, she sat down by a tree  to rest. She was positive that Rien went
by somewhere  here. She entered  the forest in  the same place  as he.
Were the stories about this forest  really true? Did it really swallow
people  never  to  be  seen  again? She  refused  to  believe  in  the
impossible. They had to go somewhere, as did Rien.
     She got up and once again proceeded further into the woods. There
were  still no  trails,  but she  was confident  that  would not  last
forever.  Somehow, somewhere,  there  had  to be  a  trace of  someone
passing. She was not going to give up that easily.
     After what she guessed was five leagues of walking, Kera came out
to the edge of  the forest. She could not imagine  it being that short
across,  but there  was  a wide  meadow ahead  of  her, the  mountains
raising on  each side, enclosing the  valley. Off to the  right, where
the road  angled up hill into  the canyon, Kera spotted  the fortified
walls of Valdasly Keep.
     "No!"
     She turned  back, angry  and determined. She  was careful  not to
make this  mistake. She  knew she  could not have  taken such  a sharp
turn. As she stepped back into the forest, a wild animal scream echoed
through the  valley. She felt the  hilt of her sword,  looking around.
There was no  trace of anything moving. With  solid determination Kera
walked back into the woods, marching straight ahead, no longer looking
for any  paths or trails.  The animal  yell sounded again,  all around
her, almost  on top  of her. Kera  did not stop.  She knew  the forest
looked equally  empty in  all directions. She  was going  to challenge
that emptiness now.  She felt uneasy and perhaps even  scared, but she
was not  going to  give up.  Not after making  a promise  and breaking
another.
     She paused just long enough to take out the item she found in the
cave when  escaping from Phedra and  examined it again. It  was a near
perfect square  with a  floating black and  gold arrow  inside, always
pointing in the same direction,  or towards metal. Perhaps the ability
of this item -- she had no  real name for it -- to unerringly maintain
its orientation, would be of help in this forest.
     Turning the item over, Kera examined the other side, containing a
series of equidistant black lines, crossed by a red line. The red line
changed in  size, short some times,  long at others. Right  now it was
long, almost  three-fourths the length of  the side of the  square. It
tended to  be longer in  the day than at  night. Perhaps a  device for
measuring time, but Kera had still not learned to use it.
     Turning  it back  over, Kera  determined that  the direction  she
wanted to head in was indicated by  the gold end of the arrow, the one
that pointed towards Magnus.
     The walk lasted for what seemed to be hours, leagues upon leagues
of blindly walking straight  ahead, constantly checking her direction.
At times it appeared as if a  straight path through the forest was off
to the side as indicated by the arrow and after debating if she should
trust her senses or not, Kera  would follow the direction indicated by
the device in her hand.
     Looking up at the sun, barely visible through the branches of the
trees above  her, and  wondering if she  should consider  turning back
before it  gets dark  in the forest,  Kera insistently  pushed forward
through the  thick growths and  clearings alike.  She did not  stop to
rest, nor to  look around and most importantly, refused  to look back.
The one effort  she consistently made was to walk  around the trees in
her way. At one such tree, she  started to do the same and then froze,
standing  face  to face  with  a  tall  blond  haired man  with  sharp
features. He  wore dark  green clothes,  tunic and  pants, and  held a
staff in one hand. Close as she stood to him, Kera could not determine
where he ended and the tree began. It almost seemed that they were one
and the same.
     She took a  hesitant step back, wondering where he  came from and
who he was. Her  hand jerked to her belt, to draw  the dagger, but she
stopped herself. The man made no  threatening gestured and she did not
want to seem aggressive to him.
     She noticed that his eyes were crystal blue, just like Rien's and
his almost white hair fell half  way down his back, also blending with
the trunk of the tree. She stood  like that for a long time, examining
him, aware that his eyes were tightly focused on her. She took another
step back. "Um...hi... I'm looking..."
     The man  silently pointed  further into  the forest.  Neither his
motion,  nor  expression betrayed  emotion  or  malicious intent.  His
movements were  fluid, almost as if  leaves blowing in the  wind. Kera
cautiously stepped past  him, in the direction he pointed.  It was not
the one the arrow had indicated, but he was the first living thing she
met in the forest and for the time being, she was willing to trust his
knowledge of the woods.
     "How far...?"
     There was no  answer. She swallowed hard, turned her  back on him
and continued on. She  hopped he was not showing her  the way back. It
was nearing dusk, with sunlight no longer cutting through the branches
of the trees, now  hanging far to the west, just over  the tops of the
mountains. The  forest was now eerily  quiet. There were no  sounds of
birds or rustling leaves. Most importantly, the animal cries were gone
as well. The dead silence, disturbed  only by her footsteps, made Kera
feel  uneasy. It  seemed as  if the  trees had  eyes and  paused their
conversations as she  passed, watching her go by  them, pretending not
to be afraid.
     It began to get dark when  Kera once again stopped before a large
tree in her path.  A man stood there. The same man?  She was not sure.
His clothes were  grey, but hair just  as white and as  long. His eyes
were  bright  yellow, almost  glowing  in  the settling  darkness.  He
stepped forward, separating from the tree and walked past Kera without
saying a  word. She turned  to look, surprised  that just a  few yards
behind her the forest opened into  a clearing. She just walked through
that part of the woods!
     Feeling completely  disoriented, Kera  followed the man  into the
clearing  where a  low fire  burned in  a small  fire pit.  Slowly she
realized that the clearing was  filled with people. They all appeared,
in some way,  not human. Tall, slender, having  either extremely light
or  extremely dark  hair. Their  eyes were  all focused  on her,  some
almost glowing, almost seeing through  her. Many were armed with bows,
some carried swords.
     Four of them were seated around  the fire, three men and a woman.
They  were  looking at  her  with  what  seemed  to be  suspicion  and
contempt.
     "Y ean  shipy si'  eels'popa," the  man who  brought her  said to
those at the fire.
     A blond man stood up. "Z'I' il ja. Z'Y' pee'P iu tee'L zeer."
     The language  mixed with  the sudden wind,  sounding almost  as a
natural part  of the forest.  The spirits of Charnelwood  were finally
speaking. Kera knew that she had found the place.
     "Y  sheaf' zeer  f'Eeji Ree'N  icheepiy," the  man answered.  "Ja
earb'Epee'P si'  pa s'peavee'L sipiy."  The words passed  Kera without
making any sense.
     As she looked, Kera noticed Rien stand up and step forward.
     "Z'I' il ja," the man at the  fire turned to him. It sounded like
a question. Many heads turned.
     "S'peafeemee'L chinbealeel."
     The voice  sounded nothing  like Rien. It  was soft  and flowing,
mixing with the natural sounds of the forest.
     "Reez!" a harsh  exclamation sounded from a woman  on the ground.
Kera had no trouble guessing she was upset. Rien remained motionless.
     "Y 'Pil s  d'Eals si' shi zonealil zeepia eac'Il,"  a dark haired
man at the fire said, without getting  up or taking his eyes off Kera.
She could feel tension build up.
     "C'Ees zeer us  is zeepia," the blond man who  had stood answered
and sat back down.
     Rien walked over to Kera, roughly  taking her arm and leading her
into the forest. "What the hell are you doing?" he hissed as they left
the clearing. "You could've been killed!" He released her and gave her
a shove forward.
     "I'm sorry. A courier came. He had  a message for you. He said it
was urgent and he could only wait a day."
     Lines  of concern  appeared  on Rien's  face.  "Wait here.  Don't
move!" He disappeared  into the almost total  darkness, somewhere back
where the clearing  was. Kera could barely see the  traces of the fire
and sense the smoke from the burning wood.
     The wind continued to blow and leaves and branches rustle, making
Kera wonder if that was elven  speech. Long minutes passed before Rien
returned. He looked her in the eyes and shook his head.
     "I'm sorry. I thought this was important enough to come."
     "I hope you're wrong," he told her and walked away.
     "Rien, wait!" Kera caught up to him. "I'm sorry."
     He paused long enough to let her catch up, but said nothing.
     "Rien?"
     He did not answer.
     "Rien?"
     "What?"
     "Please understand."
     "Kera, you could have been killed if the Dopkalfar saw you first.
The  only reason  you were  permitted to  pass and  brought to  me was
because they saw  you with me a  few days ago. There's a  lot of anger
there right now.  It may effect the decision they  make. The villagers
here depend on that  decision. If the war comes this  far, it may mean
the difference between life and death for them."
     "I'm sorry.  How many  times do I  need to say  that to  make you
understand I mean it?"
     Rien remained quiet.
     "I  did  what I  thought  best.  If  the  courier's rush  is  any
indication of the message's importance, I  feel I did the only thing I
could."
     "I hope you're wrong," Rien stopped. His eyes seemed as bright as
those of the  other elves Kera saw. "Because if  you're right, none of
our lives may ever be the same again."

                            *          *          *

     "Sir Keegan!" the messenger stood up as Rien and Kera entered the
great hall. He  immediately took a rolled up parchment  from under his
tunic and handed it to Rien.
     Kera stopped a few yards short of the courier, not wanting to get
in Rien's way. He was tense the  entire trip back, snapping at her and
refusing to talk. The messenger's willingness to stay up and wait only
emphasized the urgency of the message and Kera feared what it might be
all about.
     "Who sent this?" Rien asked, cracking the wax seal.
     "Lord Yasarin." Kera had never heard the name.
     Rien unrolled  the sheet and read  it. Kera wished she  could see
his face,  but did not dare  to approach. If Rien's  shifting in place
was any  indication, the  news was  not good.  It seemed  like forever
before he put the paper down.
     "When did  you leave  Port Sevlyn?" His  voice was  hard, tension
obvious in the way he spoke.
     "On the eighth, Sir."
     "The army was there?"
     "Yes, Sir."
     Rien  turned  away, looking  at  Kera.  She  could not  read  his
expression. It was like nothing she had ever seen.
     "Rest tonight. I'll have a reply for you to take back tomorrow."
     "Take back, Sir?"
     Rien looked back  at him. "No. You're to stand  down. Stay out of
the war."
     "Sir?"
     "Just do it. Go."
     "Yes, Sir." The courier turned and left.
     Rien leaned on the table, his  arms on either side of the letter,
seemingly  reading it  again.  Kera  waited, not  sure  if she  should
interrupt.  What could  that letter  say? What  was happening  at Port
Sevlyn?
     "Guard!" Rien  called one  of the men  patrolling the  great hall
over. "Wake Baron Dower. I will wait for him in the library."
     "Now, Sir?"
     "Now!"
     The man rushed  off, up the wide staircase leading  to the second
floor of  the keep.  Rien picked  up the parchment  and rolled  it up,
turning to face Kera.
     "Rien?"
     He did  not look at her.  "Come on," his hand  wrapped around her
arm and he almost dragged her to the library.
     "Rien?"
     "Yes, I'm listening."
     "What's wrong?"
     They  walked into  the library  and Rien  closed the  door behind
them. "Adrea never made it out of Sharks' Cove," he muttered.
     Kera  remembered  well the  argument  Rien  and Adrea  had  about
leaving Sharks'  Cove. He insisted that  it was dangerous to  stay and
she  argued that  there will  be  plenty of  warning in  the event  of
Beinison attack.  Had the war finally  come to Sharks' Cove?  That was
the one  thing no  one mentioned.  All the news  of fighting  has been
coming  from the  eastern part  of the  country, the  Baranur-Beinison
boarder.
     "What happened?" Kera asked.
     "Sharks' Cove  fell to  the Beinison  army on  the fifth  of this
month. By now, so did Port Sevlyn."
     "What?!"
     Rien sat  down, rubbing  his eyes.  "All of  Quinnat is  in enemy
hands. They are probably at Gateway now...maybe even at Magnus..."
     Kera paled. How could this happen so soon? How could the Beinison
army get so far up the river  so quickly? Sharks' Cove and Port Sevlyn
were major cities. Gateway was a military garrison designed for events
such as this. "You can't be serious..."
     "I'm  completely  serious. When  this  message  was written,  the
Beinison army was in sight of Port  Sevlyn and there was no militia to
defend them."
     Kera took a  deep, abrupt, breath. "Then we lost  without so much
as a chance."
     Rien walked over to the  bookshelves and studied the titles, then
selecting one, picked it up and opened it.
     "What are you reading?"
     "Baranurian Military Disposition." He slammed the book shut. "Two
regiments!"
     The door into the library opened  and Baron Dower walked in. Kera
was surprised that he still wore his night clothes.
     "What is it, Rien?" the Baron asked.
     "Sit down."  Rien's voice  was forceful, almost  as if  giving an
order. The Baron paused to look at him, but sat down. Kera expected to
hear an  argument, or at least  a reprimand for Rien's  tone of voice,
but none came.
     "...Twelve days  ago Sharks' Cove  fell to a combined  assault of
the Beinison army and navy..."
     The Baron stood back up.
     "...on the  morning of  the ninth  an estimated  twenty regiments
stood ready to attack Port Sevlyn..."
     Kera noticed the Baron's hands tense.
     "...Port Sevlyn  only had the  local militia to defend  with. Two
thousand men strong at the most. I have no reason to believe there was
no attack."
     "Where did you get that?"
     Rien held up the rolled up parchment.
     "The courier? He brought this? I told  him to give it to me if it
was important!"
     "He was under orders to deliver it to me."
     "That's no  excuse," the  Baron started, but  immediately changed
the topic.  "Where the hell  was our army?"  The words were  said with
such strength that Kera took an involuntary step back.
     "About three  regiments, all light infantry,  were lost defending
the bay. Another  four, under the command of Lord  Morion, didn't stop
at  Port Sevlyn  long enough  to drink  their water.  Word has  it Sir
Ailean died in the battle for Sharks' Cove."
     "They're marching  straight on  Magnus!" the Baron  exclaimed. He
looked at the  map on the wall between two  book cases. "Gateway's the
next garrison they'll encounter. Two regiments."
     "Both Royal Duchy  Militia," Rien added. "I  imagine that's where
Lord Morion will want to make his stand."
     "Six  light and  medium infantry  regiments against  twenty?" the
Baron asked. "They'll never make it!"
     "If that's  what he's doing,  I don't think  he wants to  win the
battle. His goal at Gateway would be to win time."
     "Time for what? There are only seven regiments in Magnus." ReVell
Dower  walked over  to the  window, looking  into the  darkness. Seven
regiments were nothing, no matter how  well trained. The sheer bulk of
the enemy  force would  crush them  in a matter  of days.  "They won't
stand a chance.  The two green militia regiments will  fall without so
much as a struggle. The Huscarls will stubbornly try to hold the whole
city and  when they take enough  losses, back off to  the Old Quarter.
And the Royal  Guard will, of corse,  fight to the last  in the castle
and lose."
     "They'd  be more  organized if  they all  fought together,"  Rien
said.
     "Yes, but that's the stupid  split regiment system. If Wainwright
weren't such a horse's ass and cooperated with Sothos, they could have
an organized defense!"
     "I don't understand why there were so few troops stationed on the
Laraka,"  Rien said.  "Sothos must've  know  how likely  an attack  on
Shandayma was!"
     "Maybe, maybe not," ReVell muttered.
     "That's still thirteen regiments the  Beinison force will have to
fight," Rien added as an after thought.
     "One  by one,  thirteen  is negligible.  Their  chances would  be
better if they stood as one!"
     "Untar can't  be so  arrogant as  to have  them march  right into
Magnus, could he?"
     "What's to  stop him?  An ancient  broken fort at  a fork  in the
road? He went through all of Quinnat in a matter of days. Magnus isn't
much tougher."
     "Welspeare and Monrodya may send reinforcements," Rien suggested,
his voice filled with doubt.
     "Arvalia can send reinforcements," the Baron said.
     "But your troops were meant to reinforce Leftwich!"
     "Leftwich won't matter if Magnus is gone."
     Rien nodded. ReVell  was right. Not much would  matter to Baranur
if Haralan's rule were to end. "What are you going to do?"
     ReVell Dower confidently  walked to the door and  pulled it open.
"Guard! I want to  see Sir Bonhan and Sir Hardin  now!" He slammed the
door shut. "I have three regiments here, including one heavy infantry.
If  I march  directly  on Gateway,  I  can also  pick  up the  Seventh
Baranurian Rangers in Cynnyd. This will leave two militia regiments in
Hawksbridge, along with the Eighth  Baranurian Rangers on the Monrodya
boarder and another heavy infantry regiment. That should be plenty for
the Duke."
     "What  can you  do with  four regiments?"  Rien asked.  "It'll be
suicide to confront the Beinison army like that."
     "If there's  been a miracle at  Gateway, they can use  four fresh
regiments. If not, then  I'll make a direct attack on  the rear of the
Beinison  army at  Magnus. Four  regiments aren't  much, but  they can
produce quite a bite."
     "That's a one thousand league march. You won't be there until mid
to late Yuli at the earliest,"  Rien protested. "It may already be too
late now."
     "Faith, Rien. Faith! Where there's no hope, there's no chance for
victory!"
     "I just don't want to see  you die out there, ReVell," Rien said.
"I agree with sacrifice, but not with suicide. If you can't change the
tide of the battle, then there's no reason for you to die in it."
     "This isn't  about life  and death,"  ReVell said,  speaking with
great conviction. "War has never been about life and death. It's about
freedom and rights, because those are the things easiest to lose. This
country has had a good line of kings. Losing that would destroy us..."
     There was a knock at the door.
     "...I intend to go to make a difference, not to die, but if death
is a part of  that, then it's a necessary part. I'm  willing to do all
that I have to."
     The knock sounded again.
     "Come!" the Baron returned to his desk and sat down.
     The door opened  and the two knights that had  been called walked
in.  They both  seemed sleepy,  but  were properly  dressed. Each  man
greeted the Baron and Rien.
     "I think  you'd best be  the one to  tell them, Rien,"  the Baron
said.
     Rien nodded thoughtfully, then looked  up where Kera stood in the
corner, watching  the exchange, all  but forgotten  by the men  in the
room. "Kera, go to bed. I'll see you tomorrow morning."
     She hesitated for  a moment, wanting to hear  the discussion, see
what the final decision would be,  but instead walked over to the door
and pulled  it open. It was  her duty as  Rien's squire to do  what he
said, not  argue or ask  questions. She  had promised him  and herself
that she would see  this through and be the best  squire she could and
eventually become a knight.
     "Kera," Rien's voice stopped her. "Thank you."
     She turned and smiled at him, not sure if he was thanking her for
leaving or  risking everything to find  him to bring him  back. He was
right when he  said that if she  did the right thing  calling him from
his  tribe, it  could only  mean  that the  unthinkable had  happened.
Indeed, it has. These could perhaps be the last days of Baranur.
     Before returning  to her  room, Kera  stopped at  the picturesque
wall sized  map of Baranur  in the great hall  and looked at  the keep
representing  Gateway. It  was maybe  two hundred  fifty leagues  from
Magnus, about as  far as from Sharks' Cove to  Port Sevlyn, a distance
the Beinison army covered in just  a few days forced march. There were
another hundred  or so  leagues between Port  Sevlyn and  Gateway. How
long could that take?  An extra few days? By now it  could all be gone
and Untar the Second could be sitting on Haralan Tallirhan's throne.
     "Beautiful, isn't she?" a guard's  voice startled Kera. He paused
by  her, admiring  the map  she  looked at,  taking a  break from  his
rounds. "Just look at all that!  Our fathers and forefathers took this
land from the wild and the barbarian tribes that roamed it and made it
into what it is now and the Beinison generals think they can just take
it all away. Never! No foreign  sword will control any portion of what
we  are! Baranur  has been  forged in  the fires!  You remember  that,
girl!"
     Kera smiled at him nervously and nodded.
     "Good night," the guard went on, down the great hall.
     How wrong he was, she thought. How much is already lost.
     She returned to her room, lit  a candle and prepared for bed. She
could only  guess at what  was happening in  the library this  late at
night, what kinds  of conclusions would be made,  decisions arrived at
and how different  the world would be tomorrow  morning. Kera wondered
about what had  happened to Adrea and what would  happen to her little
girl, now in the south of Baranur  with Brice, if she were killed. The
first time they met, Adrea accepted  Kera with no questions, going out
of her  way to make  her feel comfortable  and welcome. At  first Kera
suspected it  was because of Rien,  but as time went  on, she realized
that that  was Adrea's  nature. She  was always  kind to  everyone and
always helpful.
     The candle's dying light caught Kera's attention and she wondered
how lost she had become in her  memories and worries. When she lit the
candle, it was a long way from burning out.
     Getting  into bed,  Kera  permitted the  flame  die out,  letting
darkness settle in around her.

                            *          *          *

     Early in the morning, following the directions of one of the keep
guards,  Kera found  Rien  on  top of  the  watch tower,  thoughtfully
looking into the  forest. The guards he had chased  away from the post
walked the  length of the  rampart on  the keep wall,  quietly talking
about having drawn the night shift yet again.
     "Rien?" Kera asked, stopping just short of him.
     It took him unusually long  to respond. He shifted, then motioned
her over, not saying a word.
     "Are you okay? I'm sorry about yesterday."
     He nodded. "ReVell wants me to lead the ranger regiment. He feels
I'm most qualified."
     Kera felt her heart sink. Join the war? "Are you?"
     "I prefer peace," he answered.
     "Are you most qualified? Will you do it?"
     He did  not answer for  a long time,  making Kera suspect  he had
decided to go. She would, of course,  go with him. She was his squire,
after all. What  she did not know  was if that was what  she wanted to
do.
     "At any other time I would have agreed to do what he asked," Rien
said.  "The  arguments presented  were  most  convincing and  while  I
completely disagree with participating in a  war for any reason, he is
absolutely right that unless each of us does his part, we can not call
this land home or this country our own. Every bit of strength we exert
for the crown makes this country that much more powerful."
     Kera felt her heart beat faster. "`Any other time'?" she repeated
his words.
     "Long before  this situation arose, I  made a promise that  I now
have to keep. Adrea never came out  of Sharks' Cove and I have to find
her and get her out."
     "Sharks' Cove?  It's well over  three hundred leagues  behind the
enemy line!" Kera exclaimed.
     "A promise is a promise."
     There was  obviously no talking  him out  of his decision  and no
further arguments would help. "When are we leaving?"
     "We?" It was  the first time this morning he  looked at her. "I'm
going alone. It's too dangerous for you."
     "You can't go alone! You'll need help. And she's my friend, too!"
Kera did  not really  want to  go, but she  would do  it for  Rien and
Adrea. She felt she owed them at least that much.
     "No. I'll  be in the  heart of Beinison held  territory. Besides,
Deven will be with me. I don't want you getting hurt."
     "And you think I want you getting hurt?"
     "Kera," he sighed, "you're my squire. My obligation to you is not
just to make you into a knight. It  is also to teach you and guide you
and  when the  need  is  there, protect  you,  until  you can  protect
yourself. I judge this to be too dangerous for you to come."
     "I  lived my  life  in  the streets  of  Dargon,  taking care  of
myself!" her  voice was filled  with anger. "I  damn well know  how to
take care of myself!"
     "I'm sorry,  but I don't  think you're  quite ready for  war. You
will remain at Valdasly until you hear from me."
     "Rien, please!"
     He shook  his head. "I  don't want you  following me into  a war.
Promise me that you won't do what you did yesterday, no matter what."
     She tried to  stare him down, but  it did not work.  His mind was
made up long before she tried to change it.
     "I'll worry about you."
     "I'd be worried if you wouldn't."
     "When are you leaving?"
     "In a few hours. As soon as  my things are ready. I'll be leaving
Kelsey and my armor here."
     "How will you go?"
     "ReVell is giving me a horse from his stables, a very fast one. I
need to get to Sharks' Cove as quickly as I can."
     Kera put her arms around Rien,  pulling him close to herself. "Be
careful."
     "I will."  She felt his cheek  against her temple. "I  have every
intention to come back."
     "I love you," Kera whispered as a tear ran down her cheek.
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     (C)    Copyright   May,    1993,   DargonZine,    Editor   Dafydd
. All  rights revert to the  authors. These stories
may  not  be  reproduced  or   redistributed  (save  in  the  case  of
reproducing  the whole  'zine  for further  distribution) without  the
express permission of the author involved.







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  D     D A  A R  R G    O  O N N N     Z   I N N N E     || Volume 6
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  D    D  AAAA RRR  G GG O  O N N N   Z     I N N N E     || Issue  2
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--   DargonZine Volume 6, Issue 2        07/28/93          Cir 1151   --
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-- Archives at FTP.EFF.ORG (192.88.144.4) in pub/journals/DargonZine  --
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--                            Contents                                --
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 Guest Commentary             Carlo Samson
 Take from the Tower          Carlo Samson           Firil 30, 1013
 Quest Part II                Dafydd Cyhoeddwr       Ober, 1013
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1                        Guest Commentary:
                         Startled Birds
                               by
                         Carlo N. Samson


     Greetings all, and  welcome to the second issue of  Volume 6. For
our  new  readers,   the  previous  single-story  issue   was  a  rare
occurrence; sometimes  a story is  written that simply can't  be split
into convenient installments.
     I'm sure some  of you are wondering about the  long time lapse in
between volumes. This is due in part  to the fact that over the years,
several authors have moved/graduated/lost net  access, and we are once
again  looking for  new  people  to join  the  Dargon Project.  Please
contact the editor (Dafydd, white@duvm.bitnet) if you are interested.
     Last year about this time I had the opportunity to meet in person
David "Orny"  Liscomb (founder of  _FSFNet_ and creator of  the Dargon
Project),  as  well as  fellow  Dargon  authors  Rich Jervis  and  Max
Khaytsus. Interesting  guys, all of them  (be sure to say  'hi' if you
meet them on the net!).
     Anyway,  in this  issue we  have the  long-awaited conclusion  of
Dafydd's story  "Quest" (Part 1  of which appeared in  _FSFNet_ Volume
10, Number 3),  and a story from  yours truly which provides  a bit of
background to some of my earlier works.
     As for upcoming issues, we have  several War stories in the pipe,
a couple  of works by  new authors, and  a new cycle  of Brynna/Cydric
adventures. Also, back issues of  _FSFNet_ are available from the same
archive site as _DargonZine._
     So keep it here, tell your friends about us, and e-mail to Dafydd
(that  address again:  white@duvm.bitnet)  if you  want  to write  for
Dargon!
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1                         Take from the Tower
                                 by
                           Carlo N. Samson

(Author's  note: The following story takes  place about a year  before
the start of the Baranur-Beinison war.)


QUIASHRION WOODS: Firil 30, 1013

     The mid-afternoon sunlight filtered  down through the tall trees,
dappling  the forest  floor as  Berk  tramped along  the narrow  path,
softly whistling  an old drinking song.  The sound of a  snapping twig
and a muffled curse caused him to  turn around just in time to see his
friend Kintrell stumble and fall to the moist ground.
     "What happened there,  Trell? Did a tree up and  trip you again?"
Berk said  with a  grin as he  extended a strong  hand to  his younger
companion.
     Kintrell struggled with his pack  as levered himself up to accept
Berk's  assistance. "I--I  think  I saw  a rat,"  he  stammered as  he
regained his footing.
     "Wouldn't surprise  me," Berk  said, casually scanning  the dense
forest that surrounded them. "They say  that the wizard kept a pack of
crazed killer rats, which of course have now escaped."
     Kintrell's  eyes widened,  but he  kept a  calm expression  as he
brushed a leaf out of his unkempt hair. "You think I'm afraid of rats?
I'm not, you know."
     Berk gave a short laugh. "I know. It's the mice that really scare
you, eh?"  He shifted his rucksack  to a more comfortable  position on
his wide  shoulders and continued  walking. But the thirty-  five year
old adventurer understood  his friend's nervousness, for  the patch of
woodlands they  were now in  had a somewhat sinister  reputation among
the local countryfolk.  Stories were told of a  reclusive wizard named
Tarlada who  built a great green  tower called Glasmelyn Llaw  deep in
the heart  of the forest  south of a town  called Dargon. It  was also
said that those who ventured too close to the wizard's home were never
seen again.
     Berk was sure that most of the tales were exaggerated, but didn't
exactly  discount  them, either.  But  he  never seriously  considered
trying to find the  tower until almost two weeks ago,  when he heard a
rumor that Tarlada was finally dead. Upon making further inquiries, he
learned that a pair of adventurers--a  woman in a silver half-mask and
a brooding young  mage--had invaded the green tower to  rescue a gypsy
woman whom the wizard had taken.
     This  news had  served to  pique Berk's  interest. It  was common
knowledge  that wizards,  especially reclusive  ones, usually  amassed
great stores of wealth, and the thought of an unguarded wizard's tower
(ripe for  the plundering) very  much excited  him. He was  once again
running low on funds, his last job  having come a month ago as a hired
sword on a caravan run from Magnus.
     Berk then  spent the next  few days  trying to convince  his most
trusted friends  to join him  in an expedition  to the tower.  None of
them wished to do  so, as they all believed that  the wizard was still
very much alive  and would horribly torture anyone  who dared approach
his forest retreat. In the end  he was only able to persuade Kintrell,
a longtime friend  and aspiring thief, to accompany  him by mentioning
that  the wizard  would  surely have  more  than a  few  books in  his
possession.  Although  Kintrell  was  illiterate, the  young  man  was
fascinated  with books  and took  every opportunity  to try  and teach
himself how to read.
     After  a  few more  days  spent  interviewing various  people  to
determine  the  most  probable   location  of  Tarlada's  tower,  Berk
encountered  an  old  man  who  was  able  to  provide  him  with  the
information he sought. Then, after  buying provisions for the journey,
he and Kintrell  headed south out of Dargon into  the forestland where
the wizard was said to have lived.
     Kintrell scrambled to keep pace with Berk. A drop of sweat beaded
off the  young thief's chin and  soaked into the stained  maroon tunic
that hung  loosely on  his skinny  frame. "What kind  of books  do you
think the wizard has?" he asked.
     Berk, who  had heard  this question  several times  since leaving
Dargon, rubbed the back of his  neck and replied, "I keep telling you,
Trell,  wizards have  lots of  books. Mostly  spell books,  that's for
certain. Okay?"
     "Do you think he'll have one that can make me know how to read?"
     "Well,  we won't  know  that  until we  get  there, right?"  Berk
replied  heavily, shaking  his head.  They had  been walking  for what
seemed like  hours after  leaving their horses  when the  trail became
impassable for the  animals, and his patience was  growing thinner the
more weary he became.
     After  a few  moments Kintrell  asked, "Do  you think  the wizard
really is dead?"
     Berk had also heard this question  several times. He was about to
snap back an  answer, when he realized that Kintrell  had never really
done anything potentially life-threatening in his twenty- three years,
and was undoubtedly feeling apprehensive.  He reached down the neck of
his brown  tunic and  brought out  the object that  hung on  a leather
thong. "Remember what this is for?"
     Kintrell looked at the crystal-and-silver pendant. "Sure, it's to
tell us if  there's bad magic around." He paused  a moment in thought,
then said, "But  what if the wizard's  not evil? I mean,  what if he's
good, but just doesn't want us to bother him?"
     Berk let  the pendant drop  to his chest  and put his  arm around
Kintrell. "Trell,  my simple-minded friend,  think for a  moment about
why we're in  this gods-cursed forest. The wizard is  dead, right? And
when  someone is  dead, they  can't hurt  those of  us who  are alive,
right?"
     "Yes, but--"
     "Ghosts are not real, Trell."
     "I--I know, but if he's dead, why did you buy the pendant?"
     Berk smiled. Kintrell  was showing signs of  original thought. "A
simple precaution," he replied. "In ventures like these, it's best not
to leave some things to chance."
     They walked  along for  another hour  or so,  pausing once  for a
brief rest.  The forest was calm  and quiet, with only  the occasional
birdcall or rustle in the bushes to break the silence. Soon, the trail
ended in a large clearing where  stood the fabled Glasmelyn Llaw. Berk
and Kintrell stopped and stood in silent amazement at the great tower,
which seemed to be constructed of  a single piece of green crystalline
stone. Five slender turrets rose to various heights from points on the
tower's circumference, giving the structure  the appearance of a giant
green hand thrusting upwards from the forest floor.
     "So this is  where the wizard lives,"  whispered Kintrell, gazing
up at  the dark windows  slits. A shiver raced  down his spine  at the
thought that some unseen lurker could be watching them from inside.
     "Used to live," said Berk, drawing  his sword. He glanced down at
the pendant and  was reassured when he saw that  the crystal was dark.
"Come on. It doesn't look like anyone's home."
     The pair advanced across the  clearing and paused at the entrance
to the  tower. The door was  missing, and there appeared  to be scorch
marks around the frame.  The hinges of the door looked  as if they had
been melted.
     Kintrell unhitched  his mace  from his belt.  "What do  you think
happened here?" he asked.
     "Exactly  what   it  looks  like  happened,"   Berk  replied.  He
cautiously made his way into what  he assumed was the main living area
of  the tower--or  used  to be,  he corrected  himself.  The room  was
completely burned out; all that remained were brittle piles of charred
wood and a layer of ash covering  the floor. He poked at a nearby pile
with  the tip  of his  sword;  moving aside  some of  the larger  wood
fragments, he uncovered the twisted remains of a large chandelier.
     Kintrell wandered over to the side  of the room and squatted next
to the remnants of a large  bookshelf. He stirred the burned wood with
the head of his  mace; suddenly, there was a loud  screech as the wood
pile erupted  in a flurry  of motion. He  cried out and  flung himself
backwards. Berk whirled around in time  to see a bird explode from the
pile and wing it's way out the door.
     Kintrell lay gasping, clutching his  heart. Berk reached down and
hauled the young man to his feet.  "What's the matter with you? It was
only a wood grouse!"
     "S-sorry, Berk, it just surprised me, is all," Kintrell panted.
     "Well, come on,  then. Doesn't look as if  anything survived down
here--let's hope the fire didn't spread any farther."
     The two made their way to the back of the room and up a flight of
stone  steps; Berk  noted with  satisfaction  that there  was no  fire
damage in evidence. Almost halfway to the next floor, his foot slipped
on something and he toppled forward. He  let out a string of curses as
he pushed himself back to his feet.
     "What happened?"  Kintrell asked.  Berk ignored  him as  he knelt
down to examine the step he had  slipped on. It appeared to be covered
with a grey  powdery substance; he took a pinch  between his thumb and
forefinger and  rubbed lightly. "Feels like  ash," he said. He  took a
quick  sniff of  the  powder and  frowned. "But  it's  not from  wood.
There's a whole  mess of it here." He straightened  up and scrutinized
the walls; they were clean and unmarked.
     "So what do you think it is?" asked Kintrell.
     "I don't know;  the fire didn't get  up this far, so  it can't be
from burning." Berk  picked up his sword and  carefully stepped around
the ash pile. "Come on--and watch yourself."
     The  second floor  was apparently  a display  room. A  panoply of
armor and edged weapons occupied a third of the wall space, while maps
of various kingdoms and tapestries took up the rest.
     "Would you look  at this, Trell--this is what we  came for!" Berk
said with  delight. "Now, what  we're looking for are  valuable things
that we can carry and sell easily. You understand what I mean?"
     "Sure,  Berk,"  replied   Kintrell.  "Nothing  heavy--like  those
shields, or those big swords, right?"
     "Right. Now  let's get  to it."  Berk shrugged  off his  pack and
pulled out a large canvas bag;  Kintrell did likewise. Berk moved over
to a  display case holding  an assortment of silver  tankards; finding
the door  locked, he  smashed the  glass with the  hilt of  his sword.
Grinning, he began stuffing the tankards into the bag.
     After they had  ransacked the room, the pair  explored the turret
for that  floor. It  turned out  to be a  library, much  to Kintrell's
delight.
     "Ol's balls," the young thief  murmured, gazing at the shelves of
books and scrolls. "You think these are his magic books?"
     "Probably," Berk  said. Ignoring the shelves,  he began rummaging
through the  drawers of the  desk in the  middle of the  room. Finding
only a sheaf of  parchment and a stick of sealing  wax, he turned away
from the desk  and saw with horror that Kintrell  was happily tumbling
the books off the shelves into his bag.
     "What in  Xothar's name  do you think  you're doing?"  he yelled,
grabbing Kintrell's arm.
     The young man  looked at him fearfully. "Y-you said  I could keep
any books we found!"
     "I know--but  you can't take ALL  of them! We have  to leave room
for the valuable stuff."
     "But books *are* valuable!"
     Berk thrust  Kintrell away from  him. "Look, just take  the books
out and leave them here. All right?"
     "But, Berk--"
     "DO IT!"
     Kintrell winced  and began to  comply. Berk looked at  his friend
and felt  a sudden stab of  guilt. He sighed heavily,  then said, "All
right, Trell,  all right. You  can take one, and  if we have  any room
left over, you can come back and get a few more. Okay?"
     Kintrell brightened. "Okay, Berk!"
     "Great. Just meet me on the  next floor." Berk shouldered his bag
and left the room.
     Kintrell continued taking books out  of the bag, and waited until
he heard  Berk's heavy  bootsteps echo on  the steps  before rummaging
around  to see  which book  was worth  keeping. Most  of the  tomes he
examined had elaborately illuminated  pages and neatly flowing script;
one, however, was written with strange blocklike letters and contained
no decoration. He looked at the  book's leatherbound cover and ran his
finger across a  large gold symbol in the center.  Just then, he heard
Berk bellow for him to hurry up. Making his decision, Kintrell stuffed
the tome into his bag and scurried down the stairs.

     Subsequent  floors  and  turrets  yielded items  more  to  Berk's
liking. His bag overflowed with silver candlesticks, ivory statuettes,
small gemstones, and  the like. After a while, the  two paused briefly
for  a meal,  eating on  gold plates  and drinking  from fine  crystal
goblets. By late afternoon, they  had filled their bags and backpacks,
and had to fashion  new bags using sheets from off the  beds in one of
the sleeping rooms  they found. Berk continually  checked his pendant,
even  though he  was certain  that the  tower was  indeed free  of the
wizard. He  also kept finding mysterious  piles of ash on  the various
levels of the tower, but soon  ceased wondering about their origin the
farther up they progressed.
     Eventually, they  reached the top  of the fifth turret.  The room
was completely  dark, prompting Berk  to instruct Kintrell to  light a
torch. In the flickering firelight, the pair saw that the walls of the
room were covered with  a heavy black cloth. Next to  the wall stood a
long low table  draped with a silver  cloth, and in the  center of the
room stood a massive table, on which was a dark cube- shaped object.
     "This was probably  the wizard's conjuring room,"  mused Berk. He
eyed the object on the table; Kintrell  moved to stand next to him and
wondered aloud what the object could be.
     "I'm not entirely sure," Berk replied. Curious, he unsheathed his
sword and was about to poke  the cube-shaped thing when Kintrell cried
out, "No, don't!"
     "What, Trell?"
     "I-I don't think you should do that, Berk."
     "Why not? Think it's evil or something?"
     "It-it .  . .  " Kintrell  shivered and  cast his  eyes nervously
around the room. "I think we should leave this place."
     "All  right, Trell,  no  need  to wet  yourself,"  Berk said.  He
sheathed his sword, glancing at his  pendant as he did so. The crystal
was still dark, as  it had been ever since they  entered the tower. It
was  supposed to  glow in  the presence  of hostile  magic, or  so the
jeweller he  bought it  from claimed. Then  again, perhaps  there were
some forms of evil too subtle to be detected by magical means.
     A quick search of the  room revealed nothing special. Berk ripped
down the  dark heavy  cloth, which  served merely  to block  the light
coming in  from the  window. Satisfied  that there  was nothing  to be
gained in  this room, he  indicated to Kintrell  that he was  ready to
leave.
     The young  thief was staring out  the slitted window next  to the
table by the  wall, gazing out over the woodlands.  At Berk's call, he
turned and said, "This is the last room, so that means we're finished,
right?"
     Berk nodded. "Not  a bad haul, I'd say! Get  your stuff and let's
leave."
     Kintrell reached down  and picked up his  makeshift treasure bag,
having left  the backpack  and canvas  bag on  the previous  level. It
resisted his pull;  he yanked harder, but the bag  remained fast. With
all his might  he gave the bag  one final yank; the  low table flipped
over and Kintrell  found himself tumbling backwards into  the table in
the center  of the room. Berk  dropped his bag and  started forward to
try and catch him, but was  too late to prevent Kintrell from slamming
down atop  the dark cube.  There was  a crunching sound,  and Kintrell
screamed as he felt shards of the object dig into his back.
     "Trell!"  Berk shouted  as he  raced to  aid his  companion. "Are
you--" His  words were cut  off by a  thin, shrill wail  that suddenly
pierced the  air, accompanied  by a  burst of  bright blue  light that
flared out from underneath Kintrell, where the dark cube had been.
     Berk helped  his friend  off the table.  Kintrell moaned  as Berk
removed pieces of  what looked like charred wood from  the young man's
back. Just then, another wail split  the air; moments later, a violent
tremor  rippled through  the tower.  The two  adventurers were  thrown
against the  wall. Berk reached  out to steady Kintrell,  but suddenly
clutched  at his  head as  a searing  pain shot  through his  mind. It
lasted for only a second; Berk dropped his arms and saw Kintrell still
holding his head.
     "Trell, are  you okay?" Berk asked  as he shook the  young man by
the shoulders.
     "W-what's happening, Berk?" Kintrell  stammered, his eyes full of
fear.
     "I don't know,  Trell, but we're getting out of  here right now."
Berk picked  up his  bag and  ushered Kintrell ahead  of him  down the
steps. They hadn't  gotten far when the tower  shuddered violently for
the second time.  A bolt of pain hammered hard  into Berk's brain, but
this time did not  subside. He let out a cry and  pounded at the wall,
squeezing  his  eyes   tightly  shut.  He  drew  a   deep  breath  and
concentrated, fighting  back against the  mental agony. He  opened his
eyes and saw Kintrell hunched up against the wall.
     "Let's go, boy!" he shouted through gritted teeth.
     "It hurts, Berk, it hurts!" Kintrell wailed.
     "Come ON, damn it!" Berk growled, pulling the young man along.
     The tower trembled again as they emerged from the turret onto the
fifth level,  and the pair were  thrown to the floor.  Kintrell landed
next to  his canvas  bag, which  had tipped over  and spilled  out its
contents.  Concentrating against  the haze  of pain  that clouded  his
mind, Kintrell focused and saw the book he had taken from the library.
He reached out and clutched it to his chest, just as he felt Berk pull
him to his feet. As he stumbled  along in front of his friend, he felt
a stiffness begin to creep into his arms. His breath started coming in
short, ragged gasps. The pain in his mind was unrelenting.
     By the  time they made  their way down  to the second  level, the
tower's shuddering  had become  severe enough to  cause cracks  in the
walls  and floor.  Kintrell could  barely move  his legs.  He stopped,
causing Berk to stumble into him.
     "Keep moving, damn you! We've got to keep moving!" Berk screamed.
     "I-I can't!"  Kintrell sobbed. Berk  shoved him hard  and shouted
for him  to get going.  Kintrell started  crying openly as  he lurched
into motion.
     They finally  made it  out of  the tower  and blundered  down the
forest trail.  The pain  had lessened somewhat,  but the  stiffness in
their joints  had become unbearable.  Still, Berk kept them  moving as
fast as they were able.
     Kintrell's legs  felt like solid  stone. His arms had  long since
frozen around the leatherbound book. He desperately wanted to stop and
rest,  but Berk  was cursing  like  a madman  for him  to keep  going.
Eventually,  Kintrell's legs  gave out  and he  crashed to  the forest
floor. He saw Berk stumble a few  steps more, then fall heavily to the
ground. Kintrell tried to will himself into motion, but found that his
body no longer  obeyed him. His arms were dead,  useless, and he found
that he could no longer even  feel the book against his chest. _What's
happening  to me?_  he  tried  to scream,  but  his  lips were  locked
together. The  last vestiges of  feeling left  his body, and  soon his
eyes  closed  of  their  own  volition. In  a  panic,  Kintrell  tried
thrashing about, but it was as if  he were encased in stone, or buried
alive in cold, hard  dirt. _Help me! Help me! OH BY  ALL THE GODS THAT
EVER LIVED, *HELP ME*!!!_
     Mercifully, his mind ceased functioning not long afterwards.

     A few days later, Jongur the  Hermit was chasing a rabbit through
the forest  when he came upon  the petrified corpses in  the middle of
the trail. With  a gasp of horror  he dropped his sling  fled from the
scene, eyes  wide with  fright. He  stood panting  against a  tree for
several minutes, until his curiosity  overcame his fear. He crept back
to the scene and peered at the  bodies from behind a bush. They looked
very much like statues hewn from  a flaky light-grey stone; indeed, he
might have assumed that  that was the case, were it  not for the items
they held. One man lay on his  side, clutching a bulging bag made of a
heavy blue  cloth; the other lay  on his back, an  expression of sheer
terror frozen on his face, clasping  a large book to his chest. Jongur
estimated  that they  had not  been  there for  very long,  as he  had
crossed this trail seven days ago.
     The  hermit sat  on the  ground, considering  the bodies.  With a
shock he remembered that he was near the old wizard's green tower. For
as long as he  had lived in the woods, the area  around the tower felt
foreboding  and sinister,  as  if  some unseen  force  wished to  keep
everyone  away. Then,  of course,  there were  the strange  vines that
seemed  to  have  a life  of  their  own  and  a singular  purpose  to
discourage people from approaching too  closely. Jongur had learned to
avoid the  tower, until one  day not long ago  when he pursued  a deer
into the tower's sphere of influence.  The vines were gone, as well as
the sense of the unseen presence.  He assumed that the wizard had died
at last, and with him whatever magic  he had used to ward his home. He
found that  the game in  the tower area  was more plentiful  than that
patch of woods  around his hovel, most likely  because hunters avoided
the tower as well.
     But now,  Jongur feared that the  wizard was not truly  dead, and
had cursed these  two for plundering the tower. The  hermit had always
assumed  that if  he  did  not bother  the  wizard,  the wizard  would
likewise  leave  him alone.  But  with  this  direct evidence  of  the
wizard's apparent malice, he wasn't so sure. He no longer felt safe in
these woods; it was probably best that he leave and find another place
to live. But where?  Back in the town? He shook his  head sadly at the
memories: the fire,  his family's death, the months of  begging on the
street, the constant fear of being  attacked by other beggars for what
he managed to  collect. No, he couldn't go back,  yet neither could he
continue to live here. Unless....
     Jongur  eyed the  blue  bag that  the man  nearest  to him  held.
Perhaps he had gotten away with some of the wizard's wealth? Hope rose
in his  chest. He unsheathed  his knife and  slowly crept over  to the
man. A  few pokes on  the man's arm with  the knife caused  small grey
bits to  flake off. Satisfied  that the  man was completely  inert, he
pulled on the bag, but it remained  firmly in the man's grasp. He then
cut a slit in  the bag and ripped it open.  Various objects of silver,
crystal, and gold spilled out onto the ground. Jongur let out a cry of
delight; if he could sell these, he  would be a rich man and could try
to start  his life  over again. His  mind raced with  plans on  how to
carry the wealth  back to his home,  and how best to  go about selling
them.
     He stuffed as much as he could  into the burlap sack that he used
to carry home his kills. He was about to leave when he caught sight of
the book the other man held. He went over and pulled the book out from
under the man's arms, accidentally breaking  one of them off as he did
so. The strange  gold symbol on the cover of  the book fascinated him;
whatever the  book was  about, he  was certain it  would fetch  a good
price. He tucked the tome under his arm and hurried home.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                              Quest
                        by Dafydd Cyhoeddwr
                    b.c.k.a.

                              Recap

     A young man named Dyalar living in Trasath - a very small village
which  doesn't seem  normal even  to the  inexperienced youth  who has
lived there all  his life - is  apprenticed at age 14 to  his uncle, a
blacksmith named Lavran whose shop is in the City of Dargon.
     The lad goes to Dargon  and gradually learns smith-craft from his
Uncle Lavran.  At age  16, after a  hearty celebration  of Midsummer's
day, he is lured from his bed by  a falling star and dreams of what he
might do with a lump of the fabled sky-iron. He finds the fallen star,
as well as  two religious symbols - an oak-  branch shaped from amber,
and a strange  silver-like chalice. From that day, he  seems to gain a
'guardian angel'  which keeps  him out of  serious harm.  Several more
years pass.
     And, just a few weeks  before King Haralan's 36th birthday Dyalar
dreams that he takes his three  treasures and forges a sword from them
with the help of an unseen entity.  As he dreams that he is taking the
rosy-gold sword from its final cooling bath, he awakes to find that it
was not  a dream  and that  he now  has a  Quest to  complete. Without
telling anyone, he sets out upon it.

                               Part 2

     I  curled myself  up as  small as  possible in  the corner  of an
abandoned but not ruined woodland chapel.  I covered myself as best as
I could with my blankets as well  as branches and leaves I had brought
in when I'd arrived.  I was still a little cold and I  knew I would be
colder when  the small fire went  out, but the weather  wasn't yet bad
enough to be dangerous. Still, as I  drifted off to sleep I hoped that
I would  get some  kind of  direction on my  quest soon  - I  had been
wandering all but aimlessly for the past three days and it was getting
too late in the season to be so  deep in the forest alone and far from
any civilization.
     I dreamed the Dream that night. Confusion, fear, struggle, a ring
of dancing figures, a knife, pain - and I woke, sitting up and gasping
at the pain  in my chest, barely  noticing the cold of  the chapel. It
took me a few minutes to calm down, but soon I was trying to rearrange
my 'nest', which had been scattered by my thrashing. I was confused by
the intensity of the Dream - normally  by this time of year, the Dream
only produced a vague sense of unease and a slight twinge in my chest,
and it rarely even woke me up.
     Once I  was ready  again for  sleep, it came  swiftly and  with a
strong scent  of roses.  I fell immediately  into dreaming  again, but
this time  I saw only  a familiar village  square and no  nightmare. A
voice that  was ghostly  even for  a dream seemed  to say,  'Return to
Trasath - your Quest leads homeward...'  and I slipped too deeply into
sleep to remember what further I may have dreamed.

     Seven years after I left it, and  two days after the night in the
chapel,  I rode  back into  Trasath. I  hadn't even  realized that  my
'aimless' wandering had in fact been leading me in the direction of my
home village. But if I hadn't stumbled  upon a trail just where it was
marked by a  Fretheod obelisk that had been used  as a mile-marker and
sign-post to  Trasath (among other villages,  including Dargon itself)
the  morning  after my  dream-message  in  the  chapel, I  might  have
wandered in the woods for far longer than two days.
     Trasath seemed so  tiny to me now! After the  vastness of Dargon,
my home village  was but a clustering of houses  about a central well,
with the single  inn looking even smaller than my  uncle's house. As I
rode into  the central  square, the  few people  out and  about looked
askance at me,  and no one hailed  me though I saw  recognition in the
eyes of  a few. I  turned my  horse down one  of the three  short side
streets  the  village  boasted  to  my  father's  house,  feeling  the
suspicious stares biting into my back as I rode.
     Father's house hadn't changed much save  that it seemed a bit run
down. I dismounted and  tied my horse's reins to the  ring by the door
and knocked.  I was fairly sure  he would be  home as it was  close to
sundown, and  in any case  mother would be  there. After a  short wait
during which  I knocked two more  times, the door opened  slowly and I
laid eyes on my Father.
     He was  almost as much  changed as  my perception of  Trasath had
been. He seemed shorter, older, thinner, and much more worry-worn. His
hair had gone streaky-grey, and his  face bore lines too deeply etched
for one who was  not ancient. He stared at me for  a moment, then said
shakily, "Son? Dyalar?"
     He opened his arms and we embraced, hugging fiercely and slapping
backs in our  love and happiness at seeing each  the other again. When
we finally  broke apart, it  seemed as if much  of the worry  and fear
that had been in his face was gone and he stood up straight and proud,
looking at me up  and down. "Come in, come in son.  I was just sitting
down to  dinner -  join me  and tell  me about  Dargon and  why you're
here."
     I followed  him into the  house, idly noting the  slightly untidy
look of the front room. Something  didn't seem right there - something
was  missing. I  knew that  mother would  never have  allowed even  so
slight a degree of disorder creep into her house. As we crossed to the
dining room,  I asked,  "Father, is mother  away visiting  someone? It
just looks like no one has cleaned in here in a while."
     He stopped  stock still, and  all the improvement in  his bearing
that seeing me  had produced now vanished like a  spring frost beneath
the first rays of  the sun. He sat down on the  nearest chair and drew
me  down into  the one  next to  it. "So,  Lavran didn't  tell you.  I
thought he wouldn't, but I forgot in the joy of seeing you again. Son,
your mother  has been  dead these past  six years. It  was -  a fever,
caught the winter after you left.  The village healer could do nothing
for it. She...she didn't suffer..."
     He broke off, consumed by  his remembered grief. I, too, grieved.
I was  shocked to  hear that mother  was dead, and  even more  so that
Uncle had  known but not  told me. I  would have thought  nothing more
about the manner of mother's death had not the familiar scent of roses
intruded into  the grief father and  I were sharing, and  a sense that
father was  not being fully  truthful with me grew  in the back  of my
mind.  The feeling  didn't indicate  malice, but  rather fear,  and it
seemed to have something to do with my quest.
     We eventually  comforted each other sufficiently  to have dinner,
and we talked about  what I had been doing and what  he had been doing
but  not in  depth. After  catching each  other up  in a  general way,
father said he had to get some sleep as he had work to do early in the
morning, but he promised  to leave work as soon as he  was able and we
would talk more then.
     I was given my old room to stay in, though it took a while to get
it cleaned up  and ready to be  lived in even for a  night. Finally it
was ready, and I sank into my old  bed that was a little too short for
my adult body and fell asleep.
     When I  began to  dream, it was  very much like  the night  I had
forged the sword - everything seemed  real but even though I was doing
it there  seemed to be something  between the 'me' that  was observing
and the 'me' that was doing. In my dream (which I knew probably wasn't
actually a dream),  I got out of bed and  dressed warmly. Then, taking
the sword out of its makeshift scabbard, I made my way silently out of
the house and to  the small paddock where I had put  up my horse after
dinner. I  rode cautiously to the  farmhouse of a man  named Arndil. I
dismounted a short distance from the  house and walked the rest of the
way silently. As I drew nearer and nearer the house, my sword began to
glow faintly silver. I crept into the  house and to Arndil's room - he
had never been married as far as I  knew, and he seemed to be alone in
the house.
     As I stood  beside Arndil's bed looking down at  him, I felt hate
rise up in me. I saw him in a memory that was not my own, but that was
as vivid as if  it must be something I had seen or  done. I saw Arndil
dancing in a ring with seven  other men, all naked, all chanting, with
"myself" bound  and helpless  at the center.  Only Arndil  was sharply
enough defined in  my dream-memory to recognize - who  the other seven
were I  did not know.  All eight were  chanting dark and  evil chants,
invoking someone or  something named 'Hanarl, Savior  of Trasath', and
intoning that I must be sacrificed to keep the village safe.
     The memory faded enough that I again  saw Arndil in his bed in my
dream. Hatred  flooded my  body, and  I raised my  sword high  over my
head, taking a two- handed grip on the barely-long-enough hilt. I knew
that the hate in my body wasn't my own, but belonged to whomever owned
that memory, and that person or thing had total control of me.
     The sword descended, driven by  my muscles hardened by long hours
at the forge  swinging heavy hammers and by the  will of my possessor,
aimed at the totally unprotected and unsuspecting body of the sleeping
Arndil - or  so I thought. The  blade met an obstruction  in clear air
about 6 inches from the sleeping body with a jar that rattled my teeth
but made no noise.
     I was startled by the unseen barrier but my puppeteer wasn't. The
blade hadn't  slid from the barrier  like it might have  from a curved
metal shield;  it seemed to  have bit into  the resistance like  an ax
into a log. My muscles strained  and the blade sank slowly against the
resistance. As  it bit deeper  and deeper, the  sword began to  glow a
fierce  gold  unlike  its  previous subdued  silver  radiance,  and  I
marveled to see the invisible shield-like thing protecting Arndil from
the blade begin to glow reddish-white,  more red near the cloven part,
revealing the shape of the protection.
     The thing  that possessed  me continued to  struggle to  force my
blade through  Arndil's protection, the farmer/priest  still sleeping,
blissfully  unaware  of  his  danger. Inch  by  fractional  inch,  the
golden-glowing  blade  neared  Arndil's  flesh and  finally,  my  body
sweating with  the effort, the keen  edge reached its target  and drew
blood from Arndil's arm.
     The instant  that blood was  drawn, the protection  collapsed and
Arndil awoke, gasping  in startled fear. He  seemed totally unprepared
for an attack,  both mentally and physically, but  my puppeteer didn't
give him time to gather himself  together. The sword was already drawn
back over my  shoulder, and after my stance was  adjusted slightly, it
was swung again. It connected  with Arndil's outstretched arm with all
the force my body could muster and sheared clean through it, coming to
rest  deep within  Arndil's chest  and killing  him cleanly.  But that
wasn't enough for my possessor. It  forced my body to continue to hack
and  chop,  rendering  the  man  into so  much  meat  and  blood,  and
continuing when there  was no more Arndil to carve  by hacking his bed
into flinders as well.
     Finally, the hatred within me cooled,  and the strain of what had
been done to  me dulled even my  dream perceptions so that  I was just
barely aware  of being guided  back to my horse,  and then back  to my
Father's house and my bed.
     My  exhaustion kept  me  asleep  well into  the  morning. When  I
finally awoke, my  hopes (faint, at best) that the  past night's dream
had been  just that  were dashed  when I saw  the rust-brown  of dried
blood on  my clothes  (not the  ones I  had worn  to bed,  either), my
sheets, and my skin. My golden sword  was on the floor beside the bed,
and while it wasn't stained, the floorboards around it were.
     It took me a  while to drag myself out of bed.  Up 'till the past
night, the strangenesses in my life had been good, interesting things:
being dragged out into the forest  by a falling star and finding three
treasures instead of one; my 'guardian  spirit' keeping me safe for my
destiny; and the 'presence' that had  helped me forge my golden sword.
But  now those  strangenesses had  turned sinister  and ugly  with the
carnage it seemed all  but certain I had been forced  to commit. I was
heartsick, but I didn't want my  father to know. I hardened my resolve
and began  to clean myself and  my room before leaving  Trasath and my
'quest' behind.
     Dried blood is not  easy to get out of cloth,  and even harder to
get out of floorboards, but I  succeeded. After packing my things, few
as they were,  I checked once more  to be sure that no  evidence of my
dream-walk remained  to incriminate my  Father, I saddled up  Sock and
rode for Dargon.
     The trail took me through the village again, and if I had doubted
that I  had really killed Arndil  despite the blood on  my clothes and
person  that morning,  I was  made sure  that someone  had killed  the
farmer as I rode through the central  square of my former home. I only
heard bits and pieces of other conversations, as no one seemed to take
much notice  of me, but  the topic  of everyone's discussions  was the
mysterious  and messy  death of  Arndil. I  was sure  that some  of my
former friends were eyeing me with suspicion even though I had bundled
the golden sword  in some blankets tied behind my  saddle. And I could
feel every pair  of eyes in my  back as I left Trasath,  for good this
time.
     But, as I rode down the main trail toward Dargon, my vision began
to cloud. The Dream,  which had rarely come to me  in the daytime, and
then only on MidSummer's Day itself, now obscured my perceptions and I
noticed the resemblance between my nightmare-Dream and the memory that
had preceded the carnage last night. In  fact, my Dream seemed to be a
distorted shadow  of the memory of  the person who had  controlled me!
The Dream intensified  - the confusion, the fear,  the pain...and then
it was gone, and I found myself riding up to my Father's door.
     I tried to leave Trasath for the  rest of the morning and most of
the  afternoon,  but  I  could  not.  Always  the  Dream  would  come,
disorienting me  and removing me from  control of my horse,  Sock. And
when the Dream faded away, I would  be back at my Father's door or, as
in the last few tries, in  the paddock behind Father's house beginning
to strip  Sock of  my equipment.  Finally, I  gave up  in despair  - I
couldn't leave Trasath of my own accord.
     I  wasn't very  good company  for  my Father  that afternoon  and
evening. He  could tell  I was  depressed, and maybe  even that  I was
afraid of something.  But, I couldn't tell him what  was going on. Not
that I couldn't have - nothing was  keeping me from it, unlike my wish
to leave Trasath -  but I wasn't sure enough of  him and the situation
in the village to fully trust anyone with what was happening to me. If
Uncle Lavran were here, or maybe  even Leriel...I could have talked to
either one of  them. But I just  wasn't close enough to my  Father - I
didn't  know him,  had  never  known him  well  enough  to talk  about
something like this.
     We both decided to retire early. I  went to my room, but I didn't
want to sleep.  I lay on the bed  and wished with all my  might that I
wouldn't go out dream- walking again, or that if I was dragged from my
bed that the thing controlling me  would explain what was going on and
why I  was part  of it.  Somewhere in  the middle  of my  wishing, and
sometime before  my exhaustion forced me  where I didn't want  to go -
into sleep - I  made up my mind that if I did  go dream-walking, and I
didn't learn why, that I would take steps to make sure that I wouldn't
be used any further.
     This time my dream-walking didn't  intrude into my sleep until my
body was  dismounting Sock at the  gate of a family  named Harnolt. As
soon  as I  realized  that  this wasn't  an  ordinary  dream, I  began
fighting, but it was no use. As my body was carried forward cautiously
to the front door of the moderate farm house, my sword began to glow a
deep, rich red which seemed to throw  a shell around me. Somehow I was
made aware that this glow, like the  others, had a function - the deep
red was to shield me from sight until I had reached my goal.
     I entered the house silently  and paced through the rooms surely,
as if I had no doubt of  my destination. I passed through the rooms of
the children, then  their parents, all unseen, and  finally stopped in
the room  of Brenn Harnolt, grandfather  to the children in  the other
room, father to the man who now ran the farm.
     Once again, the Dream in its pure  form rose up in me. This time,
I recognized only  Brenn in the circle of eight  dancing men, although
one  of the  other  figures was  little  more than  a  moving blot  of
darkness rather than a shadowy blur  and I realized that the blot must
be the deceased  Arndil. I wondered whether this hell  was supposed to
continue  until  all eight  of  the  dancers were  dead  -  but I  was
determined that it wouldn't.
     I tried  to remain  distant from  the hate  and rage  that poured
through  me, called  up  by the  pure  Dream and  the  sight of  Brenn
sleeping there on the bed. My  body wasn't affected by my withdrawal -
it raised the sword and brought it  down with all my might, only to be
stopped  again by  a shield  like the  one that  had tried  to protect
Arndil. As before, the blade began  to glow gold, and the shield began
to glow red in protest as it was slowly riven by the magic forged into
the alloyed sky- iron.
     Soon,  the shield  was thoroughly  pierced, and  first blood  was
drawn. But Brenn seemed more prepared than had Arndil. When the shield
went down and  Brenn woke up, he recovered from  his shock swiftly and
drew  a dagger  from beneath  his pillow.  I guess  that the  death of
Arndil had  forewarned the  rest of  the dancers,  but I  wondered how
Brenn proposed defend himself with a  dagger from someone who had made
mincemeat of Arndil.
     I found out quickly: the dagger  was magic. Brenn was an old man,
with thin,  withered arms and a  skinny, frail body. However,  when my
body took a swing at him with all the strength in my back and legs, he
was able to  catch the blade in  the vee of dagger-blade  and hilt and
the force of my blow was totally  absorbed by his weapon - he probably
didn't even feel the  power my body had put into  it. And, despite age
and fragility,  Brenn had  probably been  a fighter  once, and  he was
still agile  if not  fast -  I was just  a metalsmith  with occasional
dreams of  being a  swordsman. Brenn flicked  my blade  aside (another
magical  property of  his dagger)  and riposted  unexpectedly into  my
stomach.
     Fortunately,  my puppeteer  had  good reflexes  and  I backed  up
enough to turn a possibly fatal stabbing into a shallow wounding. This
only  made my  puppeteer  madder,  and it  began  to  hack and  slash,
attacking mercilessly and untiringly. I had occasion to notice that my
sword was  again glowing red,  its light encompassing the  whole room,
keeping the sounds of our battle from the rest of the house.
     I also  noticed that  every time  my blade  struck the  dagger, a
spark  of  blue   light  was  struck.  It  started   out  very  small,
unnoticeable the first  few times, but it increased  by larger amounts
with each blow. As the spark  grew larger and brighter, I noticed that
Brenn seemed to feel  the shock of the contact of  the blades more and
more. He seemed to know what this  meant well before I did, because he
began to get desperate, making wild moves, throwing things to distract
me, calling out for help. I finally figured out that just as the blade
had sheered through the shielding  that had protected the man earlier,
it was  now somehow canceling  out the magic  in the dagger  little by
little. And  eventually, when my  puppeteer took one last  swing which
was parried frantically by Brenn,  the dagger-blade broke and my blade
carried through and into Brenn's chest.
     This fight had been even worse than  the last one in terms of how
drained I  already felt.  My controller  managed to  force my  body to
mutilate Brenn's  but not to the  extent it had Arndil's,  and it left
the rest of the  room intact. I lost awareness even  before I had left
the  house, hoping  that my  puppeteer  could get  me home  in such  a
condition.
     It was past noon  when I woke, and even though  that meant that I
had slept for almost  half a day, I was still tired  and achy from the
exertions I  had been forced  through in  the night. Again,  there was
blood everywhere  - and this  time, some of it  was mine. But,  when I
bent to examine  the wound that Brenn  had given me, I  was shocked to
find  no trace  of it  on  my body.  My  tunic was  slashed and  blood
stained, but there was  no mark on my stomach. I  looked over to where
the golden sword had been laid  across a chair propped against my door
and marveled at the magic thing that I had somehow created.
     I  cleaned  my room  again,  removing  all  traces of  blood  and
struggle. Then I ate  a meal big enough to feed half  of Dargon, or so
it seemed, so hungry was I. All  the while, I was trying to figure out
a way to end  the dream-walking I was being forced  into. As I saddled
Sock, the solution came to me - I would used the sword that I had made
to kill myself, and thereby end the killing I was doing unwillingly.
     Loath to  end my life  without need, I  tried once more  to leave
Trasath,  this time  by  back  ways. But,  I  was  still blocked  from
escaping my destiny  in that manner. So  when I came out  of the Dream
again in front  of my father's house  I decided to escape  in the only
other way  open to me.  I turned Sock away  from my father's  house to
find a clearing in the woods around Trasath in which to end my life.
     I  followed our  side street  until it  ended just  past Jefirt's
house, who lived on the outskirts  of the village. Choosing one of the
faint trails that continued into the forest from the end of the street
at random, I  rode on, taking side paths and  navigating forks totally
without pattern. Just about the time  I began to think it strange that
I hadn't found  a clearing yet, I  came to a very  large cleared space
that  would be  perfect for  my  purposes. It  was about  as large  as
Trasath's  Square, oval  in shape,  with several  large stones  placed
about it. It almost seemed familiar in  some way, but I was sure I had
never been there before.
     I dismounted Sock and looped his  reins over the saddle. He would
stay in the area for a while cropping the dying grass in the clearing,
but if I was  successful in my mission he would be  free to wander off
back to  town. I removed the  golden sword from behind  the saddle and
moved into the center of the clearing.
     I knelt in  the grass and unwrapped the sword,  admiring one last
time the work that had been done on it. It was a beautiful weapon, but
even though my  hands had fashioned it I couldn't  take credit for its
creation. I wondered whether I would  learn who HAD created it and why
after I was dead...
     I had already pondered  the difficulties of self-destruction with
a  sword, but  the basic  problem was  solved by  the presence  of the
stones in the clearing. I placed the hilt of the sword in the angle of
a stone and the ground, which would  keep it from moving away from me.
Then, I  placed the point  of the sword  against my chest  between two
ribs and  to the left of  the breastbone. I leaned  forward enough for
the point to catch  in my tunic, then paused for  a moment. I silently
said farewell to my father, Uncle  Lavran and Aunt Mellide, my friends
in Dargon,  Leriel (who was more  than a friend, though  I would never
get to find out how much more now)...
     As I  tried to remember the  people I should be  taking leave of,
the  Dream began  to intrude  upon  my consciousness.  Flashes of  the
circle of dancing men were interspersed among the faces of loved ones.
One moment  I could feel  the ropes binding me  as the men  danced and
chanted, and the next I was kneeling  down with the golden sword at my
chest. Somewhere in  that confusion, I recognized that  the clearing I
was kneeling in was the same as the one where the naked men danced and
chanted in my Dream. Also, somewhere in the confusion, I realized that
when I  concentrated on the sword,  the Dream faded away.  Grasping at
that straw, I centered my attention on the sword until all vestiges of
the confusion  were gone  and I  was once again  only kneeling  in the
center of the  clearing. Quickly, then, before whatever  was trying to
stop me  found another tactic, I  bade a quick farewell  to everyone I
had not thought of  before, and began to lean forward.  Just as I felt
the tip of  the sword draw blood  from my chest, there was  a flash of
very bright, very white light, and I heard the command, "STOP!"
     And, I  found myself  obeying. Completely.  I couldn't  even turn
around  to see  from whence  the command  had come  - I  was immobile.
Presently, I felt hands on my shoulders pulling me back gently so that
my  chest came  away from  the  sword's tip,  letting it  fall to  the
ground.  The hands  pulled me  to my  feet, turned  me, and  pushed me
gently to  the edge of  the clearing and  into the trees.  There, just
beyond the edge of the clearing was  a pair of ancient oak trees, huge
and spreading, shaded to a deep  green by the layers of leaves between
them and the  sun. Nothing but the barest  forest undergrowth carpeted
the ground beneath  them - their age and size  precluded anything else
taking root within their demesnes - creating a shadowed clearing about
their bases. I was guided just to the edge of this dark green clearing
by the hands at my shoulders, and  then a voice said, "Be free again."
As volition returned to my body and  I slumped back down to my knees I
felt an overwhelming  wave of nearly divine power  emanating from that
natural  temple  that drove  me  to  prostrate myself  without  really
wanting to.  A shape  moved briefly  within the  shadows, and  then it
faded away along with the awe inspiring sense of power.
     Before  I had  even  begun  to recover,  hands  took  hold of  my
shoulders  again, and  a  voice  I almost  recognized  said, "Get  up,
Dyalar. Herne  doesn't much like the  reaction even the shadow  of his
partial avatar elicits, which is why  I'm here to enlist your aid." As
I was  helped back to my  knees and then  to my feet I  reflected that
that natural temple  was a perfect place to meet  the Protector of the
Forests. Some argued that Herne was  more of an elemental force than a
deity of some  kind, but whichever he was, he  certainly had the power
to bend mortals to  his will. It was in his favor  then that he didn't
like to use it.
     Back on  my feet  I turned to  see whose hands  had aided  me, to
confront  the  impossible. I  recognized  the  voice  now, just  as  I
recognized the face, although I hadn't  seen it in about 10 years. She
hadn't changed at all, but then she  wouldn't have - she was my sister
Keryin, and she was dead.
     But  she didn't  look dead.  Dressed in  her favorite  grey-green
gown, black hair tied back with  blue and green ribbons, eyes flashing
blue, cheeks rosy-red,  a budding rose the same color  tucked into her
hairband over her  right ear - she looked exactly  as I remembered her
going off  to the village  dance two nights  before she died.  I said,
"Keryin, is it really you? Are you...How could you be alive? Or...a-am
I d-d-dead?"
     She hugged  me tightly, feeling  very solid, and said,  "It's me,
Dy. I'm not alive - not really. And you are not dead. We are both here
to do the will of Herne and eliminate the evil that dwells in Trasath.
From  the moment  of my  death, I,  with his  help, have  been working
towards this day. The story is long, but you need to know it all."
     She began  to speak, and her  story was almost too  bizarre to be
believed. I  probably wouldn't have  believed it  were it not  for two
things. One  was Keryin herself, who  had been dead for  10 years. The
other was the already fading memory of the glimpse of Herne I had been
granted. At that moment, there was  no way I could doubt anything said
in Herne's name.
     Keryin's tale began with the Wolf  Winter, and its effects on our
tiny village.  Dargon was a prosperous  duchy, for all that  it was on
the northern end of the Kingdom,  and even though Trasath was somewhat
isolated from most  of the duchy, it had always  done well for itself.
But the Wolf Winter had eliminated half the population of the village,
and had provided the means for an evil force to gain a foothold there.
Certain powerhungry  citizens had  been influenced into  calling forth
from the Dark  Places an entity known as Hanarl.  Eight members of the
community,  under  the  leadership   of  Master  Dineel,  the  village
innkeeper, had  made a pact with  the spider-like being to  provide it
with the sacrifices it wished in return for being given power over the
entire village. Considering the weakened state of Trasath at the time,
and the  promises made that such  a disaster as the  Wolf Winter would
never happen  again, the village had  little choice but to  give in to
the Octacle and to Hanarl's demands.
     After that, twice  yearly, at ceremonies everyone  over a certain
age were required to attend, a sacrifice  was made to Hanarl of one of
the villagers,  chosen by lottery.  Those two were only  the mandatory
sacrifices, however. At any time, the Octacle, or even anyone who knew
about them, could demand that some supposed wrong could be paid for by
sacrifice. Wanderers  were frequently  the subject  of these  kinds of
sacrifices, but never often enough to arouse suspicions. The Octacle's
hold was maintained by blackmail -  if anyone left the village knowing
of Hanarl's grip on the populace,  it was communicated to them that if
they told anyone,  a loved one would be the  next victim of sacrifice.
If the person  didn't have a loved  one to be held,  he wasn't allowed
away from the village, and if he  tried to get away, he was invariably
captured and sacrificed.
     Keryin had been  one of those 'extra' sacrifices.  At that dance,
she had  been propositioned by Dineel's  son and had turned  him down.
Repeatedly. In  front of everyone,  and not politely. Two  days later,
she had been  taken in the middle  of the square by  Master Dineel and
four other men, accused of  blasphemy against Hanarl, and sentenced to
sacrifice. No  one had been able  to do anything to  save her, because
the entire village was in the same precarious position.
     Her  loss had  been covered  up  - none  of the  children in  the
village  knew of  Hanarl and  the Octacle,  and Father  was even  more
determined that I  should not know of them after  Keryin was killed by
them. He talked to  Lavran and made the deal that  got me removed from
Trasath.  It also  got him  in trouble  with the  Octacle, but  he had
thought it worth getting me out of danger's way.
     But the Octacle had retaliated against  him for saving me. He had
been lying  to me about Mother's  death. Keryin told me  that her name
had been  forced to come up  for the Mid-Summer sacrifice  lottery and
that the Octacle had  duly killed her on the Stones  of Hanarl as they
had killed countless others before and after her.
     "But, now you are here, Dyalar, wielding the Sword of Herne. Ever
since my wrongful death, Herne has been using both of us - you through
me - to  work toward an end  of Hanarl. You were guided  to the ruined
chapel to find the Branch and  Chalice, and thereafter to find the sky
iron. Once these objects of Power  were in your possession, I was able
to reach you at times, enabling me  to protect you even from the order
of form Herne  removed me to after  my body was slain.  Then, when the
stars were  right, we both  moved you to create  the Sword out  of the
three artifacts you had found and a portion of your own soul, for only
a weapon possessed of the powers those four things would give it could
possibly conquer the Octacle of Hanarl that ensnares Trasath."
     "Why didn't  you just  tell me?" I  asked after  letting Keryin's
explanation  sink in.  "I would  have been  happy to  help you  - done
anything to avenge your death and mother's."
     "It  would have  been  too  dangerous, Dy.  The  Octacle is  very
powerful, and  even though they have  ruled supreme in Trasath  for 17
years, they still fear the day  that someone comes to depose them. The
two that we  killed still slept under the shield  given them by Hanarl
even this  long after  anyone has thought  to try to  kill one  of the
Octacle in  their sleep. And  they have  their ways to  detect surface
thoughts that they use mostly on  strangers - which you qualify as. If
you had ridden into town with  death and destruction on your mind, you
wouldn't have lasted 5 minutes, Sword or no.
     "The plan was  to have you -  us - eliminate four  of the Octacle
and then challenge Master Dineel with his power severely diminished by
the halving of his priests. But,  we had not counted on your attention
during  the night  raids, nor  on your  reaction to  those raids.  I'm
really sorry you found what I  was directing you to do so distressing.
Perhaps I did  get a little carried  away, but then they  did kill me,
after all..."
     "But, now that I know..." I began, but Keryin interrupted me.
     "Yes, now that you know, the plan has changed. Your moral outrage
at what was being done to you  impresses Herne, even though it put our
plan in jeopardy. Though you were  an instrument of Right, you did not
know it. You sought to end the  carnage in the only way you could find
since you  knew not  the purpose  of the killings  and only  that such
killings were wrong.
     "That is  why Herne intervened  today, in violation of  the rules
imposed upon powers like him by  pact and law. And, ironically, it was
Hanarl's breaking  of the rules so  long ago which tipped  the Balance
far enough in his favor that Herne feels justified in making the small
transgressions he has - manifesting  the merest fraction of himself on
this Order of Form, and allowing me  full access to this Order of Form
(if temporarily) - as efforts to right the Balance.
     "And  he wouldn't  do it  even then  if it  wasn't so  important.
Hanarl has grand plans, and Trasath is only a testing ground. It works
slowly, wanting to be sure of Itself, and in doing so It has amassed a
great deal of power  here. It must be stopped soon, for  if It is not,
the whole world is in jeopardy.
     "You might think that Trasath is  an unlikely place for such evil
as Hanarl to  begin his conquest of  Makdiar from - it  is, after all,
just a small hamlet in the wilds  of Dargon. However, the Balance is a
delicate  thing.  Hanarl  managed  to  use  the  forces  of  Nature  -
essentially a part  of the Balance itself - to  goad certain people in
Trasath to helping  it tip the Balance  in favor of Chaos  just a bit,
but it  was enough. Trasath is  small, and Hanarl doesn't  have enough
worshipers here to  draw strength from homage. But he  gains even more
power from the sacrifices its Octacle  performs. Soon it will be ready
to spread  its influence to  more hamlets  and villages. As  its power
grows, and  the Balance skews  ever farther toward Chaos,  Hanarl will
move faster  and faster, gobbling  up towns, cities,  whole countries.
Unless  forces are  brought into  play on  the side  of Order  and the
Balance is restored.
     "And this is what we must do.  We are the forces of Order arrayed
against Hanarl's forces of  Chaos. It is not as it  was planned, but I
believe that we  can still prevail against Hanarl's  minions. You, the
sword ... and myself  as an added element - it will  be enough. It has
to be."
     She stopped speaking for a moment, head tilted slightly as if she
was listening to  something I couldn't hear. When  her eyes refocused,
she said, "If  you accept our mission, we should  be about it. Herne's
brief intervention here  caused ripples that the  Octacle has noticed.
We would be foolish to wait around  here for their response - we would
be  at a  distinct  disadvantage anywhere  near  their unholy  ground.
Herne's last words  to me were that  if we are able  to defeat Dineel,
Hanarl will  be forced to  retreat and  the other priests  will become
powerless. He gives us his blessings, but can do no more at all for us
now.
     "So, what do you say, brother?"
     I put off giving Keryin a  definite answer by taking steps to get
us away from the Stones of  Hanarl. Riding back to Trasath with Keryin
mounted  behind me,  I tried  to figure  out what  to do  next. Keryin
seemed to believe that the Octacle of Hanarl was a formidable foe, but
also that I could defeat them. I  wasn't as sure. The only magic I had
ever  faced  had  been  in  the   last  two  days  and  while  it  was
overwhelming, it was  also frightening. I didn't know  enough about my
skill or the Sword to believe  I could stand against a directed attack
from a fully  aware and prepared opponent. But, I  also didn't think I
had a choice.
     "What should I do?" I finally asked Keryin, hoping that she would
have the answers I couldn't find due to her 'special' status.
     "What do you think you should do, Dy?" she responded.
     "Well," I replied, "my options are rather limited, aren't they? I
mean the only thing I can think  of is to ride into the village square
and cry  challenge on Master Dineel,  then wait for him  to accept and
fight."
     "You have  one other option -  well, two actually. You  could, if
you chose, simply leave Trasath. The  binding Herne put on you to keep
you in the village has been lifted  - he didn't want to coerce you any
further to his work."
     "No," I said. "I don't know if  I can defeat Master Dineel, but I
know I must  try, for yours and  Mother's sake, as well as  all of the
others who died  at the hands of  Hanarl's minions - I  can't just run
away and let more die."
     "I   didn't  think   you  would,"   Keryin  said,   squeezing  me
affectionately. "So, your other viable option is to sneak up on Master
Dineel and kill him before he has a chance to kill you."
     "But  that's not  honorable!" I  said, indignant  that she  would
suggest such a thing.
     "Neither is  Dineel or his  master, Hanarl. You should  know that
even  if you  follow the  forms and  conventions of  single combat  by
calling Challenge  on Master  Dineel, there is  nothing in  his makeup
that  would force  *him*  to follow  them. I  can  guarantee that  the
remainder of the Octacle would  be stationed around the Square waiting
for the  right moment to  strike at  you, with Dineel's  approval, and
even at his orders.  If your opponent will not play  by the rules, why
should you?"
     "Because, if I didn't, I would be as bad as he!"
     "That, brother, would  depend on why you were doing  it. What you
now  have to  decide is  which power  - whose  "honor" -  you wish  to
follow. True, within the confines of  what you term honor, sneaking up
on and killing Dineel with no warning is wrong. However, if you did it
because it  was necessary, the only  way you have a  chance of killing
the man, and the  man's death is for the greater  good, then you would
be following the Honor of Herne and of the Balance.
     "Herne has enlisted you to remove Hanarl from this Order of Form.
He has placed  on you no restrictions  on the "right" way  to do this,
only that it be done. Do you agree that it must be done?"
     "Well, yes...of course..."
     "Then  is it  more important  that it  be done  your way,  with a
challenge that Dineel  will ignore and you will possibly  die from, or
that it be done in the surest way possible?"
     "I...I don't know, Ker. I always thought....Which is right?"
     "I can't tell you that, brother. I can only present the options."
     "But, don't you know? Why won't you help me?"
     "No, Dy, I don't know which is  "right". I know which I would do,
but you must  decide which you will  do. Both Herne and I  trust you -
you will do the best you can  to eliminate Hanarl, no matter which you
chose."
     Still trying to decide, I guided Sock up to my Father's house and
dismounted. I was somewhat confused by  the idea that "honor" wasn't a
constant thing  - something  solid and absolute  to measure  your life
against.  Then, as  if  in a  flash,  I realized  that  "honor" WAS  a
constant thing, it was the form of the honor that was fluid. The codes
that I had  learned during my time in Dargon  were only one embodiment
of the  concept. But, they  could be set aside  if there was  a higher
guidance -  which I  had in  the form of  Herne's directive.  It *was*
honorable to kill Dineel from ambush, as  long as I was doing it for a
greater  cause than  the filling  of my  purse, or  the betterment  of
myself or my liegelord. I was serving Herne and the Balance in this. I
had decided.
     I secured Sock's reins to the hitching post before Father's house
and noticed that  the front door was  slightly ajar. I was  sure I had
closed  it, but  then,  considering  the errand  I  had  left upon,  I
realized that I  could as easily have left it  standing wide as locked
it.  I closed  it,  and  turned to  Keryin.  "Dineel's  death is  more
important than adherence  to a set of rules." I  said. "We're going to
the Inn to catch him unawares. Let's go."
     I set out  towards town and the  back way to the inn,  but I soon
noticed  that Keryin  was not  following.  I turned  around found  her
walking back towards the woods.
     "Ker! Where are you going?" I  called out. She stopped and looked
over her  shoulder. "Remember the  shortcut we found racing  Minia and
Phin to the bakery? Come on!"
     Only with  her prompting did I  remember the shortcut -  as young
children, we had all been forbidden to enter the forest around Trasath
for any reason. The village was small,  so it wasn't a problem in most
cases. However,  at the  end of the  week it had  been the  custom for
Dorinach, Trasath's Baker,  to cool her pies on the  back porch of her
shop. Minia and  Phin, the children of our neighbors,  my sister and I
would  often race  over there  in the  late afternoon  to take  in the
lovely aromas and get first pick of the castoffs of Dorinach's baking.
There usually wasn't much in the way  of castoffs, so the first one to
arrive  got  the  best  bent  tarts, or  broken  cookies.  Keryin  had
discovered a way to shorten the  run down several alleys to the bakery
by skirting  one edge of  the village and  taking a trail  through the
forest to  the end of  the alley that  ran behind the  village square.
And, as I began to run after  her swiftly moving form, I realized that
the bakery was right next to the Inn.
     Sneaking  through the  alley  as  silently as  we  were able,  we
approached the Inn. I saw that  Keryin's shortcut had been a very good
idea - there  was someone at the entrance of  the cross-alley just the
other side  of the  Inn, and  at the end  of this  alley where  it met
Trainer's Way.  It seemed  that Master Dineel  had posted  guards, but
only along  the most  likely ways  for me to  get to  the Inn  from my
father's house.
     Now moving even  more silently and keeping a wary  eye on the two
guards who had  no thoughts of anyone approaching the  Inn from behind
them (fortunately), we  neared the rear door of  Master Dineel's home.
It seemed  that luck  was with  us -  the door  was open,  probably to
facilitate the warning that the guards  expected to give Dineel of our
approach.
     I led the way through the pantry  and kitchen of the Inn. The top
half of the  door between the kitchen  and the front room  was open so
that it was easy to hear the  conference going on in there. Keryin and
I crouched by the door and listened.
     "...s properly  secured by  the well, Master.  We had  no trouble
taking him either." I identified the voice as that of Ederavin, one of
Father's best friends and who lived next door.
     "Good." This  was Dineel.  "Then we  have a  hold over  the young
troublemaker. Ederavin,  I want  you to  stand next  to Himran  and be
ready to answer Dyalar's challenge. Don't worry - you're just there to
distract him  for a moment. To  make sure that Dyalar  takes the bait,
however, I want you  to take this wand. It has  enough power stored in
it to  do substantial damage to  the person you touch  with this metal
end. I won't ask you to try to get close enough to Dyalar to use it on
him  - the  wand isn't  capable of  discharging swiftly,  and I'm  not
interested in putting another of the  octacle at risk. However, if you
use it on Himran, you will both  be avenging the years of slights that
man has  done to us,  and you  will be sure  to distract his  son long
enough for the rest of us to act."
     "As you will, Master," was Ederavin's  reply. I thought I heard a
note of regret in his voice, but  such was Dineel and Hanarl's hold on
the octacle that even the prospect of torturing his best friend didn't
sway Ederavin from  obeying. And it was only by  concentrating on what
my  mission was  that I  kept from  leaping up  right then  and trying
(futilely, most likely) to keep them from harming my father at all.
     "To  continue,"   said  Dineel.  "Feyarin,"  who   was  Trasath's
shoemaker, "you take the remainder of  the octacle and hide in various
positions around the edges  of the square - make sure  you have a good
view of the well. While you wait, concentrate upon Hanarl. I will take
up a position at the edge of  Tailor's Way, out of direct sight of the
well. As we wait,  I will be entreating our god to  supply us with the
means  of destroying  our  enemy.  When Dyalar  enters  the square  to
challenge Ederavin for the life of his father, you will each be filled
with the Venom of Hanarl. Release it at Dyalar, and he will be utterly
destroyed. We can then rebuild the fullness of the octacle and put our
plans back on schedule."
     With  a  chorus  of  "As  Hanarl demands,  by  the  Master,"  the
conference broke up. I heard them leave, talking softly to each other.
When there had been  no sound for a minute or  so, I peeked cautiously
over the edge of  the lower part of the door and  was relieved to find
that the front room was empty.
     Cautiously, I went through the kitchen door and crossed the small
front room that also served as a  tavern. The front door had been left
open as well, and I peered through  it. I saw Ederavin standing by the
well next to the  limp form of my father, who had  been bound hand and
foot as  well as being  secured to one of  the spit-posts by  a goodly
length  of rope  wrapped about  his chest.  Ederavin looked  at Father
sorrowfully, then  stared at  the short,  black, silver-capped  rod he
held.  After a  moment his  face took  on a  look of  resolve, and  he
reached out to  touch the silver end  of the rod to  my father's neck.
There was a slight crackling noise, and I could see a flickering dance
of sickly  purple light begin to  move across father's neck.  I turned
away to  find Keryin right  behind me,  watching the torture  with the
same expression  on her  face that  I knew  was on  mine -  hatred and
desire for revenge.
     We both  moved away from  the door  and the chance  of discovery.
Keryin turned  her gaze on  me, questioning.  When the first  moans of
pain came through the door, she touched my shoulder in sympathy. I was
trying to wrestle with my recently-made resolve to eliminate Dineel by
whatever means were  necessary - with my father's pain  on the line as
well as my "honor", I was having a hard time not falling into the trap
Dineel had  so carefully set. But  Keryin's presence helped -  she was
hurting too and she was not rushing heedlessly into the square.
     Finally, I  said, "If we both  slip back into the  alley and then
around to Tailor's, we could sneak up behind Dineel..."
     Keryin's face  had hardened as  the moans turned to  low screams.
She said,  "I have to stop  that, Dy. You  sneak around that way  - as
fast and as quietly  as you can. I'll try to get  them to stop hurting
father."
     "But, what about that 'venom' thing Dineel talked about?"
     "Dy," she said with a smile and  a gentle touch to the side of my
face, "remember,  I'm already dead.  Herne will protect my  spirit and
guide it to its final rest when my task here is done. They cannot harm
me in any permanent way. Go - every second wasted is one more eternity
in torment for father."
     I hugged her, wishing she could stay with me always, then ran for
the alley. The guards still watched  the Trainer's Way entrance to the
alley, nervously shifting a bit as  the now louder screams echoed from
house to house. I turned back the  way Keryin and I had come. I didn't
dare run  outright for fear of  alerting the guards, but  Tailor's Way
wasn't very far along the alley  anyway. I turned onto the narrow road
in the direction  of the square and immediately slipped  back into the
alley: Dineel's hiding place may  have been effective from the Square,
but from this end of the street I  had a perfect view of the leader of
Hanarl's Octacle.  My hands itched for  a bow (though I  was barely an
average shot) or  a sling (with which  I was better -  there were more
targets for a slingstone than an arrow in a city like Dargon). Since I
had neither, I drew my rosy-golden sword and peered around the corner.
I marked out carefully likely  spots of concealment between myself and
Dineel before quietly taking the first step around the corner.
     As soon as I  was around the corner, my sword  began to glow red,
calling up the shell of concealment I  had seen it use before. I moved
straight  for  Dineel,  hoping  that  concealment  by  ordinary  means
wouldn't be needed.  It seemed that either luck or  the red shield was
working for me, because I was within  two steps of Dineel's back - and
him all unawares - when Keryin  stepped into the square from the front
door of the Inn with a shouted "Stop!"
     From my  position I could see  the entire Square. I  watched five
people step out of concealment, each one with their hands clasped palm
to  palm in  front  of  them and  a  cloud  of greyish-greenish  light
billowing around those hands. The  fingers of those hands were pointed
at Keryin but I could see that  everyone was confused by the fact that
it was a woman and not a man that had entered the square. Ederavin had
jerked the wand away from my father's neck at Keryin's cry, ending his
screams, but when he  saw it wasn't me who had  come to challenge him,
he started  to put  the wand  back to  my father's  neck. But  then he
recognized Keryin,  and his eyes  widened in  fear and he  dropped the
wand. It bounced on the well-rim, then fell down inside.
     Dineel  stayed  hidden,   but  I  could  see  the   same  fog  of
foul-looking light around his hands. I took one step, then another - I
was  within range.  I  lifted  my sword  to  strike, concentrating  on
Dineel's back.  Just as  I was ready  to end the  threat of  Hanarl in
Trasath village, the  red shield vanished, to be replaced  by a golden
one. At the same time, Keryin cried out "Dyalar!" and I saw a globe of
greyish- greenish  light impact  with the  golden shield  and shatter,
scattering a black liquid from its remains.
     Dineel wheeled immediately and his face went white when he saw me
there. Some of the black liquid struck  him, and he winced in pain. He
leaped backwards,  pointed his  hands at  me, and  the cloud  of light
around his  hands flew at me  like the globe had  done moments before.
This attack  acted like a signal  to the others, but  they didn't have
even  as  much success  as  the  first  one  to fire.  Dineel's  globe
shattered on the shield, splattering him with even more black liquid -
what I  assumed was  the "Venom  of Hanarl", and  which it  seemed the
followers of Hanarl were not immune to. Only one other globe came near
me, but  it actually hit Dineel,  who cried out and  staggered. Of the
two remaining globes, one hit the  Inn, staining the paint and smoking
a little. The last one somehow managed to hit one of the other octacle
members full in the chest - his  screams as he died were deafening, if
not prolonged.
     Dineel,  who was  hardier than  his followers,  retreated further
from me.  He called  out, "To  me!" and the  remaining members  of the
octacle moved with him towards the well. He glanced behind him and saw
that Ederavin was  just staring at me, while Keryin  was busily trying
to untie  father. He  shouted, "Ederavin!  Grab the  girl! We  need to
summon Hanarl, and she's already been a victim - she should provide an
easy entry point for our god!"
     Snapped out  of his shock by  a direct order, Ederavin  did as he
was told. Keryin had no weapons, and  though she fought as well as she
was able  without, Ederavin  was able  to keep  her from  running away
until the rest of  the octacle arrived and pinned her  down at the lip
of the well.
     I began  running as soon  as she went  down, breaking out  of the
paralysis I had been in watching  her struggle, so much like the Dream
that had haunted  me for so long. Dineel wasn't  wasting time, though.
With  the five  remaining members  of the  Octacle pinning  Keryin, he
lifted her tunic enough to bare her stomach and using a knife that was
as twisted  and sickly looking  as everything  else having to  do with
Hanarl so far,  he cut her four  times in an simple  eight limbed star
pattern. The  cuts were not deep,  but they did hurt  - Keryin's cries
told that - and they did  bleed. Then, holding the bloody knife aloft,
Dineel screamed out  Hanarl's name over and over, a  chant taken up by
the other five.
     Though the  village square  was not  large, it  seemed to  take a
terribly long time to  cross to the well. As I  drew closer and closer
to my goal, I began to see a  shape forming above the well and the six
chanting people there.  It was just a  blob at first -  a presence but
formless. Then, it began to shape  itself into a spider-like being. It
had only five  legs, though - there were three  stumps where its other
legs should  have been, showing how  much Hanarl had linked  itself to
its Octacle. I  knew that even with  the powers of the  sword, and the
blessing  of Herne  behind me,  I would  have no  chance against  this
avatar of a god if it had a chance to arrive fully.
     So spurred  on, I finally  reached the chanting Dineel.  His eyes
were  only  for the  arrival  of  his god  -  only  Keryin noticed  my
presence. I hesitated even so, not  wanting to strike like this. But I
looked up and saw the only  slightly ghostly form of the Hanarl-avatar
there, beginning to move its legs  and click its mandibles, and I knew
I had to act. I aimed, and thrust.
     My sword entered Dineel's chest  from behind. His chanting turned
to a scream  that stopped when the  first 6 inches of  my golden sword
came  out his  front. The  Hanarl-avatar writhed  soundlessly, and  as
Dineel's life left his body, the head of the spider-thing exploded and
the body  vanished like  mist blown  away by a  wind. The  five people
holding Keryin  down fainted,  releasing her. I  knelt beside  her and
covered her wound with her tunic. She  smiled at me and said, "You did
it. I'm very proud of you, Dy. You freed Trasath!"
     We hugged,  then she said, "Cut  father loose - those  knots just
didn't want to come untied. Then, we  have to get back to the grove. I
don't want father  to see me -  I can't stay much longer  and it would
only hurt him to see me again."
     I released  father from his  bonds, but he was  still unconscious
from the  wand. Keryin had already  started back down the  road to our
house and the grove,  so I followed her. When I  reached home, she was
already in Sock's saddle, waiting for  me. There was a faraway look in
her eye that frightened me, but she wouldn't answer any questions. She
just insisted that I mount up. I  did, and then we rode at a breakneck
pace back to the grove.
     Even before I  had reined Sock to a stop,  she had dismounted and
was walking back to the two  huge oaks. When she entered their shadow,
she went to  her knees. I looked  away long enough to  get down safely
from Sock's  back, and  when I  looked back, she  was surrounded  by a
faint glow.
     I  walked over  to  the oaks  and stood  behind  Keryin, who  was
beginning to look a little transparent within the glow. Though she was
not moving, and her head was bowed and thus she couldn't have seen me,
she began  to speak in a  hollow, almost echoing voice.  "Herne speaks
through me," she  said. "Herne thanks you for righting  a great wrong.
You have  done what he was  not permitted to  do on his own.  Now, say
farewell to  your sister. Her  task is finished  - her spirit  will be
released now."
     I knelt and hugged Keryin, surprised at how solid she still felt,
considering how transparent she looked. She raised her head and turned
a tearful face to  me and kissed me on the cheek. In  a voice that had
lost its echo,  she said, "I wish  I didn't have to go,  Dy. I'll miss
you - these  past couple of years  have been fun." The  scent of roses
made my eyes tear up too.
     Addressing the air,  I asked, "Does she have to  go? If she truly
doesn't want to, that is?"
     There was silence for a moment, and then Keryin's eyes got glassy
and the echo returned. She said,  "Your sister may not remain embodied
- that is not permitted. But, she could return to being your 'guardian
angel', as  you referred  to her,  if she wished.  Your bond  with the
magics of  your sword  allow the  two of  you this  kind of  contact -
should you lose the sword, or  should it be destroyed, Keryin's spirit
will have  to go. The  decision is yours,  Keryin. You have  served me
well - do you wish this to be your reward?"
     She came back to  herself and said, "Yes, Herne -  I want to stay
with Dyalar." She smiled at me as she said this, and I smiled back.
     This time, the voice came from  the trees of the 'temple'. "So be
it. Come to  me, Keryin. Dyalar, turn  away. You will not  wish to see
the destruction of this body."
     I hugged  Keryin one last time,  and kissed her cheek.  She stood
and walked deeper into the shadows  between the two ancient trees, and
I walked back  to Sock. There was  a cry that wasn't of  sound, but it
drove through my  soul like a sword.  Then, there was a  change in the
very air,  and when I  turned I was shocked  to see that  the towering
oaks had vanished - the 'temple' was now just a stand of normal forest
growth. Of Keryin there was no sign. I mounted Sock and turned back to
the trail back  to town. Yet as I  rode out of sight of  the stones, I
caught the scent  of roses on the  air, and heard a  familiar laugh at
the back of my mind. Smiling, I rode on, but not alone.
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1     (C)    Copyright   July,   1993,   DargonZine,    Editor   Dafydd
. All  rights revert to the  authors. These stories
may  not  be  reproduced  or   redistributed  (save  in  the  case  of
reproducing  the whole  'zine  for further  distribution) without  the
express permission of the author involved.





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--   DargonZine Volume 6, Issue 3        08/02/93          Cir 1xxx   --
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-- Archives at FTP.EFF.ORG (192.88.144.4) in pub/journals/DargonZine  --
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--                            Contents                                --
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 Despatches from the Field    (Special War Recap)
 Heroic Couplet               Jeff Lee               Yule, 1014
 For What We Are About To Receive... Part I
                              John Doucette          Yule 14, 1014
 'Bout 'Majin                 Orny Liscomb           Firil, 1016
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1     (This  is a  comprehenisve  review of  the Baranur-Beinison  war,
which started rather a few volumes ago.  Enjoy.)

                     Despatches From the Field:
                        Prelude to Invasion

     Nober. A  time of endings and  beginnings. The year is  1013 B.Y.
and there are numerous celebrations  being planned to mark the turning
of  the  year. Just  a  few  short  weeks  earlier, King  Haralan  had
celebrated  his thirty-sixth  birthday. Sir  Edward Sothos,  Haralan's
close friend  and advisor  and the  kingdom's Knight  Commander, would
soon celebrate his thirty-first.
     Winter had  come slightly earlier  than expected and  displayed a
ferocity such as  few could remember. The storms  raging outside Crown
Castle's  environs  went almost  un-noticed.  Inside  the castle,  the
nobles of the  land were engaged in heated debate  and exchanging even
hotter words in the great War Council called by the King.
     The past  year had  been a tumultuous  one for  the third-largest
kingdom on the continent. Early in 1012, rumors began circulating that
Bichu, an  island Empire  south and  west of  Baranur was  planning to
invade. Almost nothing was known about Bichu. Other than the fact that
the Bichanese warriors, samurai they  were called in the native tongue
of Bichu, were fanatical in battle  and were said to possess swords of
un-matched quality, the most the  average Baranurian knew of Bichu, if
they knew of it at all, was that they were alien and they wanted their
land. Thus spoke the rumours.
     The truth  was very different.  In reality, the rumours  had been
started by a  group of nobles and merchants from  Duchy Dargon, in the
extreme northwest. This small group  of individuals had been persuaded
to stir up trouble by agents of the Beinisonian Emperor, Untar II. The
general idea  was to  make Baranur  and Bichu  go to  war so  that the
Beinisonian Empire could  then move on Baranur, which  would have been
weakened considerably by the war, thus  adding the lands of Baranur to
Beinison only a modicum of effort.
     To  this  end,  the  conspirators planned  the  assassination  of
several  of Baranur's  nobles, chief  among these  the Duke  of Dargon
himself.  The  assassination  attempt  against the  Duke  failed,  but
resulted in the  death of one of  the heirs of the  Barony of Connall.
The Connall family were relatives of Duke Dargon and with him had been
among the most  vociferous in their protestation against  going to war
with Bichu. Since the Barony now  had only one surviving member of the
ruling family, the decision of whom to choose as successor to the late
Baron was now academic. Luthias  Connall was invested as Baron Connall
by his cousin the Duke and all seemed fine.
     All was  not fine, though.  Duke Dargon had appointed  Connall as
Duke's Advocate, chief upholder of the King's Justice in the Duchy. As
Duke's Advocate, it fell to Luthias to investigate the conspiracy. The
primary  conspirator,  Baron  Coronabo,  contrived  to  have  evidence
planted in  Duke Dargon's office that  implicated the Duke as  the man
behind the plot to have Baranur go to war with Bichu, and thus the man
responsible for Connall's twin brother's death.
     Connall was forced  to investigate the charges  and he concluded,
however reluctantly,  that there  was indeeed  evidence to  proceed to
trial. By Baranurian  law, a high-ranking noble such as  a Duke had to
be tried before the  King in Magnus. Sir Edward, in  Dargon to judge a
tournament, escorted  Duke Dargon to  Magnus for the  trial. Defending
Dargon  was Lord  Marcellon of  Equiville, Dargon's  father-in-law and
former Royal Magist.  As Duke's Advocate for Duchy Dargon,  it fell to
Baron Connall to prosecute.
     By summer,  1013, it  was over.  Working together,  Marcellon and
Connall  had  exposed  the   real  conspirators  and  proved  Dargon's
innocence. King Haralan called a  War Council of respected nobles from
throughout the Kingdom. This Council would give the King advice on how
to respond to the Beinisonian plot. An early decision was made to send
Count  Connall, newly  created  as  such in  reward  for exposing  the
conspiracy, to Beinison  as Ambassador. There he would  inquire to the
Beinisonian Emperor as to his intentions towards Baranur.
     The summer also saw the arrival of a most unexpected embassy from
the Empire of Galicia, Sir Edward's homeland. Galicia had, for several
hundred years and  by it's own choice, been isolated  from the outside
world. It  maintained a  policy of aggressive  neutrality. No  one was
permitted to  cross the  border in either  direction excpet  by direct
command  of the  Emperor,  Nyrull I.  The origin  of  this policy  was
unknown save  by the  Galicians themselves  and they  weren't talking.
Thus,  the arrival  of an  embassy from  the Galician  Emperor was  an
occasion of note.
     Haralan was pleasantly surprised to  find that the ambassador had
instructions to work out some sort  of trade agreement between the two
nations. He was less than happy  when his Knight Commander nearly took
the ambassador's head off, quite literally, when the two met.
     Sir Edward and  the ambassador had been old foes  from their days
as mercenaries in the chaotic Kingdom  of Alnor, built on the ruins of
the  ancient Fretheod  Empire on  the continent  of Duurom.  Moreover,
Ambassador Myros was  also Baron of Alphoria. For close  to a thousand
years, Alphoria had  been held by the Sothos family.  Myros took great
delight in informing  Sir Edward that Edward's father,  Dion, had been
executed for  treason. Adding to Sir  Edward's rage was the  fact that
Myros  was accompanied  by his  wife, Elaine.  Elaine Myros,  formerly
Elaine Janos, daughter to the former  Count Janos, had been the object
of  Edward's affection  eight  years earlier  in  Galicia. Edward  had
killed  the son  of one  of Galicia's  powerful Dukes  in a  duel over
Elaine and  was forced into  exile. Myros  knew full well  the history
between  his  wife and  Edward  and  took  further delight  in  seeing
Edward's reaction. The War Council  dragged on into winter, awaiting a
reply from Count Connall, and the Galician embassy stayed to observe.
     Ambassador  Myros  had  his  own personal  agenda  in  coming  to
Baranur. He was part of a cabal,  headed by Duke Markin, the father of
the man  Edward killed,  that was plotting  to overthrow  the Galician
Emperor. Myros  saw in  the embassy a  perfect opportunity  to recruit
allies and a source of men and material for the coming coup.
     With Myros was a sorceress by  the name of Celeste. She professed
to be  in Myros'  service, but  in reality,  she was  a member  of The
Order, a  secret organization of  Galician mages dedicated  totally to
preserving the Empire. The Order's  leader, the Primus, had instructed
Celeste to report  on Myros' activities. Myros was known  to The Order
as one of  the cabal and they  hoped to learn more  about Myros' plans
while in Baranur  and about Baranur itself. Celeste, too,  had her own
agenda to pursue.  While reporting on Myros, she hoped  to utilize the
information she gained to turn the situation to her best advantage.
     The end of the War Council was spectacular. An Ambassador arrived
from Beinison with a  gift -- the head of Luthias  Connall in a golden
box.  On the  same day,  just  after the  "gift" had  been opened,  an
assassination team from Galicia arrived  with the intent of "removing"
Myros and his chief advisors.
     The result  of these two events  was that an angry  King declared
war on Beinison and Myros escaped while his underlings died. In a move
that  surprised the  whole Baranurian  Court, Celeste,  leader of  the
assassination  team, offered  Sir Edward  the coronet  of Alphoria  by
Nyrull's command.  Sir Edward refused,  saying his oath to  his friend
and King, and the coming war, demanded that he stay in Baranur.
     The new  year would bring red  war to the Kingdom  of Baranur and
the tales the bards would tell would  be ones of great heroes and even
greater tragedies.

                      Despatches From the Field:
                            Bloody Spring

     Deber, 1013,  finds the Kingdom  of Baranur gripped by  the worst
winter in living memory. War has come to Baranur, a war of inaction --
nothing can move through the heavy snows and freezing cold.
     Into this frozen  hell journey brave men and  women on struggling
horses. They carry messages to  all corners of the Kingdom, announcing
war. The people have not been expecting war, not with Beinison and the
news comes  as a shock. In  the barracks and cantonments  of the Royal
Army, the shock is a double one. For with the declaration of war comes
orders from the Knight Commander --  Move south with all haste. In the
dead  of  winter,  the  commanders   of  the  Royal  Army  stare  with
incredulity at seemingly impossible orders.
     Edward Sothos,  Knight Commander of  the Royal Armies,  knows how
difficult  the orders  are.  He gives  them because  he  has no  other
choice. The  Royal Army  can muster  43,000 warriors  at the  start of
Deber. Fourteen thousand in each  of the Northern and Southern Marches
and fifteen thousand at Magnus. Another 10,000 are being recruited and
trained and must remain in their  training schools. The Militia of the
Kingdom, 50,000 strong, are mobilizing  also though the quality of the
Militia Regiments varies widely.
     Sir Edward knows his troops will  be facing the full might of the
Beinisonian armies and so he gives  the order for all available troops
to  bolster Knight  Captain Martis  Westbrook's Army  of the  Southern
Marches. The  Northern Marches,  under the  command of  Knight Captain
Ailean of Bivar, is stripped of troops -- Sir Ailean is left with only
five  thousand out  of his  original force  of fourteen  thousand. The
Magnus Garrison remains as a strategic reserve.
     As  the preparations  go on,  Edward and  Marcellon are  summoned
south by the Duke of Pyridain. A man sufering heavily from his travels
has come from Beinison. He claims  to be a Baranurian subject and says
he has information for the Knight Commander.
     With spring almost upon the  land, Edward and Marcellon arrive to
interrogate the  traveller. They  discover him to  be none  other than
Luthias Connall,  whose very "execution"  by the Beinisonians  was the
spark that started the war, very much alive and in very bad condition.
     From him, they learn that the Beinisonians are planing a surprise
attack  on  the Laraka  River,  Magnus'  economic lifeline  and,  now,
under-defended. They also  learn that the enemy does not  plan to wait
until summer, the traditional campaign season, to attack. Sir Edward's
strategy  of concentrating  his forces  in  the south  will blunt  the
enemy's  main  attack  but  has  left the  entire  Northwest  open  to
invasion.
     By Melrin, the Royal Army is  reeling from losses on both fronts.
In  the  South,  the  enemy's   main  army  shattered  Knight  Captain
Westbrook's force at Oron's Crossroads.  Virtually the entirety of the
Noble  Houses of  the Southern  Marches  is annihilated  and a  goodly
portion  of  the  Pyridain  Militia  with  it.  In  what  will  become
recognized as  one of the great  blunders of the war,  the Beinisonian
Emperor, Untar II, allows Martis  Westbrook to extricate over half her
19,500 troops unmolested. These troops will  continue to be a drain on
Beinisonian resources throughout the war.
     Untar's main  army, the Fist  of the  Emperor, goes on  to reduce
Pyridain  City  (defended by  the  remnants  of the  Baranurian  heavy
infantry that  fought at Oron's  Crossroads), and begins its  march on
Magnus, laying waste to the countryside as it goes.
     In the North,  20,000 troops commanded by  an up-and-coming field
marshal of  the Beinisonian  army, Joachim  Vasquez, lands  at Sharks'
Cove (Duchy Quinnat)  on the mouth of the Laraka  River. Sir Ailean of
Bivar  meets this  attack  at the  water's edge  with  5,500 men.  The
Baranurian forces  give the  elite light  troops of  the enemy  a good
thrashing  but  are finally  overwhelmed.  Lord  Morion of  Pentamorlo
rallies the survivors and begins a long and gruelling retreat down the
Laraka. He plans to make his  stand at Gateway Keep, 250 leagues north
of Magnus and designed for just this purpose.
     Vasquez moves quickly in pursuit,  but is delayed at Port Sevlyn,
a city  of 10,000 halfway  between Sharks'  Cove and Gateway  Keep and
thus a  vital base of  supply. One of  the Duchy of  Quinnat's Militia
Regiments garrisons the city and determines  to hold off the enemy for
as long as possible.
     The 1,000  defenders hold off the  enemy army for three  days, an
incredible feat of arms. At the  end, Vasquez orders the garrison, and
half  the populace,  put  to the  sword as  an  example to  discourage
further resistance.  He leaves  some troops to  garrison the  city and
moves off down the Laraka towards Gateway and Magnus.
     As Yule, 1014, reaches its  midpoint, three great armies threaten
Baranur. In the South, Untar and the 30,000 strong Fist of the Emperor
are drawing  ever closer to Magnus  and if not checked  will arrive by
Seber.  On the  Laraka,  Vasquez has  received  reinforcements and  is
preparing to  launch an attack  on the desperate defenders  of Gateway
Keep. In the North, a force  of 15,000 approaches Dargon City from the
sea undetected.
     To counter  the threat to  the capital, the Knight  Commander has
sent Baranur's heavy  cavalry, the 8,000 strong Royal  Hussars, to aid
Lord Morion  in his defence of  Gateway Keep while other  forces begin
the march toward Magnus, hoping to reach the city before the enemy.
     The spring  of 1014 has been  one of blood and  death. The coming
summer promises to be one of carnage and horror unsurpassed.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                          Heroic Couplet
                           by Jeff Lee
                         jlee@smylex.uucp

     Thomas  Shopkeeper knelt  on  the  cold stone  in  front of  King
Haralan, well aware of the many eyes on his back.
     "This  man," the  King  proclaimed to  the  gathered crowd,  "has
singlehandedly removed the  greatest threat that our  fair country has
known in over a  century. The Beinison threat is ended,  and we can at
last return to peace!"
     As  the crowd  roared,  Haralan  stepped back  to  make room  for
another. Sir Edward Sothos, towering  over the kneeling Thomas, laid a
black-gloved hand on the man's  shoulder. "Thomas Shopkeeper, you have
done  what neither  I  nor my  armies could  accomplish."  In a  voice
overflowing  with  emotion,  he  continued:  "It  is  meet  that  you,
therefore, rather than  I, should bear the title and  duties of Knight
Commander  of the  Royal Armies."  Sothos'  brown eyes  gleamed as  he
smiled down at the astonished man.
     When the cheers had again died away, King Haralan stepped forward
once more. "Thomas, for your great service to Us, We are moved to make
you a Baron of Our Court. No  more shall you be called Shopkeeper, but
Baron Thomas -- the Hero!"
     "What are you  still doing in bed, you lazy  slug?" The cacophony
of the crowd  was pierced suddenly by the shrewish  screams of Thomas'
wife;  the finery  of  Dargon  Keep's great  hall  dissolved into  the
dreary,  familiar  scene  of  Thomas' bedroom.  Sunlight  streamed  in
through a broken slat in the shutters, and as Thomas watched, a beetle
flew in through the  gap and hung transfixed for a  moment in the beam
of light.
     "Nothing, dear, I was just getting up."
     "Don't  you  `dear' me,  slugabed!"  The  swat of  Madge's  broom
punctuated her  sentences eloquently.  "It's daylight out;  you should
have opened up the shop hours ago! But, no, you must lie here, wasting
the best hours  of the morning. Now  GET" -- swat -- "OUT"  -- swat --
"of BED!"
     "Yes, dear," he sighed.

     Thomas considered  himself as he polished  the brass candlesticks
for the  third time  that morning.  He was  short, portly,  losing his
hair; he looked, for the most part,  like his own father at forty. Ah,
he'd dreamed,  when growing up, about  a life of adventure  and glory,
but in  the end  he was only  a shopkeeper, like  his father,  and his
father's father.  Timothy, his son,  was doing well at  University; he
might escape the stagnation which had enfolded Thomas like the arms of
an old lover.
     And then  there was  Madge. He'd  loved her  once, yes,  but that
seemed so  long ago. The  lot of a  shopkeeper's wife was  like bitter
herbs to her,  souring her gradually as the monotony  grew. She'd been
beautiful  once, he  recalled;  so beautiful  before  the despair  and
bitterness set in.
     He'd hated  himself that he couldn't  give her more in  life; his
shame turned  him to drink.  What little  comfort he could  have given
her, he'd  withheld by  going instead  to the  tavern. At  first, he'd
stayed out until after she was  asleep; yet he still noticed the tears
drying on the pillow when he got  into bed. The shame this caused him,
though, would ever disappear into the bottle on the next night.
     He could  hardly blame  her, then, that  her tongue  became harsh
whenever she spoke to him; that the hurt look in her eyes hardened and
became, when  she bothered to  look at  him, one of  loathing. Gentle,
beautiful Madge became a bitter shrew, and it was all his fault.
     Ah,  he said  to himself  as he  moved dishes  from one  shelf to
another, if  only things  had been  different. If  only I'd  rescued a
princess from a horrible monster. She'd have rewarded me well, and I'd
have been a hero. I could have --
     "Thomas!" came Madge's shrill voice, interrupting his reverie. He
spun  about guiltily,  then  flinched  back when  he  saw  her in  the
doorway, brandishing an iron skillet as though ready to brain him with
it.
     "What, dear?"
     "This skillet  is cracked!" She  waved it furiously as  proof. "I
only bought it  a week ago, and now it's  completely useless. You take
this right back to the ironmonger and DEMAND a new one!"
     Alas, Thomas mused  as he left his shop, by  the time you realise
the damage you've done to someone, it's too late to repair.

     Thomas stopped in mid-stride as he heard the muffled cry from the
alleyway. He gaped  stupidly as his eyes adjusted to  the dimmer light
and reported the scene within the shadows.
     A man  lay on the  muddy ground, the  back of his  blue servant's
livery  stained black  with blood,  which  pooled under  him like  the
morning mist in a valley. Just beyond the body were two coarse-looking
men, one holding  a wicked dagger at a woman's  throat while the other
tore a jewelled pin from her bodice.
     "Here,  you,  take your  hands  off  her," Thomas  cried  without
thinking. Both men turned towards him, the one with the knife throwing
his captive roughly to the ground.
     The other, bigger  man leapt at Thomas, swinging  with a powerful
roundhouse.  Instinctively, Thomas  ducked, then  brought the  skillet
around with all his might, connecting with the back of his assailant's
head. The man dropped like a felled ox.
     A sudden  pain made  Thomas look  down; the  handle of  the other
ruffian's dagger protruded from his chest. As he fell to his knees, he
heard the  man's footsteps  running out  of the  alley, back  into the
street.
     "Ah," Thomas said,  his own voice seeming to reach  his ears from
miles away. He  felt nothing, neither pain nor emotion,  and his mouth
kept repeating,  "Ah, ah,"  of its own  volition. The  alleyway tilted
crazily as  he toppled;  the ground  took forever  to receive  him, it
seemed.  All of  his  warmth spread  from the  grievous  wound in  his
breast, and darkness  began encroaching on the alley  from the corners
of his eyes.
     Hands on his shoulders. The world tilting until the sky was above
him. The lady  looking down at him, ice-blue eyes  wide in horror. She
was as beautiful a woman as he had ever seen: petite, with short, dark
red hair and skin  as white as the driven snow. He  gazed at her small
mouth,  the thin  red lips  moving, but  her words  seemed muffled  as
though she were speaking through many thick blankets.
     He wanted to cry  out, tell her that the red  mud was ruining her
expensive clothes, but  he lacked the strength. He tried  to hear what
she was saying, instead.
     "-- repay you;  you saved my life. Oh, please  don't --" He could
see little more than her face now.  Her lips moved some more, and then
she said, "You are a true hero."
     "A hero," he whispered; and then he smiled; and then he died.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                    For What We Are About to Receive...
                                 Part I
                            by John Doucette
                   

Crown Castle, Magnus, Royal Duchy, Baranur
14 Yule, 1014 B.Y.

     Haralan Tallirhan, by  the Grace of God King of  Baranur and Duke
of Magnus,  watched the  column of  Hussars wind  its way  through the
Royal District as it made its way towards Northgate.
     A  slight  breeze was  blowing,  bringing  some relief  from  the
stifling  heat. In  the city  below the  first wall  of Crown  Castle,
people were  going about their business  almost as if the  war was not
merely 250 leagues from Magnus.
     The thing which  brought the war home to people  was the striking
lack  of shipping  alongside the  city's  docks. With  the main  trade
artery of  the Laraka now  denied the  capital, Haralan was  forced to
bring in  by land  everything needed  to keep a  city of  50,000 souls
functioning, a very expensive and unsatisfactory method of sustanance.
     To be  sure, food  was not a  problem - the  fields of  the Royal
Duchy were rich enough to supply a population three or four times that
which was  present. The state of  the city's commerce, however,  was a
different matter.
     Ever since  the closing  of the Laraka,  the Merchant  Houses had
been clamouring for Haralan to do something, anything, to re-start the
flow of trade.  Prices had increased for the fifth  time since Melrin.
The poor were  beginning to grow dissatisfied as well.  Soon, the King
of Baranur could be facing riot inside the walls of his own capital.
     Assuming, of  course, that Untar hadn't  claimed Haralan's throne
by then. Haralan's  friend and advisor Sir Edward Sothos  had for days
been  sounding the  alarm  of  Untar and  his  Fist  of the  Emperor's
progress.
     "You may succeed  on the Laraka, Connall, only to  find the heart
of the kingdom gutted and burned," the king said under his breath.
     The  distinct  sound  of  hard boots  on  stone  interrupted  his
thoughts. Haralan turned his head in the direction of the footsteps to
discover Sir  Edward and Sir  Edward's aide, Commander  Jan Courymwen,
approaching.
     "Edward!" Haralan said with a smile. "What news?"

     Also  watching the  departure of  the  Hussars, but  from a  much
different vantage point,  were three men and one woman.  "I would have
much  preferred the  Knight Commander  to  have sent  the Huscarls  or
Legion of  Death with the Hussars,"  spoke the shorter and  younger of
the three men.
     "Are you mad?"  asked the eldest. "We shall need  those troops to
hold off the Beinisons."
     "Phorsan makes a  valid observation, Lieran," the  third and most
expensively dressed  commented. "When the  time comes for our  Lord to
move, the Huscarls may prove...difficult."
     "I don't know, Ethros," Lieran said. "If reports can be believed,
the  Benison Emperor  and  his troops  have  smashed everything  we've
thrown at them!"
     "That...foreigner...doesn't   know  how   to  handle   Baranurian
troops," Phorsan said in disgust.
     Lord Ethros  of Northfield  turned from  regarding the  column of
horsemen.  "Don't be  an  idiot!"  he snapped.  "Sothos  is a  capable
general. *That* is why  I have been labouring for so  long to have him
discredited. His is  the mind behind the strategy. I  dare say that if
he had not moved  so many Regiments of the Royal  Army to the Southern
Marches during the winter we would be prisoners of Untar even now."
     Phorsan  took the  rebuke angrily,  his hand  flexing around  his
sword hilt. "You admire him!" he accused Ethros.
     "I respect  his abilities,"  Ethros countered calmly.  "As should
you. With  Sothos as  shield, Haralan is  untouchable. Once  Sothos is
gone..."
     "This is dangerous, Ethros!" Lieran said.
     "What say you, Lady?" Phorsan asked of the woman in the corner.
     "The prowess of the line Sothos  in combat hath long been known,"
came the oddly-accented voice from the  shadows. "To face on the field
the Knight Commander is to court the Reaper."
     "What do you suggest?"
     A black  form detached itself  from the  wall and moved  into the
light, midnight black robes rustling against the stone, face hidden by
the robes' cowl. "Force the Sothos to face thee in a contest for which
thee art most suited."
     "Politics?" Lieran asked.
     "Politics," Phorsan said with satisfaction.
     "Politics," spoke Ethros with decision.
     "Politics," said Celeste in a voice smooth as silk.

     Haralan listened to his Knight Commander's report on the state of
the Kingdom's army with supressed humour. The King was not a man given
to flippant  mannerisms. Indeed, the  matters on which Sir  Edward was
reporting were of  great import. The thing was, no  matter how hard he
tried, Haralan  simply could not  fail to find  the sight of  his most
trusted advisor standing,  literally, in the shadow  of that advisor's
chief aide a cause for humour.
     The two of them made an  odd pair. The shorter, Edward, always in
the  foreground of  attention while  the taller,  Commander Courymwen,
invariably attempted  to blend into  the background. Much of  that was
due to the station each occupied, of course.
     The personalities of each seemed mis-matched as well. Edward very
rarely relaxed his posture in  public. Even in private, among friends,
he was reserved. Haralan, Edward's  closest friend, saw his friend let
down his guard only occasionally. Haralan wondered at what the adopted
Baranurian's  homeland was  really  like if  it  regularly turned  out
products such  as Edward.  Sir Edward  displayed such  an intenseness,
such a resoluteness  of purpose, that almost all  of Haralan's knights
were in awe of the man. As for the common soldiers, well, they reacted
to Sir Edward  with a strange blend of fear,  respect, and utter faith
in their  supreme commander.  Whenever he walked  into a  room, Edward
dominated most by sheer strength of  persona. Talking to him, one felt
as if Edward  had the height advantage instead of  the speaker. All in
all, a surprise for those meeting the scarred Knight Commander for the
first time.
     That  same feeling  of surprise  was also  felt when  meeting Sir
Edward's aide, Jan Courymwen. With  her unusual height, six-foot four,
combined with  her flaming-red hair  and deep emerald-green  eyes, one
would  expect a  temper  and  attitude of  superiority  to match.  She
possessed  neither. Even  the fact  that she  was the  second-youngest
woman who  had gone through  the Royal  Military Academy to  reach the
rank of Commander did not give her cause to be boastful.
     She  was a  study  in contrasts.  Decisive in  her  duties as  an
officer of  the Royal Army,  she was often  shy and unsure  of herself
when not on duty. Much of her deference came from the circumstances of
her birth. Her  parents were from Port Sevlyn, poor  folk making their
living  working   for  Lord   Quillien  Thorne  along   Port  Sevlyn's
waterfront.  She owed  her position  at  the academy  to Lord  Thorne.
Together, she  and Edward administered  the Royal Army better  than it
had ever been administered in its long history.
     It  really was  quite sad,  Haralan  thought, that  such a  close
friendship as she  and Edward possessed must come to  an end. The King
sighed.
     Sir Edward ceased his narrative. "Something, Sire?"
     "Oh, nothing,  really," Haralan said  with a dismissive  wave. "I
was wondering,  should we not  send at least  part of the  garrison to
strengthen our forces facing the Fist of the Emperor in its advance?"
     "I think  not, my liege,"  Sir Edward responded. "Not  yet. Until
conclusions on  the Laraka have been  reached, we dare not  weaken the
capital."
     "Sound advice,  as always,  my friend."  Seeing the  Royal Magist
approaching, Haralan eased himself from  the battlements with a smile.
"What summons you to come calling on us, my Lord Marcellon?"
     "Busy, Sire?" Marcellon called out.
     "The Knight  Commander has just  finished reporting to me  on the
state of the Kingdom as he sees it."
     "An exceedingly thorough and intense  view it must be," Marcellon
jokingly commented as he joined the group.
     "War is not  a time for frivolity, Old Man,"  Edward said, rising
to the bait.
     "With you,"  the Royal  Magist commented, "there  is no  time for
frivolity." He continued, not giving  Edward a chance to speak. "Now,"
he began, keeping  up a running joke the two  had been cultivating for
weeks,  "why  don't  you carry  on  or  over  or  whatever it  is  you
warrior-types do and let civilized men get down to some real work?"
     Sir Edward turned to the King. "If His Royal Majesty will permit,
the Commander and I have work to do."
     "Certainly, Sir Edward. You have our leave to go."
     The  two warriors  saluted their  King and  strode off  along the
wall, making  for the nearest  tower. Marcellon  winked at Jan  as she
went and received an answering smile in return.
     Once  they were  out of  ear-shot,  Haralan turned  to his  chief
advisor on things political. "Any success, Lord Marcellon?"
     "Regretfully, no. I can find no hard source for the rumours about
them,"  he  said, indicating  the  retreating  figures of  the  Knight
Commander and his aide. "I have suspicions, but can offer no proof."
     "Can your magic not--?"
     "Haralan, magic is  not the cure-all for the  world's woes. There
is a limit to what I can do."
     "That is not sufficient! I am coming under increasing pressure --
from within even my own House! -- to remove Edward. You must give me a
weapon to use!"
     "I shall try, Majesty. I shall try."

     As they descended  the narrow stairs of one of  the great towers,
Edward asked  over his shoulder,  "What would you say  to a go  on the
practice field, Commander?"
     "It would be a welcome break in the routine, sir. I accept."
     The two  exited the  tower and  proceeded through  Crown Castle's
many defences,  arriving some half an  hour later at the  King's Keep.
They separated, each going to their rooms to fetch their gear.
     An hour  later, the sun  beginning to  set, Edward stood  in full
panoply awaiting  his aide and his  friend. Once done, he  would still
have his aide. But the friend would be gone.
     It is fitting I wear the  black over my shield and armour, Edward
thought. For  today, I  shall truly  feel deserving  of this  badge of
dishonour. A figure  in blue and gold  came out of a  small portal and
walked steadily  out onto the field.  A crowd was starting  to gather,
some out  of boredom, others  out of curiosity  to see who  the Knight
Commander was to fight,  still others eager to pick up  a trick or two
from the  man who directed  the Royal Army.  Edward waited for  Jan to
reach him, resigned to  what he must do, shield on  one arm, helm held
in the other.
     "Sorry I took so long, sir," Jan  said as she strode up. "My hair
was not being cooperative."
     "It has now succumbed, I gather?"
     She smiled. "After a fashion, sir.  I had such trouble with it, I
may consider getting it cut."
     "It would not suit you short so, Coury."
     "You like my hair?" she asked.
     Edward thought he detected a hint  of red in his friend's cheeks,
but dismissed it  as an effect of  the sun. "Yes. Very  much. Shall we
begin?"
     "Uh...yes, sir."  Jan took a  breath before speaking,  her manner
now very  formal. "I  greet you  this day,  Your Excellency,  upon the
field of combat. As challenged, I claim the right of selection. Do you
affirm or deny my right?"
     Edward responded in the same manner, a manner which, as a Knight,
came to him more easily than it  did his aide. "I greet thee this day,
valiant warrior,  upon this field  of combat.  I here doth  affirm thy
claim to the right of selection.  The claim of right of selection thus
affirmed, I doth now take upon  my judgement the resolution. Dost thou
recognize my right of resolution?"
     "I do recognize your right of resolution, Your Excellency."
     "I thank thee, worthy gentle. What shalt be thy pleasure?"
     "I choose sword and shield. What shall be the resolution?"
     "I choose as  resolution that the combat be to  the death with no
quarter given."
     "I accept the resolution."
     Both combatants  donned their helms  and settled into  a fighting
stance. Edward decided  on a quick, violent offensive and  moved in on
Jan almost immediately.
     Jan backed up, trying to use her longer reach and longer blade to
thwart the sudden attack. Edward came  right on in after her, sweeping
at her  legs, forcing her to  use more of  her shield and less  of her
sword.
     Realizing that a defensive strategy  was a course to destruction,
Jan leaned in on Edward's next stroke, using her shield as a battering
ram. It worked and the Knight  Commander soon found himself parrying a
furious series of strokes that sent  sparks and bits of wood flying in
the waning sunlight.
     Edward  was beginning  to get  the  worse of  the situation.  His
aide's longer reach made it more difficult for Edward to get in a good
strike. Consequently,  his shield  was being quickly  and methodically
hacked to bits.
     After what seemed hours, but in reality was only several seconds,
the two separated, standing five or so yards apart while each regained
some strength and re-evaluated the other's skill.
     Edward  decided  that he  needed  to  be the  one  to  go on  the
offensive and  he clearly  needed some advantage  to get  inside Jan's
reach. Once inside her reach, he thought he could exploit a gap or two
in her guard.
     He eased the remains of his  battered shield off of his left arm.
"Art thou ready to continue?" he  asked Jan. In response, she saluted.
At once, Edward flung his shield  at his opponent and followed it with
a charge.
     Jan caught the thrown shield on her blade, sending the splintered
target harmlessly to the ground. When  she brought her blade back into
position, she found  herself facing her commander at  very close range
coming  at her  from her  left, her  shield-arm. She  was too  slow in
bringing her shield around to cover and  a hard thump on her ribs from
the flat of Edward's blade finished the combat.
     A ragged  cheer from the  spectators evidenced their  pleasure at
the spectacle.  As the crowd broke  up, Edward and Jan  left the field
together heading for the entrance  to nearer to Edward's offices. Both
walked in silence while they brought their breathing under control.
     "I thought I had you," Jan said between breaths.
     "You  very  nearly  did,"  Edward responded.  "It  is  your  time
fighting in  line. You tend  to let your  guard down somewhat  on your
left -- too much reliance on your line-mate's sword to protect you."
     Jan shook out her hair. "I'll work on it, sir, if you'll instruct
me."
     "It's not as bad as all that, Coury. Just look at my shield."
     "It was a good workout," she agreed. Just then, she noticed where
they were heading and sighed.
     "Something wrong?"
     "No, sir. Well, yes, sir. I'd hoped to turn in."
     "Let Daniel handle things?"
     "A bit selfish, sir, I know, but we could both use the rest."
     "And rest we shall. I wanted to  speak with you in private and my
office qualifies. Besides, it's nearer than either of our quarters."
     Jan laughed. She  and Edward entered the Keep and  made their way
to Edward's office. The corridors were mostly deserted, the occaisonal
scribe or guard or member of the kitchen staff being encountered.
     They  entered  Edward's  outer office,  greeting  Captain  Daniel
Moore, Edward's other  staff officer, as they did.  "How fare things?"
Edward asked.
     "Nothing unusual, sir,"  Moore replied. "No new  reports from the
Laraka and no change on the southern front."
     "Good. Glad to hear it."
     "So  who won?"  he asked,  indicating what  was left  of Edward's
shield.
     "Who do you think?" Jan said with a chuckle.
     "It was a very near-run thing,"  Edward chimed in. "Coury made me
work for it."
     Moore smiled. "Are you two staying?"
     "You can wipe that beseeching  look off your face, Daniel Moore,"
Jan said with  relish. "Edward and I  are going to have  a little chat
and then leave you to minding the store."
     Moore  sighed a  sigh  that seemed  to come  from  the depths  of
despair. "One could always hope."
     Edward crossed to  the door to his office. "No  one is to disturb
us, Daniel," he said as he and Jan entered.
     Edward set his helm and what was  left of his shield on the small
table in the  corner opposite his large desk and  poured himself a cup
of water from the pitcher there.  Jan joined him, setting her helm and
much more  intact shield on the  table also. This left  Edward holding
both the pitcher  and his cup. He  poured his friend a  drink from the
cup she had rescued and went over to his desk.
     Jan  pulled  two chairs  over  from  the  table and  let  herself
collapse into one of them. Edward set the pitcher down on the desk and
then eased himself into the other.
     "I've been too long away from the practice field," he said as his
rapidly stiffening muscles protested their recent abuse.
     Jan let her  head sink back against the chair.  "Me too. Oh, that
smarts."
     The two close  friends just sat for a few  moments, letting their
muscles finish  berating them  before they continued.  It was  Jan who
spoke  first. "What  was it  you wanted  to talk  about, Edward?"  she
asked, eyes closed.
     Edward  carefully set  his cup  on  the desk.  "Coury," he  began
hesitantly, "I think  we should no longer be seen  together in public.
Further, I  think it would  be best if we  kept our relationship  on a
more professional level than it has thus far been."
     Jan's eyes  snapped open  and she  sat up.  "What?" she  asked in
confusion. "By all the gods why?"
     "You know why," he said, eyes downcast. "The rumours."
     "The rumours?" she asked incredulously. "But -- you never -- they
haven't mattered before," she protested.
     "They do now."  Edward ran his fingers  through his close-cropped
hair.  "Coury, there  is a  danger that  if the  rumours continue,  my
ability to  function as Knight  Commander may be threatened.  I cannot
allow that."
     She sat  there, unable --  unwilling --  to believe what  she was
hearing. "You...can't...allow...that?  Are you  trying to tell  me you
care for  the power and prestige  of the position of  Knight Commander
that dearly that you would...cut off our friendship just like that?"
     Now Edward looked directly at his aide. "What I am saying is that
my continued friendship with you is  putting in jeopardy my ability to
fight this war. I cannot compromise  that ability, not with the future
of the kingdom at stake."
     The young woman  sat back. "I thought I knew  you. I thought that
you were  a person who  above all else would  stand by his  friends. I
thought you had more dignity and honour than this."
     "Coury, let me explain," he pleaded.
     "No, you've made yourself quite clear. You're too high and mighty
to  have people  think you  could be  friends with  a commoner.  Well,
fine." She stood, tears fighting with  her anger. "I once had a friend
named Edward  Sothos. I don't know  who you are, but  if Edward Sothos
should return,  he'll know  where to  find me."  Without giving  him a
chance to respond,  she turned and left, slamming the  door on her way
out.
     No sooner had  she stormed out than Daniel Moore  opened the door
and leaned in. "Anything wrong, sir?" he asked his superior.
     "Wrong?"  Edward responded  as he  stared out  the window  at the
shadows full upon the castle grounds. "No, Captain."
     "But -- Coury --?"
     "Leave it, Captain."
     The bafflement  on Moore's face  was plain. "What about  her helm
and shield?"  he asked,  noticing the  articles on  the table  for the
first time.
     Edward twisted in his chair to face his officer. His gaze flicked
to the items on  the table and back to Moore. "Have  one of the guards
take them to Commander Courymwen's  quarters," he instructed in a dead
voice.
     "Yes, sir." Daniel was about to leave when Edward stayed him.
     "Captain," the Knight Commander said,  "I shall be at Gortholde's
Hall  should I  be  needed." So  saying, Sir  Edward  pushed past  the
still-bewilidered Captain Moore.
     As the door closed, Daniel shook his head. "Yes, sir."

     Those few servants unfortunate enough  to come upon Jan Courymwen
as she  went to her  quarters quickly  and without dignity  shied away
from the storm they saw in her face.
     Jan wrenched  open the door  to her room  and slammed it  hard as
soon as  she was through.  She fell  back against the  door, seething,
letting her anger have its way. That was soon spent as it finally sank
in that Edward had actually ended their friendship.
     With that  realization came  an emptiness.  Edward was  more than
friend to Jan Courymwen. He was  a mentor, an example of how society's
ideals could work in  the real world. He was also  the first person to
treat her as an equal as a warrior  and not just as a "girl playing at
swords" as she had been called in the Academy.
     The war had come  home to Jan in a totally  unforseen way and she
was unready  to deal with  it. When the tears  came, she did  not hold
them back. Unlike her anger, her tears lasted a long, long time.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                            'Bout 'Majin'
                        by David/Orny Liscomb
                   

     Darren emerged from the woods into the bone-warming sunlight of a
warm spring day. There was still snow  in places in the woods, and the
air within  had been sharp  and chill. After  the long months  of bare
trees and  gray skies, the  dancing sunlight on  the deep blue  of the
lake before him was a glorious sight.
     The road curved down to the  shore, just as the innkeeper back in
Pride's Landing had said it would,  when Darren had asked him where he
could find someone to take him  across the lake. A small cottage stood
nearby, with a dock extending twenty  feet into the water. Against the
side of  the building leaned  an old  rowboat, its wooden  planks gray
with age.  A couple of  old men sat facing  the lake in  wooden chairs
near the dock. Darren walked down and greeted them.
     "Excuse  me, milords.  I was  told  someone here  could ferry  me
across the lake?"
     The old  men looked at  him. Darren waited.  The one on  the left
spoke. "Tha's  so, junior.  But my  son Bug's got  the boat  just this
second. Gone down to  the cove, do a bit of  fishin'. 'Majin' he'll be
back 'fore nightfall. If'n so, 'majin' he'll take you across."
     Darren closed his  eyes. The innkeeper had told  him that getting
ferried across the lake would save him half a day's walk. But in order
to get here, he'd  had to walk two hours out of his  way. And now he'd
have to wait for  hours -- and he still might have  to wait all night!
And  he'd  wanted to  be  in  Westford tonight  to  be  early for  his
brother's investiture ceremony.
     Darren thought. "Anyone else nearby who has a boat?"
     The  old man  shook  his  head. "Nope.  Can't  say  as there  is,
junior."
     "Wait a  minute -- you've got  a rowboat over behind  your cabin.
Can I take that?"
     The old  man shook his  head again.  "Tch. I wouldn't  feel right
letting you take it. Ain't been in the water in a couple season."
     Darren sighed. These  old men hadn't used the boat  in years, but
weren't willing to  let him take it?  Wait -- maybe that  was it! They
were hedging about it because he'd leave  it on the far shore, with no
one to row it back across the lake!
     "Look, let me  buy it from you.  Here -- here's five  drin. Can I
take the boat?"
     The old man looked at the coins  in Darren's hand in front of his
face. "Well,  I guesso. It's  not much of a  boat, really. But  if you
insist..." He  held out a weathered  paw and Darren dropped  the coins
into the leathery palm.
     He  turned around  and headed  toward the  cabin. He  rounded the
corner and found the rowboat propped against the side of the building.
As he tilted it away from  the building, something jumped out from the
rotting leaves underneath.  Darren leapt back and let go  of the boat,
which bounced loudly against the cabin, then fell to the ground with a
thump, echoing the  pounding of his heart. He took  a deep breath; the
rodent that he'd flushed had scurried away underneath the cabin.
     Because the wood  was dry, the boat wasn't too  heavy, and Darren
didn't have much  of a problem hauling  it down to the  shore. The two
old men just  sat there watching him,  not saying a word.  He ran back
and fetched the two oars, which  the previous year's leaffall had half
buried. He slipped the oars into their locks and pushed off.
     He started  pulling for  the other side.  Because he  was sitting
facing the stern,  he watched the two  old men watch him  as the shore
gradually retreated. He was out five  drin, but at least this way he'd
make Westford by nightfall!
     He was probably two or three furlongs from shore before he turned
again to  see where he was  headed. The opposite shore  stood at least
another league distant,  and he took a moment to  admire the view. The
trees were beginning to bud, and the valley would be a wonderful sight
in autumn. He kind of envied the people who lived on the shores of the
lake.  Things were  certainly much  simpler here  than in  the crowded
crown city of Magnus.
     It  was about  this time  that Darren  noticed the  water in  the
bottom  of the  boat.  He hadn't  noticed it  before,  because he  was
wearing  his boots,  but  it was  already two  or  three inches  deep!
Looking closer,  he could see  water seeping, in some  places flowing,
between  the seams  in  the  planking of  the  boat.  The damned  boat
couldn't hold water!
     Darren  looked  for something  to  bail  with, but  there  wasn't
anything. He looked  longingly at the far shore, but  was certain that
he couldn't make it across. He sat back down and resignedly turned the
boat around  and headed back toward  the cabin and those  damnable old
men.
     The row  back was  strenuous. The boat  was rapidly  filling with
water, which slowed it down and made it heavier. He struggled with it,
sweating and  cursing the entire  way. Once  he turned around  to make
sure he was on course, and he saw the two old men sitting calmly, just
as he had left them ten minutes earlier. He didn't turn around again.
     He was perhaps half a furlong  from shore when the boat foundered
and just wouldn't move any more. There wasn't anything to do but swim.
Darren turned  and glared at his  audience before he slipped  over the
side of the rowboat and started to swim for shore.
     He rapidly began to tire,  and began venturing an occasional foot
to probe for the bottom. His arms were encumbered by the wet fabric of
his puffy  shirt, and  he struggled to  make any  progress whatsoever.
Finally, he could feel  the bottom, but it was still  too deep to walk
on; he bounded  along in a ponderous, bouncing mimicry  of a run until
the water was shallow enough to allow him to walk.
     He finally  dragged himself out  of the lake. His  white chemise,
now tan with silt  and green with bits of plants,  hung heavily on his
shoulders, and  his boots  were calf-high buckets  of mucky  water. He
walked up  to the old  men and just glared  at them. They  didn't even
smirk.
     After a moment, one of them  spoke to the other. "You know, Jess,
a boat made of dry wood just ain't no use."
     "Yep," replied  the other. "Gotta let  it soak fer a  while - let
the wood swell and fill up all them little cracks."
     "Yep. 'Bout 'majin'."
     Darren just walked away, heading  back toward Pride's Landing. He
wouldn't make  Westford by nightfall, but  he'd be sure to  make it my
nightfall tomorrow,  even if it  took him half a  day to get  there on
foot.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1  (C)    Copyright   August,   1993,   DargonZine,     Editor   Dafydd
. All  rights revert to the  authors. These stories
may  not  be  reproduced  or   redistributed  (save  in  the  case  of
reproducing  the whole  'zine  for further  distribution) without  the
express permission of the author involved.








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--   DargonZine Volume 6, Issue 4        12/07/93          Cir 1153   --
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--                            Contents                                --
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 Vengeance is Mine ...        Max Khaytsus           Yule 10-23, 1014
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1                         Vengeance is Mine...
                           by Max Khaytsus
               (b.c.k.a )

     Having seen as  much as he had of Sharks'  Cove burned, pillaged,
and  deserted, Rien  was surprised  to see  the Abyssment  standing in
tact. He was even more amazed to  see a trickle of people going in and
out of the bar, citizens of Sharks' Cove and Beinison troops alike. He
watched the flow  of traffic for a while, then  calmly walked down the
street and into the tavern.
     Inside, nothing had  changed since his last visit.  It was noisy,
smoky and  very crowded. "Move along!"  a rough voice barked  and Rien
hurried past  the bouncer at the  door, in a  hurry to get out  of the
doorway.
     "Ale,"  he declared  at the  bar and  slapped some  coins on  the
counter. The  bartender silently scooped  up the money and  and placed
the filled mug on the bar.
     Rien picked it  up and, although not liking the  bitter flavor of
alcohol, drank, observing the room. So far he had seen no trace of the
Sharks' Cove militia,  but there were quite a few  of them here, mixed
with the  Beinison soldiers and sailors,  drinking together, laughing.
It was  no surprise the town  guard sold out. They  were always little
more than a mercenary troop for hire.
     Off in the far  corner Rien noticed a familiar face  and a man he
did not  know sitting with her.  Sitting down on a  stool, Rien looked
away, hoping  the woman  had not seen  him. He wanted  to talk  to her
alone, preferably in a place more private than this, but the table she
sat at would  do just as well.  Rien glanced over his  shoulder at the
man at the table. He was  well dressed, clearly not a laborer. Perhaps
a  merchant or  an  aristocrat or  a  minor noble.  Not  likely to  be
Baranurian at all.
     "Another ale," Rien told the  bartender. He was growing impatient
from the need  to find out what  happened to Adrea and  the urgency in
his voice clearly  betrayed his emotional state. He did  not know what
to think  about her absence.  She could  have escaped or  perhaps been
killed, but  she could  also be  a prisoner somewhere  or hurt  and in
trouble. It was those last  two possibilities Rien worried about most.
Those were the ones that she would  need help to escape and so long as
he  did not  know what  had happened  to her,  he was  helpless to  do
anything.
     He secretly held the hope that she had escaped, although the more
likely possibility was that Adrea had  been killed. He did not want to
believe in  that second alternative. He  knew she was too  good to get
into trouble like that. He hopped that  she had gotten out of the city
in time.
     Without noticing it, Rien finished the second mug of ale and when
he looked back to the corner table, the man was no longer there.
     "Give me two glasses of red  wine," Rien told the bartender. "The
good wine, not what you water down. And in real glass."
     "Two Rounds," the man said.
     A bit on the  stiff side, probably due to the  low supply and war
time inflation. Rien dug out the two  silver coins and put them on the
counter before himself. The bartender came back empty handed, probably
not expecting Rien to pay, but at the sight of the coins, scooped them
up and left.
     Having finally received the two glasses, Rien made his way to the
corner table and sat down without being asked.
     "So what does a good doctor go for in Sharks' Cove these days?"
     The woman looked at him. "Life's cheap. What about a mercenary?"
     Rien put  one of the  glasses in front  of her. "Life's  cheap on
both sides of the war."
     She smiled, a touch of irony in her expression. "So which side of
the war are you on, Rien the Mercenary?"
     "Does it  matter?" He  was still  trying to find  out if  she was
trustworthy.
     "You'd be surprised. Revolutionaries, vigilantes, terrorists. You
wouldn't want to get caught in the wrong part of town..."
     Rien took  a sip of  wine, watching  the people pass  through the
room.
     "Which one are you?"
     "I'm sorry. Which am I?"
     "Vigilante? Revolutionary?"
     "Tourist."
     "In a place like this?"
     Rien let a smile slip.  "Sharks' Cove has everything. Slums, high
society, exotic goods, Quirin,  a swamp, mountains...even the Beinison
army. Where else in Baranur can you get all that?"
     "There's struggle and death here,"  Jenye said. "That's all there
is in Sharks' Cove. That's all there ever was."
     Rien leaned back in his chair.  "I'm looking for a friend. I need
your help."
     Jenye folded her  arms, studying him. "What makes  you think I'll
help you?"
     "Old times."
     "We've had no old times! And Isom is still looking for you."
     "Does he know who I am?"
     "He knows you're a tall blond man who cost him thousands of Marks
and that's enough to keep looking."
     "You didn't sell me out?" Rien was somewhat surprised.
     "Rien the  Mercenary? There  must be thousands  of you  out there
right now!"
     "Of me?"
     "Not by  name, but  the battlefields are  littered with  men like
you."
     Rien took another sip of wine. Was she serious or facetious? "And
if I tell you my full name and where I'm from?"
     "I may think  you want me to visit." She  motioned a serving girl
over and whispered something to her. Something about a room.
     "But will you  think I want Lord Isom to  visit?" Rien asked when
Jenye turned back.
     She shook  her head. "I  have nothing to  gain by selling  you to
him. I wouldn't've told  you how to find him in the  first place, if I
liked the man."
     "What's your problem with him?" Rien asked.
     "I  don't..." Jenye  looked around,  casting a  particularly long
glance at the Beinison soldiers two tables away. Her voice was quieter
whens she  started speaking again.  "I don't  like the idea  of people
being sold as cattle."
     Rien nodded. "I approve."
     "I know," Jenye looked away. "That's why I helped you last time."
     The serving  girl returned before  Jenye could answer  and handed
her a key. "Eli said you can have it as long as you need."
    "Thank you."
     Rien watched the girl go, wanting  to ask what that was all about
and waiting for the answer to the question he had already asked.
     "Come with me," Jenye stood up.
     Rien also got up, picking up  both wine glasses. He handed one to
Jenye. "I brought this so I could get you drunk and more cooperative."
     She smiled. "Good try, but I don't drink."
     "You  don't? You  did when  I met  you last  Nober. It  certainly
looked like wine."
     Jenye laughed. "Eli gives me water and I add coralline to make it
red. I hate alcohol."
     "Sorry," Rien sighed and put his own glass back on the table.
     "Oh, don't leave it," Jenye said.  "Maybe I can get you drunk and
cooperative. Come along."
     Rien picked  up the glass and  followed Jenye up the  stairs to a
room at the  end of the corridor  where she unlocked the  door and let
him go in first.
     "This used to be the best room at the inn, possibly the best room
for rent  in town. The  furniture, the  view, the status.  There isn't
much left now. Not much other than the furniture."
     Rien walked  over to the window  and looked out. A  burned street
lay before  him, opening into a  destroyed market square. "I  see what
you mean..."
     "That house over there, with the burned top floor, used to belong
to the Captain  of the Town Guard. The fighting  was most severe here.
The Guard tried to protect his residence, but the Benosian troops kept
coming,  wave after  wave. I  was here  watching as  they stormed  the
house, dragged him up to the roof, chained him there and set the whole
place on fire." She shivered at her own words. "And just like that the
whole city became theirs..."
     "Why did they let the Abyssment stand?"
     "Gaius isn't a  man without influence. He made  deals. I wouldn't
be surprised if he bought the regiments controlling the city..." Jenye
sat down on the edge of the bed. "...what's left of the city, anyway."
     "What  about Quirin?"  Rien asked,  looking at  the silver  spire
raising above the  river, beyond the burned portion of  the city. "Did
Gerald and Morgan make it out?"
     "Probably," Jenye  said. "God only  knows. Certainly no  one here
does."
     Rien let a  smile slip. "Are you Stevene?"  he asked, recognizing
the monotheistic reference.
     "Yeah. What about you?"
     "I'm a heretic," he said, trying to hide the smile.
     "Benosian? Olean?"
     "No, just a heretic."
     "You don't believe at all?"
     Rien tested  her with his  eyes. "I  believe in Mother  Earth and
Father Sky,  in the dark night  and the brilliant day.  My deities are
the plants  and the rocks  and the animals.  My gods are  the elements
that create my environment."
     "You do  know what my  religion says  will happen to  you?" Jenye
asked.
     Rien nodded. "It's a risk I'll have to take."
     "Sit  down," Jenye  indicated to  the bed.  "We can  talk without
intrusions here."
     "Not about religion, I hope."
     "About why you came here."
     Rien put the wine glass on the window sill and sat down by Jenye.
"Should I start over?"
     "Please."
     "I'm here looking  for a friend and I was  hoping you could point
me to someone who could provide some facts."
     "It must be a good friend to bring you into the middle of a war,"
Jenye commented.
     "She is. And I hope she's all right."
     "She? Your wife? Lover?"
     "A student...a friend. She stayed longer than she should have."
     "Where was she staying?" Jenye asked.
     "The Tipsy Dragon, by the river," Rien said. "She tended bar."
     "The Tipsy Dragon was destroyed yesterday," Jenye said, wondering
about the coincidence.
     "I know. I did  that." It was not the complete  truth, but he was
not going to say that now.
     "You?  You  don't  look like  a  mage  any  more  than you  do  a
mercenary."
     "I'm not. There were other factors involved."
     "Describe her for me," Jenye asked. "I'll see what I can do."
     "She's a little shorter than  you, blond hair, shoulder length in
Mertz, brown eyes.  Athletic, very outgoing. She has a  little girl, a
year and a half old, but they've been separated since early spring."
     "Is the  girl with her  father?" Jenye pressed Rien  for personal
information.
     "She's with a friend. We were never told who the father is."
     "Is she safe?" there was genuine concern in Jenye's voice.
     "I hope so. It's hard to tell where the war front is these days."
     "What's your friend's name."
     "Adrea Rainer."
     "All right. You give me a day and I'll see what I can do."
     "Thank you."  He stood up,  ready to  leave. "Jenye, if  you need
money or help, let me know."
     "Nothing yet. Just come back tomorrow  evening. If I'm not in the
tavern, ask at the bar."
     "Thank you,"  Rien repeated  himself and left.  He still  was not
sure how  much Jenye could be  trusted, although it appeared  that she
was well on the Baranurian side  of the conflict. Either way, going to
her was  better than  not going to  anyone at all.  There had  been no
leads at The Tipsy Dragon at all.  Deven had made sure that it and the
men in  it were  destroyed for  good. Rien  did not  like the  idea of
coming to  Sharks' Cove to attack  the Beinison army from  the inside,
but he  could understand Deven's  bitterness towards these  people and
their country and did  nothing to stop him. It was  always a good idea
not to come between a mage and his vengeance.
     His biggest concern now was Adrea.  It had been more than a month
since the  invasion and  there was  no trace of  her. What  could have
happened? It had  been far too long to tell  anything by the condition
of the tavern. For  all he knew, Adrea left days  before the attack or
maybe several months later.
     Rien walked around  the Abyssment to look at  the charred remains
of the  market square  and the  destroyed home  of the  Guard Captain.
Burned alive. What a horrible death. As hard as he tried, he could not
understand what  could drive someone to  do things like this,  to draw
blood with no provocation, to kill and  loot and be willing to die. He
did not  understand what drew people  into these conflicts and  at the
same time, when drawn into one himself, he was no better than those he
condemned.
     ReVell Dower was  another sore spot, leading an  army against the
Beinison forces, outnumbered  five to one. What good could  he do? For
whom? The gleeful  heroic charge into battle made no  sense. There was
no point with odds this great, no matter what the intent.
     Rien walked between the burned booths, the street full of litter.
There were no  dead bodies here as the city  was still inhabitable and
such decay would be a way  of spreading sickness and disease. But what
was left  of the market  square was also  empty. He stood  alone among
ruins, the blackened support frames and  remainders of walls. It was a
whole different world, nothing like what Sharks' Cove used to be like.
     "Hey, you!" someone yelled in the Benosian tongue and Rien turned
to look.
     A Beinison soldier stood, arms folded, at the edge of the street,
facing Rien.
     "Come here."  It was said in  Benosian and Rien pretended  not to
understand.  He knew  that if  he  spoke, he  would never  pass for  a
Benosian citizen anyway. Perhaps ignorance would be better.
     The soldier drew his sword  and approached Rien. "Are you stupid,
or what?"
     `Probably stupid,'  Rien thought. It  was suicide to go  into the
streets with or without a sword, but it may have been better if he had
his now.
     "You must be  stupid, son," the soldier  approached, swinging the
sword for balance. "You're stupid,"  he repeated in Baranurian, trying
to provoke a fight.
     Rien took  a few  steps back,  to the  remainder of  a wall  of a
building.
     "Oh,  you're making  it so  easy..." the  Benosian words  sounded
again. The  sword started into its  strike and Rien, with  his back to
the wall,  dropped to his knees  and bent forward. The  blade impacted
the  wall with  a crack,  splintering  the already  damaged wood.  The
soldier's legs were  just before Rien and with a  quick swing, he sent
the man tumbling to the ground. The sword remained stuck in the wall.
     Rien got up as the soldier drew a dagger and stepped on his right
forearm. "Drop it," he said in Benosian, his speech heavily accented.
     The man tried to throw Rien  with his struggling and was rewarded
with a heavy boot  crashing down on his wrist. The  dagger flew out of
his hand as he yelled out in pain. Rien knelt down over him.
     "A few years  ago I would have  broken your arm to  make sure you
never fight again, but I've learned that people like you will learn to
use their off arm  just so they may cause more pain."  He drew his own
dagger.
     "It'll be an honor to die at  the hands of an enemy," the soldier
spat, "to die fighting for my country."
     "We're fighting for my country," Rien answered, running the knife
across the  soldier's throat. Warm  blood squirted up and  stained the
ground, the rushing  air from the lungs  causing it to foam  as it ran
out.
     Rien tossed the dagger aside and leaned against the wall, looking
away from the body. He could still hear the shallow gurgling gasps and
the  sound made  him sick.  He  was disgusted  with what  he did,  the
soldier's dying  words repeating themselves  in his mind. The  man was
already on the ground, helpless and Rien killed him anyway.
     "Damn you!"

                     *          *          *

            Rien held his breath as clanking footsteps fell on the
        wooden bridge above him. The quickly flowing water from the
        recent rainstorm threatened to tear him away from the supports
        he clung to, and he hung on as the clanking of boots above him
        refused to subside. He looked up, not being able to see more
        than shadows passing over the cracks. There must have been over
        a thousand men in this unit. It was as big as the one he had
        encountered up river just a few days before.
            As a single man he would probably be overlooked by the
        Beinison force as relatively harmless, if noticed at all, but
        his cautious nature forced him to hide from the soldiers,
        hoping that avoiding them entirely would also avoid any
        possible unexpected conflicts. As the footsteps on the bridge
        ceased, Rien released his grip on the support and maneuvered
        closer to shore. It was wet and muddy, but the bushes were
        green and strong. Grabbing a thick branch above the water, Rien
        pulled himself out on shore. Off on the other side of the river
        he could see the Beinison troops marching in dead precision.
            It was a hot mid-summer day and Rien did not worry about
        staying wet for long, but nonetheless, he took the time to
        shake the water off his clothes and out of his hair. Rien was
        sure that as soon as he was on his way the sun would take care
        of the rest and he would be dry, if not clean. He lingered on
        the shore a bit longer, looking into the rapidly flowing waters
        of one of Laraka's many tributaries. The mud he managed to stir
        was quickly being washed down stream and the water was once
        again becoming clear.
            "Hey, you, peasant!"
            Rien set his jaw.
            "I'm talking to you! Bring me water, peasant!"
            Rien pulled the peace binding on his scabbard lose and
        stood up from among the bushes, facing the man who called him,
        a middle aged Benosian in grimy armor sitting atop a tired
        horse.
            The soldier studied Rien, surprised to see someone so young
        and armed. He assumed it was some old fisherman in the brush.
            Rien stepped forward, onto the road, looking the soldier up
        and down. The man was clearly a Benosian knight, a blue star
        hanging on a chain draped over his shoulders. This was probably
        not going to turn out well.
            "Well?" the Beinison knight asked. "Where's my water?"
            Rien pointed over his shoulder with his thumb. "Must be in
        the river."
            The soldier pulled his feet out of the stirups and slid off
        his horse. "I hope you use that sword half as well as you use
        your mouth."
            "I'd rather not have to show my skill to others," Rien
        tried backing off, but it was too late, the man had yanked his
        own sword from the saddle scabbard and was approaching, ready
        for a fight.
            Rien took a step back, mentally readying himself. The
        Benosian's approach was sloppy, almost arrogant. The sword was
        loosely held, the wrist limp, the other arm was just hanging at
        his side. Was he really a knight who could not fight or simply
        not what he appeared to be? Could he be trying to play a trick,
        hoping to catch his opponent off guard?
            Rien planted his feet solidly on the ground. A single good
        move could solve the problem no matter what the other man's
        intentions and proficiencies were. He was glad to have unbound
        his sword.
            The Beinison knight closed in to striking range, a clearly
        solid grasp on the hilt of his sword. He thrust in a feint,
        changing the attack to a swing at Rien's weapon arm. It caught
        Rien off guard, but he managed to get away with a minor cut,
        drawing his sword on the move. He stepped closer, inside the
        reach of his opponent's sword, and thrust his own into the
        man's gut. The sharp tip easily tore through the chain armor
        and sank into the flesh underneath. The Beinison gasped in
        surprise, wrapping his free arm around Rien for support. The
        sword fell from his grasp.
            "Water..." was the last thing he muttered before sinking to
        the ground.

                       *          *          *

     "It's my  human half, Deven,"  Rien explained. "That's  the blood
that makes me do these things."
     The mage stirred the fire with a stick, releasing sparks from the
ambers into  the air.  "I don't  think Eelail  are any  different from
humans. You  have the  same drives,  want the  same things...  You get
angry for the same reasons."
     "That wasn't  just anger.  For that  one moment  if I  could have
reached into his  chest and torn his  heart out with my  bare hands, I
would have."
     "No. Look where you are. Look at the death and destruction around
you. You're angry and you haven't stopped being angry since the moment
you got here. What do you have to be angry about?"
     Rien looked away.  Deven was right. He did not  want to be angry,
but he  was. "I don't know,"  he sighed, although deep  inside he knew
well enough.  Between the  war and Adrea's  disappearance, as  well as
Deven's own rebellion against the orders to stay out of the war he had
too many things to  worry about and it all added to  his anger at what
he saw. He picked at his food,  no longer interested in eating. "I did
it without thinking and all I can see now is that cut I made."
     "You've killed before."
     "Not like this. Not after my  opponent was down. Never a helpless
man."
     "They killed my parents when they were helpless," Deven said. "Do
you know how the Empire kills it's enemies?"
     Rien shook his head.
     "They cut  their eyes, so they  can't see and hamstring  arms and
legs, so all they can do is  scream. Then the lucky ones are burned or
drowned.  Others  are  just  left  for  the  carrion  birds  or  other
scavengers, alive  and unable  to defend  themselves. My  parents were
burned. At night I can still hear their screams..."
     "I'm sorry."
     "It's been forty years," Deven said.  "It doesn't hurt as much as
it used to."
     "But you still kill for it."
     "Revenge is a deep  cup to drink from and of  all people, I admit
it."
     Rien pushed his plate away. "What  if we find that Adrea is dead?
What then?  Revenge on  the Beinison army?  Go after  Vasquez? Talens?
Untar?"
     Deven shrugged. "We'll see."
     "We'll see what?  If we can fight with one  thousand to one odds?
Or do you mean the entire Beinison army?"
     "I mean we'll see. I hope she's  safe, but if not, I don't intend
to forgive."
     "Neither do I," Rien admitted  bitterly, "and that's the problem.
That's  the human  reaction.  My people  could  never justify  killing
others at  random after what had  happened to them. Perhaps  if I knew
who, where...but then..."
     "Will you need me tomorrow?" Deven asked.
     "I don't think so," Rien  answered. "I'll be meeting Jenye again,
see what she found out. Day after tomorrow, if she had any news."
     "Then I'd like to use the day to look at the Beinison fleet. They
seem to  be just waiting  in the  bay. I'd like  to see what  they are
waiting for."
     Rien nodded. "Be careful."

                       *          *          *

            The annoying fizzling sound of the spell subsided, leaving
        behind traces of what used to be a heavy lock. Deven gave the
        door a push and it opened with ease, the remnants of the lock
        slipping out of the frame and shattering on the ground. Silence
        ruled inside the dark old house, making Deven wonder who the
        previous inhabitants were and what had happened to them now.
            He lit a candle with his finger, choosing to conserve the
        energy that would be required to light the room. The table on
        which the candle stood was littered with empty wine bottles and
        the remains of a meal. He picked up a bottle and smelled it.
        Baranurian wine.
            Something creaked and Deven returned the bottle to the
        table. He was here for a single purpose, a single person. He
        walked across the room to the stairs leading up and as quietly
        as he could, made his way to the second floor. The darkness
        here was very deep, the light of the candle on the table
        downstairs unable to penetrate this far. He muttered a curse
        and an incantation, creating a glowing sphere the size of a
        chicken egg. He needed the light.
            The top of the landing fanned out in three directions, a
        door in each of the alcoves and another one behind him. Which
        room? Were all occupied? He should have asked more questions of
        the urchin before coming here, but all he thought to find out
        was if there were any guards.
            Something creaked again, behind the door to his right, and
        Deven carefully approached it, the glowing sphere trailing
        after him. He carefully reached for the door and pushed it
        open. The light of the sphere behind him projected his shadow
        into the room, casting a deep blue glow around his outline.
        Someone gasped.
            Deven moved forward, the light sphere trailing him, better
        illuminating the room. On the bed sat a woman, holding a
        blanket to her chest. Her widely opened eyes expressed fear and
        concern.
            "I am looking for Lord Asart Geldavery," Deven said in his
        native Benosian.
            "Next room," the woman whispered, pointing.
            "Thank you," he turned and left, the sphere bobbing up and
        down behind him. He hoped she would not yell in view of the
        fact that he had not only presented himself as a mage, but a
        Benosian as well. Deven pulled the door closed after himself,
        satisfied with his prediction. First thing first. Asart and who
        ever else, if there was trouble.
            He walked to the central alcove and pushed the door open.
        There was instant scrambling in the room as his glowing shadow
        announced his presence. "Lord Asart Geldavery?" Deven asked of
        the man in bed. A woman unsuccessfully hid behind the man.
            "I am."
            "Grandson of Count Jaril Geldavery?"
            "Yes?" His voice sounded less sure, somewhat puzzled.
            "Your grandfather wishes to see you." A ball of light fell
        to the bed from Deven's outstretched hand, quickly enveloping
        it and half the room in fire. "Tell him Baron Yasarin still has
        followers."
            The last of the words were drowned out by agonizing
        screams.

                       *          *          *

     It was shortly before sunset that Rien started for the Abyssment.
He  spent the  morning  looking over  the city,  trying  to look  less
conspicuous  than  the  day  before  and  avoiding  soldiers  and  the
remainder of the  almost invisible town guard as much  as he could. It
almost worked.
     At one of the alley ways he noticed a small group of youths. They
loitered, talked, one  muttered a hello as Rien walked  by, then, when
he  was  half  way down  the  block,  he  heard  yells and  sounds  of
commotion. When he turned, he  saw four Benosian soldiers being pelted
with  rocks by  the youngsters.  He did  not give  the situation  much
thought, but when the soldiers drew  their swords and charged into the
alley after the boys, Rien ran back, hoping to prevent a massacre.
     He made it to the corner in time  to see a large log tumble off a
wall of crates,  crashing into the soldiers and causing  boxes to rain
down on them. The running boys  returned, gathering around the pile of
shattered boxes, obviously  scared, but wanting to take  their task to
its obvious conclusion. One bent down to take a sword from an unmoving
soldier when,  to everyones surprise,  the unmoving man's  hand locked
around his wrist and the soldier planted a dagger into the youngster's
side.
     The rest of  the boys ran as  the soldiers got up  with war cries
and charged after them.
     Rien cut around  the boxes, blindsiding the last  of the soldiers
and getting his sword. The man sprawled out on the ground confused and
disoriented.  The  other three  stopped  their  charge and  turned.  A
sinking feeling hit Rien. He did not want to fight and kill after what
had happened  the day before, but  at this point there  was no backing
out.
     He waited. Attacking first was asking to lose advantage with this
many opponents.  Waiting could  mean the same  thing. As  they started
spreading out  to surround him, he  moved back, to the  alley wall, to
keep all of them in his field of vision.
     With a  yell one of the  soldiers jumped forward and  swung. Rien
parried and continued moving back. There were only a few more steps to
the wall  when the  soldiers rushed him.  He sidestepped  one, elbowed
another.  Surprisingly, the  third  fell  on his  own.  The last  man,
without a sword,  did nothing. Rien did not wait  for his good fortune
to change. He  parried another swing, feinted a strike,  and his sword
connected with  the arm  of his  confused opponent.  With a  scream of
pain, the man backed off. The attack came easer than Rien expected. It
came from his reflexes, without thought.
     Three to go. Two. The man who  had fallen was not getting up. His
sword was picked up by the unarmed man.
     Rien parried two  more strikes and made one of  his own, when one
of the men stiffened up and  fell forward. Both Rien and his remaining
opponent stopped fighting to look at him.
     "Mage!" the man with the injured arm yelled and ran.
     What he did not see at a  distance was a black arrow sticking out
of the soldier's back. "You're probably next," Rien told his remaining
opponent.
     The man  answered with a  vicious swing that Rien  barely dodged.
His back  was now  against the  wall, a dead  body at  his feet  and a
Beinison soldier viciously swinging his sword to keep him off balance.
There was no strategy in the foreigner's attack.
     Rien swung  his sword to  break the soldier's pattern,  parried a
hit and feinted a head shot. As  his opponent's sword came up to block
the shot,  Rien brought  his swing  down, sinking  the blade  into the
man's side.
     The soldier looked  at Rien in surprise, staggered  and fell with
the sword  still lodged in  his body. The  methods of killing  did not
change in one day, nor did they feel differently. The look in the eyes
of the dying was the same fear as always.
     Rien stepped  away from  the wall  and scanned  the roof  tops of
surrounding  buildings. Nothing.  No  archer, not  even  a trace  that
anyone had ever been  up there. He bent down to  examine the arrow. It
had a  black shaft, dyed by  its looks, black fletchings  and, when he
pulled it  out, a  black flint  tip. The  construction appeared  to be
flawless,  as did  the aim.  The arrow  penetrated the  soldier's mail
between the  shoulder blades, just  to the left  of the spine.  He was
probably dead before he hit the  ground. Examining the other man, Rien
discovered that an  arrow penetrated his chest and broke  when he fell
on  it. These  shots  were  obviously aimed  to  kill,  not injure  or
disable.
     Scanning the rooftops one more  time, Rien hurried from the alley
before the sun set and submerged  it into complete darkness. There was
no need to sit here in the dark  and wait for the escaped man to bring
reinforcements. And  the boys who  started this fight were  long since
gone.
     To his surprise, Rien found the last soldier lying face down just
short of  the exit into the  street. A black shaft  protruded from the
base of  his skull. No longer  being able to resist  the mystery, Rien
pulled out the arrow and hid it  under his tunic, now hurrying to meet
Jenye.
     It was  completely dark  when he  made it  to the  Abyssment. The
tavern was crowded with people, not  a single table or chair available
to use, not even at the bar.  Rien could not remember ever seeing this
pace so  busy. Jenye  was no  where in  the crowd.  After a  moment he
walked over to the bartender and  asked for an ale. "Is Jenye around?"
he asked when the drink was served.
     "Who's asking?"
     "Rien."
     "Room five, up the stairs."
     Leaving the ale  at a table surrounded by  drunks, Rien proceeded
upstairs.  This  was  not  the  same room  as  the  previous  morning,
positioned on the opposite wall, facing north, away from the river. He
knocked.
     Jenye opened the  door. She was dressed in  travelling clothes, a
change from the flashy styles she usually wore. "Come in."
     He did.  "Did you  learn anything?"  he asked  as she  closed the
door.
     "Maybe. Eli found out that The  Tipsy Dragon had been occupied by
Beinison forces  since the day  of the invasion. Whatever  happened to
your friend must've happened on the same day."
     "Then we need to find the people who were present that same day,"
Rien said.
     "I'm ahead of you,"  Jenye smiled. "I was going to  ask you to do
that with me tonight."
     "Let's go."
     "If the first place won't work out,  we can go to another, but it
may require bribes."
     "I'll take care of them."
     "All  right, then,"  Jenye  agreed. "We'll  start  with a  street
vendor I know."
     They left the crowded tavern  and headed west, towards the docks,
Jenye leading the way.
     "I have  a question for  you," Rien said. "I  witnessed something
today that strikes me as bizarre, even for Sharks' Cove."
     "What?"
     He took  the black arrow  from under his  tunic and showed  it to
Jenye.
     "Oh, God!" she exclaimed. She grabbed it from his hands, tore off
the fletchings,  broke off the  tip and  threw the parts  in different
directions. "Come on," she broke into a run.
     Rien followed her. "What's wrong?"
     She did not answer until they  ran a few blocks. "The penalty for
carrying that is death," she gasped when she stopped.
     "Death?"
     "Where did you get it?"
     "In a dead body that I was fighting. What is it?"
     "I  told you  yesterday  we have  vigilantes and  revolutionaries
here. The most wanted  of them is Ga'en the Blind,  an archer who uses
black arrows."
     "The Blind?"
     "They say  that he's completely  blind because he wears  a helmet
with no eye slits." She turned away and looked back the way they came.
"Many think that  he was a soldier  in the Legion of  Death, caught by
the  Beinisons and  tortured.  His eyes  were burned  out  and he  was
released into the wilderness, where he somehow became what he is."
     "The Legion of Death?" Rien  asked. The Legion were two regiments
in the Combined Host of Baranur, the Red Death and the Grey Death. Two
of the perhaps best trained heavy  infantry archer regiments on all of
Cherisk. Their  mention alone has  been known to shatter  enemy morale
and send armies off the field of combat.
     "He's been  called `The Black Death',"  Jenye explained, "because
of the arrows he uses. The reward for him now is ten Marks, but no one
knows who he is."
     "That may  be," Rien said, "but  I doubt he's blind.  I saw those
shots  and I  doubt I  could  duplicate them...and  I consider  myself
skilled with the bow."
     "He could be aided by magic," Jenye suggested.
     Rien shrugged. "I've learned that a lot of myths and legends tend
to be placed on common things that seem to defy explanation."
     "I think this  town needs all the heroes of  myths and legends it
can  get," Jenye  said.  "He  goes around  attacking  thieves and  the
Beinison army  and that rallys  people to  his cause. What  did happen
with you, anyway?"
     "Some kids were attacked by Beinison soldiers and I tried to help
them get away. The next thing I knew, there were black arrows sticking
out of the patrol."
     "Well,  that's the  reason there's  such  a high  reward for  his
head," Jenye said. "The Beinison army lost quite a few men to him."
     As they talked, they reached  their destination and Jenye knocked
on the door of a small wooden house, little more than a two room shack
constructed of  old rotting planks and  a torn ship sail,  to keep the
wind and the rain out. A  woman of Jenye's age, although appearing ten
years her senior, cracked open the door.
     "Yes?"
     "Walda, good evening to you. Is your husband home?"
     "Come in, please," she opened the door completely.
     Rien followed Jenye into the house.
     "Moldan, Doctor Calyd is here to see you."
     A balding,  tired looking man  appeared at  the door to  the back
room. "What can I do for you, Doctor?"
     "Please,  sit down,"  Walda indicated  to a  low bench  along the
wall. "Can I bring you something to eat?"
     "No, thank you, Walda. I'm fine."
     Rien refused as well. This family  did not seem to have enough to
feed themselves, much less strangers.
     "Moldan," Jenye started, "I'm looking for a woman who was in town
at the start  of the invasion. She  tended bar at The  Tipsy Dragon. I
need to find out what happened to her."
     "A pretty young thing, yes, I remember," he muttered. "Last I saw
her was a few days before the Beinisonian ships came."
     "We  need to  find her,  Moldan," Jenye  cast a  glance at  Rien.
"Could you find out?  Ask around? If you can find  the people who were
at The Tipsy Dragon that..."
     "If they're alive and in town," Moldan agreed.
     There was  a scream from  the back  room and everyone  jumped up.
Walda rushed out through the doorway.
     "My son,  Barar," Moldan  explained. "I fear  he's seen  too many
horrors of the war."
     "Let me take a look," Jenye offered.
     "I have nothing to pay you with, Doctor," Moldan protested.
     "Then you  won't have to,"  she said and disappeared  through the
curtained doorway.
     Moldan followed  her, shaking  his head. Rien  stepped up  to the
curtain, to look in the other room.  Walda and Jenye knelt by a skinny
boy, perhaps eight or ten years old, dirty and crying. Moldan absently
stood  not far  away, looking  on. As  Jenye talked  to the  boy, Rien
scooped some coins from his purse  and tossed them into the empty soup
pot leaning against the wall by the fireplace. Perhaps that would give
them a chance to fill it with real soup tomorrow.
     Jenye soon finished  with the boy and they left  after Moldan and
Walda thanked them profusely and promised to do all that they could to
help.
     "Sad, isn't it," Jenye asked as they walked down the street. "The
boy, I mean."
     Rien nodded. "You have to wonder why life has to be so unfair for
those so young."
     She looked at him. "But then it wouldn't be interesting to people
like you if it were fair, would it?"
     Rien paused, looking  at Jenye. Was that a comment  on his choice
of occupation? If it were, it was  hardly fair. In his line of work he
could speak  only for himself.  Others were responsible for  their own
actions. He was  no one's keeper and  never intended to take  on a job
such as that. As for it  being interesting over fair, that was another
thing  to  argue.  He  always   loved  the  mystery  and  intrigue  of
`interesting', but would take fair over that any day.
     "No, it wouldn't," he said, "but it'd be simple and easy."
     "And you want a simple life?" Jenye asked, equally surprised.
     "I don't think I'd mind one."
     "I can't  see you living on  a farm, digging in  the dirt," Jenye
laughed.
     "You can't see  me fighting with a sword,  either," Rien reminded
her.
     "I've never seen you with a sword," she shook her hear. "You're a
hard man to pin down."
     "And you? Working for the  worst criminal this city's ever known,
while selling  out his business  associates behind his back?  And then
turning around and helping a sick child for no reason at all?"
     "It was a way to pay Moldan for what he said he will do. And it's
painful to  watch the boy suffer  like that. He didn't  do anything to
deserve that pain,  but now he'll have  to live out his  life with the
horrors of this war hanging over him...  But then I'm not the only one
to offer kindness to him, am I?"
     "I'm sure that goes for his parents without saying," Rien agreed.
     "It's not  his parents  I'm talking  about," Jenye  stopped. "The
boy's bed  is exactly opposite  the fireplace in  the big room.  I saw
what you did and I doubt those were stones you threw in there."
     "Just a  few coins," Rien shrugged  it off. "They need  them more
than I do and they struck me  as too proud to simply accept money from
a stranger."
     "You're a strange man, Rien... What is your family name?"
     "Keegan," he answered without hesitation.
     "And where are you from, Rien Keegan?"
     "I travel a lot."
     "I can see  why you would want a simple  life, then," Jenye said.
"But if you want it so much, why haven't you made yourself one?"
     Rien had  to think about  that. Why  indeed? "I don't  think I've
found the right place yet."
     "You must be a hard man to please."
     "Sometimes," a hint of a smile escaped his lips.
     They soon  returned to the Abyssment,  crowded as it had  been at
their departure.
     "Where else did you want to  go?" Rien asked. "You said there was
someone else."
     "I think Moldan will come through,"  Jenye said. "I was afraid he
wouldn't know who  you were looking for, but he  obviously met her. If
there's anything to find out, I'm sure he's the one to do it."
     "Then I guess  I'd best say goodnight here," Rien  stopped at the
foot of the stairs.
     "Here?" Jenye  turned. She was a  few steps ahead of  him. "I was
hopping you'd come up."
     Rien  glanced around  the room,  at the  Beinison soldiers  still
sitting and drinking. "All right."
     They went up to Jenye's room.
     "Rien, what if we don't find her?"
     "I'll look until I do."
     "What if she's a prisoner somewhere?"
     "I'll have to get her out."
     "And if she's dead?"
     He turned  to the window,  looking at  the blind alley  it faced.
What if she  is dead? Would he leave? Attempt  revenge? "She's alive."
There was no proof otherwise. There was  no reason for her not to have
left in time.
     "In the last two months," Jenye  said, "I've seen more death than
I had all  my life and you tend  to see quite a bit living  in a place
such as this."
     "She has to  be alive," Rien said, "for her  daughter. She has no
one else."
     "I hope you're right, but I have to be realistic. I never thought
I'd live  to see a  war, much less  live in one,  but here it  is. And
people do die.  It's not some romantic dream the  bards tell us about.
It's very, very real."
     "I know,"  Rien nodded.  "But all  I have right  now is  hope, so
that's what I do."
     "Tell me a little about Rien Keegan," Jenye asked. "Who is he?"
     "I am  he," Rien  turned back  to his  companion. "It's  all that
simple."
     "No. You said you travel. Where? What do you do there?"
     "Asbridge, Dargon, Arvalia, Narragan, Quinnat..."
     "Well, that  pretty much  covers this part  of the  country. Your
horse must be very tired."
     "I never asked."
     "Where are you from originally?"
     "Arvalia."
     "It must be nice there this time of year."
     "It has  it's good points,"  Rien smiled thoughtfully.  "It being
home, I think it's always nice there. You're from Magnus, aren't you?"
he changed the topic.
     "The accent a little thick?" Jenye smiled.
     "Just a little, but there's nothing  quite as distinct as a Royal
Duchy dialect. Are you from Magnus proper?"
     "The  Royal City  itself.  Born there,  studied  medicine at  the
University, then came here to heal the sick."
     "How long have you been here?"
     "A while. Ten years. Since 1002. Twelve."
     "Do you like it here?"
     "Somewhat. I've found that it was  easier to come down river then
to go back upstream. What about you? How did you become a mercenary?"
     "That'll  take longer  than  I  have to  be  told," Rien  avoided
answering.
     "Longer than you have? I wanted to ask you to spend the night."
     Rien's smile faded.
     "I hope you don't think me  forward," Jenye said. "I don't make a
habit of asking men to sleep with me. I've only done it twice before."
     Rien took  a deep breath,  not sure  what to say.  "What happened
those times?"
     "They both accepted. With time I learned that one was a thief and
the other a liar."
     "How do you know I'm not both?"
     "Intuition. Experience."
     Rien sighed. "You really don't want to get involved with me."
     "Why not? You're not married."
     "I travel," he forced a smile,  but it faded quickly. "I was home
last month. Saw someone  I hadn't seen in years and  found I still had
feelings for her..." He let his words trail off, a bit bitter.
     "Is she no longer interested in you? Is she married?"
     "No...but I think she's grown tired of waiting for me. I'm afraid
I've  hurt her  when I  left. I  didn't realize  that for  the longest
time."
     "So what will you do?"
     "I'll wait and hope she forgives me."
     "You're turning me down?"
     "I'm afraid  so, but I  don't want you  to think it's  because of
you. You're the  only good thing I've  found in this nest  of wasps. I
just  don't  want to  hurt  you  like  I've  hurt everyone  else  I've
touched."
     Jenye smiled a  sad smile. "I appreciate you  being honest. There
was someone who wasn't. He had a wife...and a convenience -- me."
     "I'm sorry."
     She shook her head and kissed him on the cheek. "So am I, but I'm
glad I wasn't wrong about you."
     Rien stood up,  somewhat taken aback by the  situation. "Is there
anyone else we need to see?" he asked again.
     "No. I think Moldan will come  through. I'll go see him tomorrow.
Come back and see me the day after, in the morning."
     "You sure you don't want me to come with you?"
     Jenye shook her head. "I'll bring some herbs for the boy, to help
him sleep. This sort of doctoring may take a while."
     "All right," Rien agreed, "but be careful out there."
     She laughed. "I'm  the only physician in  Caligula's service, one
of the few in this whole  city. I'm a desperately needed commodity. No
one would dare try anything."
     Rien nodded. "Thank you for your help, then...and for..."
     Jenye put a  finger to his lips. "Don't thank  me until you learn
the price."

                       *          *          *

            It was only three men. One obviously wounded and another
        drunk. They wouldn't be too much of a problem. Certainly, the
        screaming girl had already attracted all the attention she
        could get. The sad thing was, the people of Sharks' Cove were
        so terrified of the invaders, all the screaming did was force
        them to double check their doors and windows to be sure that
        everything was tightly locked.
            When Rien happened across this scene, he was just in time
        to see a Benosian soldier spear a man with a pike and the woman
        begin to scream. He had no idea how the two were related, or if
        they knew one another at all, but the very next moment the
        soldiers surrounded the woman and dragged her into an alley.
        Her terrified screams made Rien's decision for him and he
        started to run well before his brain gave the order to his
        legs.
            Leaping over the dying man, Rien put the force of his
        charge into the back of the soldier nearest him. The man went
        sprawling forward with a yell, his metal armor shaving sparks
        from the cobblestone street. Before the other two could react,
        Rien had the previously wounded man in his grip, forcing his
        long dagger through the man's armor and between his ribs. The
        man screamed and struggled, but was no match for Rien's
        strength. He released the grip on his sword to Rien as Rien's
        hand wrapped around the hilt, and sank to the ground, gasping
        for air.
            "Yield," Rien warned the other man, who still held on to
        the woman.
            The soldier put his sword to the woman's throat. "One
        step!"
            "If you kill her, it's just you and me."
            "But you don't want to see her die."
            "Try me."
            The sword slowly slid along the woman's neck, drawing a
        trickle of blood. Rien could not tear his eyes away from the
        woman's.
            "Let her go!"
            "Not on your life!" The Benosian looked about, at his
        injured companion, slowly bleeding to death behind Rien and
        then at the other, the drunk, sputtering about on the ground
        like a fish out of water. Neither one was of much use to him in
        this situation. For that matter, neither was the woman. The
        sword flashed across the woman's neck, squirting blood in all
        direction and with his leg, he kicked her towards Rien and ran.
            Rien caught the woman with both hands, letting his sword
        fall to the ground. His eyes were still locked with hers and
        deep inside he could somehow feel the terror that spread
        through her. Her tunic was bloody and blood foamed from her
        mouth. He knew there was nothing he could do, except hunt down
        the man that did this, but he held on to her, mesmerized by
        what he saw. She grappled his arms with her own, begging for
        help with her eyes, as she drowned in her own blood. Long
        moments passed with their eyes locked before she passed out
        from lack of air and even more time before Rien lowered her to
        the ground and let her from his grasp. He felt pure rage, with
        no target to vent it on, until spotting the drunken man getting
        up.
            "Pick up your weapon!" the hiss filled the street, but the
        drunk soldier already had that very thing on his mind. He took
        a wobbling step towards Rien, sword held high, then swung at
        his unarmed opponent, still on his knees over the dead woman.
            Rien pushed back, snapping up the sword by him and came
        back up to his feet, just outside of the soldier's reach. A
        single parry sent the soldier's sword, as well as a good
        portion of his arm across the alley and a second sank deep into
        his chest, lifting him off the ground and throwing him back,
        the thrusting point of the sword having passed completely
        though the man.
            But justice was not yet done.

                       *          *          *

     "...forty three ships, nothing smaller than a bireme. Quite a few
cogs and carracks. Five galleons,"  Deven listed out the inventory. "I
was thinking  I'd sink one,  to give the sharks  a taste of  the tough
meat, but  if you've  wondered where  the mages  have been  during the
war..."
     "Yeah," Rien muttered absentmindedly.
     "Rien," Deven shifted to a sitting position. "The Benosian mages!
I've found them!"
     "How many?" Rien asked.  It was late and dark the  two men lay on
the floor  of their hide out,  sharing their impressions of  the day's
events.
     "I figure there  were twenty, at least,"  Deven guessed. "Perhaps
an even  two dozen. Some scrying,  others mixing things. I  did notice
one very powerful clairvoyant. I hope he didn't notice me..."
     "Clairvoyant? Natural?"
     "By all  means. I hope he  doesn't pick up on  my trace energies.
He's the best I've seen in years."
     "What good is he  to them when he's so far  from the front?" Rien
asked.
     "I'm sure they have good messengers," Deven said, "and in case of
need, they can probably send a  message by magical means, just like we
do."
     "I wonder what his range is," Rien asked.
     "Judging by the fact that the  fleet made no attempt to move past
the delta,"  Deven guessed,  "I suspect  he can  see into  Magnus from
here."
     "Eight hundred leagues?"
     "Explains why they're winning, doesn't it?"
     "It certainly cuts down on their need for scouts."
     "Listen, Rien," Deven shifted noisily, "I have an idea."
     Rien opened his eyes and looked  over to the opposite wall, where
the mage sat.
     "Look at  us, two old  geezers," Deven laughed. "All  that living
and all that experience and we're now in our primes and we've got that
chance of a lifetime right here! If  there's one man we get out of the
war by force, let's make it that mage."
     Rien sat up as well. "We were ordered to stay out of it."
     "Or what? We're volunteers as it is and besides, we already broke
all the rules coming here to look for Adrea! What would it hurt?"
     "I don't think one mage will make a difference in this war," Rien
said. "If anyone, Untar's the one to go after."
     "Next to Haralan, I suspect Untar  is the best guarded man in all
of Baranur  right now," Deven said.  "Besides, I know I  can't take on
someone  like Mon-Taerleor,  but  there  are other  good  fish in  the
bay..."
     "So you're willing  to swim out to  a ship full of  mages who all
together are ten times as powerful as Mon-Taerleor?"
     "Dying to!"
     "And just  think, a year ago  nothing would've gotten you  out of
your laboratory for even a moment!" Rien laughed.
     "A year ago I wasn't on the losing team!"
     Rien silently evaluated the proposal. He did not believe that the
clairvoyant mage was  the hinge of the war effort,  but he agreed with
Deven that a mage so powerful could  indeed be a valuable asset to the
enemy and a disaster for Baranur. He had no moral problems with trying
to stop  him. That would  more than likely  save hundreds of  lives in
Baranur. He himself had seen more death here than in most other places
he had been  and could agree with the statement  Jenye made earlier in
the day.
     "What do you plan on doing?"
     Deven did not answer.
     "Deven?"
     "I'm sorry.  I didn't think  you'd agree...  I was working  on my
argument."
     The corner of  Rien's mouth curled up, but he  refused to let the
smile appear.  "I didn't tell  you this, but a  day after I  got here,
before  we met  at the  Dragon, I  saw a  woman killed  in cold  blood
and...she died  in my  arms. I  don't know her  name, nor  where she's
from. I don't even  know if she's Baranurian... I held  her in my arms
as she died and there was nothing I could do to save her. And she knew
there was  nothing I could  do..." He took  a deep breath.  "I'm never
going to forget  her face, nor the  face of the man who  killed her. I
looked for him all night, but couldn't find him... I'm willing to take
one life if it will save others from a death such as this."
     "I'm sorry," Deven  said. "I didn't mean to..."  He stopped. "No.
I'm not sorry. I want you to  know what my countrymen are capable off!
I want you to feel the rage that I feel when you think of them!"
     "Deven,  it's not  just them.  We're all  animals inside.  When I
killed that man in the market, all I could see were the wounds on that
woman and all I could feel was  the need for revenge...and when I slit
his throat and  looked in his eyes,  all I could see  was that woman's
expression...for that one instant I was as human as you."
     "And you don't like being human, do you?" Deven said in a caustic
tone. "Well, I've got  bad news for you. You're just  like the rest of
us. You're no better and no worse.  You have to live the life you were
given and  you have to live  it with the  rest of us, imperfect  as we
are. Or you can go and hide in the forest, hoping no one will see that
face of yours in the light of day. But those are your ONLY choices!"
     Rien bit his tongue, holding his words.
     "Look, I'm  sorry," Deven went  on, "but  I'm tired of  you using
your father as an excuse for what you do! Life is a boat and we're all
in it together and  it matters little where we came  from and where we
are going."
     Rien nodded. "I  should be apologizing. We have no  choice who we
are born  to or  where. Our  families and  heredity are  determined by
events beyond our control. If we're  lucky, we're born to good parents
in a prosperous  area and grow up  in a good environment.  All that we
have  a choice  in is  our path  in life.  Beyond our  births we  make
ourselves into who we are."
     Deven took  a deep  breath and  slowly let it  out. He  knew from
experience that  Rien just backed  out of a fight  for sake of  an old
friendship. He always had a deep conflict  with who he was and did not
feel at home with either of the two races he belonged to. On any other
day Deven  would say that  not enough time  had been invested  by Rien
into understanding  the world  he is a  part of, but  today he  had to
wonder if that  world was changing too  rapidly to give those  in it a
chance to adjust.
     "I'm the one  to speak," Deven sighed. "I'm pulling  you in after
me, to avenge my parents, your country...Adrea..."
     "And with no plan," Rien warned.
     "No plan. It just hit me out of  the blue that it might be a good
idea to sink that ship..."
     "Into  the blue,"  Rien corrected.  "It  also `just  hit' you  to
destroy the Dragon."
     "The Dragon's different," Deven said. "Even if this were all over
today, I wouldn't be  able to go back and live there.  We wrote it off
when we abandoned it. I just made sure it was a casualty of war."
     "The mage?" Rien reinforced the topic.
     Deven shifted,  leaning back against  the wall. "The best  way to
kill someone,  that I know  of, still happens  to be by  bashing their
skull in."
     "All right," Rien agreed. "Assuming  that's what we're doing, how
do we get to him?"
     "We don't. I certainly don't. The  closer I am to him physically,
the more aware of me he'll be. And if he were actively looking for me,
I doubt I'd be safe anywhere on this side of the continent."
     "So you want me to swim out into the middle of the bay and do him
in? Has Brice been telling you stories about my swimming again?"
     Deven laughed.  "You can't  confront him either.  You'd be  in as
much danger as I. Although you don't practice magic, your potential to
do so is a beacon in itself."
     "Then if we can't do it..." Rien began.
     "...That's   what  makes   it  a   challenging  problem,"   Deven
interrupted.
     Rien shook his  head. "Deven, I don't want to  be taking any more
risks than we  already are by being here. Adrea  should be our primary
concern."
     "She  is, but  you know  I can't  go into  the street  talking to
people.  My accent  will  give me  away  in  a blink  of  an eye.  I'm
inobvious only so long as I keep my mouth shut."
     "I'll find her," Rien said. "You just help me get her out."
     "That was the deal all along," Deven agreed.
     "And the mage?"
     Deven  rubbed his  chin. "Well,  if we  can't go  to him,  he has
little choice, but to come to us."
     "Oh, good," Rien said sarcastically.  "I was hoping you'd save me
the swim."
     "You may yet  need to swim," Deven said thoughtfully.  "I need to
think this over."
     "Should I wait or go to sleep?" Rien asked.
     "Go to sleep."
     "Right."
     Deven chuckled. "You  wouldn't be this way if  you understood how
desperately the rest of us need this sleep."
     "I could've been in a comfortable bed right now, with a beautiful
woman, having  the highlight of  my visit  to Sharks' Cove  and you're
laughing?"
     "She asked you  to sleep with her?" Deven  asked, surprised. "The
doctor?"
     "Something like that."
     "Rien, I'm  flattered," Deven laughed, "but  you really should've
picked her over me."
     "My love  life has plenty  of problems without  any complications
from Jenye," Rien sighed.
     "Kera?"
     "Kera. Eile."
     "Eile? You saw her?"
     "You know I was in Arvalia."
     "You've been going there at least once every two years since I've
known you  and this  is the first  time you've made  an effort  to see
her," Deven said.
     "I didn't make an effort," Rien said. "We ran into each other."
     "And?"
     "And..." Rien sighed. "I still love her."
     "And she?"
     "I don't think her feelings about me ever changed."
     "And Kera?"
     Rien did not answer, remembering  the harsh exclamation Eile made
at the council of tribes. "If looks could kill..."
     "Looks like you have a big choice to make," Deven said.
     "I had it  to make long before  that. There is no way  Kera and I
can  continue."  He  said  that very  bitterly,  with  much  finality,
although he never really felt any hostility towards her.
     Deven did  not answer,  giving his  friend a  chance to  vent his
frustrations.
     "Did I tell you she got me to make her my squire?"
     "No."
     "She did. I think  this is a good first step  to end our physical
relationship."
     "Just like that?" Deven asked.
     Rien nodded, not quite sure if  Deven could see that in the murky
light of the dying ambers. "We're  of two different worlds. Where will
we be in ten years?"
     "So you'll  never sleep with  another human female  again?" Deven
asked.
     "That's the general idea."
     "And you'll get yourself a rich Eelail girl, have five kids and a
big tree house..."
     "Cut it out," Rien warned.
     "That's what I thought," Deven said. "You can't run away."
     "I can't stay, either."
     "Does Kera know it's over?"
     "I don't  know if she understands,"  Rien said. "She loves  me, I
don't doubt that, but I just don't think she sees the problem."
     "So in your infinite wisdom, as a man who has three women chasing
after him, which one will you pick?"
     Rien did  not answer for the  longest time, then finally  got up.
Deven had this way of getting  into the problem, making himself a part
of it. Forcing Rien to think.
     "The one  I've hurt  the most,"  Rien sighed.  "Who else  could I
pick?"
     He walked  over to the  door of the  shack and slammed  it closed
after stepping out.  Deven remained sitting by the  wall, knowing full
well that Rien would  need the time alone to think  about what he just
said. The  mage chuckled  and stretched  out on  the wooden  floor. At
least  one of  them  needed sleep  and for  a  welcomed change,  Deven
figured he would be the one to get a restful night.

                       *          *          *

            "Sergeant! Are we free to turn in?"
            "I guess that'll be it for tonight. Go ahead. Tell everyone
        to be ready to sweep further north tomorrow."
            "Yes, Sir!"
            Heavy footsteps echoed down the street as a group of men
        hurried down the dark street to a two story wood building.
            "Sir, what about you?"
            The sergeant turned and looked. "I'll be there in a minute.
        I just want a moment out here alone."
            "Sir?"
            "Fresh air, Lasin! Just smell it!"
            The other man paused, tilting his head up, as if to get a
        better sample of the cool night air. "It's better than the
        stench of burned wood and blood, Sir," the man agreed.
            "Yes, yes. I find it's the evenings I live for now, Lasin,
        when we put our swords away and rest from the day's labours."
            "And enjoy the mead and the women, Sir?"
            The sergeant laughed. "Let's go in. The mead is better than
        fresh air when it comes to making me light headed, to forget
        what I've done during the day."
            The two soldiers hurried from the mouth of the alley after
        their companions and disappeared through a doorway under a kite
        shield. Silence took the street for a time, before shadows
        again moved against the walls of the buildings.
            "You're right. They're staying at the Dragon."
            "We need to go in."
            Silence. Two men crawled along the wall, watching for any
        other activity in the street. Two windows lit up with
        flickering flames above them and laughter floated into the
        alley.
            "Any last words?" Rien asked.
            "No."
            "Deven!"
            The mage paused, looking back.
            "Don't stir trouble!"
            "My god, Rien! We're going in there with a dozen soldiers
        and you're saying don't stir trouble? There are going to be a
        lot of deaths in there tonight. It's either us or them."
            "Don't look for trouble," Rien warned.
            "I don't think you know how much I love life," the mage
        whispered. "I'll do as much as I can to avoid risking it and
        everything that I can to save it!"
            "You do that."
            They moved up to the rear door of The Tipsy Dragon and
        paused one more time.
            "Is it open?" Deven asked.
            "Yes."
            "It never stops to amaze me how often people lock the front
        door to stop intruders, only to leave the back door wide open."
            "Shhh!"
            A scream echoed down the alley.
            "That came from above," Deven looked up. "Perhaps I should
        go with you?"
            "You look downstairs," Rien answered sharply. "The upstairs
        is my problem."
            "You'll run into trouble," the mage protested.
            "Then I'll call for help. Stick to the original plan for
        now!"
            Rien pushed open the back door, allowing a partial view of
        the rear corridor and the kitchen doorway. Everything was dark,
        with only a dim glow of a flickering candle visible in the
        kitchen.
            "It's clear. Go."
            Deven slid past Rien and through the open door, pressing
        himself against the wall once inside. A moment later Rien
        followed, taking the other wall. Both men looked up and down
        the corridor, then advanced forward, pausing at the doorway to
        the kitchen. Rien nodded and Deven slid into the kitchen,
        heading for the stairs leading to the basement. Rien himself
        crept further down the corridor to the rear stairs leading up,
        then, as quietly as he could, ascended into darkness.

                       *          *          *

     It was still  very early when Rien arrived at  the Abyssment. The
tavern  was  almost  empty  due  to the  early  hour  and  ordering  a
non-alcoholic drink, Rien  took a seat at the corner  table from which
he could see both the stairs and the front door.
     Some  time passed  with  him watching  people  coming and  going,
thinking  about the  events  of the  last few  days.  He was  becoming
worried about  Adrea, more worried than  he was on his  way to Sharks'
Cove. He had been here for six days and in this time made no progress.
He was  no closer to  knowing Adrea's  whereabouts and as  each moment
passed, the chances of her being found became more and more remote. He
was angry  with himself for  letting Adrea  talk him into  letting her
stay in  Sharks' Cove. There  was no  need for her  to do that  and no
reason for him  to agree, other than her talking  faster than he could
reason. The  Tipsy Dragon was  just another facility that  happened to
make money. There was no reason  to maintain it. The funds it provided
served little  use, usually being  used to  keep the tavern  going and
building maintained, not  that other funds were  unavailable for these
tasks.
     Rien mentally kicked himself. Everything  was fine. It was just a
matter  of  time  before  Adrea  would  be  found.  Safe.  He  shifted
impatiently. Jenye was  now late. Had something happen  to her? Should
he wait or  ask at the bar?  He waited longer, now  worrying about two
people, instead  of one. Finally giving  up, Rien made his  way to the
bar and asked the man on the other side of the counter for Jenye.
     "You're that Ryan fellow?" the bartender asked.
     "Yea," Rien winced at the pronunciation. `Something like that.'
     "Eran," the man called a serving girl over. "Take this man to the
warehouse and stay there. Don't go back alone."
     "Sure, Eli."
     Rien followed her  out of the Abyssment, as soon  as she left her
apron  behind  the counter.  The  girl  was  young, maybe  fifteen  or
sixteen. She did not say anything.
     "Why aren't you supposed to come back alone?" Rien finally had to
ask.
     "Because the  soldiers are  in the  streets," the  girl answered,
almost surprised the question was asked.
     "Well, of course, they're always there! We're at war!"
     She looked  at him,  obviously surprised.  "You didn't  hear, did
you?"
     "Hear what?"
     "About the attempt on Admiral Talens' life?"
     "No." Now Rien was genuinely surprised himself. "When?"
     "Sometime yesterday.  An archer  just missed  him and  he ordered
everyone west of Quirin to be put to the sword."
     "West of Quirin?" That included all of the docks, most of the old
quarter and  all of the merchant  quarter. "That's more than  half the
city!"
     The girl did not answer  and Rien decided against saying anything
more. He was thankful  that they were out in the  east part of Sharks'
Cove, upstream from Quirin, and  concerned about what was happening on
the  other side  of  town. Just  few  months ago  Sharks'  Cove was  a
bustling city  of ten thousand, among  the largest in Baranur.  By the
time he  arrived a few  days ago, it was  said that the  four Benosian
regiments patrolling the  city consisted of more people  than what was
left of the local population. What would the slaughter of another half
of the people leave? Rien wished he could do something, but he knew he
was as helpless to stop the enemy as the rest of the populace.
     Within a few minutes Eran brought  Rien to a building with a huge
front door  and knocked.  A sliding  bar could be  heard and  the door
cracked open.
     "What is  it?" a man, barely  visible behind it, asked.  All that
could be seen  of him was where  a narrow streak of  light fell across
his face.
     Rien nervously looked up and  down the street. They were probably
a half league from the part of town where the people were being killed
and he could feel a chill in the air.
     "Is Doctor Calyd here?" Eran asked.
     "Who's he?" the man asked cautiously.
     "He's looking for her. Eli told me to bring him here."
     The  door opened  into a  dark room  and Rien  followed the  girl
inside. The room  went much further back than it  seemed at first, the
back part separated from the entrance by a black curtain.
     "She's in the back," the man said. Rien could now see that he was
dressed in chain armor, complete with a sword and a long dagger on his
belt and a shield and a helmet lying on a chair.
     Before  Eran could  indicate for  Rien to  follow her,  the guard
closed the door, sliding the heavy  deadbolt back into place. The room
submerged into  murky darkness, illuminated  by a single  candle. Eran
stumbled towards the curtain and  brushed it aside. Rien followed her,
better oriented  to the  darkness on  this side  of the  curtain. They
walked through the  room and down a short corridor  to another, larger
room, where many people rushed about  and about three dozen lay on the
floor. There was more blood there  than all those bodies could account
for.
     Rien looked at  the bodies in desperation, half  expecting to see
Adrea among them, but while there were quite a few women there, he saw
no trace of her.
     "Come this  way," Eran called to  him and he followed  her to the
other side of the room where Jenye tended to an injured man.
     Rien  knelt by  her,  taking a  bloody gauze  she  was trying  to
manipulate and holding it in place.  As he took it from Jenye's hands,
he realized that her hand was glowing, radiating a warmth which forced
the wound  to close up.  His own arm  became pleasantly warm  from the
closeness of the magical source.
     "All right," Jenye took the bandage from Rien. "He'll make it."
     "I didn't realize you were a mage," Rien muttered.
     "Neither did  I, until I  saw my father  die," she picked  up the
lose strips of cloth on the ground and moved to the next patient.
     "I'm sorry," Rien followed her.
     "So  am I.  He might've  lived if  I had  found out  sooner." She
unwrapped and  examined the deep cut  on the woman's forearm  as blood
freely flowed to the floor.
     "Can you move your fingers?"
     "No," the woman shook her head, obviously in pain.
     "Hold her arm still," Jenye instructed Rien.
     He did, not understanding the  reason, as the woman lay perfectly
still. Jenye took a glass marble from her pouch and forced it into the
wound. The  woman screamed in agony  and Rien had to  struggle to keep
her steady. A glow again emanated  from Jenye's hands, making the torn
skin grow together. The bleeding stopped and the injured woman quietly
sobbed.
     "Lie still," Jenye told her. "You'll be all right..."
     Rien  looked into  the injured  woman's eyes,  realizing for  the
first time that she  could be no older than Eran.  Just a girl, caught
in a war. "What happened here?" he asked Jenye.
     "Come on," the  doctor answered, hurrying to the  next patient, a
man dressed in chain and some plate. A second man, dressed in the same
manner, sat by him, unsuccessfully trying to stop the bleeding from an
open wound in his side.
     "How long was he here?" Jenye asked.
     "I don't know..."
     The wound was so  wide and deep, there was no  need to remove the
chain  shirt to  access  it.  "You should've  gotten  me sooner,"  she
scolded. "He lost a lot of blood."
     Clanking sounds alerted Rien to look up. Two men carrying a third
entered the room. "Doctor!"
     "Wait your turn!"
     "He's going to die!" they put the body on the floor.
     "So will  this one!" she thrust  all of the bandages  to Rien and
saying, "stop the bleeding," hurried to take a look at the newcomer.
     Rien moved closer to the body, pulled the soldier's armored shirt
up, adjusted the torn and stained  tunic and placed a cloth strip over
the  wound. The  cut was  deep, probably  made by  a pike  or an  axe,
slicing deep  into the right side,  under the ribs. Rien  had no doubt
that the  man's intestines were cut.  He threw another layer  of cloth
over the wound as  the first soaked up the blood.  In a battlefield an
injury such as this would be  considered unsalvageable and he would be
permitted  to die.  A third  strip of  cloth followed  the second  and
although unconscious, the man groaned from the pain.
     "What  happened?"  Rien  asked  the man  sitting  by  him,  while
continuing his attempts to slow the flow of blood.
     "He's my brother..."
     That was not  the answer Rien desired. The bleeding  did not stop
and he  continued layering the cloth.  The wound was simply  too deep,
too wide. "Jenye!"
     He was  not sure where she  came from, but her  hands checked the
wound, then rapidly checked the man's throat. They hovered there for a
moment,  then she  pushed  herself  away from  the  body. "He's  dead.
They're both dead."
     Rien removed his bloody hands from  the wound. The man died while
he was trying to save him and  the blood flow was so strong, there was
no  indication that  he  had died,  even now.  The  man's brother  sat
unmoving, looking at the body. He was probably in shock.
     "Jenye, what happened?"
     "Ga'en missed. The one shot that mattered the most, he missed..."
     "Are you sure?"
     There were tears in her eyes. "I don't know any more..."
     "Doctor!" a man called.
     "Come on," she got up, wiping  her eyes and smearing blood on her
face.
     Rien followed her to the next casualty of war.
     "Get me more bandages," Jenye told  the man who called her and he
rushed off.
     As Rien helped  tend to the wounded, he eventually  lost count of
the number of people  that passed by him and the  types of wounds that
they had. It all blended together  into one long nightmarish string of
bodies and screams  and blood from people whose only  fault was living
on the wrong  side of town. Children and elderly,  men and women, rich
and poor all alike had become targets of the Benosian force. At first,
the  calm  frozen  faces  of  the   dead  stayed  with  Rien,  but  by
mid-afternoon even they began to  blend together due to their numbers.
Every  type of  wound imaginable  had passed  by him  during the  day.
Everything from cuts and bruises to  burns and mutilation on young and
old alike. His clothes became stained with the blood which had covered
all of the floor  of the large room and the trails  of which seemed to
crawl though  the doorways, as if  trying to reach other  parts of the
building. Each time he closed his eyes,  he could see the worst of the
wounds and hear the  screams of the dying and worst  of all, the smell
of death followed him at every step,  even after it got dark and there
were no more people being brought in to be helped.
     The day passed as if in a  dream and Rien found himself and Jenye
sitting in  a darkened  back room, recovering  from their  ordeal. Her
arms  were around  him,  face buried  in his  hair,  spilled over  his
shoulder, and  he was only remotely  aware of his own  arms around her
waist.
     "I've  never seen  anything so  inhumane  in my  life," he  heard
himself say, not sure why he was saying it. There was no question that
half the people were tortured and left to die.
     "You're a soldier," he felt Jenye's warm breath on his neck.
     "I never killed for sport... I always fought for survival."
     "This is a different war. I'm sorry I made you come here."
     "I came of my own free will."
     Rien could feel Jenye's lips on his  jaw and then on his own, but
refused to fight her. He had no more fight left in him tonight and did
not think she had any, either.

                       *          *          *

            Darkness slowly dissolved into the comforting flicker of
        candles lighting the second floor corridor. Rien held as close
        to the stairs as he could, raising his head just enough to see
        over the top step into the lit corridor. Everything was quiet,
        most of the dozen doors on the floor closed, some with
        flickering shadows of flame seen from beneath them.
            Rien hurried up, knowing he had little time to check all
        rooms before meeting Deven again on the other side. Their goal
        was only to make sure that Adrea was not there. He did not want
        to be forced into a confrontation with the soldiers at the inn,
        even though Deven stressed it was inevitable.
            He checked the first room, with an open door, satisfying
        his curiosity that it was empty. How many soldiers were there?
        At least a dozen. Probably twenty, plus their sergeant. A
        standard squad of men. There were a dozen individual rooms on
        the second floor. Six more in the basement. That would average
        one to a room. Most were probably still in the tavern portion
        of the inn, getting drunk.
            He checked the second open room. Empty. The third had a
        closed door. Rien paused and listened. Nothing. Sounds could be
        heard coming from other rooms, but not from here. He pushed it
        open. Empty.
            The next door hid a lit candle in the very least and he
        debated opening it now. Would it be worth the risk? He pushed
        it open a crack. Nothing. He pushed it open some more and
        stepped inside. Empty. A travel pack on the floor, leather
        gloves, hauberk and camail on the unmade bed. The owner no
        where in site.
            Carefully closing the door after himself, Rien returned to
        the corridor. The next door was also open, the dark room empty.
        `Almost half,' Rien paused at a closed door. From the next room
        down he heard a moan. Pleasure? Agony? It was hard to tell.
        Either way, he would soon have to look in. He paused at the
        current door, listening, when running footsteps sounded at the
        far end of the corridor, where the other set of stairs was and
        not giving things a second thought, Rien pushed the door open
        and entered.
            Dark. Outline of a bed near the shuttered window. A form on
        the bed. Sleeping?
            "Forance? You so drunk you can't find your room again?"
            Rien grunted.
            "Look, I told you it's a bad idea to switch rooms after all
        this time."
            Rien did not move.
            "Look, you dumb kid, get out, or I'll throw you out!"
            The door behind Rien opened and a large framed man stepped
        in.
            "Forance?" the man on the bed asked.
            "Gegurtuny?" the man in the doorway asked and put his hand
        on Rien's shoulder.
            "Who in the name of Sanar is with you?"
            Rien's elbow impacted with the gut of the man standing next
        to him, forcing him to double over, then Rien, grabbing his
        arm, flung him across the room into the bed.
            Forance more slid than flew into the wall, but in the end
        wound up sprawled over Gegurtuny, grunting in pain. Rien
        stepped outside and pulled the door shut after himself. With
        any luck that would be all to his encounter, although deep
        inside he suspected there had to be more to it.
            He had time to quickly verify another empty room before
        coming to the one he heard originate the moan not long ago.
        Five more rooms. He pushed the door open.
            Inside, on the bed, lay a naked woman and in the middle of
        the room stood a naked man.
            "Sorry," Rien closed the door, hoping his accented Benosian
        would not be noticed. He did not recognize either of the pair.
            The next room was also lit, but there was little time to
        hesitate. Rien pushed the door open, coming face to face with
        an armed and armored man.
            "What?" the man turned in surprise.
            "Just my luck," Rien answered in the Baranurian tongue. He
        grabbed the man's arms as the soldier drew his sword and
        smashed him against the wall. The man reversed the grab,
        pushing Rien against the other wall, both tripping over the bed
        and falling on it.
            Rien punched. His opponent kicked. The bed tilted on it's
        side, sending both of them to the floor. Rien kicked. The bed
        turned over completely, falling on the two men.
            "Intru..." Rien's fist connected with the man's jaw, ending
        his warning with a yell of pain. They struggled to their feet,
        the Benosian soldier getting up in the doorway and Rien in the
        middle of the room.
            Not wanting to waste time recovering, Rien put his shoulder
        into the soldier's chest, as he charged out of the room,
        carrying the man across the narrow hallway and crashing against
        the door on the other side. The lock gave way and the door fell
        in, Rien and his opponent tumbling in after it.
            "Keep it down!" A roar sounded from the corridor, followed
        by a female shriek. The man Rien tackled made no sound.
            "Empty room," Rien muttered and got up, stepping outside.
            Three to go. He picked up the sword the soldier he fought
        dropped and hurried over to the next door. Sounds of drinking
        and talking could be heard from the overhang to the common
        room, not far away. The moment of truth was near. Pushing the
        door open, Rien paused in the doorway, looking at a partially
        dressed man leaning over a naked woman.
            "Help!" the woman shrieked.
            Rien brought up the sword as the man moved back.
            At that moment the door half way down the corridor burst
        open to reveal the large man Rien had assaulted moments
        earlier. He looked mad and spotting Rien, headed right for him.
            "Hang on," Rien closed the door. He did not want to deal
        with more than one opponent at a time. To his surprise, he saw
        the large man draw a sword from over his shoulder, not stopping
        as he did so. Rien took a step back as heavy foot steps could
        be heard on the stairs. An armed and armored man appeared at
        the top of the landing, obviously expecting to run into
        trouble.
            "What is going on out...?" the half naked man from the room
        Rien just looked in appeared in the corridor.
            "It's a party," Rien smiled, grabbing his arm and flinging
        him into the man at the top of the stairs. Both tumbled down to
        the main room of the tavern in a tangle of arms and legs.
        Rien's sword bounced down after them.
            "Intruder!" Forance yelled and swung his sword.

                       *          *          *

     "Let'er go!" A  scream filled the air and Rien  shifted, not sure
if it was  inside the building or in the  street. Jenye, still asleep,
turned, draping  an arm  around his neck  and wrapping  herself around
him. He  moved her arm  and lifted his  head, trying to  listen. There
were sounds of rushing feet in  the corridor outside the room and more
commotion further away.
     "Come on," he shook Jenye. "We've got to go!"
     "Wha...?" she turned away from him,  trying to stretch out on the
floor.
     "Jenye!" he whispered, grabbing hold of her arms and shaking her,
"we have to leave now!"
     "What is it?" she looked at him, still half asleep.
     "The soldiers are here. Get dressed."
     That  made  her move  much  faster.  They  dressed as  sounds  of
commotion picked up,  but this time outside the  room. Distinct sounds
of swords and distant yells could be heard.
     "What's going on out there?"
     Rien cracked the door open and looked out. The hallway was empty,
but only  for the moment. More  footsteps sounded and Rien  closed the
door before anyone appeared in site.
     "What is it?" Jenye asked impatiently.
     "Probably soldiers. If they come in here, don't resist. Do what I
do and when I tell you to go, run like you've never run before."
     Another scream sounded.  More rushing feet, the  sound of someone
falling.
     "You're not armed," Jenye suddenly said.
     "Shhh!"
     The door slammed open to reveal two Benosian soldiers with swords
drawn.
     "Two more in here!"  one of the men yelled in  his tongue. By the
looks of her, Rien did not think Jenye understood.
     A sergeant walked  in, sword arm bloody up to  the elbow, clearly
not  with  his own  blood.  "She'll  be good  for  the  men, if  she's
healthy," he looked at Jenye. "Kill the man."
     Rien was glad  that Jenye did not speak the  language. He was not
sure if he was glad that he did.
     One of the soldiers turned to Rien, while the other waited in the
doorway. It was time to think fast.
     "It's  bad luck  to stand  in the  doorway," Rien  said in  their
tongue. The man approaching him stopped. The sergeant folded his arms.
     "So, you do understand... Kill him anyway."
     Dodging the  swing of  the sword, Rien  slammed himself  into the
door, causing it  to crash into the sergeant. The  door hit him square
in the chest,  pushing him back, but catching his  shoulder and bloody
arm in  the door  frame and  Rien could hear  the satisfying  sound of
cracking bone.
     The  two remaining  men closed  in on  him. "If  you don't  move,
this'll be quick..."
     Rien planted his back against the wall and pushed the door to let
the  unconscious  sergeant fall.  He  would  have  to retreat  to  the
corridor to get the sword. That was no good.
     Jenye started  inching up,  trying to sneak  up on  the soldiers,
their backs now turned to her.
     "Don't  move," Rien  warned  her  in Baranurian  and  one of  the
soldiers, who apparently understood, spun around.
     Perfect.
     Before he knew it, the man was tumbling down, shielding Rien from
his companion's sword. It was a quick thrust, unexpected by all in the
room, and the man Rien knocked off balance went limp. The last soldier
shouted for reinforcements.
     "I was hoping you wouldn't  do that," Rien said, still supporting
the dead Benosian soldier.
     The soldier backed  away from Rien, trying to  maneuver closer to
the door.
     "Here," Rien gave  the body he was  holding on to a  shove at his
opponent and rushed  him as they collided. The door  slammed the other
way, catching the  soldier against the wall and stunning  him. He slid
down to the floor, leaving behind a trail of blood.
     "Damn  unlucky  place  to  stand," Rien  pushed  the  unconscious
sergeant out  of the doorway.  "Come on,"  he turned to  Jenye. "While
they're out."
     She hurried  to him, but  paused a few  steps short of  the door,
looking him in the eyes. "You're..."
     Rien grabbed  her and pulled her  out of the room.  "Let's..." In
the corridor lay two bodies of people who helped them take care of the
injured the day before. Rien had little opportunity to become familiar
with them, but  after the emotional drain of the  previous day, he had
to pause to gather his thoughts.
     "Oh, no," Jenye bent down by one, a deep cut across his chest and
part way down his abdomen. The  other man was clearly dead, his throat
slashed.
     Commotion could be heard deeper  in the building as Jenye's hands
started to glow green once again and she reached for the injured man.
     "We don't have  the time!" Rien grabbed her hands  and pulled her
up. He could feel the magic affecting him.
     "He'll die!"
     "So will we, if we don't get  out of here!" He almost carried her
to get her away from the body. "We don't have the time to do this!"
     "He's my friend!"
     They made it to a side door and Rien forced Jenye into the alley.
"Then he'll understand! You're no good to anyone dead!"
     "And neither is he!"
     "Jenye, that  wound is  simply too extensive  to spend  time on,"
Rien stopped, forcing her to look at  him. "And even if you healed it,
he wouldn't  have the  strength to  leave and  neither would  you! You
can't risk yourself this way."
     "Isn't  that what  friends  are all  about?"  she asked,  pulling
against his grasp. "I'm going back."
     "No!" Rien said, but Jenye  pulled free, rushing towards the edge
of the alley. "Jenye!"
     She stopped just short of the mouth of the alley, at the sight of
two Benosian soldiers.
     "Jenye!"
     The soldiers drew their swords.
     "Run!"
     She turned, the soldiers on her heels.
     Not having a  sword available, Rien picked up a  sturdy plank and
prepared  for an  unbalanced fight.  Jenye charged  past him,  closely
followed by  the two men. Rien  met the first soldier  with his plank,
connecting with the man  as the sword of the other  dug into the wood,
uncomfortably close to  Rien's fingers. He twisted  the plank, yanking
the weapon out of the soldier's hands, making both weapons unusable.
     With  a yell,  the  soldier  pulled a  broadsword  from over  his
shoulder, swinging down on the  draw, the blade skipping across Rien's
upper arm, splattering  blood in various directions.  "For Untar!" The
sword impacted Rien's  side making him fall over,  "and for Beinison!"
The weapon  hovered in  the air  and began  its downward  plunge. "And
for..."
     The soldier  toppled forward, the  sword digging into  the ground
near Rien's head, the edge cutting  into his shoulder before coming to
a rest.
     "Rien!"
     He could  not move,  the sword  dangerously balanced  between his
neck and the soldier on top of him. The Benosian warrior did not move.
     "Rien!"
     Through  his pain,  his  eyes focused  on the  man  above him,  a
trickle of blood forming at the  edge of the soldier's open mouth. The
head dropped down  with a final breath and the  shifting weight forced
the sword down. Rien pushed at  the ground with his heels, desperately
trying to get away from the blade, or  at least to get his head out of
the way.
     The body fell  on him, but the  sword froze in the  air, stuck in
the ground at an improbable angle.
     "Rien?"
     He cautiously opened his eyes, his vision obscured by blood.
     "Rien?"
     Jenye held  on to  the sword  with one hand  and pushed  the dead
soldier off  Rien with the  other. Before  he could say  anything, her
glowing hands reached for his wounds. "I'm sorry..."
     Rien did not answer, lying still as the pain in his side began to
dissipate. He deserved that cut. Both, actually. All three. He let the
soldier get the better  of him. He deserved worse than  he got. It was
just his luck to fight a walking arsenal with no weapons of his own.
     "Go!" Rien  caught himself. "Before  more come." His voice  was a
mere whisper.
     "You'll bleed to death if I leave you!"
     Rien did not believe that to be  the case, but was fully aware of
the severity of his wounds and that without healing, he would be in no
condition to go far alone. "Leave me," he repeated.
     "Friends don't do things like that," she said again.
     "Don't be  foolish," Rien  gasped. "How long  have you  known me?
What do you know of me?"
     "I know you're kind, gentle and you care."
     Rien tried  to sit up,  doing so with  a tremendous effort  and a
groan. He could feel the wound in his side tearing and grabbed Jenye's
arm for support.
     "You're only making it worse," she warned, pushing him back down.
     "No," Rien resisted. "Not in the middle of an alley."
     Jenye looked up and down the street. It was probably the only one
in  Sharks' Cove  that happened  to be  completely free  of trash  and
debris. Well, almost  completely free. There was  one overturned crate
lying by  the wall some twenty  yards away. She again  reached for the
wound in Rien's side, forcing it to  seal. For the time being, she was
not going to bother with the one  in his arm, or the shoulder. Neither
was life  threatening and he was  right, she was tired  and the effort
was already costing her a lot.
     "Get out  of here,"  Rien's left hand  locked tightly  around her
wrist, "before more come."
     "No!" she  yanked her hand away  from his and continued  to work,
ignoring his protests. Finally, Rien seemingly gave up, resting on the
ground as  Jenye closed the major  wound. She had to  force herself to
finish the job, in spite of fatigue.  She would not have done this for
many people, but in the last few days Rien impressed her as few others
would have and even surprised her a number of times.
     When she finished,  Jenye sat down, picking up one  of the swords
the Beinison soldier dropped. Although she had no intention, or skill,
to use the  weapon, perhaps if she  just held it in her  lap, it would
make her seem a more formidable opponent in this city.
     Rien appeared  to be asleep,  the wound  in his side  healed. The
other two wounds, on his arm  and shoulder, still needed attention, as
blood trickled  down to  the ground  from them,  and tearing  the dead
soldier's tunic,  Jenye proceeded to  bandage them. She paused  as she
tore the man's  clothes, noticing for the second time  the black arrow
that cost him  his life. She wanted  to hate Ga'en for  the horrors he
brought on the city and at the  same time was grateful for what he had
done in  this alley. She  did not think  she could handle  losing Rien
after  the  previous  day  and painfully  realized  that  his  current
condition was her fault.
     Finishing with  the wounds, Jenye  pulled Rien down the  alley to
the large  crate that could  give them cover  for a little  while. She
also moved the two dead bodies and sat them up in a doorway where they
seemed about as inconspicuous as they had in the middle of the street,
not that anyone would give them a second thought in this town.
     Coming back to  Rien, she sat down, her back  against the box and
let out a deep sigh. Now everything  was a matter of time. Both he and
she needed to  recover strength and with any luck,  they would move on
before more  soldiers show up. She  could, in all truth,  leave now to
look for  help or better shelter,  but she could not  force herself to
abandon  Rien,  not after  what  he  had done  for  her.  Lost in  her
thoughts, Jenye reached  to check Rien's wounds again. The  one in his
side was  repaired to the point  of not bleeding, but  it still needed
attention  that she  could not  provide without  her tools.  The other
wounds, although less severe, were merely bound and still bleeding.
     "Help me up," Rien's voice startled  Jenye as she moved to adjust
the bandages.
     "I thought  you were asleep..."  she muttered. "I didn't  mean to
wake you."
     "A pained sleep is a waste of time. Help me up."
     "You're too weak," she protested.
     "Too  weak  to  fight  if  the situation  calls  for  it.  I  can
travel...now."
     "The hell you can."
     "Jenye, that sleep did me a lot of good. Help me."
     She hesitated, but  finally offered him a hand,  surprised at how
quickly he accepted it and sat up.
     "The  flesh is  healed, but  the pain  will last  as it  normally
would. Some things must heal at their own pace."
     "I'll be fine, thank you," Rien answered.
     "I'm sorry,"  Jenye said. She  did not want it  to seem to  be an
after thought.
     "I'll be  fine," he repeated. "Let's  go. We need to  find a safe
place."
     "The Abyssment," Jenye  suggested. "It's pretty far  east and I'm
sure Gaius  won't let anything happen  to it... Can you  make it? It's
almost a full league."
     Rien stood  up, exerting more  of an  effort than he  expected he
would need,  but less  than what  Jenye predicted.  At first  a little
unsteady, he regained his feet. "I'll make it. Let's go."
     "Why didn't  you leave me?"  Jenye asked, offering Rien  help. He
accepted it without argument.
     "Same  reason you  didn't  leave  me when  I  asked, I  imagine."
Concentrating on both walking and the pain was a chore.
     "That's not fair," she protested.
     "But is it true?"
     "Yes. I meant what I said about friends. I make them for life."
     "I hope I was an exceptionally fast case, then," Rien said.
     "You were."
     "It wasn't because of last night, was it?"
     "I was going to ask you about that."
     Rien did  not answer, watching  the deserted streets pass  by. It
was hard to tell if the fighting in  the last day had come this far or
if  the  scars on  the  buildings  were  from previous  conflicts.  He
wondered what  to say, not  having a good answer  to give. He  did not
want to insult  Jenye, but neither did  he want to give  her any false
hope.
     "I think that  at times our desperation becomes so  great that we
are willing to seek comfort in places we know better than to look."
     "It was  just a convenience for  you," Jenye said. He  could hear
the hurt in her voice.
     "It was a needed  escape for both of us, from  the horrors we had
witnessed," he answered, hoping she was more convinced than he.
     "Did it make you feel anything?"
     Rien stopped,  taking a deep breath.  He needed a rest.  The walk
was taking a lot  out of him. "Jenye, you're the  only good thing I've
seen in  this city since I  arrived here. I'll never  forget that...or
you, but there are things about me you don't know."
     She wrapped  her arm around him,  for a better grip,  and brushed
his hair back with the other, revealing a pointed ear. "Like this?"
     "Please," he pushed her arm away, almost backing out of her grip.
"These are demons you don't want to unleash..."
     "Do you really think that being different makes you so horrible?"
     "Jenye..."
     "I slept  with you, knowing you  were different. I saw  your eyes
change color  in the fight this  morning. I can't explain  some things
about you, but  I didn't run because  of them. You need to  trust me a
little more."
     "I do, but you have to trust me  when I tell you that it would be
all wrong." He sank down a little. "Arvalia is more different that you
think. We can enjoy the moment, but never a lifetime."
     She pulled him back up, her hands glowing.
     "Jenye, don't. You're  too tired. One of us in  this condition is
more than enough..."
     Surprisingly, she listened.
     Rien  attempted  to maintain  his  breathing  at a  normal  rate,
avoiding gasps  and spasms that  made it  that much more  difficult to
stand up. "All right," he straightened himself out.
     They returned to the Abyssment, still sparsely populated, even at
this hour, without any further interruptions. It would appear that all
the excitement had been limited to  the bay and the western portion of
the city, and the most obvious thing about the tavern was that for the
first time in a long time, it was empty of Benosian soldiers.
     "My  God, Jenye,"  the bartender,  Eli,  hurried to  her as  they
walked in. "Almost no one got out of the warehouse!"
     "I know," she embraced him. "We barely got out ourselves. I don't
know how..."
     Eli looked  at Rien. "You know  the policy on having  the injured
here."
     "He's a  special case. I'll  take responsibility. We just  need a
room."
     Eli shook his head, but got a  key and handed it to her. "I don't
want to see him down here with all that blood."
     "You won't."
     She took  Rien up  to a room  looking out at  the remains  of the
market  square  and  barred  the  door after  them.  "Lie  down,"  she
instructed Rien.
     He  did. "Don't  waste  your  strength on  me.  I'll  be fine  by
morning. Just shake me awake."
     "You need to eat something," Jenye protested.
     "I'll eat when I wake up."
     "Just rest. I'll bring something and get some water to clean your
wounds."  She hurried  to  get  everything she  needed,  but when  she
returned, Rien was  asleep and she decided against waking  him up. The
rest would at least restore his strength and the time could be used to
clean and rebandage the other wounds.  Jenye still did not feel strong
enough to use magic without  overexerting herself and passing out. She
carefully  washed and  bandaged  his  arm and  shoulder  and took  the
opportunity to  examine him  one more  time. Except  for the  ears, he
looked like  any other normal  human male.  Yet, he was  obviously not
just  like other  men, but  she still  refused to  believe in  the old
stories and mythology. There had to be a sensible explanation.
     Having eaten a little of  what she brought, Jenye went downstairs
to talk  to Eli about  what had happened, find  out what he  heard and
tell of the horrors she had witnessed.
     The news was not good.
     The pay  back for the  assault on  Talens was rapid  and vicious.
There  was little  news about  the  current condition  of the  western
portion  of the  city and  enough people  attempted to  flee that  the
massacre had  spilled over  into the eastern  half. Hardly  anyone who
fell in sight of Benosian soldiers survived.
     The day before, Gaius Caligula, upon  hearing of the order to the
Beinison  troops, sent  a number  of his  people to  one of  his river
warehouses to  aid those in  his employ who  were caught in  the wrong
portion of the  city. At first they aided just  their own injured, but
as the day went on, others started to seek asylum in this little haven
and a decision was made not  to turn anyone away. Although a criminal,
Gaius  knew which  side  to  take in  this  battle  and supported  the
citizens of Sharks' Cove.
     Trying not to  think of all the faces, the  people she personally
knew, who died in her care in the last day, Jenye returned to the room
where Rien slept  and re-examined his wounds. They  still oozed blood,
but appeared much  better. Controlled not to be  life threatening, but
still not well enough to permit him to travel.
     "Who are you, Rien Keegan?" she wondered.
     Considering her  actions, Jenye undressed for  bed, unwrapped the
bandages on Rien's  arm and shoulder and once again  attempted to heal
them and  the serious wound in  his side. Somewhere along  the way she
passed out from fatigue.

                       *          *          *

            Rien barely managed to move back against the banister as
        the sword cut through the air, catching his arm and tearing
        through cloth and flesh alike.
            Acutely aware that without a sword he was helpless against
        this man, Rien glanced down into the common room where a half
        dozen men stood looking up, and exerted the strength to hurdle
        over the railing before the second swing of the sword could
        catch him.
            Managing to keep his balance below him, Rien landed on the
        edge of a table, causing the far end to swing up, impacting
        with the chin of the man sitting at that end, splattering blood
        and teeth across the room. Others scrambled to their feet,
        those with weapons available drawing steel in preparation for
        combat.
            "Hold it!" a large man by the fireplace stood up. "Who are
        you?"
            Weapons came to a rest as Rien recovered his feet and the
        man at the other end of the table slowly slid out of his chair
        and to the floor, unconscious.
            The sergeant put down his mug and approached Rien, leaving
        his sword to dangle at his side. "You are?"
            Rien took a step back. He beat Deven to the common room.
        And he missed two rooms.
            "I'm looking for a friend, but I think I got the wrong
        tavern..."
            One of the soldiers pulled the unconscious man from under
        the table and the two that tumbled down the stairs untangled
        themselves and got up. At least three people stood on the
        balcony upstairs, looking down.
            "I think you got the wrong tavern, too," the sergeant said
        and returned to his seat. "Kill him. But not here. I don't want
        a dirty floor."
            Two men with drawn swords approached Rien.
            "I wouldn't," Rien warned. He had no idea what he was going
        to do, but stalling for time could not hurt. If anything, it
        would give Deven time to finish his rounds and come up stairs,
        assuming Deven was lucky enough not to run into any trouble.
        Rien was not sure if he wanted Deven to have found Adrea. This
        would be tough enough to get out of. If she were hurt, it might
        make the situation impossible.
            One of the soldiers silently warned Rien with his sword and
        Rien backed up some more. He detected a faint trace of smoke in
        the air, too faint for the others to pick up.
            "Get going!" the soldier made a grab for Rien. He missed a
        seemingly unavoidable target and crashed down to the floor, as
        much to his companions' surprise, as to Rien's.
            "What the..." the other soldier brought up his sword to
        strike Rien, but dropped it as it turned red hot.
            "Mage!" someone yelled, filling the room with panic. Simple
        prestidigitators and conjurors were quite common on Makdiar,
        but serious wizards, of skill such as that presently displayed,
        were quite rare and very dangerous in the field of battle. The
        Benosian soldiers shifted about the room, none wanting to be
        Rien's next target. Even the man who dropped his sword hurried
        to what he felt to be a safe range. The sergeant once again got
        up.
            "Yes, a mage," a deep Benosian voice sounded from the rear
        of the tavern, making all the men with their backs to it jump
        and hurry to place themselves against the safety of the nearest
        wall. Deven stepped out from behind the bar.
            "And who are you?" the sergeant stepped forward, showing
        the initiative the half dozen men with him failed to exhibit.
        Rien's eyes targeted the backs of the two men nearest him.
            Deven calmly walked into the room, reached into his tunic
        and produced a medallion which he let dangle on its chain. "I
        am Lord Skalen Deven Yasarin, rightful heir to the Barony of
        Marolleris, son of Lord Kuvinmel and Lady Ashasan Yasarin. And
        who are you?"
            The sergeant broke into a light chuckle, followed by his
        men, the uneasy laughter turning to full bursts of gut
        splitting contempt. "Kill 'em both."
            The soldier nearest to Deven drew his sword and swung,
        still chocking with glee, as the blade impacted the soft cloak.
        The seemingly soft cloth refused to give to the blade's passage
        and the weapon tumbled from the surprised soldier's grasp. The
        mocking laughter subsided to somber groans as the soldier
        backed away. His own hand reached down to his side and came
        back up stained with blood, from a wound level with how he
        struck the mage. Deven only shook his head.
            Not wasting the precious time, Rien attacked the man
        nearest him, planting his boot into the man's back, sending him
        sprawling forward across tables and chairs, taking down another
        man in his path.
            The man who dropped his sword when trying to attack Rien,
        grabbed a bottle and turned at the sound of the racket, fast
        enough to see Rien close, but not fast enough to react. He
        slammed into a wall and sunk down to the ground.
            None of the other men moved, still watching Deven and the
        man sinking to the floor before him.
            "Sergeant..." a tongue of flame licked at the air through
        the open doorway behind Deven, making the soldiers take another
        step back. "Sergeant, surely you've heard the story of the
        Yasarin family. All dead? Not dead? Two publicly executed, but
        what happened to the children?"
            The large soldier on the stairs, Forance, let out a yell
        and leapt the few feet separating him from the mage, his sword
        held before him, aimed at a stationary target. It sank through
        the cloak, making Rien flinch as he expected Deven to collapse,
        but the mage remained on his feet and only moved his arms to
        lower the stunned soldier to the ground. Forance slipped from
        his grasp and fell backwards on the floor, a deep wound in his
        chest.
            "Sir Keegan," Deven turned to Rien, "leave. These men are
        mine."
            Rien took an unsure step forward, towards the door. He knew
        what his friend intended to do, but was not sure if he should
        let him. His hesitancy did not seem unusual to the Benosian
        soldiers around him, who only backed up even more. He knew the
        risks of challenging Deven's authority now. In spite of what he
        felt to be right, he had to let Deven finish this on his own
        terms. There was simply no other way.
            Rien walked past the sergeant, taking care to be ready if
        the man attacked him, but the old soldier made no move even as
        Rien opened and closed the door. He paused in the street,
        casting a glance back at the tavern, looking at the kite shield
        over the door, displaying a fat green dragon lying on its back,
        a filled bubbling glass in its clumsy claw and a goofy glazed
        look in his eyes. Something in him shattered as he realized
        that this symbol of some of his closest friends had been lost
        to the horrors of war. He would forever remember it as a place
        where Adrea disappeared, where he and Deven made a stand
        against enemy troops.
            Crossing the street to the river, Rien hopped off the wood
        supported embankment onto the soft white sand and walked to the
        rushing waters, looking off into the distance where flickers of
        light on the distant southern shore could be seen. Behind him,
        in the shuttered windows of The Tipsy Dragon, orange flames
        lapped at the walls of the building.

                       *          *          *

     Rien opened his  eyes, a sensation of extreme  hunger foremost on
his mind. He  shifted, realizing how sore he was  and noticed the lack
of bandages that were on him  before. Instead, there was an arm draped
across his chest.
     "Jenye..." he did not know what had happened and the idea was not
much to his liking. "Jenye?"
     "Yeah?"
     "How long have I been out?"
     She lifted her head and looked  towards the window, where the sun
had already risen in the east. "Over night. You and I both..."
     "You..."
     She kissed him. "You don't have to thank me."
     "Yeah..."
     "How do you feel?" she sat up.
     "Sore."
     "Just sore?"
     He moved his arm. "Just sore. Very sore."
     "I'm sorry this happened," Jenye apologized again.
     Rien brushed his hand across her stomach. "Another place, another
time..."
     "What?"
     He shook his head. "Thank you for taking care of me."
     Jenye put her arms around him. "I'll be sorry to see you go."
     "I still need to find Adrea," he reminded her.
     "You..." Jenye  sighed. "I guess  there isn't  such a thing  as a
good time  to tell you.  Your friend was killed  the first day  of the
invasion."
     "What?"
     "Moldan found  a witness. The invasion  was so sudden, few  had a
chance to flee. She died at the tavern."
     "No!"
     As he spoke, Jenye saw the pupils of his eyes turn steel grey.
     "I must speak with the witness!"
     "Rien, don't. Please."
     "I must."
     His look and  the tone of his voice frightened  her, but she felt
the obligation to resist. "You don't know what you're asking..."
     "Yes, I do. Tell me who the witness is!" his voice rose.
     Jenye turned away from Rien. There were things she needed to talk
to him about now for over a day  and this seemed to be the right time.
She had his attention and the time.
     "You left two coins in Moldan's house. He gave them back to me to
return to you."
     "You're changing the topic," Rien warned.
     "Gold Marks?"
     "Jenye!"
     "Do you know what can happen to a commoner with two Gold Marks in
a town like this?"
     Rien grabbed her shoulder and twisted her to face him. "Jenye!"
     "What are you going to do? Find out who killed her? Go kill them?
Why don't  you go after  Talens? He's hiding  in Quirin while  his men
loot and pillage the city!"
     "Jenye,  Adrea was  always my  responsibility. I  trained her.  I
worked with her. I was there when her daughter was born. I'm not going
to abandon her now, dead or alive!"
     "You won't let  her rest until you  see blood at the  end of your
sword!"
     "If that's what it takes, but I  will look in the eyes of the man
who killed her and see what's in his soul."
     "The witness  is Barar, Moldan's  son," Jenye turned  away again.
"It's part  of the  reason for  his nightmares. When  I went  back, he
described things  to me  that he  doesn't know the  words for.  He was
there that day. He saw it happen...and he'll never forget it."
     "What happened?"
     "A half dozen men chased a girl in to the tavern, a commoner, and
killed her. Your friend tried to  stop them, killed a soldier, injured
some others...  Then they caught her,  raped her, gutted her  and left
her to die."
     Rien threw his legs over the edge of the bed and got up. "No..."
     "It'll comfort you to know that they were the ones staying at the
tavern. You killed them already."
     Rien did not answer.
     "Do you feel  better now that you know the  truth? Does it please
you that they died by your hand?  You're just like them! Just like any
other man who ever  picked up a sword! It's people  like you that make
this world such a miserable place to live!"
     Fighting the pain and the soreness with his anger, Rien picked up
his blood stained tunic and put it  on. "I am sorry I disappointed you
with who I am, but I warned you that it would happen. Goodbye."
     She did  not move  as he  walked out. Perhaps  what she  said was
enough or  too much, but it  all stemmed from frustration  of the last
few  days and  the knowledge  that he  was going  to leave  anyway, no
matter what she would have told him.  She was only sorry that the news
she had to deliver him was bad. She really had no bad will towards him
or his mission. It  just came out sounding that way,  her anger was at
what was happening in Sharks' Cove.  Rien was still among the kindest,
most sensitive  people she ever met  and seeing him go  still hurt, in
spite  of her  displeasure with  his  profession. Perhaps  she did  do
wrong, after all.

                       *          *          *

     Rien managed  to control himself enough  not to slam the  door to
the room behind  himself. He was angry  at the news and at  how he was
treated,  but he  could  not disagree  with what  Jenye  had said.  He
himself had said  the very same thing a countless  number of times. He
just did  not expect to hear  it from her so  harshly. Compounded with
the news of Adrea's death, he  found himself at a complete loss. Worse
than  that,  there  was nothing  he  could  do,  no  one to  take  his
frustrations out on.
     He  paused at  the end  of the  corridor, before  going down  the
stairs, and forced himself to calm down. He was not going to do anyone
any good by staying  mad, himself most of all. After  a brief rest, he
proceeded down the stairs and towards the door across the room.
     "Rien!" he  heard Jenye's voice when  he was half way  across the
common room. In spite of himself, Rien stopped and turned. Jenye stood
at the top of the stairs,  a blanket wrapped around her shoulders. "We
need to talk."
     For  what seemed  like  forever, he  did not  move,  the eyes  of
everyone in  the room either  on him or her.  He really could  not say
that he hated her or never wanted to  see her again. In a way he could
understand her angry  outburst, but at the same time  he could see the
mistake he made with Kera and did not want to repeat it a second time.
It would  hurt now, but  it would  be easier to  get over than  in the
future. She would probably hate him,  perhaps as much as he would hate
himself, but it had to be done.
     As  all confused  patrons focused  on him,  he once  again turned
around and left the Abyssment, this time for good.
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1  (C)    Copyright  December,  1993,   DargonZine,     Editor   Dafydd
. All  rights revert to the  authors. These stories
may  not  be  reproduced  or   redistributed  (save  in  the  case  of
reproducing  the whole  'zine  for further  distribution) without  the
express permission of the author involved.






1                                                             /
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  D     D A  A R  R G    O  O N N N     Z   I N N N E     || Volume 6
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  D    D  AAAA RRR  G GG O  O N N N   Z     I N N N E     || Issue  5
  DDDDD   A  A R  R GGGG OOOO N  NN  ZZZZZZ I N  NN EEEE  ||
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--   DargonZine Volume 6, Issue 5        12/10/93          Cir 1109   --
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--          Archives at fir.cic.net in pub/Zines/DargonZine           --
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--                            Contents                                --
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 Startled Birds               Carlo Samson           (Guest Commentary)
 Resolutions                  Carlo Samson           Yuli 4, 1013
 Sons of Gateway 6: Running   Jon Evans              V. 30-Yule 12, 1014
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1                   Startled Birds:  A Guest Commentary
                          by Carlo N. Samson
                       (b.c.k.a. )

     Seasons Greetings to all our new and current readers, and welcome
again to another edition of  _DargonZine_! Yes, the previous issue was
another single-story blockbuster; while we  endeavour to have at least
two stories  in an issue, sometimes  a large story must  be printed in
its entirety in order to preserve the narrative integrity.
     Some of  you may recognize two  of the authors featured  in issue
6-3. Jeff Lee ("Heroic Couplet") was a member of the Dargon Project in
1988, and his story "Stranger in  the Mist" appeared in _FSFNet_ 11-1.
He is now back with us and is currently at work on his next story.
     The  other returnee  is  David  "Orny" Liscomb,  of  whom I  made
mention  in the  commentary for  issue  6-2. Orny  founded the  Dargon
Project  in 1984  and  was its  mentor until  he  stopped putting  out
_FSFnet_ (the predecessor  of _DargonZine_) in mid-1988.  At that time
he, like  many college graduates,  dropped off  the net and  was never
heard from again. "'Bout 'Majin'"  is his first story since returning,
and he also has a considerably  more ambitious story that is currently
in the  editing cycle. We're glad  to have his familiar  style gracing
our pages once again.
     Lastly, in this issue we have the sixth installment of Jon Evans'
"Sons of Gateway" series, as well as one by this writer which wraps up
most of the loose ends from  my previous stories. Upcoming issues will
feature the  conclusion of  the "Campaign for  the Laraka"  series, in
addition to stories by Bill Erdley  and Max Khaytsus. So stay with us,
tell your friends about us, and let us know how we're doing.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                              Resolutions
                          by Carlo N. Samson
                 (b.c.k.a. )

     (Author's Note: This story takes place about a year before the
     Baranur-Beinison war.)

     Brynna Thorne  stood alone at  the top  of one of  Crown Castle's
many towers.  She leaned on the  rough stone battlement and  gazed out
over the city of  Magnus in the direction of the  Laraka River. A warm
breeze caressed  her long dark hair  and brought with it  a mixture of
scents: the briny  smell of freshly-caught fish being  unloaded on the
docks; the  sweet fragrance of  bright flowers from the  Royal Garden;
and the  faint, familiar  smell of  the river itself.  The sight  of a
small  merchant ship  slowly  moving downriver  under  the broad  grey
expanse of Kheva's  Bridge brought on a twinge of  longing; she wished
she could be out there on the river, back aboard her own ship, instead
of  being cooped  up  inside the  cold  walls of  a  castle, even  the
majestic residence of the King of Baranur.
     She heard  a voice in the  distance; it sounded like  someone was
calling her  name. Brynna looked  around, and spotted a  figure waving
vigorously to her from far down below in the courtyard. It appeared to
be a  woman, and  next to  her was  one of  the castle  guards. Brynna
politely  waved  back,  unsure  of the  woman's  identity.  Apparently
satisfied,  the  woman  spoke  to  the  guard  and  the  two  of  them
disappeared into the castle proper.
     Brynna's brow furrowed  as she mentally reviewed the  list of all
the people she  knew in Magnus. Within the first  week of her arrival,
before the  trial started, she had  visited with all the  friends whom
she knew still lived  in the city; a few of them  had moved away since
the last time she was in town.
     She was still pondering over this when she heard footsteps behind
her. Turning, she saw  a tall young woman in a  simple white and green
dress  coming  toward  her  from   the  tower  entrance.  The  woman's
sandy-blond hair  was tied back with  a lavender ribbon, and  her oval
face was dominated  by a wide full-lipped mouth, beaming  with a broad
smile.
     Brynna felt  herself returning the  smile as recognition  came to
her. "Kadie! So it's you!"
     The  other woman  extended her  arms as  she closed  the distance
between them. "Brynna Brynna Brynna! Surprised to see me?"
     "As a matter of fact, yes," Brynna replied. The two women briefly
embraced. "The last time I saw you was...how old is your son?"
     "Sons," Kadie corrected her.
     "Another one?" Brynna shook her  head. "Don't you and Alexio ever
talk anymore?"
     Kadie giggled. "Well, what do you think we talk about?"
     Brynna rolled  her eyes. "You still  look like the same  old girl
who used to hide whenever boys came around."
     "And you  look--darker," Kadie said,  squinting one eye.  "But at
least you've  kept your mage  mark." She  reached out and  touched the
streak of  blue that colored the  strands of long ebony  hair near the
left side of Brynna's face.
     "As if I could get rid of it!" Brynna said with a laugh. "Now, do
you want  to tell me  just what the  freezing hell you're  doing here?
Dawna said that you moved back to the country two years ago."
     Kadie looked over  the battlements. "My, but we're  high up!" She
gathered her skirts and sat down  in a crenel. "Anyway, my husband has
friends in the castle guard, and one of  them came by a week ago for a
chat. He happened to mention that the whole city was talking about the
trial of some  famous pirate who had  been brought in by  a woman ship
captain. And  I thought  to myself,  there's only  one woman  who that
could possibly be! So I...persuaded Alexio to take me here to see you.
He had to call in many favors  and do a bit of persuading himself, but
it all worked out and here I am!"
     "I'm impressed,"  Brynna said. "And  I'm very glad that  you did.
Living in the Castle isn't quite how people imagine it to be."
     "So  what exactly  is your  part in  all this?"  Kadie asked.  "I
thought you'd be  away in some far-off port  seeking ancient treasures
or the like."
     "Well, it's...it's quite a story," Brynna said.
     "You know how much I like stories."
     Brynna  sat down  against  the parapet.  "Well,  the whole  thing
started a few months ago with a book."
     "A book? What book?"
     "I was on  a trading run to  Dargon, and a day before  we were to
leave I wanted to  get a birthday gift for my father.  So I stopped in
at a local  book shop and ended up buying  this very unusual tome--I'd
never seen it's like before. The owner suggested I take it to a scribe
he knew...."

     The  scribe's name  was  Genarvus  Kazakian, and  he  lived in  a
private residence east of the marketplace. He was middle-aged, shorter
than Brynna,  and dressed rather  more formally than she  expected. He
seemed  a bit  nervous when  he answered  the door,  but was  pleasant
enough as he  ushered her into his small but  comfortable study. A boy
of  about  fifteen  years  was   busily  cleaning  the  fireplace;  he
straightened up as they entered  the room. Kazakian introduced the boy
as his assistant Abiro, and sent him away to make them some tea.
     They  sat down  at a  table  in the  center of  the room.  Brynna
watched Kazakian examine the book; he  used a large round lens mounted
on a wooden handle to peer closely at the cover and pages.
     "It  is  certainly very  old,"  Kazakian  murmured after  several
minutes. "And the  writing is very precise." He put  down the lens and
looked up.
     "What about the language it's written in?" Brynna asked.
     "That I am not entirely sure  about. The letters do not belong to
any script or alphabet that I am familiar with. Although, I do have an
idea...." He got  up and pulled a book from  a nearby shelf. Returning
to the table,  he opened the new  book to a certain page.  He used the
lens to scrutinize the cover of Brynna's book, then looked over to the
open pages  of the  other book.  After a few  minutes of  reading, his
expression became  triumphant. "By the  beard of Ol! I  cannot believe
this!" He  turned to Brynna  and said excitedly, "Captain  Thorne, you
have purchased a most significant tome!"
     "How significant?" asked Brynna, her interest mounting.
     "Firstly, have you ever heard of the Mystics?"
     "Of course. They were an ancient race that lived on Makdiar about
three or  four thousand years ago.  My mother used to  tell me stories
about them."
     Kazakian nodded. "But if my  suspicions about this book are true,
then it may  be that the Mystics  did not merely exist  in stories, as
most people believe."
     Brynna was  about to ask  him what  he meant when  Abiro returned
with the tea.
     "Just put  it over there, will  you?" Kazakian motioned to  a low
table in  front of the fireplace.  "And fetch my writing  desk." Abiro
nodded  and  moved to  comply.  Kazakian  turned  back to  Brynna  and
continued his  explanation. "You  may know,  Captain Thorne,  that the
Mystics  are widely  considered mythical  by most  scholars, and  that
those who do  research on them are generally scorned.  I fall into the
latter category, and have gathered much information during my years of
study." He went on to reveal  that the Fretheod people, who ruled much
of Baranur over  two thousand years ago, sometimes  made references to
the Mystics  in their literature,  and even included samples  of their
script in various texts.
     "The symbol on  the cover of the book you  bought is exactly like
the one depicted here in this  Fretheod volume on religion. The symbol
was  apparently used  by a  Mystic sect  known as  the Ara'la  Takkon.
Unfortunately, not much is know about  the sect, but their 'holy book'
is commonly known as the Codex Araltakonia."
     Abiro returned with the writing desk. Kazakian opened it and took
out a sheet of  parchment, a quill, and a bottle  of ink. Brynna moved
the books aside to make room on the table.
     "Will that be all, milord?" Abiro asked.
     "Yes,  yes," muttered  Kazakian.  Remembering  Brynna, he  added,
"Unless you  would like some  tea, Captain Thorne?" She  declined, and
Abiro left the room with the tea tray. "As I was saying, this book may
very well be the  sacred text of the Ara'la Takkon. If  so, it will do
much to prove  that the Mystics did once exist."  He paused and looked
at Brynna with a serious but hopeful expression. "If I may ask a great
favor of you,  Captain Thorne--would you be willing to  take this book
to Magnus for proper study?"
     Brynna  considered  for a  moment.  The  capital was  a  two-week
journey upriver from Port Sevlyn,  her home and final destination. The
crew of her ship was due shore  leave, though, and the ship itself was
in need of repairs; but it would  be no trouble for her to continue on
to Magnus by  herself, and besides, it would give  her the opportunity
to visit some old friends there.  "If it's that important, I'd be glad
to do it," Brynna said.
     The  scribe nodded  his  thanks and  hurriedly  scribbled on  the
parchment. "It  is imperative,  then, that  you get  this book  to the
Royal  Scholar. He's  an open-minded  fellow--I  met him  while I  was
studying at the University--and he will no doubt be very interested in
properly  authenticating  and translating  the  tome."  He signed  the
parchment  with a  flourish. "Present  this  letter to  him, also.  It
contains a brief  summary of my conclusions, and  instructions for you
to be compensated for delivering it there."
     Brynna  smiled  in  mild  amusement.  The  scribe  had  certainly
loosened up upon  determining the book's significance. "I  had no idea
it was of such historical value when I purchased it."
     Kazakian  nodded  vigorously as  he  imprinted  his seal  on  the
parchment. "It  is most fortunate  that you  came across the  book and
brought it to me.  A devout man might see the hand of  a god or two in
this!"

     "Do you believe it was written by the Mystics?" asked Kadie.
     "Well,  I looked  at it  very  closely during  the voyage,"  said
Brynna, "and as I said the  writing wasn't like anything I'd ever seen
before. But in  any case, as we neared Port  Sevlyn the _Voyager_ came
under attack by Commander Challion--"
     "He's the one who's on trial, right?  Didn't he used to be in the
Royal Army?"
     Brynna nodded.  "He was Knight  Captain of the  Southern Marches,
but was discharged for forcing himself on a peasant girl."
     "Disgusting," Kadie said, making a face.
     "Exactly my  thoughts," Brynna  agreed. "After his  discharge, he
became the  leader of  a band  of pirates, and  was widely  sought for
various  crimes. He  wanted the  Codex, but  I refused  to give  it to
him...."

     "You haven't answered my question," Brynna said. "Is this a raid?
If  not, I'd  very much  like to  get under  way. Tell  your mage--the
conscious one, that is--to give us the wind back."
     Challion leaned over the rail. "I have one other objective, and I
think you know what I mean."
     Brynna shrugged. "Do elaborate."
     "The Codex  Araltakonia, Captain  Thorne. I  wish to  purchase it
from you."
     Cydric turned to Mandi. "The what?" he whispered.
     "That book  you were  looking at  in the  cabin," she  replied in
hushed tones."The one  on her desk--it's supposed to be  as old as the
Mystics!"
     "Sorry. I  don't have what  you're looking for,"  Brynna replied,
folding her arms.
     "No  lies, no  games, Captain!  I know  you acquired  it back  in
Dargon. But I'm prepared to offer twice what you paid for it."
     "In  truth, Commander,  I  never thought  our  paths would  cross
again--the dragon whale seemed rather attached to you, as I recall."
     "I  got  the  better  of  the creature,  in  the  end,"  Challion
answered. Hitching  his trousers up  around his ample waist,  he said,
"Well, three times your purchase price, then. You'll be making quite a
profit."
     "The knowledge in the Codex is beyond price. In any case, what do
you  want with  it? You're  by no  means a  scholar--neither are  your
mages."
     Challion rubbed  his fleshy  face and  exhaled loudly.  "My final
offer--quadruple the amount you paid to acquire it! A fine trader such
as  yourself cannot  fail to  recognize  a wonderful  bargain such  as
this."
     "True, but I also recognize barjee squat when I hear it. And I've
heard enough,"  said Brynna. "Spear detail,  forward!" Several crewmen
went over to the remains of the scorpion and picked up spears from the
storage box. After dipping the points  into the tar pot, they lined up
alongside Brynna  at the rail. Kayne  lit up a torch  and stood behind
them.
     "It always comes to violence, hey Skoranji?" Challion said to the
balding man. To Brynna he said, "Very well. If you do not wish to sell
the book, then I am afraid I will just have to take it."
     "You and  what battle fleet?  Your men  won't set foot  upon this
ship," Brynna shot back.
     The balding  man spoke. "Truly  now, m'  dear? Be you  willin' to
test your pups 'gainst me bloodseekers?"
     "Would you  be willing  to bet on  it, Captain  Skoranji?" Brynna
asked, smirking.  The _Voyager_  crew laughed.  Even from  his vantage
point, Cydric could see Skoranji turn red.
     "Please,  please,  let's  not  bring  my  friend's  fondness  for
gambling into this," said Challion.  "I appeal to your reason, Captain
Thorne. Give  the Codex  over peacefully, and  we'll part  on friendly
terms."
     Brynna shook her  head. "You raffenraker, do  you seriously think
you intimidate me?"
     Challion motioned to the green-robed man, who lifted his arms and
spoke a short  phrase. An intense green glow limned  his hands, then a
ball of  light the  same color  formed and  shot toward  the _Vanguard
Voyager_. It  came to hover over  Kayne, then sped downward  to strike
him full  in the  chest and  knock him backwards.  It then  ringed his
neck, and slowly the First Mate rose into the air.
     "Certainly not, Captain. I know  better than to threaten you. But
a threat to your friend is another matter," Challion said, smiling.
     "True  men do  not hide  behind magic,"  Brynna returned  coldly,
gripping the  rail so hard her  knuckles turned white. "Let  him down,
Commander Challion. Now."
     "We are  going to  board your  ship. If  you or  any of  your men
resists, mister Kayne will no longer have the use of his head."
     "First let him down, damn you. Then I'll give you the Codex."
     "The book  first, in  exchange for  his life.  That is  your only
option."
     Brynna chewed on her lower lip, then finally agreed.

     "You didn't!" Kadie exclaimed.
     "Well, at  that moment I didn't  have much of a  choice ," Brynna
said. "But when I found out that Cydric and Mandi were hiding on deck,
I secretly instructed  Mandi to get my bow and  arrows and have Cydric
make ready to kill the wizard when I signalled."
     Kadie's eyes widened. Brynna slowly shook her head and sighed. "I
don't like having to kill, you  know that. But sometimes it's the only
way."
     "I understand," said Kadie. "But then what? He was able to do it,
I suppose, or else you wouldn't be here telling me about it!"
     "He did, and that enabled us to fight back...."

     Gulping a quick  breath of air, Cydric leaped up,  drew a bead on
the _Black Swan's_ magic-maker, and let the arrow fly. It sped through
the air  in a flash  of silver, and  smacked deep into  the sorcerer's
left eye.
     The man screamed, clutched at his face with both hands, staggered
forward, and pitched over the rail into the river.
     Kayne fell to the deck as the green ring vanished from around his
neck. "Battle  positions!" shouted  Brynna. The _Voyager_  crew surged
forward, scooping up their weapons and whooping in defiance.
     Cydric  ran over  to check  on Kayne.  Challion cursed  as Brynna
severed the grappling lines.
     "Are you all right, sir?" Cydric asked, helping Kayne to sit up.
     "Never did  like wizards,"  the First  Mate replied,  rubbing his
throat.
     Brynna instructed two  crewmen to take Kayne  below, then ordered
the spear detail forward again. She retrieved the torch and re-lit it.
     Challion  ordered the  _Swan's_ oars  back into  the water,  then
directed Skoranji to prepare the ballista for a counterattack.
     Brynna handed  the torch to  the first  spearman, who lit  up his
weapon and passed the  flame to the next man. After  the torch made it
down the line and  all the spears had been lit,  Brynna gave the order
to let fly.
     Several  of the  burning spears  struck  the side  of the  _Black
Swan_. A  few of them  landed on  the deck, and  one managed to  hit a
sail. The fire  spread quickly, forcing Challion to  abandon his plans
for a retaliatory strike in favor of saving his ship from the flames.
     Cydric and  Mandi watched the  action from the rail.  As Skoranji
dashed madly about the deck of the _Swan_ calling out orders, a breeze
rippled across  Cydric's cheek. At  the same time the  helmsman cried,
"We've  got the  wind back,  Captain!" Cydric  looked up  and saw  the
ship's sails billowing proudly once more.
     "Get us under way immediately!" called Brynna.
     As the _Vanguard  Voyager_ slowly pulled away  from the enkindled
_Black Swan_, Cydric could  see Commander Challion standing motionless
at  the rail,  flames licking  at his  back. Suddenly  he shouted  out
across the widening gap between the ships.
     "I will not  forget this, Brynna Thorne! I cannot  be defeated so
easily--revenge will be mine, in the end!"
     Brynna came over and took the bow and arrows from Cydric. "Wrong,
Challion. It  ends now!" she said.  She nocked an arrow  and fired. It
struck the Commander square in the chest, penetrating his breastplate.
Challion gasped and fell back into the fire.

     "Was that really necessary?" Kadie asked.
     Brynna was  silent for  a moment. "You  have to  understand, that
wasn't the  first time  he and  I crossed  each other.  I was  just so
frustrated and angry that he had attacked me and put my crew in danger
again. I really wanted it to end."
     "And I suppose it has, hasn't it?" said Kadie.
     "With the  trial, yes. When  we arrived in  Port Sevlyn, I  saw a
Royal Navy ship in dock, under the command of Captain Xane Hellriegel.
He's the one who actually went back and captured Challion and the crew
of his ship."
     "And  you rode  with  them all  the way  here  to Magnus,"  Kadie
finished.
     "Yes," said  Brynna. "I was  rather surprised to see  how quickly
they brought  Challion to trial,  though. Apparently this is  one case
the Crown wants disposed of as soon  as possible. And, since I was one
of his victims, I testified against him. The King is going to announce
the verdict soon, so I came up here to wait."
     "Well, I'm  sure there's no doubt  about what it's going  to be,"
said Kadie. "But how did Challion even know you had the Codex?"
     "He claims that a woman hired him  to obtain the book from me and
deliver  it   to  her,  in  exchange   for  a  large  sum   of  money.
Unfortunately, the woman he described hasn't been found, and he claims
he knows nothing else about her."
     "What about the Codex itself?"
     "The scholars  have been debating  over it since  practically the
moment I brought it  in," Brynna said with a grin.  "They seem to have
divided into  two armies--those who  believe it's authentic  and those
who believe it isn't. I still got paid, though."
     "You've  certainly made  your  mark on  this  city, haven't  you,
Brynna?" Kadie said with admiration.  Her emerald-green eyes took on a
faraway look.  "Your life is so  much more exciting than  mine. You've
seen and done far more that I could ever hope to!"
     "That's what  many people think,  but the truth of  it is...well,
don't tell my mother this, but sometimes I think of giving it up. Just
settling down and raising a family like you've done."
     "Would you really do that?"
     Brynna  half-shrugged and  gave a  slight shake  of her  head. "I
don't know--I mean, you remember what happened with Tarant?"
     Kadie nodded, remembering the time  when a 23-year-old Brynna had
accepted a marriage proposal from a young man, but later broke off the
engagement in  order to  take advantage of  the opportunity  to become
captain of her own  ship. "So what you mean is, you  don't know if you
even could settle down?"
     Brynna sighed. "Well,  I suppose I eventually will,  but it won't
be  for a  while, at  least.  Maybe someday  if  I ever  get tired  of
adventuring."
     They talked a  while longer about family  and friends. Presently,
the castle guard who had escorted Kadie came up the tower and informed
Brynna that the King was about to render his verdict.
     "Oh, came I come too?" Kadie asked hopefully. "I've never been to
a trial before!"
     "Of course. Let's go," said Brynna.

     The Audience Chamber of the  castle had filled almost to capacity
with  various  courtiers and  nobles  by  the  time Brynna  and  Kadie
arrived. The guard led the two  women through the murmuring crowd to a
bench near the front of the room where sat the other witnesses against
Commander Challion. Kadie  marvelled at the vast expanse  of the great
hall, and  expressed great interest  in the colorful banners  and huge
tapestries that hung on the walls.
     A few minutes later, a black-haired man in a gold and green tunic
strode  solemnly into  the room  from the  double doors  at the  rear.
Brynna  explained   that  he  was   the  Falcon  Herald   of  Baranur,
distinguished by  the image of  the blue falcon  in the center  of his
tabard, and by the silver circlet he wore on his head.
     The Falcon  Herald reached  the front  of the  hall and  stood in
front of  the throne. "Your respect  for His Majesty, King  Haralan of
Baranur!" he intoned. The room fell  silent. A moment later, the doors
opened to  admit an entourage  that included several guards,  the High
Priest, the  opposing Advocates, various functionaries,  then the King
himself surrounded  by soldiers of  the King's Own.  Brynna instructed
Kadie to bow  her head like the  rest of the crowd as  the King passed
by.
     When the entire assembly had installed itself at the front of the
hall and the King had seated  himself on the throne, the Falcon Herald
motioned for  the congregation  to be  seated. Commander  Challion was
then brought  in, flanked by  guards and iron-shackled at  the wrists.
Brynna saw  that although his arrow  wound had fully healed,  he still
carried himself as  if he was in  great pain--no doubt a  ploy to gain
the King's sympathy.
     The guards  made Challion kneel  before the throne.  King Haralan
stared at  him for several  long moments, stroking his  chin. Brynna's
heart pounded in her chest as she waited to hear the verdict. Finally,
the  King stood  up. A  page  handed him  a golden  scepter, which  he
pointed at the large man kneeling before him.
     "Artemus Challion, former Knight Captain of the Southern Marches,
the accusations that have been brought against you are most grave. You
have committed crimes against your  country and stained your honor. It
is my judgement, then, that you be declared guilty of all charges, and
punished accordingly."
     The hall  exploded with  scattered cheers and  excitement. Brynna
leaped up and shouted with elation. Dimly, she heard Challion shouting
in protest.  The Falcon Herald  called for  quiet, and when  the noise
died down the King continued.
     "Because of  your past service  to the  Crown your life  shall be
spared, but you shall be held in the dungeon for fifty years, or until
the end  of your days. Furthermore,  all of your possessions  shall be
seized  and used  to pay  restitution to  those whom  you have  caused
injury. This  I decree,  before God  and the  Kingdom." He  handed the
scepter back to the page. "This tribunal is concluded."
     "No!"  shouted Challion  as the  guards forced  him to  his feet.
"Your Majesty, please!  You cannot do this to me!  I implore you--" He
roared in  defiance as  the guards began  dragging him  away. Catching
sight  of Brynna,  his face  contorted with  rage. "I  *will* have  my
revenge,  Captain Thorne!"  he snarled.  Brynna gazed  coolly at  him,
smiling faintly in  satisfaction. When he was finally out  of the room
Kadie remarked, "My, but he was angry! Aren't you frightened?"
     "Not at all. He won't be bothering anyone for a long while."
     The  High  Priest  said  a  brief  benediction,  then  the  royal
entourage moved out of the hall.  The crowd broke up, some leaving the
hall, others milling about.
     "So what do you do now?" Kadie asked as she and Brynna headed for
the doors.
     "I collect my restitution, I  suppose!" Brynna said with a laugh.
Just then  she spotted a familiar  face coming towards her  out of the
crowd. "Come on, let me introduce you to someone."
     A tall well-muscled man in the  uniform of the Royal Navy stopped
and congratulated Brynna. She thanked him and gave Kadie a little push
forward. "Captain Hellriegel, may I present Acadia Farrondale."
     "A  great pleasure,"  Hellriegel  said, taking  Kadie's hand  and
pressing  it to  his cheek.  The young  woman gave  a nervous  giggle.
"Ah--it's--I'm delighted  to meet  you," Kadie falteringly  replied, a
wide grin on her face.
     Brynna  explained that  she and  Kadie grew  up together  in Port
Sevlyn, and that Kadie moved to  Magnus upon her marriage. "And didn't
you say  you moved again?" she  asked, casting her friend  a prompting
look.
     "Oh--ah, yes,  we did,"  Kadie answered,  casting her  eyes shyly
downward. "After  my second son was  born, my husband decided  that we
would need a bigger  place to live, and so we moved to  a town not far
from the  city." She flicked her  gaze up at Hellriegel,  then over to
Brynna.
     Hellriegel made small talk with them for a few more minutes, then
asked Brynna if she  would like to join him later  at a local dockside
pub.
     "I'd like to, but..perhaps some other time," Brynna replied.
     "Are you  sure?" asked Hellriegel. "You  do, after all, owe  me a
dinner."
     Brynna smiled. "We'll see."
     "That's as  good an answer as  I'm going to get,  eh?" Hellriegel
said with a  slight nod of his  head. "Hope to see  you, then, Captain
Thorne. A pleasure,  Lady Farrondale." He smiled as he  took his leave
of them.
     Kadie stared open-mouthed  at his retreating back.  "Did you hear
that? He called  me lady!" She put  a hand on her chest  and turned to
Brynna. "WHY didn't you accept his invitation?"
     Brynna shrugged. "I...it didn't seem appropriate."
     "You  spent two  weeks on  a  ship with  the man!  Don't tell  me
nothing happened!"
     "Nothing did."
     Kadie sighed  and mimed slapping  Brynna across the  face several
times. "Is  your mind  still there, Brynna?  HOW could  nothing happen
between you and..." She glanced back and breathed a sigh. "And him!"
     "Don't let Alexio hear you talk like that. He might get jealous."
     "Realm  of  the gods,  Brynna,  it  looks  like you're  not  even
trying!"
     Brynna put a hand on her friend's shoulder. "You haven't seen the
Royal Gardens yet,  have you? They have the most  beautiful variety of
roses that my mother would give anything for. Would you like to go see
them?"
     Before Kadie could reply,  a young disheveled-looking man dressed
in red  and gray  scholars' robes  came rushing  up to  them. "Captain
Thorne?" he asked breathlessly, looking at Brynna.
     "Yes, what is it?"
     "My  name  is Cullan,  I'm  with  the  Scholar's Council  at  the
University of Magnus. May I speak with you?"
     "Concerning what?"
     "It's about--well, we, that is, the Council, would like to make a
proposition--I mean, we'd like to make an offer, uh...."
     "An offer of what?" asked Brynna with slight annoyance.
     The young  scholar visibly  composed himself. "Are  you available
this afternoon?  The Council would  like to  see you before  you leave
Magnus. It's about a possible expedition."
     "An  expedition to  where?" Brynna  asked, concealing  her sudden
rise of interest.
     "That  will be  discussed at  the meeting.  Will you  be able  to
attend?"
     "Yes, of course. Thank you," Brynna replied.
     "Very good, Captain.  Um, someone will be sent for  you at around
three bells."
     Brynna nodded, and the young man departed.
     "He seemed  excited," Kadie  observed. "Do you  know what  he was
talking about?"
     "I'm not sure. I should have at least asked him about the Codex,"
Brynna said.  She turned to  Kadie. "Well, why  don't we go  see those
roses now?"

     Meanwhile,  in the  infamous  Fifth Quarter  of  Magnus, a  gaunt
dark-haired  man  angrily   made  his  way  into  a   pub  called  the
Silverchance Tavern. The man swept  through the common room and pushed
through the  crowd in the  gaming parlor until he  came to one  of the
private booths  at the  back. He  flung aside  the curtain  and stared
wordlessly at  the older, more  expensively dressed  man who sat  at a
small table with a slender auburn-haired young woman beside him.
     "Ah, Veltain!  What news, eh?"  the older man said,  turning from
his young companion.
     "Challion has  just been  sentenced," Veltain said  tightly, eyes
narrowed.
     "At last," the older man replied. "Well, sit! Tell us about it."
     The gaunt man stood for  a moment, breathing heavily, then ripped
the curtain back across the  booth's entrance and slammed himself into
a chair. "You were wrong, Javaro.  Challion has only been sentenced to
imprisonment, not death!" He rested his elbows on the table and cupped
his face in his hands.
     "Then it would  seem that the King is in  a merciful mood today!"
Javaro chuckled and  took a sip of wine from  the silver goblet before
him.
     Veltain  looked  up, annoyance  clear  on  his face.  "Don't  you
understand? They may interrogate him  further--he might even lead them
to her!"  He stabbed a  finger at the young  woman, who calmly  took a
long  puff on  the  pipe  she was  smoking  and  exhaled in  Veltain's
direction.
     "Why must you  always be so scared?" she said  in a smooth voice.
"You're nothing but a mouse in a  pit full of snakes." She looked away
and sucked on the pipe.
     "Damn you, Taja!" Veltain said tensely.
     Javaro  sighed. "Calm  yourself,  Veltain.  Nothing has  changed.
Challion still knows nothing of us. What does it matter that he wastes
away in  a rat-infested dungeon  instead of twirling  at the end  of a
rope?" He  slipped his  arm around the  young woman's  bare shoulders.
"And do  you really think  he could recognize  her outside any  of her
many disguises?"
     Veltain slapped both palms on the  table. "The true issue here is
that the Codex is now lost to  us, thanks to your total mishandling of
the whole matter! If you had done as I suggested--"
     Taja looked  at him sharply.  "If we  had done as  you suggested,
every mage in  Baranur would be knocking at our  doorstep! You have no
concept of subtlety, mouseface."
     "You call hiring pirates subtle?"  Veltain sneered. "I would call
that desperation born  of ineptitude. I'm going to  recommend that the
both of you be expelled from the Triarch at once!"
     Javaro  leaned  across the  table.  "There's  no need  for  that,
Veltain,"  he  said in  a  low  voice.  "The  situation may  still  be
salvaged."
     "You utter  fool!" Veltain  spat, nearly  rising from  his chair.
"Without the  Codex, the Triarch will  remain no more powerful  than a
band of street  urchins! I find it incredible that  they entrusted the
task to you!"
     Javaro's  eyes narrowed.  "One  cannot foresee  all  that may  go
wrong,"  he said.  "Nor  can  one accurately  predict  the actions  of
another."
     Veltain  smirked.  "You thought  retrieving  the  Codex would  be
simple, given  that Captain Thorne  is a  woman." He ignored  the look
that Taja threw him.
     "I am a patient man, Veltain, but I am starting to become annoyed
with you," said Javaro, gripping the stem of the goblet.
     "You've become  soft. Soft and  weak. You  have no place  with us
anymore!"
     Taja  took the  pipe  out  of her  mouth.  "You quivering  little
mouse," she said  with sharp disdain, her pale blue  eyes mocking him.
"Why don't you go  find a cat to put you out of  your endless state of
fright?"
     "Bitch," Veltain said.
     "Meow," replied Taja.
     Javaro frowned. "I don't want to ever see you again, Veltain," he
said. "Leave us."
     Veltain  threw up  his hands  and  quickly rose  from his  chair,
nearly knocking the  table over. "Gladly." He turned and  made to open
the curtain. Suddenly he spun around and with a motion almost too fast
to see,  hurled something at Javaro.  Taja screamed as the  man's eyes
popped wide, a  many-pointed metal star embedded in  his throat. Blood
bubbled from the wound as Javaro gurgled and slumped over.
     Veltain's arm flashed  again. Taja jerked aside  as another metal
star buried itself  in the wall. She ducked down  and shoved the table
hard  against Veltain's  legs.  The  gaunt man  lost  his balance  and
tumbled backwards,  bringing the curtain  down as he fell.  Several of
the patrons in the gaming parlor  looked up in startlement as Taja ran
out of the booth, screaming wildly.  Veltain scrambled to his feet and
started to  pursue her, but  changed his  mind after seeing  the young
woman tearfully imploring a pair of leather-clad men to help her.
     Veltain almost made it to the back door before the two men caught
him. At Taja's insistence, they took him outside into the alley behind
the  tavern. Taja  followed, sobbing.  Her expression  changed as  she
watched the men  punch and kick Veltain. After a  few minutes she told
them to stop. She took a pinch  of tobacco from one of the pouches she
wore around her slim waist and sprinkled it into the bowl of her pipe.
After lighting  it, she told the  men to stand Veltain  up against the
wall and move  away. She approached the man's bruised  and bloody form
and put her face next to his.
     "You shouldn't have killed Javaro,"  she said icily. "And another
thing;  just because  you're dealing  with a  woman doesn't  mean that
things will be simple." She took a step back and puffed on the pipe. A
moment later, she exhaled a cloud  of smoke into the gaunt man's face.
Veltain coughed and waved his hands in  front of him. Taja and her two
confederates watched from  further down the alley  as Veltain's coughs
became ragged  gasps for breath. Soon  he was on the  ground, wheezing
violently. He  kicked and struggled,  clawing at his chest.  Finally a
tremor rippled  through his body  and he  lay still. Taja  smiled with
satisfaction as she led the men away.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                Sons of Gateway, Part 6: Running
                         by Jon Evans
                 (b.c.k.a )

     My name is Cara  Shem Fenib. I lead my clan. It  is the cold time
in the  plains, but we  have survived. I have  been a good  hunter, so
there has  often been meat,  instead of the  hard roots that  leave my
insides almost as  empty as not eating at all.  Sickness among my clan
also has been rare: the wind spirits have been kind.
     This light time marks the middle  of the cold time. If we survive
now, my clan lives  until the next cold time. But,  the last few hunts
have not  gone well. Each  member of my  clan gets hungrier,  and with
hunger  comes  desperation: a  young  one  challenged me,  earlier.  I
refrained from  hurting him, and avoided  hurt for myself, but  if the
hunts do not improve, things will get worse.
     I sent the mothers  and the weak to the thick  trees in search of
roots. I and my  brothers will hunt what we can,  and alert the others
if we kill. Separation  is bad for the clan. If we  kill, it will take
longer for the  others to arrive, and another beast  or clan may claim
it before the rest of my clan  arrives. But, at least the hunters will
have eaten. I have no choice. Our mothers will starve, and will not be
able to make milk for the young when the warm time comes and our loins
burn.
     My  brother's call  disturbs my  thoughts: he  has found  a fresh
trail. It is near  the darkness, now is the best  time. The tracks are
from a  large beast.  The depth  of its tracks  show much  weight. The
scent tells us  its taste, and our legs tighten,  and our stomachs cry
out to be filled. We follow quickly.
     The scent gets thicker in a spot: it rested by this tree, it does
not know we follow it. The trail continues, away from the thick trees,
and we  see a structure lit  by Spara-Kla, the burning  air. There are
many worshipers around it. They  are the Spara- Klani, the man-beasts,
and they do not travel without  the burning air. They roam the fields,
burn the land, and hunt in the  thick trees with the long claw and the
flying stick. And  they kill my clan  when we are many  and strong. We
war with the Spara-Klani, but we are too weak now.
     The trail continues  past here, back to the trees,  and we follow
it, knowing  that it is the  riding-beasts of the Spara-Klani  that we
follow.

     "I couldn't  reach you until  I was  about a hundred  feet away,"
Kenneth told Rho  as they rode through the darkening  woods. They left
the burning tent and its occupants behind, trying to put out the fire,
find out what its cause was, and control the slaves at the same time.
     "I know. The  device must be very powerful." Rho  looked over her
shoulder  to Goren,  who sat  in the  saddle behind  her. Kenneth,  it
seems, was only able to acquire  one extra horse from the camp ground,
and wasn't expecting  any company. The silk clothes Goren  and Rho had
been wearing  in the tent were  not nearly warm enough  for the winter
evening, even with five layers of the material wrapped about them, and
sharing the  horse allowed  them the double  benefit of  sharing their
body heat.
     "I am thankful for your rescue, Kenneth," Goren spoke as a way of
getting  into  the conversation.  For  some  reason, Kenneth  had  not
treated him terribly respectfully in  the past half bell. Goren wished
he knew why. "My family will reward you greatly for my return, when we
get to Magnus. I'll make sure of it."
     Both Rho and Kenneth turned and looked at him disapprovingly when
he said this,  but it was Kenneth  who spoke next, as  if Goren wasn't
even there.
     "I would have warned  you if we had the time,  but I was being...
followed."
     "Looks like nothing's coming, now,"  Goren said, glancing back to
make sure  there was nothing behind  them. This time, Kenneth  did him
the courtesy of acknowledging his remark.
     "There are other ways of knowing when you're being followed, boy.
We are still in danger of those  who are behind us." He looked down at
Rho, almost scolding her with his expression.
     "I had to make a decision, didn't I?" She seemed almost childlike
to Goren with  this remark, and he glimpsed a  softness that he hadn't
seen  from  her  in the  tent.  He  wondered  if  he could  like  this
demanding, oppressive  woman whose angelic eyes  concealed experiences
he didn't wish to live, and a fire he feared... and shared.
     "It  was  wrong," was  Kenneth's  only  response, and  he  looked
forward and  down as if  to end the  conversation, but he  mumbled one
last phrase in the next half bell. "The Fenib still have to be fed."

     The trail  enters the thick trees,  again, and I send  my brother
for the mothers and the weak. We are close now, and the man-beast will
be stopping, and our numbers will be greater. It is very dark, and the
Spara-Klani do not travel in the darkness.
     A strange  thing happens: a  man-beast walks toward my  clan, not
covered in its usual hide, and lays down in the white cold. My brother
starts forward, but  my bark stops him. The Spara-Klani  are not to be
trusted.
     I step  closer, coming near his  leg. He does not  move. Smelling
him, I do  not sense fear. This  disturbs me, and I  warn my brothers.
But this man-beast is foolish. The white cold surrounds him, makes him
weak, and all we must do is wait.
     Then I feel  him in me, speaking  to me, showing me,  and I know:
this one  is for us.  I wait,  and the white  cold takes his  heat and
leaves him with the  smell of the Black Fenib. I  bark to my brothers:
we shall survive this cold-time.

     Cold air greeted  Goren as he stirred from under  the blankets he
and Rho  had shared to keep  themselves warm. The small  lean-to which
Kenneth had built the night before kept some of the wind out, and most
of the  snow, but the rest  of the blankets and  materials were needed
for the  horses. He looked  around, searching  for his many  layers of
thin clothes and found only a few of the items with which he had left.
     "Here, wear these," were the first  words Rho greeted him with as
she entered  the slight structure, a  gust of wind following  her. She
threw a small pile of clothes -  a cape, suede vest, thick white pants
and a pair of white boots which were a little large for him, and added
as she walked out, "We're leaving soon."
     He dressed quickly, finding that most of the items fit him rather
well, over the thin layer of  clothes he had taken from their previous
lodging. What was that place,  anyway, he found himself wondering, and
where are we going in such a  hurry? And where were these clothes last
night, when I needed them? And what's happened to... He left the tent.
     "I don't understand," was the first thing he said to her. She was
dressed in some new clothes, also; probably taken from the saddle bags
she was  strapping onto the horses.  She gave him a  hard look, filled
with sadness and determination.
     "He left last night," was  her only explanation. This did nothing
for Goren's need for information, and  only made him wonder who he was
dealing with, now that they were free.
     "Oh, so he always just gets up and walks off without his clothes?
In the middle of the night?"
     "The Fenib had to be fed." She looked at him, almost accusing.
     "Who  in Risseer's  feast are  the  Fenib?" He  was getting  very
annoyed. He knew she  could knock him on his back,  if she needed, but
he didn't care. He only wanted answers, something she owed him at this
point.
     "Inhabitants of  these woods.  Creatures who  live in  the winter
because we help them, because  they need help. All Stevene's creatures
need help, some time or other."
     "Nehru's pointy  nose! A Stevenic!" He  threw his arms up  in the
air and began pacing around the fire Rho had built earlier. "Listen, I
don't care what religion you follow, as long as it's not bloody Saren.
All I want is  answers. Why did he leave, what's  happened to him, and
why am  I wearing his clothes?  These are his clothes,  aren't they? I
mean, is he coming  back, or isn't he? How does he  intend to feed the
Fenib? No  one in their  right mind just  wanders off into  the winter
night without anything to wear. No one can live through..."
     His words trailed off slowly, their meaning finally hitting home.
He knew why  Kenneth had left, now, and what  had probably happened to
him. He had only one reply. "Ol, that's disgusting."
     Again, she said, "The Fenib had to be fed."
     "Why him?"
     This question  only resulted in  Rho's accusing glare.  He didn't
know why, but he  had the feeling she thought it  was his fault. Then,
she stopped.
     "I'm sorry,  it's not  your fault.  It's mine."  Goren understood
this statement  about as well as  he did all her  opening thoughts, so
she reinforced it. "If I had not taken you with us, you would have run
on your own, when the tent burned, wouldn't you?" Goren nodded. "Well,
you would have  been caught by the  Fenib, and they would  have fed on
you. You would be dead, now, and not Kenneth."
     "He gave his life...?"
     "I didn't know! The magic field around the tent was preventing me
from contacting Kenneth. The Fenib were in danger of dying out."
     "But he's a human being!"
     "It doesn't  matter, in the long  run. There are plenty  of human
beings, but  the Fenib who hunt  in winter are slowly  dying off. It's
our fault, you know."
     "What?" That last  one was a little  much. As hard as  it was for
him to  understand that Kenneth's life  had been forfeit for  his own,
that Rho thought she was the reason for Kenneth's death, and the Fenib
had  to be  fed, he  had no  concept of  why she  thought the  Fenib's
inability to survive was his and Rho's fault.
     "Not  'ours' meaning  yours  and mine,  but  'ours'... the  human
race's. We kill them  in the summer, when they hunt  the game we think
of as  our own, the game  we cage in  to make the slaughter  that much
easier. It reduces their chances of surviving the winter."
     Goren  looked  at her,  seeing  pain,  happiness, confusion,  and
remorse all over her face. It crumbled, her eyes became cloudy and her
shoulders drooped. He thought of going to her, resting her honey-brown
head against him, but she stiffened immediately.
     "There. You have your answers. Now,  we head for Magnus to return
you to your family."
     Goren  began scooping  snow into  the  fire and  listening to  it
simmer as the flames became lower and lower.

     "What can possibly be taking them so long?" Ne'on asked no one in
particular as he looked at his map  of Baranur. He traced a line, once
more, from Gateway to the Nar-Enthruen  where he had sent a company of
men to take  the Stone of Strength.  That gem was a giant  piece of an
important spell component.  With it, he could open a  gate the size of
this hall.
     Ne'on paced in  front of the fireplace slowly,  reflecting on the
comfort of the warmth. Lifting his black hand, he tilted his head back
slowly to empty the goblet's contents  down his throat. What was that,
his third this evening? He hadn't kept count. He didn't care, anymore.
Things had gotten out of control. He could barely even remember how he
had gotten here. He reached for the bottle.
     Everything had gotten so chaotic.  And then there was Phos. Phos,
whose   logic  was   infallible,   who   rationalized  everything   so
convincingly until, before  he knew it, Ne'on was sitting  on the Seat
of Gateway  and heir to House  Winston. Phos, whose magic  filled him,
gave him the strength to do the things he couldn't control on his own.
But it felt so good when the energy filled him. It was better than the
wine he was  drinking. It was better than anything  he had ever known.
He could fly, if he wanted, or make lightning strike from the sky.
     And people listened to him. Yes, he admitted, that was definitely
something to  consider. The power  and respect that he  commanded. The
way people accepted  what he told them, listened  to his instructions,
and things went along so smoothly.  There were actions which had to be
taken before that happened. Ne'on didn't like to think of those times.
He could  hardly remember them  happening, as  if he had  dreamed them
during the night, only to wake up and find himself here, now. Phos had
taken care of them. When things became confused, and Ne'on didn't know
what to do - that seemed to be happening often, in the last few months
- he called Phos. All Phos asked  in return was a way into this world.
Ne'on liked to think of Phos as his guardian angel.
     "Why not  look for  them?" Clay  suggested from  the edge  of the
firelight. "You have magic..."
     "That wouldn't work for our -  my - benefit. It'd be like turning
on  a bright  light in  a forest.  Equiville would  pick it  up in  an
instant."
     "I don't understand," Clay returned,  stepping out of the shadows
to  peer at  the bottle  of  Lederian red.  Why not?  he thought,  and
reached to fill an empty flask with the wine.
     "I thought you didn't drink."
     "I don't," Clay  returned, and swallowed a large  quantity of the
liquid.
     Ne'on stared silently at his Captain.  There were a lot of things
he hadn't  bothered to learn about  Clay. He hadn't thought  he needed
to, but perhaps now...  no. It would all be over in  a few weeks. This
damn magic - it can take control of a man.
     "Picture yourself  sitting in the  hills, watching a  field. It's
night time, heavy  clouds, no moon. Someone is in  the field, but he's
not using anything to light the way. Can you see him?"
     "Very  difficult," Clay  answered. He  finished the  rest of  his
goblet, and put it back on the table. Instictively, he wandered toward
the edge of the light. "But what does that have to do with it?"
     "To use  my magic," Ne'on explained,  "I would have to  lower the
Garthian Blind. That would be like lighting a torch in the middle of a
dark field. Gateway  would become very visible  to Equiville's senses,
and we can't afford that... not yet."
     Bartholemew Clay stepped back into the darkness.

     "Just  remember  what  I  told you,"  Rho's  voice,  surprisingly
neutral, reminded  him. "Don't  stay at Gateway  too long.  You're not
meant for that, anymore."
     "I still don't understand what you're telling me. First-"
     She looked  at him again, and  he became silent. The  winter thaw
had come and gone on their trip to Magnus, and the horse he had ridden
had broken  a leg  in the muddy  trail. They were  forced to  kill it.
Something else  for which  she would  remember him. She  had a  way of
making him feel sorry, making him  want to repent for simple mistakes.
She had an  influence on him which  he had never known  by his father,
and couldn't remember from his mother.  No one, in fact, had ever made
him feel so much like a child, an inexperienced, immature infant. Yet,
it wasn't malicious. It was more like... being instructed.
     "Don't understand,  Goren. Just  listen to  people who  know what
they're talking about. Go to Gateway, do what you have to do, and then
leave."
     "What am I  supposed to do after that?" He  scowled slightly when
he said that, realizing that he had been taking orders from her for so
long he began to rely on her input. "Forget it. I'll find something to
do."
     "Good." She  began to  walk away,  then turned  around. "Remember
what  I told  you about  Stevene. He'll  forgive you,  as long  as you
forgive everyone  else. And He  loves you, no  matter who you  are, or
what you do."
     Goren waived  as she pulled her  horse in front of  her, down the
cobblestone drive,  and onto the  road that would eventually  lead her
out of  Magnus. She wanted  him to go to  Dargon for some  reason. She
hadn't said  it exactly like that,  but he knew she  would be there...
maybe he would go. She was very trying, as a friend, he thought. Never
gave him an  inch. He smiled as  he turned to walk up  the steps... he
liked her like that.

     Haralan  squinted  his  eyes,  surveying  the  battle  plans  his
advisors and War  Council members had drawn out before  him. It didn't
appear  favorable  on the  field,  out-manned  and out-horsed  by  the
Beinison  Army, but  Magnus -  and  Crown Castle,  particularly -  was
strong, and held the loyalty of every good citizen. It would take more
than Beinison had, he hoped, to claim victory here. But these Councils
went on forever; and with Marcellon's condition...
     "My  Lord King,"  Edward  Sothos, Knight  Commander of  Baranur's
Armed Forces, spoke slowly and intently. "If the Beinison Armada makes
its way down  the Laraka and joins forces with  the Emperor's Fist and
the regular army in our  Southern Marches, Magnus *will* be endangered
seriously. It may be necessary to draw plans for evacuation."
     "Surely," spoke High Priest Redcrosse,  "such plans were drawn up
years ago. This discussion hardly seems necessary."
     "Surely, they were,  my Lord High Priest," the  Knight Captain of
the  Northern  Marches,  Luthias  Connall, interupted,  not  a  little
contempt for the pompous clergyman in his voice. Haralan realized just
how much Luthias had aged these past two years, with the beard roughly
outlining his tired face, but he  had yet to learn the complete wisdom
of restraint. "However," Luthias continued, "those plans were drawn up
over one hundred years ago, when  Magnus only had three sections. Only
chaos,  confusion, and  death would  result if  we tried  to implement
those plans today."
     "Well, then," returned the  clergyman, "surely we should consider
the safety of the Church-"
     A loud noise  from the hall outside the chamber,  followed by the
main doors opening, interupted the High Priest.
     "Your Majesty," announced a guard, "Goren Winston of Gateway Keep
insists on appearing before you."
     One more thing, he thought. The  King sighed heavily, sat back in
his throne,  and motioned for his  council members to sit  down. "Show
him in."
     A ragged, tired, and disshevelled man appeared before the throne,
hardly  presentable to  a king  under normal  circumstances. "My  Lord
King, my  name is Goren Winston,"  he began, and the  King's patience,
worn  thin by  the  demands  of war  and  unhelpful clergymen,  failed
immediately.
     "I am quite aware of your name, your title, and your heritage, my
Lord Keeper. The Winston Household is one of the most well known among
the minor  nobles, and  your resemblence to  your father  -beneath the
dirt and blood on your face - is  a striking one. I am also aware that
you are  now Keeper  of Gateway, following  your father's  demise, and
that you hold one of the key  strongholds at the joining of the Laraka
and the Vodyanoy rivers. Am I to surmise, then, by your appearance and
your  urgency, that  we  have  lost that  stronghold  to the  Beinison
invasion, or have you finally decided - after six months of delay - to
take the  time away from  your country's  defense in order  to receive
your formal title by my hand?  In light of the desperate situation the
first example  places us in,  I prefer to  believe that the  leader of
this potential military point of contention hasn't the wits to realize
where he is needed most! Further more, the question of who was left in
charge comes to  mind, with the only possible answer  being Knights of
the Star!"
     The King rose  from his throne, and Goren  stared haplessly about
the room, receiving no help from its other occupants. "My Lord King?"
     "We are at war, man - do you know what that means?"
     "War..."  the  word came  out  slowly,  comprehension sinking  in
deeply and suddenly.
     "Yes, war -  or haven't you been reading the  royal messages sent
from duchy to duchy these past months?" Haralan could not believe that
Gateway  Keep had  been  ignorant  of the  movement  and  news of  the
Beinison and Baranurian armies. He had sent a message less than twenty
days  past  to  the  Lord  Keeper,  who  had  replied  with  Gateway's
readiness.
     "Begging your  forgiveness, your  Majesty," Goren began,  "in the
past six months I have witnessed my father's death, been imprisoned by
my brother,  beaten by guards,  hunted by  slavers, and told  that the
feeding of a man  I hardly knew to a pack of  beasts was indirectly my
fault. I  have spent  the last  three months trying  to cover  the two
weeks' distance  between Gateway  and Magnus for  the sole  purpose of
clearing my name and requesting the aid of your Majesty in bringing my
brother - the true  murderer of my father - to  justice. The idea that
this country was at war never  entered my mind, nor are royal messages
passed on  to slaves from their  owners to keep them  abreast of world
news."
     Haralan returned to his throne,  raising his hand to halt Goren's
speech. "Something,  then, has  halted your  freedom, my  Lord Keeper.
Lord  Marcellon informed  me four  months  ago of  your situation  and
dispatched a letter  to a fellow practitioner of the  arts in order to
reinstate your  position by  royal decree.  Obviously, this  was never
executed.  We had  thought you  in the  Keeper's Seat  these last  two
months, at least."
     Haralan searched about him for  a quill and parchment, moving the
maps and  scout reports  and hypothetical troop  movements out  of his
way.  "This letter  of appointment  will  have to  do," he  continued,
dipping the quill and scratching  it onto the parchment, pausing every
so often to  speak. "I can't... afford the men...  for an envoy... but
reveal  this  to... Castellan  Ridgewater,  isn't  it?... whom,  I  am
told... was  very loyal  to... your family."  Haralan signed  his name
with  a flourish,  dripped  some wax  onto it,  and  punched his  ring
finger's royal seal into the wax.
     "How am I to deal with my brother, Ne'on?"
     "We all have our situations to deal with if we're to overcome the
Beinison forces, Lord Keeper. See if your uncle can spare a few of the
House Guard  to accompany you.  And please, do  the court a  favor and
find your uncle's  baths before you embark. Looking  like that, you're
not likely to instill loyalty in a dog."
     Goren sighed deeply. "Thank you, your Majesty."
     "If  you'll excuse  us, Lord  Keeper, we  have a  War Council  to
continue. You'll be receiving orders from  us shortly, so take care of
your business as quickly as possible."
     "Yes,  my  Lord King."  Goren  bowed  for three  backward  steps,
turned, and exited the hall.
     Edward Sothos  looked at  the King.  "A little  hard on  the boy,
weren't you?"
     "He's no boy... Untar is  younger, and his scheming threatens our
nation. It's time Winston started accepting the responsibility for the
title he's claiming."
     Sir Luthias nodded his head in grim agreement.
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--   DargonZine Volume 7, Issue 1        02/14/94          Cir 1120   --
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--                            Contents                                --
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 Laraka III (Part 1)          John Doucette          Yule 13-17, 1014
 Sons of Gateway 7: Reunion   Jon Evans              Yule 17, 1014
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1                    Campaign for the Laraka III
                 Decision at Gateway Keep - Part 1
                        by John Doucette

Crown Castle, Magnus, Royal Duchy, Baranur
13 Yule, 1014 B.Y.

     The eight Regiments  of the Royal Hussars filed  through the gate
to the Inner Courtyard and made for the barracks they had vacated just
eight  days ago  when  they  began their  journey  south  to join  the
fighting against the enemy army moving rapidly north towards Magnus.
     General of  the Cavalry Count  Sir Luthias Connall  and Commander
Sarah  Verde,  Commander of  the  1st  Royal Hussars,  dismounted  and
entered the King's Keep. Luthias was worried. The tone of Sir Edward's
message  indicated  that  the  scarred Knight  Commander  was  himself
worried  about something.  And if  Sir Edward,  a man  Luthias admired
deeply  and who  had seen  more  than his  fair share  of battle,  was
worried, then  Luthias reasoned that  he himself had more  than enough
reason to be anxious -- even  without knowing the reason for his hasty
return to the Crown City.
     He and  Verde turned  a corner leading  to Edward's  offices when
they  both literally  ran into  the man  they had  been seeking.  "Sir
Edward, we  were just  on our  way to  see you.  Your message  said to
return as fast as I could. What's wrong?"
     The  Knight  Commander  glared  up  at  Luthias.  "What's  wrong,
General," he  said in icy tones,  "is that you seem  to have forgotten
the proper  form of address  when speaking to  a superior. I  will not
tolerate  that in  any of  my officers,  regardless of  rank. Is  that
clear?"
     "Yes, sir," Luthias responded instantly, confused by Sir Edward's
rebuke.
     "Excellent, General. Now, if you  would accompany me." So saying,
Edward turned and  led the way down the corridor  back the way Luthias
and  Verde had  just come,  Commander Courymwen  following behind  her
commander.
     Commander Verde laid her hand on Courymwen's arm, indicating that
Verde wanted the  two to hold back slightly so  they could talk. "What
was that all about?" Verde asked her friend.
     "Things have  been fairly  tense since you  left eight  days ago,
Sarah," Jan replied.
     "So I gathered. What's wrong?"
     "Some  rather high-ranking  nobles have  started campaigning  for
Edward's  replacement recently.  That  and...other things  have put  a
great strain  on him. He  doesn't need this  now, Sarah, not  with all
he's got to worry about."
     "Since when  have you and  the Knight  Commander been on  a first
name basis?"
     "We've been  close friends  for some time  now, Sarah,"  Jan said
defensively.
     "Is that all?" Verde asked carefully.
     Jan stopped  suddenly and turned,  stricken, to face  her friend.
"Not you too, Sarah!"
     Jan  had perhaps  spoken more  loudly than  she may  have wished.
Edward stopped  and turned  to face the  two women.  "Something wrong,
Commander?"
     "Er...no, sir."
     "Then let us proceed."
     "Yes, sir."  The four entered the  Hall of Warriors and  made for
the guarded door leading to the Audience Chamber.
     Jan was  silent for  most of  this time.  She didn't  speak again
until the group had passed into  the small waiting room leading to the
Audience Chamber. "Sarah, what am I going to do?"
     "Relax, Coury," Verde answered. "We'll figure something out."
     The group paused  outside the double doors.  "Sir," Luthias began
to ask,  ignoring the  warning look he  got from  Commander Courymwen,
"couldn't you tell me what's going on?"
     Edward rounded  on Luthias. "The  King and  I are risking  a very
great deal on  you, Sir Knight," Edward said. "I  care little for what
happens to  me or  my reputation,  General," Edward went  on in  a low
voice, his eyes utterly cold and  menacing, "but I will permit nothing
-- nothing, do you understand? -- to endanger my friend and Sovereign.
You had best prove worthy."
     "Sir  Edward,"  Luthias declared,  the  hurt  tone in  his  voice
evident, "I would never do anything  to dishonor the King. Or you, for
that  matter. I  will do  everything  you ask  of me  with the  utmost
determination and all the strength I can muster in body and soul."
     The battle-scarred Knight Commander of the Royal Armies looked up
at that intent face for  several long moments before finally speaking.
"I  think  you'll  do,  Luthias  Connall," he  said  with  a  note  of
satisfaction.  "Yes, I  think you  shall do  very nicely  indeed." Sir
Edward turned to order the guards to open the double doors but Luthias
stopped him.
     Now  Luthias was  very  confused.  He risked  a  quick glance  at
Commander Courymwen  and the look on  her face only served  to further
Luthias'  confusion.  Clearly  something  had happened  since  he  had
departed eight days ago. Luthias caught the distinct smell of politics
in the air.
     "'Do' what, Your Excellency, is the question?"
     Edward  smiled ruefully,  making the  diagonal scar  on his  face
contort strangely. "That  is for His Royal Majesty to  say. Not I." He
nodded to the guards and the great doors opened.
     A staff thumped  three times against the  unyielding stone floor.
"His Excellency,  Sir Luthias Connall,  Count Connall, General  of the
Cavalry. His  Excellency, Sir Edward  Sothos, Knight Commander  of the
Royal Armies. Commander Sarah Verde,  Commanding Officer the 1st Royal
Hussars. Commander Jan Courymwen, Officer of the Royal Foot Guards and
Chief Aide to His Excellency the Knight Commander."
     The  four proceeded  towards the  throne at  the far  end of  the
nearly  empty Audience  Chamber. They  halted at  some invisible  line
perhaps ten feet from King Haralan  and all four bowed deeply from the
waist as was their right as soldiers of the King. "General Connall, as
ordered, Sire," Edward announced.
     "Very good.  Sir Edward, Commander Courymwen,  attend us." Edward
and Jan moved to stand on the raised dias, Edward on the King's right,
Jan to  the right  of Edward.  "There are  two others  who must  be in
attendance. The wait shall not be long."
     Great! Luthias thought. Wonderful. I absolutely hate these things
and now I'm  going to be forced  to stand here while we  wait for some
arrogant,   self-important   court   functionary  to   get   here   to
witness...well, whatever.  Why couldn't I  have been just  an ordinary
Knight like I've always wanted? Was that so much to ask?
     Just  then, one  of the  functionaries they  had been  waiting on
stepped from behind the tapestry hanging behind the throne.
     Marcellon, High Mage  and advisor to the King, moved  to stand on
Haralan's  left, his  face an  expression of  anticipation mixed  with
satisfaction.  Luthias nodded  and  Marcellon smiled  in return,  that
mixed expression still evident.
     Perhaps two menes  passed before the second  functionary made his
appearance.  During  this  time,  Luthias'  natural  fish-out-of-water
reaction to any  court situation came to the fore.  Luthias prayed his
nervousness wasn't noticeable to anyone.
     When Myrande stepped from behind the  curtain it was too much for
Luthias. "Sable!" he burst out. Myrande  smiled and Luthias made to go
to her but was stopped by a single command.
     "Hold!"  Sir  Edward  commanded.  "You  have  not  permission  to
approach the throne, Count Connall."
     "Easy, Edward," Marcellon said quietly. "Calm down."
     "The  cause was  sufficient,  Sir Edward,"  King Haralan  lightly
rebuked.  "I think  we  can  permit the  Count  and  Countess time  to
exchange greetings."
     Luthias went  to the  dias to  greet his wife.  He took  both her
hands in his and kissed her lightly on the cheek. "What's going on?"
     Myrande  smiled  again,  accentuating  her  raven-haired  beauty.
"Later," she said softly.
     "Count Connall,"  the King said,  "I would not begrudge  you time
with your beautiful lady wife, but there are pressing matters of state
we must see to."
     "Of course, Your Majesty." Luthias cringed inwardly. He'd done it
again,  messed  up  in  protocol matters.  "I  apologize,  Your  Royal
Majesty," Luthias said as he resumed  his place in front of the throne
next to Commander Verde.
     "Sir Edward," the King said,  "perhaps you should bring the Count
up to date on events transpiring along the Laraka River."
     "Yes, Sire." Edward  then launched into a  very concise briefing.
When  he was  done, the  look on  Luthias' face  had gone  from slight
confusion to that of a man planning the minute details of a campaign.
     "I  take it,  then, Your  Royal  Majesty, that  I am  to lead  my
cavalry against the enemy army on the Laraka?" Luthias asked eagerly.
     "In good  time, Count  Connall, in good  time." The  King paused,
gathering his thoughts. "We were much  distressed to hear of the death
of our beloved Knight Captain Sir Ailean. He was a good man and a fine
officer.  His  death  now  renders the  Northern  Marches  leaderless.
Granted, Lord Morion is  a good man as well and we  have no doubt that
he will serve Baranur  as well as any man, but we  cannot have such an
important  position  as Knight  Captain  of  the Northern  Marches  go
unfilled. Lord Morion will not accept our offer, that much is certain.
Therefore we have asked our Knight  Commander for advice as to whom we
should appoint to ward our Northern Marches.
     "The Knight Commander has suggested  someone rather young and not
primarily an  officer holding  the King's Commission,  but we  tend to
agree with the Knight Commander's choice.
     "So what say  you, Count Connall? Do you accept  our offer to act
as our Knight Captain of the Northern Marches?"
     It took a  moment for Luthias to realize the  full import of what
the King had just  said. When he did, his first act  was to think that
he must  look rather foolish with  his jaw hanging down  to the floor.
After he'd rectified that particular  shortcoming, all he could do was
stand in stunned silence.
     I've done  it, Father!  he thought. I've  done it,  Roisart! I've
actually done it!  A slow smile spread  across his face. "I  -- you --
me?"
     Marcellon heaved a  theatrical sigh. "All that  education and the
young  man  still has  trouble  with  sentence  structure. I  am  most
distressed at today's youth's shortcomings."
     The King  coughed. Myrande put a  hand over her face  to hide her
smile. Courymwen and Verde did their best impressions of cadets trying
hard not to laugh. Sir Edward, however, didn't react at all.
     Luthias  cleared his  throat and  tried  again. He  found to  his
dismay that he couldn't seem to make any words come out this time.
     "What's that?"  Marcellon said  in a dry  voice. "You'll  have to
speak up. Or have  you lost all power of speech  now, son? Perhaps you
should  choose another,  Your  Royal Majesty?"  All  of the  Chamber's
occupants again made  valiant efforts to control their  mirth. Jan was
not as  successful as the others  and a short sharp  laugh escaped her
lips.
     Sir Edward turned a disapproving  stare on his aide. "Sorry, sir.
Won't happen again," Jan hastily said. Sir Edward turned his attention
once more to  Luthias, suppressing the beginnings of his  own smile as
he did so.
     "No! I -- thank you, Sire, for the offer. I accept."
     "Then  approach,   Count  Connall."  Haralan  stood   as  Luthias
approached the throne.
     "Kneel," the  King commanded.  Luthias sank  to one  knee, hardly
able to believe this was actually happening.
     "Count Connall,"  Haralan began formally,  "do you swear  by your
sword, the sacred embodiment of  your Knighthood, to ward the Northern
Marches with all the strength in your mind and body?"
     Luthias drew his  sword and presented it hilt first  to the King.
"On my sword,  I so swear," he proclaimed, the  weapon's blade resting
lightly in his hands.
     "Do you further swear to  maintain true and unswerving loyalty to
your King, no matter the circumstances, no matter the cost?"
     "I so swear."
     "Do  you swear  to show  the same  loyalty and  obedience to  the
Knight Commander, He who speaks with our Voice and in our Name?"
     "I so swear."
     "And do you swear to  execute your duties fairly and impartially,
with no thought of advantage to you and yours?"
     "I so swear."
     Haralan brought  Luthias' sword  down on  the young  Count's left
shoulder. "By my right  as King, I give you the  power to mete justice
throughout the  Northern Marches  where you  see fit to  do so  and in
accordance with the laws I have laid down as King."
     The sword now came down on  Luthias' right shoulder. "I grant you
the authority  to command  and well-discipline your  inferiors serving
with the Royal Army, both noble and common."
     The sword came down a third time.  "I charge you to act wisely in
your duty and to bring honor upon Baranur and your own House."
     Haralan stepped back a pace. "Rise, Count Connall, Knight Captain
of the  Northern Marches."  Luthias stood  and as he  did so  the King
returned his  sword to  him. Diplomatic  as always,  Haralan refrained
from commenting on Luthias' nervousness, which was evident to everyone
present.
     Speaking softly so that only he and Luthias knew what was spoken,
Haralan said, "Many eyes are upon  you, Count Connall. Eyes hostile to
my wishes. Be careful. If you should fall, Sir Edward falls with you."
Luthias  stepped back,  giving no  indication that  the King  had even
spoken to him.
     "We  regret we  cannot bestow  upon  you your  rightful Badge  of
Office, Knight Captain.  It was lost along with Sir  Ailean, God grant
him eternal rest, and there has not been time to fashion another."
     Luthias grinned wickedly. "No matter,  Sire. I shall take it back
from the Beinisonians."
     "Well said, Knight Captain. Sir Edward, you may proceed."
     "Yes, Sire," Edward said, coming forward. "Once more, the Cavalry
Wing finds  itself without a  General to  command it. And,  once more,
Commander Verde, I must ask you  to accept that duty you had performed
since the death of General Tyre. I know you will perform with the same
competence  displayed in  the past.  It  occurs to  me, however,  that
having  the Cavalry  Wing commanded  thus,  by a  Commander, would  be
inviting potential breakdown of the unity the Royal Hussars are famous
for  displaying in  times when  the Kingdom  is threatened  by outside
force. Therefore, to ensure that one voice, and one voice alone, shall
speak for the Hussars, I hereby promote you to General of the Cavalry.
     "Congratulations, General."
     The shock and pleasure on Verde's  face was evident. She also had
not been expecting anything such as this.
     Haralan  stepped down  off the  throne dias,  the signal  for the
others present on the dias to  do so as well. He congratulated Luthias
and General Verde and then, begging pressing state matters, exited the
Audience Chamber, his guards in tow.
     Luthias immediately  went to his wife  and greeted her in  a much
longer fashion  than he had had  time for previously. "My  God, Sable,
can you believe it?"
     "Yes, actually, I can. I always knew you'd succeed like this. Are
you pleased?"
     "Pleased?" Luthias  laughed, making him seem  younger. He grabbed
his wife and spun  her around. Planting a kiss firmly  on her lips, he
asked, "How's that for pleased?"
     Myrande chuckled and laid her  head on her husband's chest. Maybe
he's finally returning to himself, she thought.
     "Now," Luthias asked, "what's been going on here the last week?"
     Myrande raised her head. "What happened, Luthias?"
     "The Knight Commander,"  he said in a low voice,  "nearly took my
head off before we entered the  Audience Chamber. I've never known Sir
Edward to display that much outward emotion ever. It can't just be the
war."
     Sable sighed, putting her arms  around her husband. "No, it's not
just the war. There have been rumors going around of late that suggest
Sir Edward and his aide are more than just friends."
     Luthias  turned   in  Myrande's   embrace  to   regard  Commander
Courymwen. The  tall red-haired soldier  was talking to  General Verde
and  Sir  Edward.  All  three  seemed  comfortable  in  one  another's
presence, though Luthias could  tell that his former second-in-command
was slightly nervous. The Knight Commander  did not often take time to
chat with just anybody, after all.
     "Sir  Edward has  good  taste in  women, then.  I  don't see  the
problem."
     Myrande punched Luthias hard in the left arm. "Idiot!"
     "Ow!"
     "Just trying to knock some sense into you, you blockhead."
     "What are you talking about?"
     "Luthias," she said, stroking his hair, "when will you learn that
the  customs of  Dargon are  not  those of  the rest  of the  Kingdom?
Remember what I told you about  how the attitudes towards that kind of
thing are somewhat stricter here in Magnus?"
     Luthias frowned.  She had told  him, but he'd forgotten.  Come to
think of it, when the Knight  Commander had come to judge that tourney
in Dargon he himself had said something to that effect. "I still don't
see  the  problem.  What's  wrong   with  courting?  Does  her  family
disapprove?" he asked in disbelief.
     "No, it's not that. The rumors say that the two of them have gone
past the  courting stage. Far past.  It was just those  kind of rumors
that destroyed the Princess' marriage, or  so I'm told. There are even
rumors, vague ones that say that Sir Edward's days as Knight Commander
may be numbered."
     Luthias' face  took on  a grim expression.  That's what  the King
meant, he thought. Aloud, he  said, "Unless Sir Edward's personal life
interferes with his performance as  Knight Commander, I don't see that
anyone has a right to criticize him."
     "Wait a  mene," Luthias  continued before Myrande  could comment,
"how is  it that you're  so up on the  current rumors? You  were never
much for gossip."
     Myrande  hesitated,  not wanting  to  answer.  She knew  Luthias'
temper and she didn't want him doing anything rash.
     "There's something  you're not telling  me. And don't deny  it. I
can see it in your face."
     "Luthias, it's nothing. Really."
     "Now I know it's serious. You never say 'nothing' in that tone of
voice when it means nothing. Out with it."
     Myrande's lips  tightened into a  thin line. "I didn't  have much
choice but  to become acquainted with  the rumor mill. While  you were
gone there were those that suggested  that the children I was carrying
weren't yours. Among other things."
     Myrande's husband's expression grew dark, promising suffering for
those who caused her pain. "Who spread these rumors?"
     "Who knows?"  she lied. "That's  the nature of things  like this.
Any rate, the deed is done."
     "Then these rumors have stopped?"
     "Oh yes," Myrande responded, a hint of satisfaction in her voice.
"The King saw to it personally."
     Luthias  seemed satisfied  with  her explanation.  He decided  to
change the subject. "Do you believe these rumors about Sir Edward?"
     "No. I know Jan Courymwen  sufficiently well to know she wouldn't
do something  like this, if  only to protect Sir  Edward's reputation.
And as  for Sir Edward, I  don't think it  would even occur to  him to
make those kinds of advances towards a woman he wasn't courting."
     Luthias  let  his arms  drop  to  his  sides  as Sir  Edward  and
Marcellon came over, having  finished congratulating General Verde. "I
trust I am not interrupting?" Sir Edward asked politely.
     "Not at all, Sir Edward,"  Myrande responded. "Ever since the war
started, I and the children have seen too little of you."
     "Thank you, My  Lady," Edward said, bowing. "I assure  you I will
try to  get around to  see you  and the children  when I can.  The war
presses heavily  upon me, My  Lady, and my  duties require most  of my
time."
     "I'll  make a  deal with  you, Sir  Edward. Stop  calling me  'My
Lady'. It  makes me  feel old. Call  me Sable. Do  that and  I'll stop
pestering you about coming around to see us."
     "It's a deal, My Lady," Edward  said with just the barest hint of
a smile.
     "Your stubborn streak's showing again, Edward," Marcellon said.
     "Yes, Old Man." Marcellon collapsed in a fit of laughter.
     "Sir Luthias,"  Edward said,  turning his  attention to  his tall
subordinate, "I must apologize for my actions earlier."
     "Sir Edward,  there's no need," Luthias  protested. Marcellon was
now clasping his hands to his sides he was laughing so hard.
     "On  the contrary,  there is  much  need. I  was --  am --  under
intense pressure and I took it out on you, an innocent subordinate who
knew  nothing   of  his   commander's  difficulties."  This   kind  of
explanation  was not  required --  it was  dangerous, even  -- from  a
commander to those under him, but Edward was just to a fault, a legacy
of his  dead father. "My  deeds and  words were of  unknightly conduct
and, as one Knight to another, I ask your forgiveness."
     Luthias, overcome that the  Knight Commander should treat Luthias
as an equal, said, "Sir Edward, let's forget the whole incident."
     "Good," Edward said, managing a real  smile for the first time in
two days. "Now,"  Edward said briskly, "I have some  special orders to
give you before you depart. That is,  I will if the Lord High Mage can
control himself."
     "Sorry, Edward,"  Marcellon said with  no hint of  apology. "It's
not often you tell a good joke and I just couldn't help myself."
     "I'll go talk  with Jan and leave you three  alone," Myrande said
and started to leave.
     "No, My Lady,  stay." Myrande looked at  Edward questioningly, as
did  Luthias. "I  need both  your counsel,  both of  you being  of the
nobility, and  possessing a  more than  significant amount  of status.
First, I must insist that neither of  you speak of this to anyone. Not
to Jan" -- this to Myrande -- "nor to the King" -- this to both.
     "I don't  think I like  the sound  of this, Sir  Edward," Luthias
said evenly.
     "Nor I," Myrande added.
     "I am  not shouting from  the Forum with ecstasy  either." Edward
fixed both Connalls with that intent gaze of his that let the receiver
know what was about to be  discussed was in deadly earnest. "Since the
news from  Oron's Crossroads was received,  I have been seized  by the
impression that something other  than training and professionalism and
morale  is the  cause for  our poor  performance in  the war  to date.
Having thought and  mulled over the despatches in the  last few days I
have  become convinced  that  the  enemy within  is  aiding the  enemy
without."
     "Treason?" Luthias breathed.
     "No," Edward replied  hastily. "At least not  intentional. Let me
explain. The reason that House Troops  are outside the imperium of the
Royal Army  is to provide  an assurance that  the nobles have  a power
base outside the King's control, yes?"
     Luthias  answered immediately;  military history  was his  hobby.
"I'm not  sure I understand exactly  what 'imperium' is but  I believe
the answer  is yes. Having the  House Troops separate was  what helped
the Loyalist  forces come out on  top during the Great  Houses War. It
also  helped  to  curb  King  Darian's excesses  in  the  Shadow  Wars
afterward."
     Edward looked  at Luthias  as if  Luthias should  have come  to a
conclusion. "And?"
     "And...I don't see what you're driving at."
     "Think, Luthias! A command structure that perpetuates a situation
in which the left hand does not  know what the right hand is doing or,
when  both hands  do know  what  the other  is doing  but neither  can
influence the other..."
     "...is fine  for fighting  an internal enemy  but not  an outside
one," Luthias  finished in sudden  understanding. "I don't know  why I
hadn't seen it long ago."
     "Because  as you  said the  arrangement was  often necessary  for
Baranur's survival and  that kind of history tends to  put blinders on
those it  has benefitted. And I  do grant that things  have worked out
when Baranur has  been challenged by external enemies  before but this
time  is not  like  before!  This time  it  is  Beinison, the  largest
military power on the continent."
     "There's no  need to  preach, Edward,"  Marcellon said.  "I think
you've got him convinced."
     "And I think I know why you  are speaking to us before the King,"
Myrande said.  "You want us  to test  the waters for  something, don't
you?"
     "Exactly so, Lady Sable. I do indeed want the two of you to 'test
the waters'. I  rather like that turn  of phrase. I need  to know what
level of  opposition I  will encounter.  I know  King Haralan  will be
difficult, but I know my friend and while he may not be a Cadhless, he
does have a  goodly store of common sense so  convincing him shouldn't
be  too much  a chore.  It's the  rest of  the nobility  I am  worried
about."
     "What is it you intend to do?" asked Luthias.
     Without even a pause, Edward answered,  "I intend to ask the King
to grant me the Edict."
     Luthias'  eyes widened.  "My God!"  he exclaimed  in wonder  that
Edward would have the daring to go to such lengths. Noting Marcellon's
lack of reaction, Luthias asked, "You knew?"
     "Edward came to me for advice early this morning."
     "Forgive my  ignorance, gentlemen," Myrande said,  "but just what
is this Edict?"
     "An ancient decree," Luthias  responded, eyes never straying from
Sir Edward's face, "that gives the Knight Commander total and absolute
control over the entire Combined Host of Baranur, Royal Army and House
Troops alike.  No noble may  refuse the Knight Commander's  orders, no
matter the circumstances. To do so means instant death. In effect, the
Military Command  Edict makes the  Knight Commander Prince in  all but
name for so long as the Edict is in force."
     "And  if  and when  the  Edict  is  declared  to be  in  effect,"
Marcellon broke in, "the wails of protest will drown out even the sun.
I would think it safe to say that House Northfield would feel directly
threatened. One  does not  make enemies  of the  most powerful  of the
Great Houses lightly. Indeed, House Northfield might, just might mind,
feel compelled to resort to a drastic and very permanent solution."
     "That  is  why  I  need  the  two of  you  to  begin  laying  the
groundwork,"  Edward said,  resuming the  conversation. "Luthias  will
feel out those nobles he comes across while leading his troops against
the enemy. You, My Lady, will  seek opinions from those nobles here at
the capital."
     "When do you plan to ask His Majesty?" Luthias inquired.
     "Soon. If  we can turn  things around, I may  not have to  ask at
all. But if the situation does not improve and improve very quickly, I
may have to ask within the month."
     "You can count on us, Sir Edward," Myrande said.
     "Good." Edward  turned his full  attention on Luthias.  "Now that
that is out  of the way, I  will give you your orders.  They are brief
and are  the same I  have sent on to  Lord Morion." So  saying, Edward
produced a message packet from his tunic and handed it to Luthias.
     "Now, if you'll excuse me,  Lady Sable, Commander Courymwen and I
have a great deal of work to do."
     "Of course, Sir Edward."
     "Knight Captain, I  leave you and General Verde  to your duties."
Edward  returned Luthias'  salute, bowed  to Myrande,  and then  left,
Commander Courymwen in tow.
     "Sarah, come  over here and  we'll see what the  Knight Commander
has set out for us."
     "Sir!" General Verde  walked briskly over to  Luthias and Myrande
from the far side of the chamber.
     "Do you want me to leave?" Myrande asked.
     Luthias thought a  moment. "No, Sable, I'd rather  you'd stay. If
these orders  are sufficiently lenient, we  may be able to  spend some
time together before I have to leave."
     "All right,  then," she  agreed. "General, it's  good to  see you
again."
     "The feeling  is mutual, My Lady.  I was afraid that  after being
away for  such a long  time as eight days  you might forget  me." Both
women laughed,  which helped to dispel  the somber mood that  had been
building.
     "Well, we may be gone longer this time," Luthias commented.
     "What are our orders, sir?"
     "I was just  about to find out." Luthias broke  the seal and took
out the parchment contained inside.  Luthias quickly read the text and
then silently held  the parchment to Verde.  Verde's features hardened
after she read the orders.
     "May I see?" Myrande inquired.  Verde looked questioningly at her
commander. Luthias nodded. Silently Verde handed the parchment over to
Myrande. Myrande read  the words slowly, the  unfamiliar style causing
her some difficulty.  The fact that some of the  letters were Galician
instead of Baranurian also accounted for her difficulty.
     One line only was written on  the parchment in a strong hand, the
letters  almost  block-like: "Hold  at  all  costs  -- done  this  the
Thirteenth Day of Yule in the  One Thousand and Fourteenth Year of the
Kingdom of Baranur by my hand,  Sir Edward Sothos, Knight Commander of
the Royal Armies".
     Looking over Myrande's shoulder, Marcellon  read the order at the
same time as she. "Not an easy task."
     "We'll only  be outnumbered  two-to-one, Your  Excellency," Verde
objected. "We may not have an easy time of it, but we'll hold."
     "You seem very sure of yourself, General."
     "Of course, My  Lord," Verde said, nonplussed.  "We are Hussars,"
she said as if that explained everything.
     "Of  course.  Good  luck,  Luthias,  General."  Marcellon  kissed
Myrande's cheek. "I'll be by tomorrow to see you and the children."
     "See you soon," Myrande agreed.
     "Sarah," Luthias said, "why don't you go tell Michiya to give the
troops plenty of  rest. And then see to the  replenishment of whatever
supplies we may need."
     "Yes, sir." Verde saluted and exited the chamber at a brisk pace.
Neither Luthias  nor Myrande said  anything for long moments,  the two
just  stood there  enjoying the  look,  the presence  of one  another.
Eventually, the silence was broken.
     "Do you have much time?"
     "Just one night."
     "I suppose that's not so bad," she replied with a smile.
     "And we shouldn't be away too  long. Like Sarah said, we won't be
outnumbered by too  much, not in military terms anyway.  And we've got
Gateway's walls  to shelter  behind. I'll  let the  Beinisonians smash
themselves against us and that will be that."
     "Luthias, don't lie to me. You don't believe any of what you just
said any more than I do."
     Luthias held her head against his heart. "Sable, promise me."
     "What, Luke?"
     Luthias had to clamp his jaw  a moment; the old nickname made him
shake with fear and the grief that he might not come back again. "If I
die--"
     "You won't die."
     Luthias  was never  sure how  she  could believe  this. She  knew
battle; her  father had  been a  Knight. She  had treated  wounds, and
watched people die--watched  her own father fall valiantly  to the Red
Plague. "I might die," Luthias admitted, and the fact never frightened
him so much as it did now. "If I die--"
     "You won't die," Myrande insisted  tightly. "If you do, I'll have
Michiya's head and Marcellon's."
     Luthias frowned  with exasperation.  "That won't  solve anything,
and it won't bring me back, either."
     Myrande's  face was  getting its  customary obstinate  look. "You
won't die."
     "Then you won't have any trouble promising."
     She sighed. "What?"
     "That you won't..."  Luthias was unsure how to say  such a thing.
"That you won't be alone forever. That..."
     Myrande raised both eyebrows and her face took on that look which
made Haralan remark that she would  have been an excellent queen. "You
would have me marry again?"
     Luthias nodded mutely.
     "And who would you have me marry?"
     Luthias blinked; he had  never considered that question. "Michiya
--" he fumbled. "Sir Edward --  hell, I don't know. Marry King Haralan
if you can get  him, Sable. I just don't want you  to cut yourself off
from life, and --"
     "You  don't need  to worry  about it,"  Myrande replied,  and her
voice  was hard.  "If you  die, I  will never  marry again."  Her head
tilted upwards,  and her black  eyes were hard  as stone. "I  won't be
able to  endure your  death a  second time,  Luthias. They'll  bury me
beside you." She looked over her shoulder. "You'd better go."
     Luthias stared at her. "You wouldn't kill yourself!"
     "I wouldn't have to," Myrande  stated, her voice stale. Then, her
eyes suddenly  filled with dark  fire. "No, I'd make  the Beinisonians
pay first."
     Suddenly,  Luthias laughed,  and he  kissed her  quickly. "You're
right, Sable. I'd better go."
     Confused, Myrande  shook her head  and reached for  her husband's
hands.
     "What is so funny?"
     "Oh, nothing,  but I've really  got to stop Beinison  before they
kill me." And suddenly, Luthias found  his wife in his arms, clutching
him tightly. "I'll see you this evening."

Gateway Keep, Royal Duchy, Baranur
17 Yule, 1014 B.Y.

     Lord Morion kicked at a stake  in the earthen rampart, sending it
flying. "Sergeant,"  he said harshly to  the soldier in charge  of the
men working on that portion  of the fortifications Morion had started,
"I want these stakes driven in  securely! They'll cause no one trouble
the way they are now!"
     "Yes, sir!"
     Morion continued  on his  inspection of  his defenses.  When he'd
been denied  access to  Gateway Keep  on his  arrival seven  days ago,
Morion had all  but given up hope  of even making a  stand against the
Beinisonians when  they came. Morion had  been a soldier for  too long
though  to  give  up without  a  fight.  And  so  he ordered  what  he
optimistically called fortifications built.
     The thing his men  and women had been laboring on  for close to a
week now was finally  nearing completion. The fortifications consisted
of an earthen  rampart two hundred yards long with  a twenty-five yard
belt of  pits and stakes  placed in front. All  this was built  on the
south bank of the Laraka's  tributary where Morion's force had forded,
only a  few hundred yards  from Gateway's comforting  walls. Defending
behind the  rampart might enable Morion  to prolong the battle  by one
bell's time, perhaps two.
     Despite the  fact that Morion  knew the defenses were  mainly for
show -- the morale of his  troops badly needed reinforcement -- it was
not the unfinished state of the fortifications that worried him (after
all,  it was  just possible  that the  rampart and  Outer Works  would
actually stop the  Beinisonians for more than a bell)  it was the fact
of the enemy's  absence that caused him to have  sleepless nights. The
Beinisonians should have taken Port Sevlyn five or six days ago and if
the enemy  general force-marched his  troops it should only  take four
days to  reach Gateway.  But the Beinisonians  weren't here.  And that
made Morion  uneasy. He had been  sending out patrols formed  from the
Battalion of  current and former students  he'd raised but so  far the
patrols had reported no sign of the enemy. Strange.
     "Well, Colour Sergeant?" he asked the man who just came up behind
him.
     "Three patrols  ha' reported back, sair,"  the Lederian answered.
"They've nae spotted a thing. Tha fourth patrol is overdue."
     Morion had been absently staring  across the river as he listened
to MacLaird's report. Now, his head snapped around. "How long?"
     "Two bells, sair," MacLaird said in a tone that said the Lederian
was having the same thoughts as Morion.
     "Double the watch, MacLaird. I'll be in my tent if you need me."
     "Aye, sair."

                   *         *         *

8 Leagues south-southwest of Gateway Keep, Royal Duchy, Baranur
17 Yule, 1014 B.Y.

     Goren Winston  and three  guards moved  north along  the Laraka's
west bank toward the last and only ford before Gateway Keep. The newly
exonerated Lord of  House Winston was pushing himself to  the limit in
order to  reach Gateway and  reclaim his birthright from  his brother,
Ne'on as soon as possible.
     He no  longer knew his  brother. The boy  that had grown  up with
him, rode a raft down the  Laraka to Port Sevlyn (to the consternation
of their mother, and the amusement  of their father). The boy that, he
admitted,  took the  brunt of  Goren's anger  every once  in a  while.
Perhaps it was his fault, he  thought, that Ne'on had been driven away
from the  family. Goren  was three years  his brother's  senior. Ne'on
probably never  understood why Goren,  while he loved his  father, had
felt so constrained  by Kald's rule, even while hunting  in the woods.
Goren now  had freedom,  but at  the price of  his father's  life. No,
Goren did  not drive Ne'on  to kill  their father. That  was another's
influence, and something he had been avoiding thinking about.
     I'll think about  it later, he thought. Meanwhile,  some where in
the back of his mind, he knew that 'later' was drawing nearer with his
every  movement closer  to Gateway.  'Later' was  not going  to be  an
option, when he encountered Phos.
     Whatever his feelings, Goren had to  tackle the problem of how to
gain access  to Gateway. For  all he  knew, the Beinisonians  might be
laying  siege at  that very  moment  to his  home. And  who knew  what
changes Ne'on had made since Goren left. His best hope, his only hope,
he realized,  was that Marcus was  still Castellan. If Ne'on  had left
Marcus in his  position as Castellan, then Goren's task  would be made
easier. If Marcus was still Castellan. If the way to Gateway lay open.
If, if, if...
     Goren adjusted his baldric and increased his pace. With any luck,
he thought, I should make it by late afternoon.

                   *         *         *

83 leagues south of Gateway Keep, Royal Duchy, Baranur
17 Yule, 1014 B.Y.

     The half-noon sun  beat down on the long line  of men, women, and
horses,  hot  and  doubly  so  for  those  wearing  amour,  which  was
practically all of the column.  Luthias marched with General Verde and
Sho-sho Kirinagi at the head of the eight thousand- strong procession.
     "Well, Sarah?"
     Verde thought  for a moment  then answered, "I don't  think we'll
reach Gateway before Beinison, sir. Not unless we push it."
     Luthias made  an instant decision.  "We'll continue on as  we are
then. No need to  tire the horses any more than  we absolutely have to
if we're  going to  have to  fight once  we get  there. Do  you agree,
Sho-sho?" Luthias asked through Michiya.
     Kirinagi  replied  through  Michiya, "Whatever  you  think  best,
Tai-shu. If the  horses tire, then we shall fight  on foot. Regardless
of the circumstances  my samurai and I will allow  nothing to deter us
from our duty. We are yours to command."
     Luthias  inclined his  head as  acknowledgement. "How  about you,
Michiya?"
     "It  would seem  to me,  Luthias-sama," Michiya  said, "that  the
decision should be based on the  news from Gateway Keep. Until we know
more,  we should  not commit  ourselves  to an  unalterable course  of
action."
     "When's the next patrol due in, Sarah?"
     Verde shifted her reins to her left hand while she used her right
hand to  shield her  eyes from  the worst of  the sun's  glare. "There
should be a patrol due in sometime within the bell, sir."
     Luthias considered. He  still felt that his decision  to carry on
as  things  stood to  be  the  best.  However,  if Gateway  was  under
siege...no,  stick  with his  original  decision.  Unless one  of  the
patrols brought back news that would require a change in plans. "We'll
keep to our  present rate of march.  But we might as well  get as many
leagues behind us as we can. Pass the order to mount."
     "Yes,  sir," Verde  said and  signalled one  of the  buglers. The
bugle's call  sounded three times and  was quickly passed on  down the
column. Baranur's elite mounted their horses and were soon making good
time toward Gateway.

                      *         *         *

Gateway Keep, Royal Duchy, Baranur
17 Yule, 1014 B.Y.

     MacLaird paced back and forth on the ramparts, anxiously watching
for the  overdue patrol.  The patrol should  have reported  back three
bells ago and its absence was causing the Baranurian army's commanders
worry. That sense of anxiety had communicated itself to the troops and
more than one occasionally looked up from whatever he or she was doing
and  scanned the  north bank  of  the Vodyanoi  for some  sign of  the
missing patrol or worse, the enemy.
     MacLaird decided  that endless  pacing would  accomplish nothing,
whereas a few  bells' rest would do  wonders. He turned to  one of the
two soldiers standing  guard near him. "Laddie, Ah'm goin'  tae take a
rest for  a while. You and  ye're mate keep  a sharp eye oot  for tha'
patrol. If ye see anathin', coom an' fetch me quick-smart. Got it?"
     "Yes, Colour Sergeant."
     "Good lad." MacLaird had just  stepped down from the ramparts and
was heading for Lord Morion's tent when he was stopped by a shout from
the ramparts.
     "Colour Sergeant! Across the river! I see something!"
     MacLaird bounded  up the earthen  steps and was at  the soldier's
side in a flash. "Wha', lad? Wha' d' ye see? Where?"
     The soldier  pointed. "That  copse of  trees off  to the  left. I
thought I saw something moving at the edge."
     MacLaird and  the soldier stared  for a  long time at  the wooded
area. Nothing. "Laddie, are ye sure?"
     "I'm almost positive...I thought for sure...I...I'm sorry, Colour
Sergeant, I guess my  mind was playing tricks on me.  I wanted to spot
that patrol so bad."
     MacLaird picked up on something in the young man's voice. "Ye ha'
friends in tha patrol?"
     "Yes, Colour Sergeant," the soldier said in a low voice.
     "I understand, lad. Ye've done no wrong."
     "Do you  think any  of them  are alive?" the  soldier asked  in a
pleading voice.
     MacLaird,  in  a  surprisingly   compassionate  gesture  for  the
normally hard man Morion's students had come to fear and respect, laid
his hand  on the man's shoulder.  "Laddie, I wilna lie  to ye. They've
been past  due for three bells  now. Chances are they  found tha enemy
when they wernae ready for it. It's hard son, I know, but ye must keep
ye're spirits up. It's  nae easy, but ye'll ha' tae  get used tae this
if ye're tae continue wi' tha life ye ha' chosen for yeself."
     "Thank you, Colour Sergeant."
     "Dinna. Ah  was just  doin'--" MacLaird stopped  in mid-sentence.
"Laddie," he asked eagerly, "d' ye see tha' flash o' light yonder?"
     "No...wait, I did see something. Maybe..." Just then, a figure in
tattered  leather amour  and dragging  a  sabre from  a leather  thong
fastened  to  its  wrist  emerged  from  the  trees.  The  figure  was
staggering and one hand was clasped to the figure's side. The face was
twisted in an obvious grimace of pain.
     "Great Culchanan's Ghost!" MacLaird exclaimed. He leaped down the
stake-studded embankment and scrambled across the Outer Works. The two
soldiers on the rampart with him were close on his heels.
     MacLaird ran  as fast as  his legs  would carry him,  throwing up
great waves of  water as he splashed across the  knee-deep ford in the
Vodyanoi. He slipped once on the  unsteady footing of the river bottom
and came up soaking wet, coughing  and spluttering from the water he'd
taken into his lungs.
     He reached the far bank just  as the figure that had emerged from
the trees collapsed. He turned the blood-stained soldier over.
     "Aurellan!"
     MacLaird looked around at the young man he had been speaking with
just a short time before. "Ye know tha lass?"
     "Yes,  Colour Sergeant.  We're good  friends. She's  part of  our
Battalion."
     "Well, she's in nae good condition. Ye," he said, telling off the
second soldier  that had come across,  "get yeself o'er tae  Evris tha
Healer an'  tell him  we're bringing in  a casualty.  Quick-smart now,
lad!" The soldier saluted, turned, and ran back across the ford.
     "Here," MacLaird said to the young woman's friend, "gi' me a hand
gettin' her across."  MacLaird and the soldier  gently picked Aurellan
up and carried her back to the Baranurian lines.

     In the healer's tent several  dozen yards back from the ramparts,
Evris, the Baranurians' only healer,  was preparing his large tent for
the numerous  casualties that were  certain to arrive once  battle was
joined. Evris  was not alone,  though. He  had ten assistants,  two of
whom had shown  that they might posses the aptitude  to become healers
themselves given some intensified instruction in the healers art.
     None  of  his assistants  had  seen  anything like  the  horrible
injuries the wounded  would be suffering from and  that worried Evris.
The aging  healer had been  plying his trade  for thirty years  in the
King's service and had seen it all. Those thirty years had taken their
toll. Of late,  Evris had been considering leaving the  Royal Army and
retiring to Magnus, perhaps to  a teaching position at the University.
After this campaign, his was certain  he would retire. Thirty years of
tending to those whose  business it is to maim and  kill is enough for
anyone.
     The flap  to the tent opened  and two soldiers, one  soaking wet,
carried in  a third  soldier with  a bloody  gash across  the abdomen.
Evris pointed to  a table to his  left and the two  soldiers set their
wounded comrade  down. "Ethros,  finish laying out  these instruments.
You two, let's get started on this one."
     When Evris  emerged three  quarters of  a bell  later he  found a
somewhat dry Colour Sergeant MacLaird,  an anxious Lord Morion and two
of the force's Commanders waiting for him.
     "She's alive, but just barely and that for not much longer."
     "Can she speak?" Morion asked intently.
     "My Lord, she has received a  sword-cut to the abdomen. She is in
a great deal  of pain and I've  been forced to give her  a potion that
makes her very groggy. She's dying."
     "I realize  that, Evris,  but I  must know  what happened  to the
patrol. Our continued survival may depend on it."
     "Very well, My Lord. I can give her something to bring her around
but you must be quick, My Lord."
     "That will suffice."
     "You and one other, My Lord."
     Morion motioned for  MacLaird to follow and the  two stepped past
Evris and entered the dark tent.
     "Through that  flap and  to your  right, My  Lord. I'll  be there
shortly with a potion."
     Morion  nodded  and he  and  MacLaird  stepped through  the  flap
leading to the area reserved  for the more seriously wounded. Aurellan
was lying unconscious on a pallet, a blood-soaked bandage covering her
wound.
     Evris entered the  closed-off area carrying a bowl  filled with a
vile-smelling brew.  He sat on the  pallet and tilted the  bowl to the
dying woman's  lips. Within moments,  Aurellan began to show  signs of
waking.
     "Lassie?" MacLaird tentatively asked. "Lassie, can ye hear me?"
     Aurellan opened her eyes a fraction. "Who...where...?"
     "Aurellan, it's Lord Morion and Colour Sergeant MacLaird," Morion
said  in a  gentle  voice. "Can  you  tell us  what  happened to  your
patrol?"
     "Patrol?" Aurellan repeated weakly.
     "Yes, Aurellan, your patrol. Concentrate. Tell us what happened."
     "Patrol...patrol...oh, yes. Ambushed."
     "Where? When?"
     "Don't...don't re...remember. Hurts."
     MacLaird broke in. "We  know it does, lass. All ye  ha' tae do is
answer a few wee questions an' then ye can sleep."
     "The patrol, Aurellan," Morion's stern  tone resumed, "tell us of
the patrol."
     "Benisons," she responded in a still-groggy voice. "Ran into some
few bells  northwest. Lots. Tried  to get  away but caught  us. Stupid
officer.  Wouldn't  listen  when  tried  tell  him  we  should  scram.
Beinisons  kept coming.  No  more arrows.  Keenan...Keenan went  down.
Couldn't  save  him." Aurellan  was  crying  now, the  tears  silently
flowing; the strength to do more than that was gone.
     "It's a'right, lass. We'll nae trouble ye anamore."
     Evris stepped forward  with a bowl half-full  of a sweet-smelling
liquid. "Drink  this, Aurellan." Evris  helped the young  woman drink.
She'd breathed her  last even as Morion and MacLaird  were exiting the
tent.
     Outside, Morion  stared at the  ground for long  moments. Neither
man seemed willing to break  the silence. Eventually, Morion's warrior
training reasserted  itself, reminding him  that he had  a commander's
duty to perform that took  precedence over everything else, even grief
for a departed student.
     "The pickets should be doubled."
     "Sair," MacLaird  protested, "tha men  are verra tired.  They ha'
been workin' on tha ramparts since before sunrise."
     "And they'll  work on the ramparts  long after the sun  sets. The
enemy is almost upon  us. We'll have plenty of time  to rest after the
battle." If the gods see fit to spare anyone.
     "Aye, sair. Ah'll see to it straight away."
     Morion  massaged  his  neck  muscles  as  MacLaird  walked  away.
Consequently, it took several  moments before Morion realized MacLaird
had stopped. "Something, Colour Sergeant?"
     MacLaird pointed. "Aye, sair, ye might say tha'."
     Morion looked in the direction  MacLaird was pointing. The senior
Regimental commander, Commander Vroneth,  was striding briskly towards
Evris' tent. From the set of his  face, Morion could hazard a guess as
to what news Vroneth was bringing.  So could the soldiers whom Vroneth
passed on  his way.  Work throughout the  camp came to  a halt  as the
soldiers' intuition told them something was up.
     Vroneth  marched   sharply  to   Morion  and  halted,   giving  a
parade-ground salute. "Report, Commander."
     "My  Lord,"  Vroneth  said,  "the  sentries  report  Beinisonians
approaching from the north. Thousands of them."
     "Right." Morion sighed. "This is it, then. Stand to, Commander."
     "Sir!"  Vroneth moved  away from  the tent,  catching the  eye of
Morion's bugler as he went.
     Vroneth stopped, facing  the camp. He filled his  lungs with air.
"Stand...to!"
     The clarion call of the trumpet  filled the air, its rising notes
summoning the Baranurians to the ramparts, stirring the blood with its
call to battle.

     Marcus Ridgewater  stood on  one of the  two towers  flanking the
gate and watched the unfolding scene in the Royal Army camp only a few
hundred yards from Gateway.
     "Should  we stand  to as  well, sir?"  asked a  young officer  of
Gateway's small complement of soldiers.
     Marcus remained  silent. He wanted  to answer "Yes," to  tell the
youngster to sound  the alarm. But he  could not. For he  was bound by
orders to do nothing. The Lord Keeper's  son - make that, the new Lord
Keeper, Ne'on - had ordered Marcus to remain aloof from the conflict.
     Ne'on  thought  to keep  Gateway  removed  from the  war.  Marcus
snorted in disgust. He turned to  the waiting officer. "No," he ground
out.
     "But, sir!"
     "I said 'No'  and I meant it.  I don't expect you  to question me
again."

     MacLaird walked  with a  steady measured  pace along  the rampart
behind the soldiers of his Battalion. "Steady, lads. Remember, they're
just flesh an' blood like we are. Do wha' ye're told, listen tae ye're
sergeants, an'  show those wee  bastards wha' Laird Morion  ha' taught
ye." His  words echoed those  of the squad  sergeants and did  more to
ready his troops than any oration could have.
     As yet,  no enemy had  appeared. Almost a  quarter of a  bell had
passed since the stand to had  been given. Two of the three Baranurian
Regiments manned the ramparts along with Morion's Battalion, now under
the command of Colour Sergeant MacLaird. Lord Morion waited behind the
ramparts with the reserve, Vroneth's Regiment.
     An uneasy feeling had come over MacLaird but he couldn't pin down
the  cause. It  took  him several  moments to  realize  that what  was
causing his uneasiness was the total  absence of sound other than that
made by  man. The Lederian pushed  his way through the  ranks 'till he
found  himself  up  against  the   wooden  palisade  of  the  ramparts
themselves. He stood  motionless, staring across the  river with every
fibre of his  being, as if by  sheer force of will he  could force the
Beinisonians to reveal themselves to him. (In the back of his mind the
thought that  the enemy might  have wizards fluttered around  until he
caught it and squashed it; he absolutely refused to contemplate such a
catastrophic happenstance.)
     Very  shortly he  was rewarded  with the  sight of  the enemy,  a
reward MacLaird would have just as well gone without. One moment there
was nothing,  just the slowly  flowing water  of the Vodyanoi  and the
gentle slope of the hill on the  far bank, then the hill was moving as
three thousand  five hundred  of Beinison's  elite marched  into view,
light sabres banging against their legs as they ran.
     The Beinisonians  stopped at the  base of  the hill, a  scant few
yards from  the water's edge.  An elegantly armored rider  trotted his
mount  out in  front of  the  enemy line  and rode  parallel with  the
Baranurian  fortifications.  He was  obviously  the  commander of  the
Beinisonian force. He studied the Baranurian defenses with an arrogant
air. Finally,  finished with his  study, he  rode back within  his own
lines  and issued  orders  to  a group  of  similarly attired  mounted
officers. His  orders given, he galloped  his horse to the  top of the
hill as his officers dismounted and moved to their units.
     The Baranurians knew what would be next in the sequence of events
and all along the line they tensed, ready to receive the enemy. In the
very center of the line, MacLaird  raised his hand, the signal for the
few archers in the force to make ready.
     Across the river, the Beinisonians were arranging themselves into
four blocks of roughly eight hundred  fifty men formed in thirty three
ranks of fifty.  In the center of  each block was carried  an oak pole
topped with a  golden eagle and encased in leather,  the Colors of the
Beinisonian Regiments.  Each was  ringed by the  possessing Regiment's
fiercest warriors.  Every man was  fully prepared  to die to  keep the
Colors from the enemy.
     For long  moments, the only sounds  that could be heard  were the
low but  firm voices of  the Baranurian  Sergeants as they  gave final
instructions and advice  to their troops; the  Beinisonians, for their
part, were utterly silent, a fact  which did much to unsettle even the
most  stalwart  Baranurian  veteran.   Each  line  was  immobile;  the
Beinisonians seemed  hesitant, reluctant almost, to  begin the contest
and the Baranurians dared not take their attention away from the foe.

     From Gateway's  battlements, Marcus  saw movement in  the enemy's
lines which  he knew  the waiting Baranurian  soldiers could  not see;
buglers and messengers making their way to join their commander on the
hill. "Won't be long now," he said, more to himself than anyone else.
     "Excuse  me,  sir?" the  officer  who  had earned  Marcus'  wrath
earlier asked.
     "Nothing.  The show's  about to  begin." Marcus  felt sick.  What
Ne'on  had  ordered him  to  do  was wrong.  Marcus  was  sure he  was
betraying the  soldiers about to die  on the Vodyanoi's south  bank by
complying with Ne'on's orders. He  was almost certain he was betraying
the Kingdom. But if  he didn't do as Ne'on, his  commander and Lord in
law, bid him do then he would just as certainly be guilty of betrayal.
     Unless Ne'on  were relieved  of his  command, he  thought, noting
three horseman riding north along the Laraka, heading for Gateway.
     "What do  you make of  that?" he asked  the soldier at  his side,
pointing to the three figures.
     "Someone's riding toward Gateway, sir."
     Marcus  looked at  the  soldier quizzically.  "What's your  name,
son?"
     "Andrews, sir," he answered proudly.
     "Andrews, if  you can't make  a better assessment of  those three
immediately, you'll  be cleaning  outhouses for  the duration  of your
assignment."
     Andrews' face went slightly pale, and he stared intently into the
distance. "If I didn't know any better, sir..."
     Marcus did not smile. "Let's assume you don't."
     "Well, I'd say that was Lord Goren. But isn't he in the dungeon?"
     "Officially." Just slightly, Marcus grinned.
     If Ne'on's  actions were  to cause,  or be  likely to  cause, the
Kingdom  great harm,  then  Marcus might  be  justified in  disobeying
orders. Further, if  that was Goren Winston, riding with  three of the
King's  guards,  then Marcus  could  assume  Ne'on  was no  longer  in
rightful possession of Gateway. Marcus was not too concerned with what
might happen  to him,  it was  his soldier's honor  - and  Gateway's -
which concerned him. Marcus had to be absolutely clear in his own mind
that following Ne'on's  orders would conflict with his  higher duty to
King and Kingdom - and that Goren was returning with redemption.
     Araminia grant me fortune, he pleaded silently. He stared at Lord
Morion's personal  standard for  what seemed like  an eternity  as his
inner thoughts maneuvered and counter-maneuvered.
     Lord Morion is not properly  under the King's sovereignty and yet
he is ready to  sacrifice all for the slim chance  that he may somehow
aid Baranur. And here I stand blowing  in the wind. Ne'on has been too
long here  with his accursed Black  Hand. No, my duty  is clear. Ne'on
may turn me into  a toad or blast me to ashes but  he will not have my
allegiance. Only my fealty to the King  is left. I will do what I must
and Ne'on be damned!
     Marcus straightened and turned. "Captain of the Guard! To me!" An
answering shout and in moments Gateway's Guard Captain was standing at
attention before his commander.
     "Captain, I want you to quietly stand the garrison to."
     "Sir?" The Captain was very aware of Ne'on's orders.
     "You heard me,  Captain. The Lord Keeper is no  longer in command
of this  keep. There," he  pointed to  the three oncoming  riders, "is
Lord Goren,  the new Lord Keeper.  Our duty to Ne'on  is finished. Our
duty to the King is not."
     Marcus was  rewarded with  the largest  (and only,  so far  as he
could remember) smile ever to grace the Captain's face. Obviously, the
Captain of the Guard had not well-liked his orders. As the Captain was
turning to go, Marcus stopped him with a hand. "One more thing. I want
two score archers to  keep an eye on the Black Hand.  They may give us
trouble.  If they  do,  they are  to be  killed  instantly. Handle  it
yourself."
     "All of them, sir?" The Captain knew the Castellan's youngest son
was a member of the Black Hand.
     "All that resist, yes."
     "Yes, sir."

     On  the hilltop  on the  Vodyanoi's north  bank, the  buglers and
messengers had reached the Light  Infantry's commander. A breeze began
blowing up from  the south, stirring the water slightly.  At a command
from their leader, the three buglers lifted their brass horns to their
lips and blew a single note.
     The standard  bearers of  each Regiment  in the  Beinisonian line
reached up and removed the leather casings from their Colors. The wind
caught them, making them snap and flutter.
     Morion  signalled his  own buglers  and the  Baranurians unfurled
their Colors.
     On the  hilltop, the  Beinisonian commander  raised his  sword in
salute. The enemy's  horns sounded once more and the  enemy line moved
forward into the water.
     "A'right, m' wee bairns," MacLaird said, "make ready."
     At a  silent signal  from their  officers, the  Beinisonians drew
their  sabres en  masse.  When the  enemy  were approximately  halfway
across a single note sounded from the hilltop. With a mighty shout the
Beinisonians hurled themselves at the ramparts.
     "Now!" MacLaird shouted,  dropping his arm. Here  and there along
the line, bow strings thrummed  and arrows dropped among the advancing
Beinisonians,  felling  a few  of  the  enemy,  too  few to  make  any
difference.
     The  Beinisonians pounded  across the  ford throwing  up a  great
spray of water. The leading edge  of the charge reached the south bank
and immediately  disappeared into  the staked  pits the  defenders had
dug; perhaps three-score of the enemy fell screaming to their deaths.
     The survivors  of the first  rank advanced more carefully  on the
ramparts now  just a few yards  away anxious to avoid  their comrades'
fate. Not everyone was successful in avoiding the pitfalls and another
score went to meet their ancestors.
     The enemy  wave was  at the  earthen embankment  now, frantically
clawing their way  up towards the waiting defenders while  at the same
time trying  (unsuccessfully in some  cases) to avoid the  stakes that
made the slope look like a massive, elongated pin-cushion.
     The first  of the Beinisonians  reached the top and  the smithy's
din of combat rang out in all its  fury. Men and women up and down the
line staggered back or fell clutching at slashes and cuts. More than a
few,  Baranurian and  Beinisonian alike,  lay sprawled  in death.  The
fighting  was bitter  and the  Beinisonians  were taking  most of  the
losses. Boiled  leather just  could not compete  with chain  and scale
mail in close-quarter fighting.
     After what seemed like forever to  those on the ramparts, a bugle
sounded,  three notes  rising in  successive octaves,  the Beinisonian
signal to retreat.  The enemy flowed back across  the Vodyanoi leaving
four hundred dead and wounded. The Baranurians counted their losses at
nearly two hundred. The fighting had raged for almost a full bell.

     MacLaird was relaxing on the ground after having issued orders to
remove the dead  and dying. Morion came up and  sat beside his friend.
"Water?" he said, offering the Lederian his canteen.
     MacLaird snatched at it like a drowning man grabs a rope. Raising
the canteen to his lips, he downed it in one go. "Thank ye, sair. Tha'
was much appreciated."
     Morion smiled. "What do you think?"
     MacLaird thought  for a moment  before he answered. "Ah  think we
can hold these wee buggers from now 'till Burgondonan. It's when those
other lads show up tha' we ha' soomthin' tae worry o'er."
     "My thoughts  exactly." Morion stared  up at the sky,  gaging the
sun's position. "I'd say we've no more than four or five bells."
     MacLaird  swallowed the  chunk  of bread  he'd  been chewing  and
looked at his  lord. "Aye," he agreed without emotion,  "tha' be aboot
wha' Ah'd guess."
     "I'm sorry, MacLaird."
     "Sorry? For wha' are ye needin' tae be sorry aboot?"
     "For getting us  into this. I could have stayed  out of this war,
you know. But my honor wouldn't let me."
     "Sair, we ha'  been together now for more years  than Ah like tae
count. Ye ken why Ah left my clan." MacLaird paused, the moment making
him feel uncomfortable.  It was unusual for the  pragmatic Lederian to
make  such a  speech. "Sair,  we  saved each  other tha'  day in  tha'
forest. Ah dinna ken  it then but Ah do now. Ye ha'  been my Laird an'
it ha' been my duty an' my honor tae help ye preserve yours."
     "Thank you, Colour Sergeant. But my honor seems to have gotten us
killed this time."
     "Wha' better  way for a  soldier tae meet  his death than  tae go
down fightin' for a good cause again' o'erwhelmin' odds?"
     Morion sighed. "I'm getting too old for this."
     MacLaird leaned  close and spoke  in low and gentle  tones. "Tha'
lass  will  be  a'right.  Lady  Kimmentari ha'  a  good  head  on  her
shoulders.  She'll scramble  before  anathin' cooms  within' reach  o'
Pentamorlo."
     Horns brayed, shattering the early afternoon respite.

     The second  round of fighting had  been raging for just  over two
bells when Morion felt the ground  begin to tremble. Then he saw them.
The cries of the wounded, the grunts and groans of the combatants, the
death screams,  the clash of  steel on  steel, all were  banished from
Morion's senses as his brain confirmed what his eyes were seeing.
     The crest  of the low  hill on the other  side of the  river came
suddenly  and  menacingly  alive  as rank  upon  rank,  Regiment  upon
Regiment of Beinison's  heavy infantry rushed into  view, sun glinting
off shields and armor.
     "My God!" Vroneth breathed. "Is there no end to them?"
     Morion did  not answer. He  was far  away from Gateway  Keep. His
world was  a blue-skinned woman whom  he loved dearly and  now knew he
would never set eyes on again.  The vision passed. He realized someone
had been speaking to him. "What, Commander?"
     "Your orders, sir?" Vroneth repeated softly.
     "Orders, Commander? What good will orders do now?"
     Vroneth was shocked. "But, My Lord! We must do something!"
     Morion was silent  long moments. "Quite right. I  don't know what
came  over  me."  He  turned  to  regard  Gateway's  battlements.  "If
only...but  that will  not happen.  Ready your  men, Commander.  We'll
commit all our reserves.  Our only chance now is to  meet the enemy at
the ramparts with everything we have."
     Vroneth saluted  and moved  off, giving  orders to  his officers.
When all  was ready, Vroneth signalled  to his bugler. At  the bugle's
call the eight hundred men and  women of Vroneth's Regiment marched to
join their comrades in the fight for the ramparts.

     "Any word  from Captain  Greerson?" Castellan Ridgewater  asked a
junior officer standing nearby.
     "Not yet, sir."
     Damn! Marcus  swore. I'd feel a  damn sight better if  I knew for
certain the  Black Hand was gone.  "No plan survives contact  with the
enemy."
     "Sir?"
     "Nothing. Are the catapults and ballistae ready?"
     The officer made a quick visual check. "Yes, sir."
     "Good. Set  your sights on  the Vodyanoi crossing." He  turned to
another officer.  "Make ready  to open  the gate. And  keep an  eye on
Goren... it appears he has company."

     In  the Keep,  a member  of  the Black  Hand was  at that  moment
looking out  one of  the high,  narrow windows  that were  really more
arrow slit than for gazing out of.
     "Are you in  or out, Mak?" asked one of  four Black Hand soldiers
sitting on the floor in the midst of a dice game.
     "Just a moment," he replied absently.
     "Come  on," pushed  another.  "I've only  got  another two  bells
before shift."
     "What has you so interested?" the first asked.
     "Something's  going   on.  They're  moving  the   catapults  into
position."
     "What?" The first soldier joined Mak by the window. "Are we under
attack?"
     "Don't think so."
     "What, you think the Castellan's finally found some balls?"
     "Maybe. We should let Clay know about this."
     "Right. Let's go."

     MacLaird  snarled  as  he  swept   the  head  off  a  Beinisonian
skirmisher. The Lederian's armor was  splotched with blood, not all of
it the  enemy's. In the  best tradition of the  men of Lederia  he had
given himself  to the battle rage  and the Beinisonians were  paying a
terrible price for  it. Few there were among the  enemy Regiments that
found the courage to go up against the seemingly insane apparition.
     To his rear a  bugle sounded and all at once  the pressure on his
Battalion  eased  as  Vroneth's  Regiment came  into  the  line.  Then
MacLaird saw the glittering wave of the enemy heavy infantry Regiments
rolling over the Vodyanoi. "M'anam don sleibh!"
     The  Beinisonian light  infantry were  thrown back  by the  added
weight  of Vroneth's  warriors but  that meant  little. MacLaird  knew
those heavy infantry Regiments had sealed the Baranurians' doom.
     Several yards away  to right of center Lord Morion  looked not to
the enemy but to his camp -- even now being dismantled by his order --
and its wounded. Morion did not truly  despair of dying, it is a thing
all soldiers  know comes sooner  or later. He  knew he would  make his
death a worthy one, but his being  was permeated by a fear of the fate
of those  who lay helpless  on their blood-soaked pallets.  Morion had
heard  of Port  Sevlyn's fate  and fully  expected his  wounded to  be
slaughtered.
     "Vroneth?"
     "My Lord?"
     "Pass the word. There will be no retreat. We win here, or die."
     Vroneth saluted gravely and moved off to inform his officers.

     Goren raced  full speed toward  Gateway Keep, six  advance scouts
following his  group of four. As  he sped along the  river's edge, his
horse almost frothing with exertion, he saw a sight he'd never forget:
Gateway's main gates  were opening. "Marcus, I love  you," he thought,
and urged his men to ride faster.
     The six  Beinison scouts  behind him were  persistent, he  had to
give them  that. But coming  up the back  trails of the  Laraka, where
Goren  had grown  up,  he  had spotted  them  and out-maneuvered  them
easily. The Laraka  flowed north until it met the  Vodyanoi, where the
latter joined it  and turned it west. Gateway was  on the eastern rock
base where the two rivers met.  Fortunately for Goren, the rest of the
Beinison army  was on the other  side of the Laraka  and the Vodyanoi,
not between Goren and Gateway.
     As they continued toward the keep, Goren saw six men line up with
bows, draw, and take aim.
     "I hope they recognize us," yelled  one of his men. "Or at least,
are damn good archers!"
     "They're in Gateway," was Goren's  reply. "I'd put Marcus' troops
against the Legions of Death if I had to." A flight of arrows streaked
across the sky, landing thirty yards  behind them and just in front of
the pursuing  Benosians. "If that  doesn't give them  second thoughts,
they won't have time for thirds!"

     Inside the  object of so  many people's desire,  Captain Greerson
moved carefully  out of  sight among the  buildings close  against the
keep overseeing the  final positioning of his archers.  A quick glance
at Gateway's siege engines told him he had little time. A quick mental
review of his dispositions left him less than totally satisfied but he
decided they would serve. They'll have to, he thought.
     The main gate to  the keep opened and the bulk  of the Black Hand
emerged. Their attention  was on the busy heavy catapult  crews in the
bailey.  They  totally failed  to  notice  Greerson's force  concealed
nearby. Swords drawn, they advanced on the catapults. Mak, the soldier
who  first  noticed the  garrison's  efforts  at changing  allegiance,
opened his mouth to speak.
     An arrow  sprouted from his neck.  He stopped, a shocked  look of
disbelief on his face.  He fell choking on his own  blood. He was soon
joined by many of his fellows as Greerson's troops opened fire. Caught
out in  the open and  now leaderless, the  Black Hand died  before any
organized attempt at resistance could be made.
     Even before  the last of  the Hand was dispatched,  the catapults
had begun their deadly song.

     At the Vodyanoi crossing, the wave of steel-clad Beinisonians was
at the halfway point  when a series of low dull  thuds issued from the
direction of the fortress-waypoint commanding both Vodyanoi and Laraka
rivers.
     With heart-stopping  suddenness huge  gouts of water  were thrown
into the air as boulders the size  of small huts found their mark. The
first few  ranks of  the enemy disappeared  almost without  sound. The
green-blue waters of the Vodyanoi turned crimson.
     Morion  spun and  stared, slack-jawed,  at the  sight of  Gateway
Keep, its great gate swung wide  and beckoning. It was several moments
before he  or anyone  could react  to what  their eyes  transmitted to
their  unbelieving brains.  Morion pushed  and shoved  his way  to his
bugler's  side  as  another   salvo  from  Gateway's  catapults  arced
overhead.
     "Sound retreat!" The bugler raised his instrument to his lips and
blew a discordant sound. "Spit, boy,  spit!" The young soldier wet his
lips and again tried, this time with more success.
     So  ended the  Baranurian army's  organized defense.  The bugle's
call  to retreat,  combined with  the promise  of Gateway's  beckoning
gate,  shattered the  defending force.  The discipline  that had  held
through so much for  so long fled as a wisp of fog  on a blustery day.
Where  once there  was  a line  of battle  ordered  into Regiment  and
Battalion, now there was a mob  of desperate men and women frantically
trying to reach the safety of Gateway Keep.
     Here and  there among the chaos,  a sergeant or officer  tried to
rally  their troops.  Most met  with failure.  A few  did succeed  and
Morion pushed  and shoved his way  to the nearest group.  He found the
leader of the  group, a Captain, by the simple  expedient of colliding
with her.
     "My Lord!" the Captain exclaimed with some surprise.
     "Good work, Captain!" Morion praised. "How many have you?"
     "Between three- and four-score, My Lord."
     Morion quickly  assessed the  overall situation,  such as  he was
able to  amidst the  confusion, and  the state of  the body  of troops
before him. "They're shaky."
     "Yes, My  Lord," the Captain  replied in  a voice that  said she,
too, was shaky.
     "Well, no help for it. Can you hold them?"
     "I  don't  know,  My   Lord."  Seeing  Morion's  expression,  she
amplified. "I'm sorry, My Lord, but that is the only answer I can give
you. Some will stay...I'm sorry to have failed you, sir."
     "Worry about  recrimination later, Captain. Right  now, we've got
to get some sort of line established."
     "With what?"  The Captain pointed  at her  troops, drawn up  in a
loose square. "Look at them, My Lord. The enemy has not yet gained the
rampart and already they're wavering."
     "Well firm them up, Captain! Because wavering or not, in whatever
numbers you can  muster, you ARE going  to form line! There  is no way
that ,"  he said, gesturing at  the packed mass before  Gateway's main
gate, "is going  to make it inside before the  Beinisionians come over
that rampart over there. We have to buy time for those at the gate and
for the  wounded to  get inside."  To the  Captain's doubtful  face he
replied, "You don't have to hold  the entire enemy army. When they see
a force deployed, they will also deploy and that will take time. A few
menes, even a few moments, can make a difference."
     "Yes, My Lord," the Captain said sullenly.
     Morion regarded her intently for  a moment then issued additional
orders. "Gather  what you can to  you. Force them to  deploy then fall
back, then deploy again and so on."
     "Where will you be, My Lord?"
     "I'm going to try and get  some people together to help Evris get
the wounded moved. We can't leave them for the enemy."
     "No, My Lord."
     "Good  luck," Morion  wished  then turned  and,  with his  bugler
following, waded into the maelstrom.

     "Goren, you  blasted fool!"  Marcus yelled as  he worked  his way
down the stairs to the courtyard. His  lord had just made his way into
Gateway - probably would have died without his help - and didn't bring
half the forces  Marcus had instructed him to months  before. "What in
Muskadon's name are you doing? Damn  good to see you, but where's your
escort? I told you to come back  with a regiment of men and the King's
seal,  and demand  your rightful  place.  Burn my  ashes in  Rise'er's
feast, boy, you're lucky I opened those gates... Ne'on himself ordered
them shut and the garrison to stand down. If I-"
     "Marcus!"  Goren's  voice  finally   made  its  way  through  the
castellan's barrage of  dialogue. He looked at  the castellan, smiled,
and grabbed  him by the  shoulders. "It's good  to see you,  too. Now,
where's the rest  of the force? With all those  men outside, I counted
on at  least three more  regiments in  Gateway... did you  deploy them
before I got in?"
     Marcus'   expression   turned   dark.  "Your   blasted   brother,
self-proclaimed Keeper  of Gateway -  you took care of  that business,
now, didn't you?" When Goren  nodded, Marcus continued. "Ne'on ordered
the garrison to  stand down, and not to allow  access to Gateway. Just
recently, I countermanded that order.  The catapults and ballistas are
firing on  the Beinison army  now, but I'm not  sure how long  it will
take Morion to move his troops in  - and the Benosian's will be making
for the entrance as fast as he will."
     Goren grasped the  parchment from inside his cloak  and handed it
to the Castellan. "This is the  King's hand, and his decision to place
me as Keeper of Gateway. Take as many horse as you can - leave one for
me  -  and gather  archers  by  the gate.  I'll  return  in menes,  Ol
willing."
     As Goren  turned towards his  father's mansion, Marcus  yelled to
him, "Watch your  brother, boy... he's not to be  trusted." Damn fool,
he thought,  Morion and his troops  don't have menes. "Captain  of the
Guard!" He waited for the man to signal from the parapets. "Gather the
two archer companies and all the  horse you can muster. We're going to
get our hands dirty on this one!"

     MacLaird stood in front of a group of soldiers from all units and
glared at them with sword drawn.  By dint of force of personality (and
outright physical threat) the Lederian had gathered twenty-two to him.
He wasn't satisfied with their morale, but it would have to do.
     Off to his left and toward  the ramparts, a bugle sounded -- hahn
taa-ree -- the signal "Form on  me!" MacLaird smiled, a wide, vicious,
happy grin. He sheathed his sword and bellowed commands to his force.
     "Hurry, Colour Sergeant!" Morion exhorted.
     "Sair!" MacLaird  turned to his troops  and spat out a  stream of
invective that would have melted stone. Morion, MacLaird, and close to
two-score ordinary  soldiers were  desperately, frantically  trying to
move Evris' field hospital and the wounded within.
     Niceties were set aside for  greater concerns. Those who were too
badly  wounded to  walk were  carried gently  but swiftly  towards the
safety of Gateway Keep. The dying were aided on their way with a quick
sword-stroke or dagger-thrust.
     The hospital was  mostly torn down and moving  when the catapults
stopped.

     "Keep form, men!" Marcus yelled as  he and two hundred archers of
his own  training were riding toward  the enemy lines from  behind the
Baranurian ranks.  Already, swarms  of Baranurian soldiers  sped past,
some desperately lunging through the line of make-shift cavalry riding
their way.  Marcus silently hoped  no men  died of stupidity  in their
attempt to gain Gateway's safety.
     Seeing the hospital was  already broken down, Marcus concentrated
on the main bulk of the front  line. At about three hundred feet, with
hundreds  of  fleeing  soldiers  around  him, he  gave  the  order  to
dismount. "Concentrate your fire at the front line, enemy rear.
     "Ready!" Two hundred bows pulled  back, aiming at where the enemy
was deploying a force  meant to wipe out one of  the few small patches
of resistance left in the  Baranurian force. "Aim!" Arrows steadied on
their  rests. "Fire!"  Two  hundred arrows  swarmed  through the  sky,
casting a small, fast-moving shadow of  death over the troops until it
struck its mark. A few of the enemy were killed, more wounded, and the
advancing force slowed.
     "Captains,  choose  your targets  and  command  at will!"  Marcus
screamed as he  mounted his horse. From his position,  he could barely
make out the  form of a commanding officer nearly  quarter of a league
away. The wind was  at his back. It would be a major  set back for the
enemy, he  thought. Hefting his own  great bow, he chose  a long arrow
from the quiver. More draw for more distance, he mused. He pulled back
on the string, meeting the arrow's nock with his chin.
     As he took aim, he remembered hearing stories of incredible feats
of archery, and  how his childhood had been charmed  with their heroic
lore.  Galthamon, in  the Great  Houses  War, had  slain a  commanding
officer from half a league away with a great bow. The Legion of Death,
two regiments of archers, had defeated  entire armies on their own. He
gauged the wind another moment, and fired.
     The arrow  seemed to  be in the  air for an  eternity as  it sped
towards its  target. Marcus  had adjusted  for wind,  distance, height
difference... to  no avail.  It struck the  ground harmlessly  an easy
twenty feet from  the Beinison officer, barely noticed by  an aid, and
considered  a random  shot by  all around.  The officer  did, however,
quickly remove his presence from the sight of the enemy army.
     Marcus thought  all those stories  about Galthamon were  a little
over  stated, and  returned to  the situation  at hand.  His force  of
archers were causing a noticeable gap between the enemy and Baranurian
troops.  Morion's  mobile hospital,  looking  over  his shoulder,  was
almost at Gateway. In fact, there  were very few troops between he and
the enemy, and all of them were moving towards safety.
     "Cease  fire!" he  yelled. "Mount  up, and  ride for  Gateway. In
form!"

          (to be continued...)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                  Sons of Gateway 7: Reunion
                      Yule 17, 1014 B.Y.
                        by Jon Evans
                (b.c.k.a. )

              Gemstone Expedition, day 94, Lieutenant
         Howen, reporting: we spent six weeks in the
         cave of the magicians, healing our wounds and
         re-stocking our supplies with theirs.  It
         took longer than expected to recover from the
         damages... I guess the injuries went deeper
         than we thought.  Hanlar blames it on Lord
         Ne'on's gem - a two-foot, purple, uncut piece
         of something I've never seen before.  I told
         him it was the altitude and the thin air, and
         we left the next morning.
              Everyone seemed to feel better just
         leaving the cave.  But three weeks later, the
         gem is still glowing, we're losing weight
         rapidly, and one of the horses just up and
         died.  No explanation.  The other horses
         bucked their way free, and bolted.  That was
         three nights past, and we've been walking
         ever since -  I only hope things go well
         until Gateway.  Our water supplies will run
         short in another day or two, but we should be
         able to make it to the Laraka by then, and
         our going will be easier.  We should be able
         to scavenge both food and water at the river.
              For the past few days, there have been
         large dust clouds to the west, and swarms of
         buzzards.  I sent a scout to find out what's
         going on.

     "Lieuten't," Hanlar spoke  from the opening of the  tent, his six
foot frame filling the space between  the flaps. "Scout's come back. I
think you might wanna take this 'un in yuir tent, sir."
     Howen  looked  at  his  junior   officer,  a  man  who  knew  the
disreputable men in this mission better than himself, and beckoned him
in with the scout. Walkins, the man who Hanlar had picked for the job,
looked shaken, a little pale, and out of breath. His black matted hair
was speckled with  bits of grass and  brush, and the mud  on his knees
was dry, but dark. Running for  two days, Howen figured, and trying to
keep out of sight of whatever it was he saw.
     "Go'n, Walkins,  tell the Lieuten't  wha' ye saw,"  Hanlar pushed
the  man forward  a bit.  Walkins stepped  with the  push, and  looked
wide-eyed at Howen. He looked back at the Sergeant, then started.
     "S'like this, Sir... there's a batch o'  bad luck - bout a keg o'
pitchers - comin' this way - ow!" He clutched his shoulder as the pain
from Hanlar's punch made its way into his muscle.
     "This  ain't the  sewers o'  Magnus, ye  scum! Talk  odd to  'im!
Sorry, Lieuten't," Hanlar added, "the rats  o' the land 'ave their own
language. Pitchers, see... beers, drinks,  what 'ave ye... they's town
guards to thievin'  scum. Keg o' pitchers, must be  lots o' guards. Or
troops."
     "Aye, Cap'n, and bad ale is they."
     Hanlar  scowled a  moment, then  looked at  his Lieutenant.  "Not
flyin' Baranur's colors, sir."
     Howen looked  at his sergeant,  the lines around the  man's eyes,
the chapping of his  lips. He'd been through a lot,  lately - they all
had -  and was  in no shape  to assault  an enemy army.  If it  was an
enemy,  and not  some envoy  travelling in  from Bichu  or some  other
realm. Too far  north and west to be Beinison,  surely. "Walkins, what
direction are they headed?"
     Walkins  leaned  forward  and  almost  whispered,  "Straight  for
Gateway, I'd bet me mother's knickers."

              *              *              *

     Riding North to  Gateway after his brief audience  with the King,
Goren Winston felt clean for what  seemed like the first time in ages.
He had a horse  to ride, three men who knew him, and  he was in charge
again.  It felt  comfortable, despite  the circumstances.  How he  and
three of his uncle's House Troops were to enter Gateway, depose Ne'on,
and fortify it  against any possible invasion were  only small matters
when he thought of Phos.
     Phos, the Demon. Not in the sense that he ever thought of demons,
but then he had  never met one, or even thought  much about them. This
one seemed  more like a mad  war general. He couldn't  explain it, but
from the brief  time Phos had exposed himself to  Goren, Goren felt as
though he  knew Phos; at  least, a little  bit. Goren knew  that Phos'
entry to this world couldn't be allowed. It could cause more harm than
this whole  war. He  only wished he  had been able  to talk  with Lord
Equiville about  dealing with the matter,  but the High Mage  had been
unavailable for the one afternoon Goren had spent in Magnus.
     Then,  of course,  there was  Rho.  She wasn't  nagging him.  She
wasn't preaching  Stevenic platitudes  to him.  She wasn't  giving him
orders or telling  him things that made no sense.  The only thing that
bothered Goren  was that she simply  wasn't there, and he  didn't like
that. He liked  her not being there.  He didn't like the  fact that it
bothered him. He'd have to talk with Marcus about that one.
     If his father were alive, Kald would  tell him to take her to the
hunting  cabin, light  a  fire,  pour some  wine.  He  smiled when  he
remembered the  first time he  had done that.  In his naive  youth, he
thought they  would just sit  by the fire  and drink wine.  Maybe talk
about hunting, which fascinated him  and therefore must be fascinating
to everyone! He smiled again, and pulled himself out of those thoughts
as one of his men rode up from ahead.
     "Lord Keeper!"
     "What is it, Wilkes?"
     "I estimate we're about two bell's from Gateway, my lord."
     The guard looked nervous. Their  position relative to Gateway was
obvious.  Goren  had  travelled  the  road  many  times  in  the  last
twenty-four years of his life. Goren lifted the iron cap from his head
to wipe back  the brown hair falling  in his eyes. "Yes,  I'd say that
was about right. Is there a problem?"
     "Well,  sir, to  be  honest..."  The guard  looked  around for  a
moment, not wanting to be the bearer of bad news.
     "Wilkes,   when  communication   breaks  down,   problems  become
catastrophes. Catastrophes cause irreversible damage. Great men become
great by avoiding the collapse of communication."
     "Your uncle always told us that, Lord Keeper."
     "Good, then what's the problem?"
     "I think the war has made its way to Gateway, my lord."
     Goren halted his steed. "Excuse me?"
     "The  war, my  lord.  When we  get over  this  ridge," the  guard
pointed to the hill he had just  come over, "you'll see Gateway in the
distance.  Looks like  some  troops  have dug  in  outside her  walls,
probably Beinison  since they're not  being let  in, but I  could have
sworn  I saw  Baranur's  colors.  The Winston  flag  still flies  from
Gateway, though, my lord."
     "You didn't see Beinison colors?"
     "No, my lord, but there's a hill not two leagues past the joining
of the Laraka and the Vodyanoi."
     "I know it well, Wilkes, it's on the west road to Port Sevlyn."
     "There's one more thing, Lord Winston."
     Goren sighed. "Yes?"
     "My lord, if you'll look at the sky behind you..."
     Goren turned and looked up.  The slightly cloudy sky was darkened
by rising dust some distance behind.  But for the trees, they might be
able to see the  cause from the hill top. Goren  sighed. He guessed he
had fifty leagues or less on the forces behind him.
     There were forces stationed outside Gateway, which probably meant
Gateway was full.  Two regiments normally made  up Gateway's garrison;
another five  could be squeezed  if the surrounding  population didn't
expect  protection.  Figure on  six  regiments  inside her  walls.  If
Gateway was being  fortified by the King's men, then  Port Sevlyn must
be in danger of falling. That didn't make sense - Beinison is south of
Baranur, and Gateway Keep is  north of Magnus, Baranur's capital city.
The battalions at Gateway must be on their way east, to the Duchies of
Pyridain and Westbrook.
     One  thing was  certain, he  didn't have  time to  sit there  and
wonder about it. "Let's ride for Gateway, full gallop."

              *              *              *

     "Captain  Clay,"  Ne'on's  voice  called  out.  "I  require  your
assistance."
     Clay  turned from  his  conversation with  Marcus Ridgewater  and
opened  the door  to Ne'on's  sanctuary. He  didn't usually  engage in
conversation with Gateway's castellan, but he and Ridgewater had found
a common point of interest  in Lord Morion's troops. Stationed outside
Gateway's  walls, Morion's  men didn't  have a  chance of  holding out
against the  Beinison forces on  their way. And, without  Morion's aid
inside  the keep,  the two  thousand  under Ne'on's  command would  be
devastated as well.
     Before  entering the  Lord  Keeper's  quarters, Bartholomew  Clay
turned to  the Castellan: "Marcus, it  is Ne'on's order that  we stand
down. And, it  is to his Black  Hand that you will have  to answer for
any action against him."
     The captain  closed the door  to Ne'on's sanctuary,  shutting the
confused  castellan out,  and himself  in. Ne'on  was standing  by his
table  of vials,  powders,  and  live animals.  The  wizard likes  his
components fresh, Clay thought. He advanced to where Ne'on was staring
at a bottle of crystal-blue liquid. "What is it, Lord Keeper?"
     Ne'on turned to Clay and frowned. "Your ignorance baffles me," he
said. "Haven't you, in all your years of sword play, ever required the
assistance of  a magical potion? To  cure wounds, ease the  pain, that
sort of thing."
     "Yes. But, they  were an opaque blue,  maybe blue-green depending
on who sold them. Not clear like that one."
     Ne'on slammed  the bottle onto  the table, nearly  shattering it.
"That!" he exclaimed, his eyes  burning with intense excitement. "That
is  the presence  of  the  Stone! Come..."  Ne'on  nearly  ran to  the
inscription  of  the mystic  circle  on  the  floor. "We're  about  to
complete our business in Gateway. This time tomorrow," Ne'on stared up
into oblivion, "the stars will be within my grasp."
     Clay took a good, long look at  the man who was employing him. He
had done  this the first time  he had met Ne'on,  just outside Magnus'
infamous fifth quarter. Then, he had seen only a second son of a minor
noble -  a son  who wanted  his brother  out of  the way  for monetary
reasons. He had been  used to dealing with men like  that - there were
many second  sons in  Baranur's seventeen duchies.  A few  had already
employed Clay to make them the first son.
     Now, however, Clay saw something  different: either a man of some
magical skill  who was not fully  in touch with reality;  or something
undescribable,  filled with  potential  but frustrated  by the  limits
of... He  didn't know. If Ne'on  was the first, life  in Gateway would
soon  cease to  be a  comfortable  thing for  Clay. If  Ne'on was  the
second, then  someone had better  make sure whatever was  limiting him
continued to do so. Either way,  Clay thought, it's almost time I left
Gateway to its own fate.
     The Captain's thoughts were  interrupted by Ne'on's words. "Clay,
bring my black-handled  dagger, the red incense, and  the Lederian red
wine.  They're over  by the  window. You  know what  to do  with them.
Afterwards, clear the table with the  animals and bring it to the edge
of the circle. I'll need it to support the Stone."
     As  Ne'on  sat   cross-legged  in  the  center   of  the  circle,
concentrating his will  in preparation of the  spell, Bartholomew went
to the window to gather Ne'on's items. From there, he could see out to
the main  towers of the  bailey, and  the catapults which  were moving
into attack positions. Gateway was slowly, and quietly, standing to.
     Bartholomew Clay smiled as he pondered the situation, and brought
the items Ne'on had requested within the circle. Marcus knew the Black
Hand would move  against him when his actions  were realized. However,
the present force of the Hand numbered only twenty, give or take a few
of the  youths. The regular  guard, on  the other hand,  numbered over
2000, and were all but fanatical followers of the castellan.
     Clay  slowly and  meticulously  placed the  dagger  on the  alter
within Ne'on's circle.  He then replaced the ashes in  the burner with
the incense Ne'on desired, and filled the ceremonial goblet with wine.
He took his time, more than was necessary, making sure the salt on the
altar was  plentiful, and the candles  weren't so low they  would burn
out in less than a bell. He even checked to make sure the altar itself
was facing East,  even though it hadn't been moved  since Ne'on placed
it  there over  a year  before.  When Clay  heard the  sound of  boots
running down the hallway outside, he knew his patience had paid off.
     Captain Clay opened  the door before Mak, one of  the Black Hand,
could  knock: disturbing  Ne'on prior  to his  spell casting  could be
dangerous. "Outside, and  quietly," the captain said  to his sergeant.
Once outside  the room, Clay  shut the  door carefully. "Now,  what is
it?"
     "Captain, it's the castellan," Mak answered.
     "Is something  wrong with  him?" Clay  feigned ignorance.  He was
certain  Ridgewater would  take steps  to insure  Gateway's protection
from the Black Hand and he had no wish to be involved.
     "No,  sir. He's  ordered the  catapults into  position. In  a few
menes, Gateway will be involved in that mess outside!"
     "Hmmnn...  gather the  Hand  and commandeer  the catapults.  When
that's done, take a few men and  arrest the castellan. By order of the
Lord Keeper."
     "What are you going to do?"
     "Ne'on's ordered me  to stay here and assist him,  I've got to do
just that. Now go, and hurry up. You don't have much time."
     As  Mak turned  and  ran down  the  hall, Bartholomew  re-entered
Ne'on's sanctuary. He  was sending those men to their  deaths. He knew
it, and he didn't care. They were mostly low-life scum, to him, and if
Ridgewater didn't  get the  reaction he was  expecting from  the Black
Hand  he'd know  something was  up. Besides,  their deaths  would give
Marcus the impression that Clay was as  good as dead. As soon as Ne'on
began his second spell - one which  Clay had been told would take some
bells - the former captain  of the soon-to-be-extinct Black Hand would
be working his way out of Gateway. To where, he didn't know.

              Gemstone Expedition, lost track of the
         day, Lieutenant Howen reporting.  If all
         things come in threes, then only my death
         remains.  Funny how you get philosophical
         when situations are desperate.  The first
         tragedy occurred with the Beinison force's
         advance scouts.  We were taken by surprise
         four times by relatively small groups; they
         were, however, better trained, armored, and
         fed than our more sizeable force.  The fifth,
         and last attack took place more than two
         bells ago - this time we were ready,
         foregoing movement in order to fortify our
         position.  The entire attacking group - only
         a squad of light infantry - were killed, with
         heavy losses inflicted on our side.  We now
         number only four.  We lost Hanlar in that
         last skirmish; a man without whom I would
         have failed this mission, or at least already
         been dead.  Hoping to avoid further contact,
         I've ordered the men moving again - straight
         for Gateway.
              The forest and hills are excellent for
         hiding.  Often, this works against the people
         doing the hiding.  When we emerged form our
         cover, only leagues from our destination, we
         were greeted with a horrendous sight: Gateway
         under siege.  This was the second tragedy.
         There seems to be a force of about three
         Baranurian regiments outside her walls.  They
         are defending themselves valiantly against
         the light infantry of Beinison, but the heavy
         infantry have just begun to close.  Shortly,
         the massacre will begin, and our deaths will
         follow.  That will be-

     "Lieutenant Howen," a voice called,  and the Lieutenant looked up
from his log to  see a virtual ghost. Not more than  six feet from the
leader of  this expedition  stood the wispery  form of  Ne'on Winston,
Lord Keeper of Gateway.
     "My  lord?"  Howen  answered.  He could  not  believe  his  eyes.
Certainly, between the  bloodshed he had witnessed,  the starvation he
was suffering from,  and his lack of  sleep he must have  gone mad. It
was the only answer he could imagine.
     "Do not be afraid, Lieutenant, I offer salvation." With a wave of
his hand,  Ne'on formed a shimmering  circle in front of  Howen. "Call
your men, carry the stone through the circle - you soon will be within
the safe walls of Gateway. Hurry now, this area is not safe."
     The image faded before Howen could reply. "Men," he called, "pick
up the cursed stone and follow me."
     The three  remaining members  of the Black  Arm hefted  the stone
with the poles they had been using to carry it. They were weak, tired,
and  hungry, but  blood pumped  excitedly through  their veins  at the
sight of salvation. The lieutenant  ordered his men through the circle
first, not concerned with his life  now that escape was so close. When
the stone  entered the circle,  however, only it  disappeared, leaving
Howen and his three men behind. The lieutenant began to cry.

     As a large, purple stone appeared from out of nothing and floated
toward the table, Clay stared at his lord. "You deserted them."
     "Of course  I did,  Clay -  I never intended  for them  to live."
Ne'on looked reproachingly at the  captain. "Is something wrong, Clay?
Haven't you ever left a man to die before?"
     "I kept my word, Ne'on. I may be a mercenary-"
     "Assassin, more accurately."
     "As you wish. But if I make a promise, I keep it."
     "Your right,  Clay," Ne'on mocked. "It  was terrible of me  to go
back on my word. I regret it, truly. Satisfied?"
     Clay spat on the floor. "You have no dignity, Ne'on." Clay turned
to leave.
     "Leave now, Clay, and you won't be coming back."
     "That is how I intended it."
     "Well, then, good bye."
     A sphere of  complete blackness formed around  Ne'on's head, then
launched itself in Clay's direction. Bartholomew jumped quickly to the
right, swinging  his sword at  the dark  sphere. The ball  of darkness
flew  past, striking  the  door  to the  corridor  and enveloping  it.
Instantly, the  door burst in flames  and was reduced to  cinders. The
black ball was gone.  Clay leapt to his feet and  dove head first into
the hallway. As  he ran from the room, he  could hear Ne'on's laughter
following him.

              *              *              *

     Goren  and the  three guards  of House  Winston were  riding full
gallop, as much to make haste to Gateway as to lose the advance scouts
following close  behind. Goren hoped  that close proximity  to Gateway
would deter the Beinison squad, but when they got to within quarter of
a  league from  the keep,  the scouts  were still  at their  backs. He
thanked Nehru the pursuers didn't have  bows to shoot him in the back,
and cursed his lack of foresight for not having brought any himself.
     A loud  horn rang out from  Gateway's parapets at about  the same
time  ballistas  began firing  their  heavy  load into  the  Vodyanoi.
Looking ahead, Goren noticed the gates  of Gateway were opening, and a
barrel-chested  man  in scale  armor  was  waving  to Goren  from  the
parapets. "There's home,  men! Run 'em dead if you  have to, but we're
almost there!"  As Goren and  the guards  made their way  into Gateway
Keep, five  of Marcus' archers  convinced the Benosian scouts  to head
back to camp.

     "Goren, you  blasted fool!"  Marcus yelled as  he worked  his way
down the  stairs to the  courtyard. "What  in Muskadon's name  are you
doing? Damn good  to see you, but  where's your escort? I  told you to
come back with a regiment of men  and the King's seal, and demand your
rightful place. Burn my ashes in  Rise'er's feast, boy, you're lucky I
opened those gates... Ne'on himself ordered them shut and the garrison
to stand down. If I-"
     "Marcus!"  Goren's  voice  finally   made  its  way  through  the
castellan's barrage of  dialogue. He looked at  the castellan, smiled,
and grabbed  him by the  shoulders. "It's good  to see you,  too. Now,
where's the rest  of the force? With all those  men outside, I counted
on at  least three more  regiments in  Gateway... did you  deploy them
before I got in?"
     Marcus'   expression   turned   dark.  "Your   blasted   brother,
self-proclaimed Keeper  of Gateway -  you took care of  that business,
now, didn't you?" When Goren  nodded, Marcus continued. "Ne'on ordered
the garrison to  stand down, and not to allow  access to Gateway. Just
recently, I countermanded that order.  The catapults and ballistas are
firing on  the Beinison army  now, but I'm not  sure how long  it will
take Morion to move his troops in  - and the Benosian's will be making
for the entrance as fast as he will."
     Goren grasped the  parchment from inside his cloak  and handed it
to the Castellan. "This is the  King's hand, and his decision to place
me as Keeper of Gateway. Take as many horse as you can - leave one for
me  -  and gather  archers  by  the gate.  I'll  return  in menes,  Ol
willing."
     As Goren  turned towards his  father's mansion, Marcus  yelled to
him, "Watch your brother, boy... he's not to be trusted."

     Bartholomew  Clay never  thought  he'd see  Goren Winston  again;
certainly not in  the fine-clothed garb of a  nobleman. Goren Winston,
however, seemed to be looking forward to their present situation. Clay
was running down  the corridor from the direction of  what appeared to
be Kald's  old quarters. Goren,  albeit tired from running  the horses
near to death,  was armed, armored, and feeling healthier  than he had
in months.
     "Clay," Goren called. He couldn't  remember the rest of the man's
name, or his title,  or very much at all about  the man. His familiar,
long blonde hair,  and his left-handed sword  - what was left  of it -
were all Goren needed to jostle his memory.
     Bartholomew stopped,  surprised at Goren's appearance,  and noted
the sword by his side and the  armor on his person. The captain of the
former  Black  Hand,  Ne'on's  personal  guard,  and  the  Black  Arm,
Gateway's now-defunct elite  militia, held his sword in  front of him,
anticipating an attack. Looking down the length of his blade, however,
he noted the farthest half was  missing. Had Ne'on's black sphere done
that?
     "You have me  at an advantage, Winston. My blade  seems to be..."
He chuckled, "incomplete."
     Goren drew his  own blade, strong and trustworthy,  and stared at
the man.  He was  terrible with  a blade, and  knew Clay  could easily
defeat him,  normally. Goren  rationalized that  this made  them even.
"You had the  advantage, a year ago,  when I was drunk  in Magnus. And
again, while I lay  in shock in the dungeon, did you  tell your men to
stop  kicking me?  Did  the  bludgeoning I  received  inspire pity  or
remorse on  your part? You  have a sword, broken  though it is,  and a
dirk at your side. Use them."
     As Goren  advanced, swinging clumsily  at Clay, the  captain back
peddled down the corridor. He recognized  the lack of skill in Goren's
footwork, the complete non-mastery of blade control. In some respects,
he thought,  this made  Winston more dangerous  than someone  who knew
what he was doing. Bartholomew thought he might die, this day.
     "I have an offer for you, Winston. My life for yours."
     Goren almost laughed.  Clay was obviously not in  the position to
bargain, but he seemed ernest. He wondered. "How do you mean?"
     "In Ne'on's  sanctuary, he's  preparing a spell.  Something about
bringing  Phos into  the world.  He sent  eighty men  to their  deaths
already, getting  some damn spell component.  My guess is, as  soon as
Phos gets here, we're all dead. I can't stop him, but maybe you can."
     "How would I stop Phos? He's..."
     "Not Phos. Ne'on. Of course, you'll have to kill him."
     That thought  struck Goren  hard. He'd thought  he might  have to
force his brother to rescind the seat.  Maybe push the man who used to
be his  little brother around a  bit, scare him into  complying. Death
had been there,  in the back of  his mind, but he  had foolishly hoped
banishment would  solve the problem.  But that simply would  have been
hoping for someone else to take responsibility.
     Clay  continued. "Not  just  any death,  either.  You can't  take
chances. You'll have to chop his head off his shoulders. Let his blood
pour out on the floor until his  lifeless body falls in a heap. That's
the only way you can be sure. Phos has to be stopped, and your brother
is in the way."
     "I can talk to him. Ne'on will listen to me."
     "Maybe once,  but not  now. The spell's  already started.  If you
don't get in there soon, it may be too late. As it is, you can't waste
time fighting with me. My life for yours."
     "If you're  still in Gateway  when I get  out of that  room, I'll
have you killed."
     Clay smiled. "I wouldn't have it any other way."

     When  Goren  entered what  used  to  be  his father's  study,  he
stopped. The  trophies along the wall  had been torn down  in place of
shelves littered  with potion bottles  and books. Where an  ornate rug
used to  be, a red pentagram  had been inscribed within  a circle, the
rug  rolled up  in one  corner. And,  over the  flames burning  in the
fireplace was a cast iron kettle of no small size.
     Ne'on  was   there,  too,  sitting  in   the  circled  pentagram,
concentrating  on something  -  the  stone glowing  in  front of  him,
perhaps. Candles were  lit about the circle, and a  small altar burned
incense and coal in the center of it all.
     As Goren stepped  forward with sword in hand, a  voice filled his
head with  doubt. "Can I  kill my brother?" it  asked. "How do  I know
what he intends  to do? Clay told  me? Who is Bartholomew  Clay that I
should  trust  him? He  was  probably  lying  to  save his  own  life,
worthless and puny that it is. And Ne'on is my brother."
     He answered  that voice. "What  else is there? Phos  has revealed
himself to me. Phos has already told  me of his plans to gain entry to
this world, and to destroy anything  and everything he can. Ne'on was,
as near as  I could tell, in  Phos' total control the last  time I saw
him."
     The  last time  I saw  him was  seven months  ago. Phos  might be
nothing.
     He killed my father. He tortured me in prison.
     I switched  the cups. The guards  tortured me in prison,  as they
probably do  every prisoner sentenced  to life. He's your  brother, by
J'mirg, you can't kill a man when he's not looking!
     Goren suddenly started toward the  circle again. "I don't worship
dark J'mirg, Phos - get out of my head!"
     A reddish form appeared over the  glowing stone in the circle. It
seemed more human than the last time Goren had seen it, but the flames
were still  evident in its eyes,  and fire seemed to  drip like saliva
from its over-sized  jowls. It was Phos, as he  intended to enter this
world.

              "Greetings, Kald's eldest son;
                 You've come too late, I've won.
               This life new shall I make;
                 This worthless world I'll take.
               Immortality 'waits,
                 With death's and blood's complaint.
               J'mirg's son shall entrance gain,
                 Peaceful Lordsrealm's plane."

     Goren  continued toward  the  circle, but  something  - Phos,  he
guessed, or  the magic  Ne'on was  using to summon  him -  stopped his
entrance. The  circle protected Ne'on  from harm while  Ne'on summoned
the world's damnation. Kind of ironic, Goren thought.

              "Entrance this circle ye,
                Been forbade while armed thee.
               Ghastly goals no easy task,
                With th'hands must lift death's mask.
               Given you choice has he,
                Ne'on dies, but not me.
               Releas'd am I, his head gone,
                With his head, I'm undone."

     Goren looked  at Phos. The  demon - so  Goren called him,  for he
knew no better -  had lied to him before. But it  was rhyming. Why did
that  stir something  in his  memory?  Rhymes were  sometimes used  in
spells. Was Phos taking the time to cast a spell, while Ne'on summoned
him  here? If  so,  and  he understood  Phos'  words correctly,  Goren
couldn't enter  the circle  armed. And  if he  didn't stop  Ne'on, the
bloodshed outside would propel Phos into Lordsrealm.
     So, Gateway  would be safe  anyway. He  could just sit  there and
wait  for Ne'on  to finish  the spell.  Ne'on didn't  have to  die. He
didn't have to  take Ne'on's throat in his hands  and squeeze the life
out  of  him. But,  what  would  happen  in Lordsrealm?  According  to
religion, Lordsrealm  was where  all the  gods -  at least,  from that
religion - resided. So, if Goren  sat back, and watched the spell come
to completion, Phos would eventually disappear into his reward.
     Reward for  murder. Reward for  deaths which, if Goren  could, he
would prevent.  And how many  deaths were needed? Would  the thousands
massed at Gateway  be enough? How about just the  Royal Duchy? Even if
it numbered  only tens,  or one, it  would be too  much. It  was evil.
Ne'on, Goren had to admit, as much  as he loved what Ne'on used to be,
was evil.  He played in  this willingly.  Goren dropped his  sword and
entered the circle.

              "Thy step sounds in the fire,
                As sour notes from a lyre.
               With your hands must death make,
                And Ne'on's life thee take.
               Make no haste, time is still,
                Take pause, gather your will.
               The spell nears its bright end,
                Life is precious to defend."


     Goren looked  up at Phos,  whose form was beginning  to solidify.
The air within the circle grew heavy with heat and a smell like embers
from a cedar fire. He watched as Phos breathed his first breath of air
on Makdiar.  He looked at  his brother, helpless, still  entranced and
oblivious to the imposing death in both Phos' and Goren's presence. He
still could not kill - Ne'on was, after all, his brother. Someone with
whom he had grown, and learned.
     Goren grabbed  a small  pentagram and the  incense on  the table,
feeling the pain as  the incense burned in his hand.  "To any god that
will  listen, give  me  the strength  to send  Phos  back to  whatever
damnation he came from!"
     Goren made to grab the  Stone of Strength, completely ignorant of
its powers, but Phos was already complete. With a swipe of his massive
arm, Goren  was knocked  back three  feet to the  edge of  the circle,
colliding with the same force that had  kept him out of the circle the
first time. Blood trickled down from  his nose, but for the most part,
he was only dazed.
     Phos stepped toward him, grabbed him by his armor, and lifted him
to face level. "You could have  run, little human. I would have spared
your life  - one  Winston was  enough for  my plans.  If you  had left
Gateway, you  could have lived a  full, long life. But  trapped within
this circle, you are mine to devour, piece by piece. Body and soul."
     "Think  again, Phos,"  Goren replied,  "I don't  know much  about
magic, but if I can't physically leave this circle, neither can you."
     "Don't  be obtuse,"  Phos smiled.  Reaching  his arm  out to  the
circle's perimeter, "Of course I ca-" His arm was stopped by the force
of the magic circle. "The little gnat."
     Dropping Goren to the ground, Phos stepped over to Ne'on, who was
still half in a trance. Phos grabbed Ne'on by the neck, lifting him up
to face Phos,  and breaking Ne'on's concentration.  "Little gnat, what
are you doing?  Release this spell, or I shall  painfully remove vital
organs from your body."
     Ne'on half smiled,  though the pain he was  already suffering was
evident. Phos' grip on  his neck was not gentle. "Heh  - first spell I
ever cast without you, Phos. Tied  this circle into your being. Didn't
think I  could do it,  but you're stuck here,  just like me.  Till you
die. Ow! Heh...  Hello, brother. Nice to see you  again. Sorry you got
stuck her- ulg."
     Phos stuck his finger down Ne'on's throat and grabbed his tongue.
Ne'on  screamed and  flailed, teears  running  down his  face. With  a
sickening, wet,  ripping sound,  Phos removed  the greater  portion of
Ne'on's tongue and dropped it  on the floor. Ne'on's breathing gurgled
as  the blood  welled up  in  this mouth.  "Did that  hurt? No,  don't
answer. I can see that it did."
     Goren grabbed the stone from Ne'on's altar: the Stone of Strength
which had been abducted by Ne'on from the Nar-Enthruen. The Stone into
which, in a desperate attempt to ward off the Black Arm, the remaining
magi had  poured their powers. The  Stone which, as the  Black Arm had
transported  it  to Gateway,  slowly  sapped  the  life force  of  the
surviving  members of  that  expedition.  And the  Stone  which, as  a
component of  Ne'on's last spell,  had been actively  conducting magic
like heat through metal. Goren grabbed  the stone and, lifting it with
all his might, brought it forcibly up against Phos' head.
     The stone impacted with him  and Phos writhed in agony, screaming
as his life  was sucked into the Stone. He  resisted the Stone's pull,
desperately grabbing at the floor, the  altar... to no avail. His life
dimished even faster. As Phos' power decreased, the Stone's increased.
The pulsing  rock began  to heave  with powers it  was never  meant to
contain. A crack formed around its base where Phos' head had met it in
a downward stroke, and a brilliant  light began emanating from it. The
air was pierced  by a shattering sound, purple light  filled the room,
and  fragments of  stone exploded  into the  confines of  the mystical
circle.
     When  Goren regained  his sight,  and his  sense of  feeling, the
trickling wetness in  his left thigh caught his attention.  A shard of
the  Stone had  plunged  deep  into his  leg,  searing  his skin  upon
entrance. His leg was nearly useless. As he felt about the rest of his
body, noting only minor cuts through  his armor, he heard Ne'on's weak
groan.
     Ne'on lay in a pool of blood. Not having worn any armor, his body
was  pierced numerous  times by  stone fragments,  the worst  of which
being a long, thin  shard in his right eye. The  blood oozing from his
wounds was  slow, partially cauterized  by the hot stone,  and Ne'on's
death was a painful, slow one.  He reached out toward Goren, trying to
touch his  brother's arm, but his  hand fell short and  dropped to the
ground.
     Goren wasn't sure if Ne'on even saw his brother, or if it was the
memory of Goren's  position which had caused him to  reach. He watched
while Ne'on's  blood coagulated, the  body trying desperately  to heal
itself even after  the life had gone from it.  Goren might have closed
his eyes,  if he could think  about it, but the  image was commanding,
not letting him look away until the blood had stopped.
     A footstep,  some hands grabbing him  and pulling him out  of the
room. Someone  was talking  to him,  but he  couldn't hear  the words.
"Ne'on's taken care of," was all he could say.

     It was several menes before he was aware of his new surroundings.
Marcus had brought  him into the hall, and was  feeding him mutton and
wine, trying  to get Goren to  feed himself. The hall  was filled with
officers from Gateway's  garrison, and from what was  left of Morion's
troops.  Morion  himself  was  sitting two  chairs  down  from  Goren,
concern, exhaustion, and regret etched in his face.
     Goren started when he saw everyone staring at him. He didn't know
what to  say, but when Marcus  offered him more food,  he declined. "I
don't think I  want to eat, right  now, thank you Marcus.  I feel very
strange. I watched my brother die. I did the right thing, and he still
died. I don't know what to do."
     "Well, Lord  Keeper," Morion started  in before Marcus  could say
anything, "if  it's not too  much trouble,  you could start  by taking
command of this keep. There's work to be done, strategies to be worked
on. I don't  know what kind of  ordeal you went through  in there, but
the situation has only slightly improved out here. There's twenty-four
Beinison regiments outside  trying to get into Gateway,  and only just
over  three of  ours holding  them there.  The siege  engines will  be
arriving in  a day or two,  and if we don't  get reinforcements, we're
all going to be dead no matter how many right things we do."
     Goren looked  blankly at  Morion. "I don't  know that  much about
strategy. I didn't realize Gateway was under siege, when I started out
from Magnus.  The King himself, to  the best of my  knowledge, doesn't
even know the problem. I spoke with him six days ago."
     Morion swore.  "Well, we sent  out messengers last week,  and the
week before that. Most recently, we sent one out two days ago, telling
Haralan -  the King,  excuse me  - where we  stood, which  was outside
Gateway, looking like easy killing."
     Goren looked to Marcus. "You sent the archers out to help them?"
     Marcus nodded.  "Aye, boy. Lord  Keeper. Sorry, but to  me you'll
always be the  son of my best friend." He  paused, cursing himself for
having brought  up Kald's death at  a time like this.  "Anyway, I knew
the squirmin' Benosians were pressing Morion hard in his retreat - and
I must say, your lordship, your troops are in need of training if they
ever  want to  try a  retreat, again  - so  I commanded  the companies
myself. We had  a full two hundred archers on  horseback, riding about
one hundred  feet in front  of Morion,  and we showered  the Beinisons
enough to  slow them  down while  Morion made  his way  in. I  hope to
bloody Saren some two or three companies went down in the hail we sent
them."
     "I  doubt it  was  that  much, but  it  was greatly  appreciated,
Castellan." Morion said. "I lost some fine troops of my own, trying to
organize that mess when the gates opened."
     "So, here we are," Goren finished.  "Bottled up in Gateway and no
help in sight."
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--   DargonZine Volume 7, Issue 2        08/04/94          Cir 1127   --
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--                            Contents                                --
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 Laraka III (Part 2)          John Doucette          Yule 19-22, 1014
 The Evening After            Bill Erdley            Yule 21, 1014
 Love an Adventure I          Orny Liscomb           Yuli 2, 1016
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1                  Campaign for the Laraka III
               Decision at Gateway Keep - Part 2
                      by John Doucette

Gateway Keep, Royal Duchy, Baranur
19 Yule, 1014 B.Y.

     Goren  stared,  for  the  fifth   time  that  afternoon,  at  the
blood-stained floor  where his  brother had lain.  Tiny shards  of the
Crystal still gathered in the corners  of the room, and the left overs
from Ne'on's magical  mixtures, books, and components  remained in the
shelves. He hadn't taken the time  to clean out the room, and couldn't
spare  the manpower  on  domestic cleaning  -  with Beinison  warriors
surrounding the keep, Gateway had needs more pressing than aesthetics.
     "Lord Keeper," spoke the man at the door. Goren turned to look at
him. Lord Morion had traveled hundreds  of miles with thousands of men
to defend  the Laraka's basin, only  to be overwhelmed by  the size of
the attacking force. No one had planned on a military front forming on
the western coast  of Baranur. The driving force had  initiated in the
north  east,  and the  south;  Baranur  had  been unprepared  for  the
campaign  Beinison had  designed  on the  Laraka.  Thus, Beinison  now
occupied  the Laraka  from its  basin  at Shark's  Cove, through  Port
Sevlyn, up to about a quarter of a league west of Gateway.
     "Lord Keeper,"  Morion repeated. There  was a look of  urgency on
his  face, one  which  Goren could  not understand,  in  light of  the
situation:  Beinison was  not going  to be  entering Gateway  any time
soon,  even if  Gateway was  cut  off from  the rest  of Baranur,  and
Gateway was not in any condition to launch an attack of its own.
     "What is it, Lord Morion?" Goren  answered. "Do the men need more
food? Water?  We've got enough to  last a few weeks...  maybe less. By
that  time, perhaps,  Baranur  will  be taken  and  we'll be  pledging
ourselves to a new liege."
     The Lord  of Pentamorlo  flinched, barely  keeping his  hand from
flying out  on its own to  strike the boy  who stood in front  of him.
Fealty to a new liege indeed, he mused. "Lord Keeper, I lost well over
a thousand men,  two days ago. And there are  over twenty regiments --
that's twenty thousand men! --  sitting outside our walls. Perhaps you
don't think so,  my lord," he continued, "but there  are more pressing
worries than  food and  water, just  this moment. Ten  of them,  to be
specific." Goren  looked quizzically  at Morion. "Their  siege engines
have arrived."

     Five menes  later, standing  on the parapets  of the  inner keep,
Goren could  see the boats docked  half a league down  the river, just
beyond  the tents  of  the Beinison  officers.  Large contraptions  of
steel, wood,  and rope were being  hauled off the ships,  and the area
was being scouted by the enemy for the best positioning of the engines
of war.
     "They'll move  a few onto  the hill," Goren said,  indicating the
hill over which the enemy had emerged yesterday morning.
     "Yes. And there, by the road,"  replied Morion. There was a small
knoll just south of Gateway's main  gate. "They'll stay far enough out
of reach of  our archers, but those catapults have  a good range. Look
at  the  sun reflecting  off  the  buckets," Morion  pointed.  "Steel.
They're equipped to launch fire."
     "Captain of the guard!" Goren yelled. Within moments, the captain
was standing in front of him. "Make ready with the bucket. If Beinison
dumps  fire on  us, I  want to  be ready  to quench  it as  quickly as
possible." When the captain left, he added, "Not that Gateway couldn't
use a good purge."
     "My Lord Keeper,"  Morion stepped forward and  spoke intently. "I
understand that as a nobleman you  deserve the respect and honor given
to you  by the  King's own hand,  but so help  me, if  your depressing
attitude costs  me one man -  one man! -  I'll throw you right  to the
enemy and let them deal with you as they please."
     "Goren!"
     Approaching them from a short distance was a middle-aged man with
well-worn armor. The  armor was simple, but  effective, and interfered
neither  with  his movement  nor  his  vision.  The  armor of  a  foot
soldier... or an archer who expected to enter combat. In this case, it
was Castellan Ridgewater.
     "My  lord, the  scribe needs  an official  recount of  the King's
decision to place you as Lord Keeper.  I thought you might like a meal
as well, and instructed her to meet you -"
     "Her?" Goren interrupted.
     "Aye,  boy.  Your brother...  insisted  the  previous scribe  was
incapable  of service.  The new  one, Lara...  well, she  dresses like
something other than a scribe, but I suppose she does her job." Almost
as an afterthought, he added, "Whatever  that may be. She's waiting in
your father's  hall." The look on  Marcus' face lead Goren  to believe
the  man was  entering battle:  hard, determined,  and gauging.  Goren
guessed the war affected everyone differently.
     "I'll eat in the hall, then, Marcus."
     "Lord Winston, if  I may suggest something militarily  - " Morion
interjected before Goren left.
     "What is it, my lord?"
     "The catapults which  the enemy is assembling. Can  we reach them
from here?"
     "I don't know. Marcus?"
     Marcus looked  at where the  engines were being moved.  "I'll see
about it. Perhaps we can scare them away from those points."
     "See to it,  then," Goren added and walked down  the steps toward
his father's home.
     When Goren was out of earshot, Marcus lowered his gaze and stared
Morion  in the  face.  "I wouldn't  make trouble  with  the boy,  Lord
Morion. He's well-liked  in these parts, and the  people here wouldn't
take  too kindly  to  his being  pushed. Do  you  understand what  I'm
saying?"
     Morion's  jaw  set,  and  his  eyes  burned  intently.  "Are  you
threatening  me,  Castellan?  I  have several  hundred  men  occupying
Gateway Keep. If I weren't putting up with lousy decorum, I'd take the
blasted place myself and lock you up!"
     Castellan Ridgewater didn't blink a  lash. "Morion, the boy's got
a lot on his mind. Don't be  bothering him. You may have men here, but
I've got a full regiment. And we  know how to bother back. Now, if you
have nothing else to say, I'll be gettin' about those catapults."
     "I have PLENTY left-"
     "I didn't think so." Marcus interrupted, and turned away.
     Morion stood staring  after him, the veins on his  brow coming to
life. "Haralan," he  whispered to the air, "by Nehru's  pointy nose, I
didn't want this damn job."

Gateway Keep, Royal Duchy, Baranur
20 Yule, 1014

     "Goren,"  Marcus looked  across the  table at  his lord.  The boy
still didn't eat more than enough  to keep him alive. Marcus' own best
effort at  distracting him, in  the form of  a scribe named  Lara, had
failed miserably. She didn't even know  how to write! And Goren became
less concerned with his surroundings every day. "The south-east wall,"
he continued. "There's a problem."
     "What  is  it?"  Morion  interjected.  Morion  did  not  normally
interrupt a question aimed at  someone else. However, in Goren's case,
he made the exception. Goren was not dedicated to the task at hand. He
was  not  concerned with  the  welfare  of  the troops  packed  within
Gateway's walls.  He did not  have the stomach  to order men  to their
deaths. Morion did not like Goren Winston, the Lord Keeper of Gateway.
He liked the castellan even less.
     Castellan Ridgewater looked  at Morion and smiled.  Not a genuine
smile,  but definitely  an  attempt  to be  civil.  "They're going  to
crumble," he  said. "Mid-day... Maybe  later. The catapults  have been
pummelling them for a full day, and they are weakening."
     "Blast," Morion muttered. One day of catapults, and the walls are
already  weakening? What  was this  keep made  of, wood?  "Well, then,
Castellan Ridgewater," Morion began with  his own attempt at civility.
"Let's  get some  fortifications built  up  within the  walls, in  the
south-eastern section of the keep. That way, when the enemy rushes the
breach, we'll be better defended."
     "Agreed."  The castellan  found  himself saying.  It  was an  odd
moment  for both  of  them.  They had  grown  accustomed  to being  on
opposite sides of arguments.
     Morion raised  his eyebrows  in surprise. "Excellent.  Then we'll
have to block off any access to  the inner keep from atop those walls,
as well as any-"
     "Now,  don't  go  givin'  me orders,  Morion."  Marcus'  ire  was
instantly fired. "Goren's  the one in charge, and I'll  take them from
him."
     "Listen,  Castellan," Morion  suddenly found  himself out  of the
surprising  agreement  with Marcus,  and  into  the familiar  heat  of
discussion. "I'm  certain Lord Winston  will agree with me  that these
precautions need to be taken-"
     "Oh, I'm  certain as well, Pentamorlo,"  Marcus interjected. "But
let's let him make the order. Advising him would better become you."
     "'Become  me?' If  these walls  were made  out of  something more
sturdy than aelo hide-"
     "Did you build these walls? No-"
     "My  Lords!" Goren  yelled. His  headache had  not been  eased by
their argument.  In fact,  Goren thought, his  headaches for  the past
three days were  primarily due to the  two of them being  in too close
quarters with each other. The lord  of Pentamorlo and the castellan of
Gateway stopped, surprised, and looked at Goren.
     "My  lords," he  continued, "make  the plans  for the  defense of
Gateway.  Morion,  see  to  the construction  of  the  fortifications.
Marcus, make sure the keep is secure from the expected breach. Most of
all, I want the two of you to STAY AWAY FROM EACH OTHER."
     Goren got up, looked at the  men, and glanced towards the door to
the hall. "I'm hungry. I've got a  lot to deal with, right now. We all
do. But  if I have to  listen to the two  of you argue one  more time,
I'll tie you together and throw  you to the enemy. If you're bickering
doesn't drive Beinison away from Gateway, nothing else will. Now, go!"
     As Goren sat  back down, Morion and Marcus stood.  They looked at
each other, then Goren, and headed towards the door.

     Captain Greerson waited for Marcus by  the door to the main hall.
While he had no qualms about entering the room and reporting to any of
the men within,  he did not want  to be the object  of anyone's anger.
Even Lord Winston, who had been reclusive since his return to Gateway,
could be  heard yelling  within the hall.  Those doors  were daunting,
indeed.
     The wooden  doors opened abruptly,  allowing Lord Morion  to exit
the hallway  quickly and without  pleasure. Morion headed  east toward
the inner keep walls. Outside, the low thud of siege engines, followed
by a heavy crashing sound, paid its toll on Gateway's walls.
     "You have  news for me,  Captain?" The castellan was  standing in
front of Greerson, now. He was in about as good a mood as Morion.
     "Only a lack  of it, Castellan." Greerson looked  away. "Your son
is still missing."
     "But he  wasn't with the  members of the  Hand when you  fired on
them?"
     "No, sir." Greerson replied. "None  of them escaped, and your son
was not among the dead."
     "Then he's  got to  be somewhere.  Check with  the other  boys he
trained with,  find out who  saw him last...  Maybe one of  them knows
where he might have gone, or what he's doing."
     "Right  away, sir."  Greerson turned  to go,  but was  stopped by
Marcus.
     "Wait  a mene,  Captain." Marcus  took a  good look  at the  man.
Greerson's eyes were  puffy and dark. His skin was  pale, and his face
was gaunt. "You haven't slept in a while, have you?"
     "No, sir. Not since the day before yesterday."
     "Right. I'll get someone else to  look about Thomas. You get some
sleep. When those walls come down,  it won't matter where Thomas is...
we'll need  every able man to  fight off that Beinison  horde. Now get
some rest."
     As the  captain of  the guard  made his way  to his  barrack, the
Castellan thought about  his son. Where could he be?  What could he be
doing? All the old barracks of  the Black Hand had been cleared out...
Ne'on's own  quarters had  been searched, and  the dungeons  under the
keep.  Most of  the boy's  belongings  were still  at the  Castellan's
residence, excepting  a suit of  chain and  a short sword.  But Thomas
trained with a broad sword, like his father...

     Lieutenant Lianna Fellthorne stood  atop the makeshift wall where
she and one-hundred  seventy troops under her command  waited. She was
not  used to  commanding  such a  large  force: Lieutenants  typically
command only one company at a  time. Her captain's dead body still lay
in the fields outside of Gateway, where  he had fallen in the rush for
safety. Six other lieutenants from her regiment lay there as well, not
lonely among the hundreds of bodies. No one had picked them up. No one
had buried them.  It wasn't likely that they would  be buried any time
soon. Certainly, their burial would not be a ceremonial one.
     One more  loud crash fell against  the wall she was  watching. It
began to creak and  bend. A good hundred feet from  the wall, she knew
she was safe, but she ordered her men away from the area. "Clear away,
there...  it's  going  soon."  At  various  points  of  the  defensive
semi-circle  within  the  wall's  boundaries,  other  lieutenants  and
captains  were issuing  similar orders.  The wall  would be  breached,
soon, and the hell would start.
     Suddenly, Lord Morion was beside her. "How are they, Lieutenant?"
     "Sir?" she asked.
     "Your troops. Are they stable?"
     "As can  be, sir. We're  about to  be invaded." Three  dull thuds
were heard in the distance. "Down, sir!"
     As they  ducked, three large  boulders crashed against  the wall.
Stones  shattered, metal  creaked,  and the  wall  wavered. When  they
lifted their heads, they saw the  sight for which both armies had been
waiting:  the wall  bent in,  bowed, and  crumbled amidst  a cloud  of
mortar, stone, and dust.
     More thuds. More crashes. Soon, the wall would be so much rubble.
     "Looks like  a storm is coming  our way, my lord."  Lianna had to
yell to be heard above the din.
     "Not yet," Morion replied. "Maybe not until the morrow."
     "Why do you say that, sir?"
     "They  haven't deployed  their forces,  yet, Lieutenant."  Morion
checked  the position  of the  sun over  the western  wall. "And  it's
nearing evening. They don't  want to fight us in the  dark, in our own
keep. They'll wait 'till morning, when they'll have plenty of light to
fight by."
     "Then  I'll order  my men  back under  cover," she  reasoned. "No
sense in letting stray boulders kill off anyone else."
     Morion  nodded  to  her  and  made for  another  section  of  the
defensive perimeter. "Not like they haven't taken enough toll already,
Lieutenant," he muttered to himself.

20 leagues South of Gateway Keep, Royal Duchy, Baranur
20 Yule, 1014 B.Y.

     "General  Verde," Luthias  Connall  approached  where his  junior
officer was  standing. Sarah Verde had  been up late into  the evening
for the last  five days, walking the perimeter and  spot- checking the
watches. She looked as tired as she felt. She's normally an attractive
woman, Luthias thought to himself. Now she looks ten years and several
wars older.
     The  newly-appointed  general turned  to  her  friend and  senior
officer. "Knight Captain," she greeted  him formally, "it's very late.
You should be resting."
     "The same can be said of you, General. This isn't the first night
you've been up this late."
     "Still early for  me, sir. Still used to night  watches and early
morning drills. Never left time for sleep, back in those days. But you
didn't have those days, did you?"
     Sarah  struck a  sore  spot  on Luthias,  and  was regretful  the
instant she saw the  look on his face. He still  didn't believe he was
deserving of the titles which had been bestowed upon him over the last
two years. He had risen very  quickly from a possible barony to higher
status than  he had ever dreamed:  Count, General of the  Cavalry, and
now Knight Captain of the Northern Marches. He had never even formally
served in the  Royal Militia, let alone  the Royal Army. But  he was a
knight,  and   knights  of  exceptional  quality   were  treated  with
exceptional praise. He  supposed he must have done  something right in
the last two years.
     "General," he began, but Sarah interrupted him immediately.
     "I'm  sorry, sir.  I  didn't  mean it  that  way.  Just that  you
wouldn't have those memories."
     "Forget it,  Sarah. What I  was going  to say was...  well, we're
going into a  major battle tomorrow. I  need you to get  all the sleep
you can. So far, we've managed  to encounter only two squads of scouts
from  the  enemy,  and  they  were  easily  defeated.  Beinison  knows
something's  up,  they  just  don't  know what.  If  they've  got  any
surprises for us, tomorrow, I need you awake and level headed."
     "I'll be awake, same time as usual, Knight Captain."
     "Don't  get all  formal on  me, Sarah.  The sun's  been down  for
almost three  bells. We're marching on  third watch to get  to Gateway
before noon. Get to your tent and get some sleep."
     "Luthias-"
     "Now, General. That's an order."
     As Sarah  almost sulked  back to  her tent,  a smaller  figure in
foreign armor came  silently up behind Luthias. Reaching  his hand out
slowly,  the  Bichanese native  tapped  Luthias  lightly on  his  left
shoulder.
     "What?" Luthias  jumped around,  pulling his  fist back  ready to
strike. "Oh, it's you, Michiya. How are things with Kirinagi?"
     "The  general wishes  to see  you return  to your  tent, Luthias-
sama. His men  are already prepared for the morning's  battle, and are
sleeping to gain strength. General  Kirinagi has much appreciation for
your skill as a warrior, but all men need rest some time."
     "So, now I'm taking orders from Bichanese generals, is it?"
     "And your friends, Luthias-sama."
     Luthias sighed and stared off into the night. Not a fire had been
lit, and a breakfast as cold as  the night's dinner awaited he and his
men. He thought briefly of Sable, and  how on a hot summer's night she
had burst into  his room, naginata in hand, ready  to defend his life.
He thought of the past quite frequently, these days. Roisart and their
father...  Clifton's father,  the old  Duke of  Dargon... He  silently
prayed to the Stevene that the war would end soon.
     Sighing one last  time, he put his arm around  Michiya and headed
toward his  tent. "We both  need sleep  for tomorrow, Michiya.  Get to
your tent  and rest well.  Death waits for no  one. Might as  well get
plenty of rest before we meet her."

1 league south of Gateway Keep, Royal Duchy, Baranur
Sunrise, 21 Yule, 1014

     "Knight Captain!"  General of the  Cavalry Sarah Verde  called to
her commanding officer. They had been travelling for four bells, since
third  watch of  the  evening before,  in order  to  reach Gateway  by
morning without tiring  the horses. Luthias had been  right: they were
all going to need the rest they had gotten the night before.
     Luthias saw  what Sarah was pointing  out. There was a  breach in
Gateway's walls,  and the enemy  was already  making its way  into the
keep. Fighting was still going on,  however. That meant the breach was
recent. And Beinison wasn't exactly  pouring into Gateway, which meant
their  was  strong  resistance   within  the  keep.  Fortifications...
ditches... the light infantry would be the first to attack, saving the
heavy  infantry  for  when  the  ground was  more  stable,  easier  to
maneuver.
     "Form ranks, General." Luthias ordered.
     "Already formed, Luthias." Sarah replied.
     Luthias  looked at  his  cavalry. Eight  regiments strong.  Sarah
would lead the first wave of four thousand. Michiya, Kirinagi's force,
and Luthias would  lead the last four regiments in  the final wave. As
he retreated,  Sarah would redirect  her force, and the  process would
begin again.
     Stevene give  us strength, he  thought. "First wave,"  he called.
"Deploy!"

     Four thousand horse pounded out  the distance between the hilltop
south of Gateway Keep and the  breach in its south-eastern wall. A low
rumbling sounded through the ground  for miles. As the Beinison troops
slowed  their entrance  to the  keep, the  commanding officers  looked
suddenly at the wall of cavalry approaching them. Buglers sounded, men
scrambled, some small resistance was organized.
     When General Verde was within quarter of a league of the Beinison
force,  she  could see  the  small  patches of  organized  resistance.
Looking back, the  Luthias' cavalry had already  begun their approach.
She raised her sword high, kicked her mount, and yelled. "CHAAAARGE!!"

     The light  infantry attacking  Lianna's section of  the perimeter
were  just beginning  to  break  through the  defenses  when the  rush
slowed. Several  of her comrades lay  in bloody heaps about  her. More
Beinison soldiers lay in front  and around her. As another approached,
she parried  the attack and thrust  low into the man's  groin. He fell
screaming, if  not dead.  The wetness  on her  face increased,  but it
wasn't her  blood. It wasn't the  enemy's blood. As she  hacked at the
enemy around her, she swore. And she cried.
     She was  a fisherman's  daughter. Her  mother sold  the morning's
catch in  a market at  Port Sevlyn. But that  was before the  war. She
knew what  had happened  to Port Sevlyn:  the burning,  the slaughter.
Innocent people  were killed for  no reason. Fishermen  strangled with
their own  lines. Women raped  repeatedly before being slowly  bled to
death.
     Another Beinison soldier made for her. Angrily, she lunged at the
man, knocking his  blade aside. Her helm almost fell  from her head in
her desperate attack, but she continued.  Her sword found its point in
the man's neck and he fell, blood sputtering from his throat.
     "Lieutenant," someone  called to  her. Checking  to see  no enemy
approaching her, she turned briefly.
     There was her sergeant, standing in  a pool of blood. At his feet
lay an enemy soldier who had gone  around her. And in his stomach, the
Beinison's sword had found a weak link. "Bury... me... in-"
     She could only  stand there as he  fell to the ground  in his own
blood. She stopped crying.

     Michiya swung meticulously at the  enemy beside him. His katana's
sharp  blade slicing  through the  woman's breast  plate, he  used its
momentum to  come down on  the man below  him. Grasping now  with both
hands, he lunged at a Beinison soldier who had ridden up beside him.
     Three deaths in three movements,  he thought. Some would see this
as poetic. Graceful. It is but death making its way through a world so
full of life. He spurred his horse to catch up with Luthias.
     "Luthias-sama," he called.  Luthias parried a blade  aimed at his
skull,  and brought  his  mailed  fist into  the  soldier's face.  The
Benosian fell  from his horse, nose  bleeding, only to be  trampled by
his own mount. The horse knew better than to stand between two armies.
     Luthias looked over  at Michiya, and the  battle surrounding him.
Beinison  was  not  having  a  good time  of  it.  While  Baranur  was
definitely  taking  losses,  Beinison  had  been  unprepared  for  the
cavalry's  attack.  They  had  been  hoping  to  gain  Gateway  before
reinforcements could arrive. They were almost successful.
     "Luthias-sama, General Verde is about to make another charge."
     "Right. Find the  bugler, Michiya," Luthias called  over the din.
Steel rang against  steel everywhere he looked.  Horses bucked, riders
fell, and blood made the ground  slippery for the infantry they fought
against. "I'll be damn glad when this day is over."

     Morion cut down  another Beinison. There was a  small squad which
had  made its  way behind  the eastern  line of  defenses. If  not for
Luthias' timely arrival, he thought, we'd have been driven out of here
just past  morning. He looked  up at the mid-  day sun. They  had been
fighting for five bells.
     Another Beinison was  crawling up the rear of  the defenses, just
twenty  yards from  Morion. The  soldier wasn't  watching the  lord of
Pentamorlo, she  had her  sights on the  colors of  Gateway's defense.
Castellan  Ridgewater had  his back  to  the rear  line, five  archers
standing with him, firing arrows into the oncoming enemy.
     "Castellan!" Morion  yelled, but  he couldn't  be heard  this far
away. His voice was sore from shouting orders all morning, and the din
of battle drowned out what volume he could still muster. He smiled. He
knew there  was time  before the  Beinison could make  her way  up the
defenses, and there was another way of gaining Marcus' attention.
     Picking  up  a  small  piece  of  stone,  he  hurled  it  at  the
castellan's back.  A small  ringing sound  erupted, and  Marcus turned
around, fuming at the man who had pelted him.
     "We're in the brink of battle, man, and you're picking on me with
stones?!"
     Morion pointed  at the Beinison  soldier five feet  below Marcus,
and the Castellan  looked down. The Benosian,  suddenly realizing that
she  was caught  in the  wrong place  at the  wrong time,  dropped her
sword.
     "Take your  helmet off, man."  Marcus yelled at the  soldier. The
frightened woman did so, and  Marcus swore. "Nehru's pointy nose. Just
like a  woman to  sneak up on  you." Raising his  bow, he  brought the
wooden  portion of  it  down, hard,  on the  woman's  head. She  fell,
unconscious, to the ground.

     It was mid-evening  when the fighting slowed,  then stopped. Both
sides were tired. Hungry. The cavalry's horses would no longer charge,
and did  little to  support their  riders. Gateway  was in  ruins, the
north wall having been breached at mid-day.
     Beinison's  forces were  battered,  but now  more organized.  The
original force  which was to be  deployed at the north  wall never had
the chance. If not for the commanding officer's decision to divide the
forces, even more Beinison soldiers might have been caught between the
defenders in Gateway and the cavalry which arrived from the south.
     Things were, for the moment, at an impasse. When Michiya had seen
that the siege  engines were still pummelling Gateway,  he commanded a
squadron  of cavalry  and  destroyed them.  Luthias  had regained  the
defenses  Morion's  troops had  built  four  days before,  outside  of
Gateway. Beinison had  retreated out of Gateway's  catapult range, and
was fortifying  its camp. Luthias knew  he was lucky, that  day. If he
had arrived  a bell later,  Gateway might have  been taken. If  he had
been earlier, the Beinison army  would not have already been committed
to the task.
     "Sir Luthias," a  man -- if such an apparition  could be called a
man -- approached  him on horseback. Luthias had watched  him from the
small hill  Luthias had claimed  as his  own. Lord Morion,  covered in
blood, dirt, and sweat, dismounted.
     "Lord Morion," Luthias returned his greeting. "Welcome to... what
passes, for the time being, as my pavilion."
     "Thank  you,  Count  Connall,"  Morion  replied.  "Welcome  to...
whatever you want  to call this situation. The lines  are drawn, so to
speak."
     "Yes, they are. But I don't think it will be long."
     Sarah  Verde  and Ittosai  Michiya  approached  the two  leaders.
"Knight Captain. Lord Morion."
     "Lord Morion," Luthias introduced, "I believe you know General of
the Cavalry Sarah Verde, and Ittosai Michiya."
     "Indeed I do." Morion replied. "General. Michiya."
     "Luthias-sama," Michiya  began. "We -- General  Kirinagi, General
Verde, and myself -- We are wondering  what the next plan of action is
to be.  You ordered  us to  dismount and rest  our steeds.  The supply
train is still not arrived from last night's camp. I fear we will have
little food for the evening's meal, or feed for the horses."
     "I believe we can take care  of that in Gateway, Michiya," Morion
offered. "If I can get that damn castellan to listen to me."
     "The castellan? What about the Lord Keeper?"
     "Useless brat, if you ask me. Hasn't been helpful since he killed
his brother."
     Luthias scowled  at Morion, knowing  both what it meant  to kill,
and how it felt to lose a brother. Having to kill his own kin would be
difficult, even for one who had seen death as much as had Luthias.
     "The boy didn't even fight  in the battle," Morion continued. "In
my  opinion,  Goren Winston  isn't  fit  to  defend a  major  military
stronghold like Gateway."
     "That's  a pretty  strong  statement, Lord  Morion." Sarah  Verde
shifted her  scabbard for comfort.  "Perhaps we should all  convene in
Gateway?"
     "A good idea-- What's that?"
     In the distance, a man on  horseback was riding from the Beinison
army toward  the hill Luthias occupied.  He carried the white  flag of
truce, and rode  weaponless. A captain called to  Luthias, and Luthias
waved him on. When the soldier was within twenty yards, he dismounted.
     "Who is  the commanding  officer?" he requested.  He had  a thick
Beinison accent, but spoke Baranurian quite well.
     Luthias stepped forward. "I speak for him."
     The  Beinison looked  at  Luthias and  recognized the  Baranurian
insignia's of rank, as well as  the knight's chain around his neck. "I
speak for General Vasquez, of the Beinison army. We claim the right to
gather  our  dead  from  the  field  of  battle  before  the  conflict
continues. It is late in the day, and much blood has been lost on both
sides."
     "Tell your  general that  he may  gather his dead  as soon  as we
gather ours." Luthias replied. "It is  our land, and we would not want
our dead to be dishonored upon it."
     "The general will accept," the  herald responded. "When you leave
the field, we shall enter it and remove our dead."
     The herald moved to his steed and mounted. He turned his horse in
a tight circle and sped down the hill to his own encampment.
     Luthias looked at Sarah. "Tell the healers -- Damn! Tell everyone
to gather  the Baranurian  dead. Stevene willing,  it won't  take much
time. I'd like to be done with this by nightfall."

Gateway Keep, Royal Duchy, Baranur
22 Yule, 1014

     "Goren!"  Castellan Ridgewater  called down  to the  grounds from
atop the sturdiest of Gateway's remaining walls. "I think you'd better
see this."
     Goren made his  way up the courtyard stairs in  the early morning
light. Morion  had gone  to Luthias' camp  the evening  before without
telling him, leaving some pompous captain in charge of his men. Marcus
was cursing  up a storm all  evening because there were  Benosians all
over the field but Morion had sent word not to fire at them. They were
gathering their dead.
     Marcus had fired  one arrow, though. A man was  running from body
to body in  the night, bending over each one  momentarily, and rushing
to the  next. Marcus' keen  eyesight had picked  him out, and  the man
slumped over  with an arrow in  the back. Pilfering from  the dead was
the least honorable thing Marcus could imagine.
     When Goren got to the top of the wall, he looked across the empty
field. "What's wrong?"
     "What's wrong? Have ye lost your eyesight, boy?"
     Goren  just stared  blankly at  the field.  Other than  the usual
signs of any bloody aftermath, he could see nothing.
     "Don't you see the enemy, Goren?"
     Goren did not.
     "Exactly it, boy. They're gone."
     Goren looked again  at the field. He looked up  the hill to where
the Beinisons had  retreated the previous evening. He  looked to where
Luthias had made camp the previous evening, as well. Nothing.
     "Lord Morion!" Goren called, but he  did not need to yell. Morion
appeared behind him.
     "Lord Morion, what is the meaning of this?" Goren demanded.
     "Well, Lord Keeper, the Beinison army isn't there. Vasquez packed
up in the middle  of the night, just after second  watch, and left. He
was only waiting to gather his dead."
     "And Count Connall?"
     "The Knight Captain, as I found he is now ranked, went after him.
He's going to chase  Vasquez all the way back to  Port Sevlyn and make
sure he stays there. He can't exactly assault seventeen regiments with
his cavalry, but he'll scare them enough to make sure they run."
     Goren sighed.  He looked at Marcus  and at Morion. "What  was the
outcome? We won, but at what cost?"
     "The Knight  Captain lost  one thousand  cavalry and  two hundred
fifty horse. About." Morion said.
     "Five hundred of Gateway's  garrison died in yesterday's battle,"
Marcus added.
     "And Eighteen  hundred of  my own men  died, since  Beinison came
over the hill five days ago." Morion finished.
     Goren was dumbfounded. "That's..."
     "Over three thousand dead," Marcus finished for him.
     "And that's  not counting the  wounded." Morion stated.  "But the
Beinison  losses  were  greater.  Between  the  start  of  battle  and
yesterday evening, they lost over seven regiments. Over seven thousand
men."
     "But they still outnumbered us... what... almost two to one?"
     "Goren, we've  got cavalry. We've  got archers. We've  got what's
left of  Gateway's walls. We even  have catapults left on  a couple of
them. All  they had  left was  infantry. We're in  no shape  to attack
them, and they don't dare attack us."
     "Best  thing they  could do,  Lord Keeper,"  Morion finished  for
Marcus. "Is get out  of here before we were rested  enough to launch a
full attack."
     "And they did." Goren looked out  at the field. He saw the blood.
The  mounds of  dirt piled  up where  heroes had  defended themselves.
Holes  in  the  walls  where Beinison  had  broken  through  Gateway's
defenses. A few bloody swords and  shields, maybe a mace, littered the
ground. "Ten thousand lives ended here."
     "War isn't  pretty, Winston." Morion  said. "And there's  no such
thing as heroes."
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                       The Evening After...
                          by Bill Erdley
                 (b.c.k.a )

     Three times today I should have died.
     I owe my  life to three different men. Well,  actually two, since
the third is dead.
     Tired. I'm tired and I want to sleep. I can't.
     There's no  real memory of the  battle. There are pictures  in my
head, but they all run together like the blood in the rain.
     I killed my first opponent today.
     He  screamed as  he fell  to the  ground. There  he sobbed  once,
gasped, and died.
     There is no  honor in killing. There is no  honor in dying. Honor
exists for its own sake.
     I try to  roll over, but my  body refuses. I got  my first wounds
today. Bruises on my legs and  sides, a nasty gash across my shoulder,
and a lump on my head.
     I hurt.
     Three times today I should have died.
     Apart from those  who stood, and fell, before me,  I remember Sir
Luthias  and Michiya.  Like two  demonic  reapers in  the devil's  own
field, they  swung and chopped and  cut, harvesting a macabre  crop of
souls to be sent back to wherever those souls came from.
     Why can't I fall asleep?
     Sir  Luthias  saved  me  by  knocking  me  to  the  ground  while
simultaneously parrying  the swing that  would have separated  my head
from my shoulders.  The mud was already salty with  blood. It splashed
into my face as I fell, and when I cleared it from my eyes and spat it
from my mouth, my assailant was dead on the ground and Sir Luthias was
already on to his next combat.
     My shoulder  hurts; the deep,  throbbing pain of a  joint begging
for rest.
     I fought beside Sir Luthias.
     They didn't  seem to know how  to counter one of  the tricks that
Sir Luthias  taught me.  Again and  again I  used it.  Swing, counter,
swing, twist,  thrust; and my sword  would bite a shoulder  or a neck.
Once, my sword caught as a man went down. As I reached for it, another
man  stepped in  and swung.  I dodged,  but I  was open  for his  next
strike. Michiya, without changing his  rhythm, caught my opponent with
a backhand slash to the head,  then continued to fight his own battle.
The dead man almost landed on me as he fell...
     Never have  I heard  so much  pain. Screaming.  Moaning. Sobbing.
There was  a constant sound.  It was the sound  of the dying.  I never
knew death had a voice.
     During  a   lull,  Sir   Luthias  complimented  my   ability  and
"tenacity", a word which  he had to explain. I didn't  tell him that I
was afraid; that I fought for my life. He already knew.
     I just want to sleep. I try to roll over again.
     It is the eyes, most of all, that  I see when I close my own. The
sightless, fixed stare of the dead.  My mistake was to look into those
eyes. Just once. I saw death's face.
     There is no honor in killing.
     I was struck in the shoulder by  a man that I didn't see. I fell,
my sword  falling from my  fingers as my arm  screamed out in  pain. I
tried to crawl back  from the fighting, but he came  at me, a terrible
smile spreading  across his face.  A man from  the company that  I had
traveled with  stepped between us and  swung. I rose from  the mud and
tried  once again  take  up my  sword.  My arm  screamed  again, so  I
switched hands.  The man  who saved  me fell. His  killer moved  on to
another fight, perhaps forgetting me. I looked at my shoulder, and saw
the blood pouring out. I turned from the fighting to find a healer.
     My head  throbs to a slower  rhythm now, but it  still throbs. It
throbs with  every beat of my  heart. It throbs because  I still live.
For that, I am grateful. Still, I wish I could sleep.
     There is no honor in dying.
     I  tripped over  a  body  while running  back  to  the line.  The
Beinison man lived, but his pain...
     "Kill me." he cried. "Please, I beg you."
     I shook my head. I showed him the sign for healer, then turned to
run and find one.
     He cursed me. "I am defeated!"  he cried. "To live with defeat is
worse than death. I will NOT live in dishonor!"
     I fetched the healers, but he was dead when we returned.
     The eyes.  Those cursed eyes. How  can I sleep when  every time I
close my eyes I see theirs.
     Honor exists for its own sake.

     The tent flap moved and  Sir Luthias entered, followed by Michiya
and a man in dirty white robes who looks like a healer. Luthias looked
at me and asked "How are you doing?"
     *I* *Live* I manage to keep my injured arm quiet.
     He nodded. "You will fight again."
     *Fight* *Yes* *Sleep* *No.*
     Again, he nodded. I think that he understood. The healer moved to
me and handed me a small bottle. "Drink this."
     I did,  and almost instantly felt  my eyes begin to  close, as if
they were too heavy to hold open.
     *Question* *I* *Dream.*
     Sir Luthias' voice sounded distant and vaguely sorrowful.
     "I hope not."
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                        Love an Adventure
                            Part One
                      by David/Orny Liscomb
        (b.c.k.a )

              "And so it came to pass that during the seventh
         year of the reign of King Brad, the County of
         Egilsay was transferred from house Sall to Count
         Justin Petersson, as dowry in his marriage to Lady
         Amigene of Sall. The dowry also included the lady's
         handmaidens, seventeen sheep, and six barrels of
         cider."

     "Boy,  it  sure is  dusty  in  here!"  thought Dale,  wiping  his
watering eyes before  turning back to the history his  father had told
him to  transcribe. Cavendish, his  father and scribe to  Duke Clifton
Dargon, had  dreams that  his fifteen  year-old son  would one  day be
accepted into the scribe's guild, but Dale had other ideas.
     He peered  out the  window of his  bedroom, which  overlooked the
lower half of  the city of Dargon.  Before him lay all  the bustle and
ruckus  of a  city alive  with the  business of  midsummer. Above  and
between the roofs of the houses he could even see the slow-moving mast
of a sailing vessel arriving in the harbor from some faraway land.
     Never in  his life had Dale  been more than a  couple hours' walk
from  the city,  and he  longed to  explore all  the places  he'd read
about. That  was probably  the worst  part about  being a  scribe: you
could read  about all kinds  of far-off  cities and kingdoms,  but you
never got to go anywhere!
     He often  went down  to the  port to watch  the ships  coming and
going, but  he rarely talked  to the  crewmen. They were  usually very
serious, and looked kind of dangerous.  But he did talk with Simon the
stew merchant.  Everyone knew  Simon --  he would  often spend  a slow
afternoon telling the children about the adventures he had heard about
when  he was  a sailor.  But Dale  knew that  he was  Simon's especial
friend.
     Dale cleaned his quills, grabbed a piece of bread and stepped out
into the street, heading downhill toward the docks.

     Commercial Street really  wasn't much of a street at  all. It was
really  just a  big  open area  between the  wharves  where the  ships
docked, and the warehouses where their cargoes were stored. Low carts,
drawn  by mule  and  oxen, labored  back and  forth  between the  two:
slow-moving islands  amidst a  sea of people  all moving  at different
speeds in different directions.
     Leftwiched   between   the   warehouses  were   bars,   brothels,
restaurants,    general   stores,    rug   merchants,    provisioners,
confectioners, furriers,  clothiers, and  metalworkers. And on  a warm
summer day, in front of  every building, traveling merchants would set
up  their  wares:  candles,  lamps,  hats,  leather  work,  and  every
imaginable type of food and  drink. On Commercial Street, the swindler
hawking  overpriced   glass  jewelry  had  to   compete  with  soapbox
philosophers;  whores  and  thieves  rubbed elbows  with  priests  and
children. And although it probably wasn't the safest place in the city
of Dargon, it certainly was one of the most exciting!
     Just short  of reaching Commercial  Street, Dale ducked  into the
side entrance of the Harbormaster's  Building. His boots echoed loudly
on the varnished wooden floors as he made his way through the hallways
to the doors that faced out onto Commercial Street. The Harbormaster's
Building was the  only building that faced the wharves  that had steps
leading up to  it, and Dale liked  to use this perch to  look out over
the crowd and  see what was going  on. Maybe someday he  would live in
the second  or third story  of a building that  faced the port,  so he
could watch all the activity from his own room.
     Dale stared  out over the port.  The unfamiliar ship he  had seen
arriving earlier  was tied  up at Countryman's  Pier, but  he couldn't
make out her  name. He scanned the edges of  Commercial Street for his
friend Simon,  the stew  merchant. It  took a  couple minutes,  but he
finally saw Simon's monkey, Skeebo. The  monk had climbed up on top of
the small wooden roof of Simon's cart  to shoo away a seagull that had
perched there. Dale  left his high ground and plunged  into the sea of
activity at street  level, heading toward the place where  he had seen
Simon's cart.

     Dale pushed  through the  crowd and finally  caught sight  of his
friend, Simon  Salamagundi. The stew  merchant was talking with  a man
who looked  like a sailor, and  hadn't noticed his young  visitor yet.
Dale stood  unobtrusively nearby and  listened to the  exchange. Simon
didn't notice  him, but Skeebo did,  and quietly leaped down  onto his
shoulder.
     "... not only  lost the bet and  had to wear a  pink scarf around
town,"  continued the  sailor,  "but he  lost the  rat,  as well!"  He
doubled over  in uncontrollable mirth,  then slapped Simon's  back and
bounded off.  Simon shook his head  in appreciation, then saw  Dale as
the young man turned to him.
     "Who was that?" the boy nodded in the sailor's wake.
     Simon smiled  a little.  "He's a cook  on-a 'Friendly  Lion'. His
boy's a  headstrong lad. Apparently  he favors losing bets  in foreign
ports!"
     Dale gestured  toward the  newly-arrived ship, sitting  quiet and
stately a couple piers down. "Is that the 'Friendly Lion'?"
     "Yessir.  She just  came in  from Westbrook  and Dar  Althol with
quite a  haul. Books,  news, silver.  Rice, nuts,  barley. And  a bard
named Kinwood. From Althol. Apparently very popular..."
     Dale wondered about the places. He'd grown up hearing about other
lands -- Westbrook, Winthrop, Tench,  Magnus -- places that he'd lived
with all his life, but had never seen for himself.
     "So..." Seeing that Dale's mind  was elsewhere, Simon changed the
topic  of conversation.  "What have  you  been up  to, this  beautiful
summer's day?"
     Dale managed a resigned laugh. "Hmph! Dad has me transcribing the
history of  County Egilsay!  It's so  boring!!! I  wish I  could visit
these places,  not just read  about them!"  Dale started to  raise his
voice.  "I'm  tired  of  hearing  other  people  talking  about  their
adventures -- I  want an adventure of  my own. Dargon is  so boring --
nothing ever happens here!"
     Simon knocked the young man on  the shoulder. "Come on, I've been
to plenty of interesting places, and out of all those places, I picked
Dargon to live in. Do you know why?"
     "Because it's boring and calm and you were tired of adventuring?"
countered Dale.
     "No! Because out  of all-a the lands I've seen,  Dargon is one of
the most interesting."
     "If Dargon's  so interesting, when was  the last time you  had an
adventure?"
     Simon  paused  a second.  "Why,  I  had  an adventure  just  this
morning. I  was cutting into  a loaf of  bread that Madame  Nilson had
baked  for me,  and  what should  I  find inside  but  a silver  coin!
Apparently it  fell outta  her bodice  and got mixed  in when  she was
kneading the dough! Hah!"
     Dale scowled. "Simon  -- that's not an  adventure! Adventures are
heroes  saving fair  maidens  or stopping  pirates  or saving  burning
cities."
     Simon  shook  his  head.  "Ah,  no. Real  people  can  have  real
adventures,  and they  don't have  to be  as dramatic  as all-a  that.
There's plenty of adventure right here in Dargon."
     Dale looked down and scuffed his  feet. "Not for me. Being locked
up at  home copying  scrolls is  about as  exciting as...  as..." Dale
threw his  hands in the air.  "Shit! I can't even  *think* of anything
more boring! I wish Dad would let me go sign on as a sailor..."
     "NO!!!" The  sudden emotion in  Simon's voice startled  Dale. His
friend was usually  the most even-keeled person Dale  knew. Seeing the
confusion in his  friend's expression, the stewmaker  sighed and shook
his head.
     "Dale, listen to me, straight? When I was you age I felt the same
way. My mama  wanted me to be  a artist. She even apprenticed  me to a
sculptor! I thought  it was the most  boring thing in the  world. So I
ran away and  tried to join a  trading ship. I talked  to the captain,
and-a you know what he told me?" Dale cocked his head to indicate that
he didn't know.  Despite his renown as a storyteller,  Simon had never
really talked about himself very much.
     "He said 'Boy, I'm not going to  take you on, but here's a bit of
advice for you. You can go  all around the world looking for adventure
and never find it,  or you can walk the streets of  your home town and
find  adventure  around  every  corner.  You  know  why?  Because  all
adventure  is, is  doing something  that you've  never done  before.'"
Simon crossed  his arms with  a satisfied  "Hmpf!" as he  mimicked the
captain. Then he leaned toward his young listener conspiratorially.
     "But I thought  he was full of  wind, so I went  to another ship.
This time, I  didn't talk to the captain, but  volunteered to help the
cook. He took me on, and my life of adventure had begun.
     "Or so I thought. It was really  the most boring time of my life.
When we were at sea, all we did was cook. My legs were bored off! When
we were in port, all we did  was drink ourselves to sleep. That's when
I got  to thinking  about the  old captain's  words about  looking for
adventure." Simon's faraway eyes returned to Dale.
     "And  that's  why I'm  telling  you  now  -- adventure  is  doing
something you've  never done before.  It doesn't need to  be something
big. You can  find adventure every day, even in  Dargon. I do! There's
no need to go running away from home to find it."
     Dale shook his head. "But Dargon's so *boring*!"
     Simon  harumphed. "Well...  isn't  there  anything you've  always
thought you might want to do, that you never did?"
     Dale thought about it. Sure, lots  of things, but none of them in
Dargon! "I dunno. I've never had my fortune told, but that's stupid."
     "Why?"
     Dale shrugged. "I dunno. Dad always said it was a waste of money.
They're fakes."
     Simon smiled in  victory. "Sure they are. But  they're fun fakes.
What's the difference between paying a bard to play for you and paying
a fortune teller to read your future?"
     Dale cocked his head again, this time in thought. "I guess you're
right."
     Simon smiled. "That's it. Dargon  isn't so boring -- there's lots
of things in this city that you haven't explored! And don't put it off
-- go see  if the fortune tellers  are busy. Here." Simon  threw a paw
into his pouch and pulled out a silver coin. "Use it."
     "Oh, okay." Dale smiled, taking the coin. "As long as this didn't
come from old lady Nilson's bodice..."

     Dale looked across at the  fortune teller's booth. He was feeling
a little anxious inside, but what  Simon had said did make sense, even
if he couldn't really see the sense  in using something as stupid as a
fortune teller as an example. If adventure was nothing more than doing
something you'd  never done  before, it made  life kind  of different.
There were lots of things he'd  never done, without knowing really why
he hadn't. The idea that you could  wake up in the morning and find an
adventure just  waiting for you  certainly held the promise  of making
life a little more interesting.
     Again he looked across at the seer's booth. No one had entered or
left in some time. He glanced up at the sky, as if entreating the gods
to have mercy, and stepped across the street.
     Dale poked his  head through a curtain and into  the booth to see
an old man in a monk's-style robe lifting a heavy crate.
     "Excuse me..." he began. "Can I help you with that?"
     The old man  stopped and straightened up. Then he  looked the boy
over. "Sure, boy.  Bring 'er into the back room."  Dale took the crate
by rope handles on the sides and heaved.
     "Marabinga's Girdle, old man! What have you got in this crate?"
     The seer let  the oath pass. "A shipment of  books from my mentor
in Magnus. It just arrived this morning on the Friendly Lion!"
     Dale was reminded  of his father and thought  to himself, "Great.
Another old man with his nose in a book!"
     The old man  held aside the black curtain that  led into the back
room. Dale stepped in, and took in as  much of the room as he could in
the darkness.  There were no  windows, and  the room was  barely large
enough to contain the table and  the chairs that sat at opposite sides
of it.  The table  was inlaid with  a wheel with  all kinds  of mystic
symbols. There was  a small bookcase opposite the  entrance, filled to
overflowing with  both books and  all manner of mystic  apparatus. The
room stank  of the dirt  floor and  incense. The walls  were decorated
with all manner  of symbols and images, only a  small portion of which
Dale had ever seen before.
     "Just slide  the box under  the table, toward the  bookcase; I'll
deal with it later,"  the old man instructed with a  vague wave of his
hand. Then, to  Dale as he rose,  "Now, presumably you came  to me for
something?"
     Dale looked at  the floor. "I'd like to have  my fortune read, or
whatever... Whatever a silver bit will get me."
     The seer  seemed satisfied and  accepted the coin.  "Well, things
have been  pretty quiet today. I  could read your cards,  that's quick
and easy. Or we  could do a sand casting, which  would take more time.
Or we  could try  the Table --  I've been having  good luck  with that
lately..."
     "That  sounds interesting,"  Dale interrupted.  He didn't  really
care, and wasn't  interested in hearing another  scholar's lecture. He
got quite enough of that from his father!
     "So be it.  Let me get ready.  By the way, my name  is Zavut. Why
don't you  sit down?"  The old  man indicated the  smaller of  the two
chairs, and inched  around the table to the other  himself. He reached
under the table and brought forth  a stubby black candle, a cloth, and
a piece of  fur. He began to  clean the surface of the  table with the
white  cloth. When  he was  done, Dale  could see  the symbols  in its
surface much more clearly. It featured  a wheel with many spokes, each
inlaid with a different colored stone. Each spoke's stones were darker
at the edge of the table,  and brilliant at the center, making several
clearly-defined concentric circles.
     "KARK!" The  tone of command  in Zavut' voice startled  Dale. The
candle was now  burning, and Dale wondered how the  seer had done that
so quickly. Clearly, he was supposed to think it was magic, by the way
the  old man  was smirking.  Of course,  Dale knew  better --  he just
didn't have an explanation right at hand.
     Zavut  took  up the  piece  of  orange  and  white fur  and  very
carefully rubbed it on the table, following the contours of the wheel.
Then  he  also  rubbed  it  on the  candle,  and  repeated  the  whole
procedure.
     Zavut then stood  up, took up the lit candle,  and walked over to
Dale. "Please stand up." He then pulled the chair aside.
     "This candle is made of beeswax and the blood of a bull. You will
hold it in  your off hand, at  shoulder height, and drip  wax onto the
table. Try as  hard as you can to  keep the wax in the  very center of
the wheel.  I will tell  you when  to begin and  when to stop.  Do you
understand?"
     "Yes."
     "Good." The seer handed him the candle and guided Dale's extended
left arm  over the center of  the table. "Concentrate on  the flame --
see  nothing else."  Dale let  his vision  be drawn  into the  dancing
light. He'd thought  the candle black, but near the  flame it glowed a
deep, rich red. But the candle soon disappeared from his vision as the
bright flame swallowed up all  less brilliant images. The flame danced
with  the  boy's every  breath  and  flickered hypnotically  as  Zavut
removed his hands from Dale's arm.
     After a few moments, Dale could  feel his arm beginning to wobble
with fatigue and  saw the result in the flickering  of the candle. But
Zavut' voice  came from  beside him. "Continue  to concentrate  on the
flame. You may begin."
     Dale slowly  turned his wrist,  but he couldn't tell  whether any
wax was dripping from the candle. He saw the flame flicker crazily. He
noticed  that he  had  turned the  candle enough  that  the flame  was
touching the wax  itself. He smelled the pungent odor  of burning wax.
His arm  was beginning  to ache, and  he felt sure  that he  must have
covered half of the table by now, when he heard Zavut' voice again.
     "Now, turn the candle back upright, bring it away from the table,
and blow it out." Dale complied. But after staring at the flame for so
long,  his eyes  weren't  able  to make  out  anything  of the  seer's
chamber. Zavut  guided him back into  his seat. "Now, you  sit and let
your eyes recover,  while I look at this casting  and try to interpret
it."
     Dale sat for a  while. He was able to see things  on the edges of
his vision, but he couldn't see  anything if he looked at it directly.
And closing his  eyes wasn't any better, because of  the dancing spots
left by the  candle's intense light. Dale was  annoyed and frustrated.
And  it didn't  help that  Zavut kept  making odd  noises. First  he'd
grunt, then he'd hmm, then he'd tsk, then he'd hunh...
     Although  Dale's  vision  gradually  cleared,  his  understanding
didn't.  Droplets of  burgundy-colored wax  were scattered  around the
table,  but mostly  in  the center.  There were  a  couple very  large
blotches just  off-center. Dale tried  to figure out what  the symbols
meant for the spokes with the biggest blotches of wax, but they didn't
seem to have any inherent meaning.  At least, none he felt comfortable
guessing at.
     Zavut  sat back  with a  dissatisfied  "Hunph!" Dale  gave him  a
quizzical look, but the only response  he got was a curt "Be patient."
The  seer  continued to  contemplate  the  Table  for a  moment,  then
addressed his customer.
     "Well, this  is an interesting  cast, young man! I  usually don't
bother explaining the  Table to customers, but I think  you might need
the knowledge in order to fully  understand this casting and maybe add
your own thoughts to the interpretation.
     "The most  basic concept is that  how far the wax  falls from the
center is extremely important." Dale congratulated himself on guessing
that, while Zavut continued to  explain. "In the grossest terms, blobs
in  the middle  represent long-term  predictions and  droplets at  the
edges of the Wheel represent your immediate future. This is because in
the long term,  it's easy to predict that you'll  experience a balance
of just  about everything. That's  why the  middle is so  blotchy. The
center  usually doesn't  tell us  much, so  we look  at the  outermost
droplets to get an idea about  what's going to happen tomorrow or next
week."
     Dale quickly tossed aside his previous guesses and reassessed the
wheel. There were only  a couple spots at the edge  of the table, with
no apparent meaning or connection.
     "About the  only thing the middle  tells us about your  life as a
whole is that  you'll be well-liked and are of  a literary bent." Dale
immediately suspected  that Zavut had  recognized him as  the scribe's
son, but Zavut  continued, apparently having discarded  the comment as
irrelevant.
     "But there are some very definite things we can see in the coming
days. Look. These four are the only spots outside the fourth circle --
that should make matters very clear," he pointed out each one in turn.
"And although  they're in  different quadrants,  their interpretations
might be very complementary.
     "See  this spot?"  Dale looked  where Zavut  pointed. "This  sign
represents a  new approach --  a new  way of meeting  old challenges."
Dale  was  taken  aback;  this  sounded  an  awful  lot  like  Simon's
philosophy about adventure. The seer  looked up at his customer. "Does
that make  sense to you?"  Dale nodded,  but remained silent.  After a
moment, the seer went on.
     "And this  spot over here is  similar." Dale looked at  the spot,
which was  right next  to a  glyph of  an ornately-decorated  cup. "It
represents new friends and new relationships.
     "The  third spot,"  continued  Zavut,  "fell in  a  sign that  is
interpreted as  overindulgence or excess.  And the fourth  spot, here,
represents  resolution of  conflict by  a dramatic,  permanent change.
Mind you, I've put these in an  order that makes sense to me, but that
may not be how you experience them..."
     Dale sat back and pondered Zavut'  words. The first spot had been
surprisingly on  target, but he had  no idea about the  next two. What
were they? New friends, and  overindulgence. And then a resolution. It
didn't sound like the rest of that applied, but the bit about new ways
of looking at things was right on.
     Dale stood up. "Thank you, seer. When  I came here, I had no idea
what  to expect.  But your  wheel has  given me  some things  to think
about. Perhaps I'll be back again sometime."
     Zavut stood and parted the curtain for Dale. "Good. People try to
make something mystical about it,  but that's really all that sagacity
is: giving  people something to  think about."  He patted Dale  on the
shoulder and stopped at the threshold of his booth.
     Dale stood blinking  in the afternoon sun.  He'd actually enjoyed
the reading.  But he  wondered if  he could call  it an  adventure. It
certainly was  something he'd never  done before,  and it was  kind of
exciting, too.  He found that he  wanted to tell someone  about it. It
really did  feel like  a little  adventure. Simon's  philosophy seemed
pretty useful, after all.
     Dale  was  curious  as  he  thought  forward  to  when  his  next
opportunity to put Simon's philosophy to work might occur.

     He stood in the bright sunlight  for a moment, wondering where he
should go  next. Across the street,  a handful of people  stood around
the booth  where Jenzun, the  local instrument-maker, sold  his wares.
Jenzun was entertaining the people by demonstrating his skill with the
dulcimer, and  Dale made his  way across the  street so that  he could
listen. As  he approached, he noticed  that one of the  people who was
also listening was a young woman he knew named Erica. Dale admired her
quietly, as he had so many  times before: burgundy hair that perfectly
framed  her dark  brown eyes  and friendly  smile. He  picked his  way
through the people and stood beside her.
     As Jenzun  began a new, lively  trotto, he was joined  by another
musician playing one of Jenzun's wooden  box drums, and another on the
rauschpfeiffe.  The  audience  started  clapping their  hands  at  the
appropriate  points in  the song,  and  Dale joined  in. Noticing  the
sound, Erica  turned and saw Dale  for the first time.  Her eyes, deep
and mesmerizing, met his, and she smiled warmly.
     Dale smiled,  then looked down  at his feet in  embarrassment. He
wasn't any good  at talking to girls, especially girls  that he liked.
Fortunately, she turned back to the musicians, although that left Dale
to stand next to  her, feeling as if his feet  were twice normal size.
She  was expecting  him to  say something.  Dale felt  each moment  of
silence pass like an accusation.
     Dale thought back to Simon's words about doing things he'd always
wanted to  do. But this  was Erica!  This was *important*!  But Zavut,
too, had said  something about new friendships.  And approaching Erica
would certainly be something he'd never done before!
     More moments passed as he tried to formulate something to say. He
suddenly realized that the  tune was coming to an end,  and that if he
wanted to talk to her at all, he'd have to do so now.
     "Erica?" As she turned, she was looking downward. Then she raised
her gaze to  meet Dale's, and he  felt like he was  falling into those
deep, dark eyes of  hers. He was completely in awe  of her beauty. But
he had something he was going to say...
     "Umm... You be  interested in coming out to the  archery butts or
anything?"
     Damn! It wasn't very eloquent, but  he'd run out of time. And she
just stood there, looking at him  and smiling in a faintly preoccupied
manner, as if musing about his  ineptitude. Then she seemed to come to
some sort of decision, and took his hand up in hers and patted it.
     "Dale... I'm glad  I ran into you today. Later  this afternoon, a
bunch of us are going swimming out  at the quarry, and I'd like you to
come, too."
     The  quarry?  "But  the  quarry's  off  limits,  isn't  it?  It's
dangerous!"
     Erica's  eyes gleamed.  She brought  her face  closer to  his and
whispered to him conspiratorially. "That's  just what they say to keep
the kids away. We've been there dozens of times, and no one has gotten
hurt. It's really lots of fun!"
     Dale couldn't argue about something he really knew nothing about,
which gave him pause.  How did he know it was  dangerous if he'd never
even been  to the quarry? If  his father had been  wrong about fortune
tellers, he  could be wrong  about the  quarry, too, right?  And Erica
said it  was fun...  And the  prospect of  spending an  afternoon with
Erica was worth the risk. After all, if he went and discovered that it
really *was* dangerous,  he didn't have to do anything  he didn't want
to.  And this  certainly would  qualify  as an  adventure, by  Simon's
definition. It was something he'd  never done, just because his father
had always  said it  was wrong.  So it was  pretty easy  to come  to a
decision with Erica looking at him like that!
     "Okay! When?"
     Erica rewarded  him with a smile.  "Meet me at the  quarry at six
bells? I've got to go pick up some things at home. Straight?"
     "Straight. See you then."
     She flashed him a final smile over her shoulder. "Bye!"
     Dale  watched as  Erica walked  away, then  turned and  looked at
Zavut' booth accusingly. "Yes!!!" he exclaimed, and ran off toward his
home.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1  (C)    Copyright   August,  1994,    DargonZine,     Editor   Dafydd
. All  rights revert to the  authors. These stories
may  not  be  reproduced  or   redistributed  (save  in  the  case  of
reproducing  the whole  'zine  for further  distribution) without  the
express permission of the author involved.






1                                                             /
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  D    D  AAAA RRR  GGGG OOOO NN  N      Z  I NN  N EEEE  ||
  D     D A  A R  R G    O  O N N N     Z   I N N N E     || Volume 7
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  D    D  AAAA RRR  G GG O  O N N N   Z     I N N N E     || Issue  3
  DDDDD   A  A R  R GGGG OOOO N  NN  ZZZZZZ I N  NN EEEE  ||
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--   DargonZine Volume 7, Issue 3        08/24/94          Cir 1075   --
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--         Archives at ftp.etext.org in pub/Zines/DargonZine          --
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--                            Contents                                --
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 DAG                          Dafydd                 Editorial
 Kidnapped 1                  Max Khaytsus           Yule 21-23, 1014
 Love an Adventure II         Orny Liscomb           Yuli 2, 1016
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1                          Dafydd's Amber Glow
                  by Dafydd Cyhoeddwr, Editor DargonZine
                       

     Well, I don't write editorials very  often any more but this is a
special occaison  - this  is the  last issue of  DargonZine I  will be
Editor for.
     The electronic  magazine will continue, though,  once again under
the capable guidance of its creator, Ornoth Liscomb, whom you may have
noticed has  returned to  the project. The  Dargon Project  has always
been his, even when he wasn't here  - I was only ever a caretaker. Now
that he has returned, and that he has time and energy to devote to it,
we (all of the authors and myself) are turning control back to him.
     There may be some changes in the  look of the 'zine, and with any
luck  it  should  come out  a  little  more  often,  if not  any  more
regularly. But  the basic element of  the 'zine - the  stories - won't
change much save to get better,  perhaps, with Orny's input once again
available to us all.
     Orny will, I'm sure,  have much to say in the  next issue to come
out. Its  been a fun  6 years, and I'm  glad that DargonZine  is still
around for me to pass back to him. Enjoy, everyone!
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                        Kidnapped, Part 1
                         by Max Khaytsus
           (b.c.k.a. )

     Kera's  sword  connected  solidly  with  her  opponent's  shield,
splintering a large chip from the edge.
     He stepped  back, shaking  his shield arm  to relax  the strained
muscle from the force of the blow.
     Kera quickly  closed the distance  the retreat created  and swung
again, connecting with the battered shield once more. The wood groaned
and splintered, revealing a crack through the shield's face.
     He took another step back and attacked Kera's shield, causing her
to momentarily lose balance. She recovered, delivering a third blow to
the shield.  With a splintering  sound, the  shield broke and  the man
flung his  arm down, shaking  the remains of  wood and leather  to the
ground. Kera took a step back and tried to unstrap her own shield.
     "Keep it," her opponent instructed,  grasping his sword with both
hands.
     "What about the code?" she took hold of the loose strap again.
     He swung at her and she dodged, dropping to one knee to avoid the
blade. "You need to learn to fight, not respect."
     "Are you saying I don't know  how to fight?" Kera's sword glanced
off his legging, shaving a yellow spark.
     "That's right!"  her opponent's sword  came down hard  across her
own blade,  breaking her  grip on  it and throwing  the weapon  to the
ground.
     Sir Ariam Brand  stepped back, sheathing his sword.  "Get up. You
talk too much. You're letting the conversation distract you."
     Kera stood up, removing her helmet.
     "Why the shield?"
     "You kept blocking," Kera explained her attack.
     "But at the end you ignored me. You fought my shield."
     "I thought I could get to you if you didn't have it."
     "And you killed my shield, but that  left you tired and gave me a
free arm. Get your sword."
     Kera picked up her blade.
     Sir Brand  drew his  sword and  brought it  down on  Kera's right
side. "You  got down to  avoid my blow.  That saved you  from dropping
your sword."
     Kera brought her blade up to block the one pointed at her.
     "Here," Sir Brand indicated, tapping his sword against hers. "I'd
force it into the ground and you'd either bend with it or drop it. You
did the right thing by not  parrying. But then you should have brought
your sword  in behind the shield  and gotten up, instead  of attacking
me."
     "I  shouldn't fight  up," Kera  repeated  what she  had heard  so
often.
     "That's right."
     "What about a feint?" Kera asked.
     "That was a feint.  I swung left, you went right.  I had a choice
of your head, your shield or your sword."
     "All right,"  Kera got  down on  one knee.  "I'm down,  sword in,
trying to get up. You still have a choice of head or shield."
     "Push  forward as  you get  up," Sir  Brand assumed  his previous
position. "I can't hit you if you're inside my reach."
     Kera got up, stepping forward. "Like this?"
     "Right. Now look,  I lose my swing when we're  this close. I have
to step back. Now,  be careful not to try this  with opponents who are
fighting with  a stiletto or a  short sword in their  off hand. You'll
have to get up by pushing away, then. It's not as effective, but you'd
at least  make them chase you  down before they can  hit you. Luckily,
most people can't fight with two weapons."
     "Sir Keegan does, sometimes."
     "He was trained at it. Few people are."
     "Now come on, let's try that again and don't distract yourself by
talking."
     "Yes, Sir," Kera prepared for the next match.
     "I'll need..."
     "Lady!" A young page called from the fenced edge of the Arena.
     "Go ahead," Sir Brand said. "I need to get a shield."
     Kera hurried over to the page.
     "I'm sorry to  interrupt, ma'am, but the Baron wishes  to see you
right away."
     "All right," Kera said. "I'll be  right there." The page left and
she turned to Sir Brand, ready with a new practice shield.
     "Go ahead,"  he told  her. "It's getting  close to  dinner. We'll
continue tomorrow."
     "Thank you," Kera dropped her own  shield on a bench and sheathed
her sword. "I will be seeing you at dinner, my Lord. Good day."
     "Good day," the knight answered and she left.
     It had been just three days since Rien had left and two since the
three regiments  training at Valdasly  Keep marched out the  gates and
down the  road towards the village,  on their way to  the Royal Duchy.
Few soldiers  and knights remained  at the  Keep -- mostly  guards and
assistants to the Baron, who waited for word from Duke Glavenford.
     Rien would have  gone with the troops,  but Adrea's disappearance
forced him to go  to Sharks' Cove instead, where he  was to meet Deven
and look for her. Kera asked him to take her along, but he told her to
stay and practice, insisting that going  to war would be too dangerous
for her.
     "When  your training  is complete..."  she remembered  his strong
hand under her chin. "I fear for your safety."
     "Then what's the point of being your squire if you hide me behind
stone walls?"
     "I  want you  to be  the best  that you  can --  better than  the
soldiers who you'd  have to face. I  want you to have  a better chance
than they."
     "You make it so difficult," Kera whispered.
     "I'd rather  not go  looking for  you as well  as for  Adrea," he
insisted. "Take care."
     Kera embraced him, trying to burn the feeling of holding onto him
into  her mind.  The  stable attendant  who held  on  to Rien's  horse
politely turned  away. Rien  put his arms  around Kera,  returning the
embrace.
     "I have to go. I'm wasting time."
     "Be careful..."  Kera muttered. "Don't  make me come  looking for
you."
     "I won't," Rien laughed. "I won't abandon you, I promise."
     They broke the embrace and Rien mounted his horse, a tall slender
animal the Baron had given him.
     "Take care of Kelsey."
     "I will." Kera bit her tongue to force back tears.
     Three days were  not enough to get the tears  to stop. She paused
in the  great hall, wiping  her face  and straightening her  hair, not
having had  the chance to do  so after the practice.  Setting her jaw,
Kera walked up to the door to the library and knocked.
     "Come," Baron  Dower's voice  sounded on the  other side  and she
entered.
     The Baron stood over his desk, a large map before him, a stack of
books, a bottle of ink and a straight edge nearby. The chandelier over
the  desk, as  well as  two  heavy candelabras  illuminated his  work,
casting a bright glow over the desk and the papers on it.
     "You sent for me, my Lord?" Kera asked.
     "Yes, please,  sit down, Kera,"  he said, making  measurements on
the map on the  table. He was always informal with  her in private for
some reason, just like he was with Rien.
     Kera sat down  across from the desk, watching the  Baron work. He
looked  tired, worn  out.  A  distinct change  from  dinner the  night
before.
     Finishing with  the measurements, he  sat down as well.  "Kera, I
need you to do me a favor." He shifted and pushed a stack of books out
of the way so they could see each other. "I received the message I was
waiting for  from Duke Glavenford  at noon. He,  although reluctantly,
approved my plan to march on Gateway. I will be leaving to catch up to
my troops tomorrow morning and I need you to do me a favor..."
     Kera started to answer, but the Baron did not stop.
     "...I want you to take Stefan to the Ducal Palace in Hawksbridge.
Few guards  will stay  here after I  go and I  would feel  much better
knowing my son is safe."
     Kera kept  looking at him  after he stopped so  abruptly, waiting
for  him to  add  something else.  "Of course,  my  Lord," she  caught
herself.
     "Good," the  Baron nodded. "Don't  tell him  what I told  you. He
doesn't know I'm going to war. I've told him we will be picking up men
in Narragan to add to the standing troops."
     "Of course, Sir. What should I do after I deliver him?"
     "Do? You'll  stay there. And  you will continue your  training in
Hawksbridge."
     "What about Sir Keegan? How will he know where I am?"
     "I will leave word here. The servants and some guards will remain
at the Keep -- I'm not abandoning it."
     "Yes, Sir."
     "Good." He picked up two letters from the desk and handed them to
Kera. "This is your  letter of introduction to the Duke  and this is a
letter for him. You and Stefan are to remain in Hawksbridge until sent
for by  myself or  Rien. All my  letters are marked  with my  seal, so
watch for it. And  having been with Rien for as long  as you have, I'm
sure the two of you have an established method of communications."
     Kera nodded, although  she had no idea how she  would recognize a
message sent by Rien.
     "All right, then. Any questions?"
     "Just directions, Sir."
     He  smiled, realizing  he missed  so  simple a  thing. "Take  the
forest road  west. After you  exit the canyon,  it will join  a larger
road. Take  the right branch, three  days, and it will  bring you into
the  city. There  are signs  along the  way and,  besides, Stefan  has
travelled it often  since he was a baby. He'll  give directions if you
need them...and if you don't."
     Kera also smiled at that.
     "Go ahead  and clean up  for dinner," the Baron  said, indicating
the conversation was over.
     Taking the two letters, Kera left the library and headed upstairs
to her room to  get out of the armor and prepare  for dinner. She knew
Baron Dower had  been waiting for word from the  Duke about taking the
available regiments to Gateway. He sent the message to Hawksbridge the
same morning  Rien left for Sharks'  Cove and a three  day turn around
time was rather spectacular for what  was normally a three day one way
trip.
     In the morning  she would take the Baron's son  to the Ducal seat
and the Baron  would join his troops  on the way to war,  the same war
Rien left for only days before. It  scared her to think about the war,
about the unchecked  slaughter of people as the two  sides fought over
stretches of land no one would think about twice in time of peace.
     She leaned  on the  window sill, looking  south towards  the dark
green  forest  stretching beyond  the  keep  walls  and the  peaks  of
mountains on  the other  side of  the valley,  that the  forest leaned
against. Where  was Rien?  Somewhere in those  mountains by  now? When
they left Sharks' Cove in late  spring, they travelled as close to the
mountains as  they could, so  she could see  the snow in  their peaks,
present even in the summer. Kera ran  her hand over her eye, trying to
prevent its watering from becoming a tear. Summer snow was not unknown
to Rien, but it was something she  had never seen before and so simple
a gesture as going  a couple of days out of their way,  meant a lot to
her.
     Somewhere out there, in the mountains to the southwest, Rien made
his way towards Sharks' Cove, to  find out what happened to Adrea. And
somewhere, not  far behind him,  marched three regiments  of soldiers,
heading  for  Gateway,  to  fight  the Beinison  army  that  no  doubt
outnumbered them four to one. Kiyan Kanne was with those troops, ready
to become a hero.
     "In a way I'm glad I'm not going," Kera sighed. "I don't know how
I would handle it."
     "First kill  is a hard  thing," Kiyan answered. "Then  you become
cold about taking a life."
     "I know," Kera said. "I've killed before..."
     Kiyan  turned to  face her.  "I feel  there's a  past you're  not
telling me about," he commented and quickly looked away.
     "There's a past I'm trying to forget," Kera responded, slowly and
cautiously. "...and I'm not quite ready  to fight new opponents to the
death just yet."
     "I'm glad you'll be here,  where it's safe," Kiyan answered. "I'd
be afraid for you if I knew  you were there with the army...and that's
one less person I'd have to out do to become a hero."
     An abrupt laugh slipped from Kera's lips.
     "You don't think I can do it?"
     "I think you're taking it too seriously."
     "Yeah?"
     "Yeah," she smiled. "It's a bit much to win a war singlehanded."
     "But's it's a goal to aim for."
     "It is that."
     Kiyan bent  down, and  pulling a  fresh pale  blue Iris  from the
lawn, handed it to Kera. "Hold on to this until I come back."
     "It'll..."
     He kissed her  before she could respond and  disappeared into the
barracks. The next morning, the troops left at the crack of dawn.
     Kera ran her  fingers over the still fresh Iris,  standing on the
window sill  in a cup,  wiping the moisture from  her eyes off  on the
delicate petals. Each  time it seemed that her problems  were about to
lessen their grip on her, something  new would cause a conflict in her
life. Something there  was no way to predict and  something that could
not be avoided.
     Quickly  changing into  a clean  set of  clothes, Kera  went down
stairs. Life  had to go on,  no matter what challenges  it would throw
her way.
     "...grain ready for harvest, we're  bowing to the damned Benosian
army!" a deep voice declared as she entered the great hall.
     "Now,  Clev,  you  know  we have  more  uncommitted  forces  than
Beinison," the  Baron's calm voice  answered. "We're fighting  for our
lands, with people who live on these lands. We'll take them back."
     "But before we take it back, we  have to look at us as a country,
at our losses, our morale, our..." Noticing Kera, he stopped and stood
up.
     The other three  men at the table did likewise,  as has been done
the past two nights, them being a  small group and Kera being the only
woman dining with them.
     "Please," she smiled, embarrassed. "You  don't have to do this...
I'm sorry I'm  late." She took her seat on  Sir Hardin's right, across
from Sir Brand.  The Baron sat at  the head of the  table, between his
son and Sir Hardin.
     The men sat back down as a  servant hurried to place a warm plate
before Kera.
     "Looks like you'll escape having  to practice with me," Sir Brand
said to Kera.
     "I can't say  I'm disappointed, my Lord,"  Kera answered. "You've
been working me much harder than Sir Bonhan."
     "You have  to understand Ariam  is much more zealous,"  the Baron
laughed. "He knows  he has little time,  so he wishes to  see a marked
improvement over the training you have received so far."
     The others at the table laughed.
     "This reminds me," Sir Hardin said thoughtfully. "I took a squire
soon after I was knighted, a bright young lad. You might remember him,
Rev -- Alaman Helvik. His father was your father's scribe..."
     "Yes, yes," the Baron nodded.
     "He was  a frail little thing,  but Lord Gregor said  I must take
him, as  a favor to him  and his father, and  so I did." He  paused to
take a bite from  a leg of mutton and wash it down  with ale. "The boy
was so  zealous to learn to  be a knight,  he broke both arms  when he
fell off a  horse the very first  day. He became a  scribe after that,
just like his father..."
     The Baron chuckled over his food.  "And it took you five years to
select a new squire after that,  one that wouldn't `break' on you." He
paused and added in  a more somber tone, "I always  felt sorry for him
over that. He wanted to be a knight so much, but he really wasn't made
for it."
     "Then there  was Albert Targ, who  you took as your  squire," Sir
Hardin laughed.  He turned  to Stefan,  the Baron's  son, to  tell the
story. "A  large lad, built like  Sir Bonham, but much  taller. Bigger
than either your father or I were  at the time. The lad lasted a whole
week, then  one morning I'm  woken up by your  father and he  tells me
Targ ran off.
     "Now, we entertained rather late the  night before, so I tell him
to stop bothering me and turn over..."
     "I drug him out of bed screaming and kicking," the Baron laughed.
     "...and he  tells me  his mother's best  silverware is  gone with
that rogue!"
     Stefan looked at his father. "Silverware?"
     "Your grandmother's pride  and joy -- her parents gave  it to her
for a wedding present -- a fine, almost pure alloy from Othuldane."
     Sir Hardin laughed. "So like two  fools we dress and saddle up in
the middle  of the  night to  go look  for a  thief. Snow's  hip deep,
wolves  are freezing  in mid  run and  we're out  there looking  for a
thief."
     "Did you find him?" the boy asked.
     "No,"  the Baron  shook  his head.  "Spent a  week  in the  cold,
knowing we  lost him, but  afraid to come home.  I knew how  dearly my
mother loved that silverware..."
     "So what happened?"
     The Baron looked  at Sir Hardin and the knight  nodded. "Well, we
came back a week later and my father calls us to his study and says if
we want to go wenching, the least we can do is leave him a message. He
doesn't say  a word  about the  silverware, so Clev  and I  keep quiet
about it.
     "That evening,  at dinner,  the servants bring  the roast  on the
silver platter. Turns out guests were expected earlier in the week and
mother sent the dishes to the smithy to be polished."
     Sir Brand chuckled. "What punishment."
     "What about Albert Targ, father?" Stefan asked.
     "I worked  the boy so  hard, he ran back  home to farm  wheat and
never looked back."
     Sir Hardin let out a hearty laugh. "So she could be leaving under
worse circumstances," he warned Sir Brand.
     "Having broken things and stollen silverware?" Kera smiled.
     "You broke  three shields in  two days," Sir Brand  reminded her.
"That's a rather impressive number, considering they're made of oak."
     Kera blushed and hid  her face behind a mug of  ale, taking a log
sip in the process.
     "Three oak  shields?" the Baron asked.  "Quite an accomplishment.
How has your progress been?"
     The servants started replacing the empty dishes with desert.
     "All right,  I suppose. I'm  really not the  one to judge  my own
skills, Sir."
     "Ariam?"
     "Quite fine, although  she needs to learn to  be more comfortable
with the  blade, learn the finesse  of using the weapon.  We made good
progress on feints and breaking binds."
     "Pardon my bluntness, my Lord,"  Kera said, "but I feel perfectly
comfortable with  my weapon. It's  fighting with someone  more skilled
that troubles me."
     "Troubles me, too,  my girl," Sir Hardin  muttered, "troubles me,
too."
     "It is the  only way to learn," Sir Brand  insisted. "You have to
stretch yourself so you may reach."
     "Talking about stretching," the Baron  said, "I want you to leave
for  Hawksbridge  as  early  as   possible  tomorrow  --  right  after
breakfast, so  act accordingly. And that  goes for you as  well, young
man," he tuned  to his son. "And  stay out of trouble  while I'm gone,
understood? Do everything Kera tells you."
     "Yes, Sir," the boy answered.
     After  dinner Kera  went  for  a walk  in  the keep's  courtyard,
relaxing in the cool evening breeze.  In the morning she would have to
accept a  new responsibility,  perhaps the greatest  one she  was ever
given. She considered  how long she may have to  remain in Hawksbridge
and what she would need to take with her. It may be a short trip, or a
very long  one. But then Valdasly  would be three days  away, possibly
less on Hasina, so she could always return.
     When she went back into the  keep, Baron Dower stopped her in the
great hall. "One last thing, Kera," he said. "I have one more thing to
give you to take to Hawksbridge."
     She  followed him  to the  library where  he handed  her a  thick
envelope, with a large wax seal holding it shut.
     "My will,"  he explained.  "A duplicate will  remain here  in the
keep, and I want  you to give this one to the  Duke's archivist. It is
to be opened only on my verified death."
     "Sir..."
     "I'm not  going to Gateway  to die,"  he interrupted Kera.  "I am
going to save Baranur, but we must  always be prepared. Give it to the
archivist."
     "My prayers will be with you, Sir," she accepted the parchment.
     "Thank you, Kera. Good night."

                   *          *          *

     In the morning Kera got up  much earlier than any of the previous
mornings  and went  for her  daily run.  She spent  the last  few days
running in the  meadow or up the canyon leading  away from the forest,
but  on this,  her last  morning at  Valdasly, she  decided to  run by
Charnelwood, towards the  village on the other side of  the valley. It
was still dark  when she made it  to the point where she  and Rien had
stopped on  their very first  run together.  She paused there,  at the
edge of the road,  looking into the forest. For the  first time in her
ten days  in Valdasly, she could  feel something from the  forest. She
took a few steps off the road,  closer to the tree line, to see better
into the darkness of trees. For an  instant she though she could see a
light in the distance, floating in the darkness between the trees.
     "Who are you?!"
     The sensation  quickly faded,  leaving an  empty feeling  and the
giant towering  trees menacingly  standing over  her. She  hesitated a
moment longer,  then hurried  back to  the road and  back to  the keep
itself.
     All the way back  she could not help but wonder  what it was that
she sensed.  Was the  forest really  alive, like  Rien said?  Could it
really watch those who passed by  it? Kera shrugged the chill that her
thoughts  had brought  on.  She  was there,  in  the  forest, saw  its
inhabitants. There were people living in those woods, people much like
Rien, who took comfort in the seclusion the dense forest provided.
     It was  light when Kera returned  to the keep, the  sun just high
enough to  shine its first  beams over the  top of the  eastern range,
bathing the  valley in  a comfortable  yellow light.  She ate  a quick
breakfast and packed  what little she would be taking  with her -- the
sword, the  bow Rien  purchased for  her, the  armor Enneth  made some
months before and some clothes.
     Once packed and ready to go,  Kera took her things to the stables
and then called on the Baron in the library.
     "Come," Baron Dower's voice sounded after a long wait.
     Kera entered  the room. The  Baron sat  behind his desk,  maps no
longer on the table. Before him sat  Stefan and Sir Brand stood by the
window. Kera greeted the men.
     "Are you ready?" the Baron asked.
     "Yes, your Lordship."
     "Good. Stefan, get your things. Meet us at the stables."
     "Yes, Sir," the boy got up and left the library.
     "Kera?"
     "Your Lordship?"
     "Any questions?"
     "No, Sir."
     "Any concerns?"
     She shook  her head. "It's  a great responsibility, Sir.  I won't
let you down."
     "Very  good," he  nodded. "Don't  let Stefan  boss you  around. I
warned  him  not  to  already.   Take  charge  and  follow  your  best
judgement."
     "Yes, Sir." She wondered if he  would say these things if he knew
of her past in Dargon.
     The  Baron turned  to Sir  Brand. "How  soon are  we going  to be
ready?"
     "As soon as you are, Sir. I saw to the horses myself and servants
were readying the armor."
     "Will old Ealhfrit be ready?"
     "Your guess is as good as mine, my Lord," the knight laughed.
     "Check on him while I see Stefan off," the Baron stood up.
     "Yes, Sir." He made a few steps towards Kera. "I wanted to..."
     "I forgot about  that," the Baron interrupted. "You two  go on to
the stables. I'll remind Ealhfrit. Wait for me."
     "What is it?" Kera asked the knight.
     "It's nothing  serious," he  answered as  they left  the library.
"Just  something  to  make  things right.  There  was  no  opportunity
before."  He handed  her a  palm-sized box.  "This is  a chain  of the
order. Wear it around your neck so  Knights of the Stone will know who
you are."
     "What? What order? Knights of the Stone?"
     "I  guess Sir  Keegan  had no  time to  explain  the politics  of
knighthood to  you. Knights  in Baranur are  broken into  orders. Each
order was started ages ago by  various Houses of Baranur. The House of
Arvalia, led by Duke Bargine, established  the Order of the Knights of
the Stone, in honor of his  father, Duke Bayder the Second, also known
as Bayder the Stone, for  his charming personality. There are painting
of them  in the  gallery upstairs.  All squires of  the order  and all
knighted by it wear the chain and pendant to show membership."
     Sir Brand reached inside his tunic and pulled his chain out as an
example. "This may or  may not help you in your  journeys, but it will
give you identity and a history...and it's a tradition."
     Kera opened the box and took a look at the chain. It was thin, of
fine workmanship, with silver links and a stone tear. "I've never seen
Sir Keegan wear anything like this," she commented.
     "I have," Sir Brand said. "It's your identity with us."
     "Thank you."
     They entered the stables and Kera double-checked the equipment on
Hasina, as  well as tack,  harness and saddle,  then did the  same for
Kelsey.
     "How soon  will you be  at Gateway?" she  asked Sir Brand  as she
worked.
     "A month, I suppose. Maybe mid-Sy, if we're lucky."
     "What do you think you'll find?"
     "A war. I know we'll find a war." He fell silent as Stefan walked
in, followed by the Baron.
     "Everything ready?"
     "Yes, my Lord."
     "I'm not  ready," Stefan complained.  He went to check  his horse
and Kera led the two thundersteeds out of the stables.
     "You're taking Kelsey also?" the Baron asked.
     "Sir Keegan asked me to keep an eye on her," Kera said. "Can't do
it if she's here."
     Baron Dower chuckled.  "Hope he keeps half as good  an eye on the
horse I gave him."
     "I'm sure he will, Sir."
     Stefan  came  out  of  the stables,  leading  his  chestnut-brown
stallion, with a white steak diagonally  across the neck. "I guess I'm
ready."
     "Stefan," the Baron  addressed him, "I know  you're practically a
man, but I want you to listen to the Duke and to Kera and do what they
say. I don't know  how long I'll be in Narragan or  where I'll go from
there, but I will write you as often as I can."
     The boy embraced his father. "I'll make you proud."
     "I know you will," the Baron tousled his hair.
     "Would you like  to ride Sir Keegan's horse?" Kera  asked the boy
when he was ready to go.
     Stefan looked at his father and the Baron nodded.
     "Yes."
     "Mount up, then!"
     Sir  Brand took  hold of  Hasina's reins  while Kera  mounted her
horse. "Thank  you, Sir Brand," she  told him. "And good  luck in your
mission."
     "Thank you, Kera," he handed the reins to her.
     The Baron  helped his  son mount Kelsey.  "Remember to  visit the
crypt in Hawksbridge, Stefan. Lay flowers  for you mother and tell her
I wish I could come."
     "Yes, Sir," the boy promised.
     "And take care. Write often."
     The boy nodded somberly.
     The Baron walked over to Kera, putting one hand on Hasina's neck.
"Take good care of Stefan."
     "I will, Sir. May Sevelin help you on your quest."
     "Sevelin?" the Baron asked, puzzled, "the god of magic?"
     "He helped me, Sir. I think he helps everybody."
     ReVell Dower released a hearty laugh. "Have a good journey!"
     Kera kicked Hasina into motion, followed by Stefan and Kelsey and
Stefan's horse. The boy  paused at the gates of the  keep and waved to
his father. The Baron waved back.

                  *          *          *

     "My Lord?" Sir Brand asked as the Baron sighed.
     "I worry about my son, Ariam. I may never see him again..."
     "I  worry about  Kera,  my Lord.  She is  a  young woman,  alone,
charged with the  protection of the boy. I hope  her courage and skill
remain untested."
     "Before he left, Rien told me  about where she's from and how she
lived,"  the Baron  said.  "I'm  not worried  about  her courage.  I'm
worried I may not return to tell my son the truth of where I went..."
     "We must have hope, Sir."
     "I do. I hope Baranur wins this damn war. I hope this is as close
as my son ever comes to being  in one." The Baron turned away from the
keep gates,  realizing he will  not be seeing  his son any  time soon.
"Lord Ealhfrit is ready. Assemble the men. We'll leave in a bell."

                  *          *          *

     Stefan Dower  remained quiet for  a very  long time after  he and
Kera  left  Valdasly Keep.  Kera  watched  his somber  expression  and
wondered how  to strike up a  conversation to distract him,  but could
not think  of what  she should say.  It was many  years since  she was
fifteen and her worries were not of living in the Ducal Palace at that
age. She was more worried of rotting under one. She had to be adult at
that age, know what risks to take and  how to take them. She had to be
self-sufficient and self-reliant. And she had to steal to survive.
     "Kera?" Stefan caught up to her, having fallen a little behind as
they rode.
     "Yes?"
     "Tell me the truth."
     "The truth?" she asked. "About what?"
     "My father. He's going to war, isn't he?"
     "Stefan... What gives you that idea?"
     "I know my father."
     "I'm not privileged to know some things," Kera tried to avoid the
question.
     "But you're not saying `no'."
     "I'm..." She sighed.
     "He is, isn't he? Tell me. I won't turn back."
     "I promised I wouldn't say a word," she uttered.
     "But you're not denying that he's not going to Narragan?"
     "No,  I'm  not.  He's  doing  what  he  feels  right,  what  Duke
Glavenford thinks is the right thing to do."
     Stefan sighed. "I wish he'd have told me the truth."
     "He loves you. He doesn't want you to worry."
     "I'm his son. I have to worry."
     "He'll come back in the fall,  I'm sure," Kera said. "Don't worry
yourself. Why don't you tell  me about Hawksbridge instead? I've never
been there."
     Stefan fell  quiet for a while,  giving Kelsey a chance  to start
falling  back, but  then caught  up again.  "I guess  you're right  --
there's no use worrying about what can't be helped.
     "Hawksbridge  is pretty  old. The  castle was  built about  three
hundred years  ago, but the city  is probably five hundred  years old.
It's  in the  plains on  the other  side of  the mountains.  It's very
beautiful. On a clear day you can see all the way to the mountains..."
Stefan thought for a moment.
     "The  castle was  built on  the  east bank  of the  river Ty,  to
protect the  kingdom from the  barbarians on this side...and  from the
evil spirits...."
     "Evil spirits?"
     The boy laughed. "The peasants say demons live in Charnelwood. No
one ever  goes there. It's  a very dangerous  place. I remember  a few
years ago  some children  from the  village went  into the  forest and
never returned.  And no one went  to look for them,  either. Every one
was afraid that the demons took them."
     "Do you believe they're real?" Kera asked.
     "The spirits? Of course! Everyone  knows there are spirits there.
They're older than Arvalia!"
     "Have you ever seen them?" Kera asked. She couldn't help but vent
the urge to pull his leg.
     "No. They stay in Charnelwood."
     "Then if you've never seen one, how do you know they're real?"
     "Have you ever seen a Benosian?"
     "No," Kera shook her head.
     "Then how do you know they're real?"
     "Word of mouth?"
     "Well...?" Stefan answered, victoriously.
     "I guess  I had  that coming,"  Kera laughed.  "But I'm  sure the
people  living  on  the  Beinison  boarder  will  swear  they've  seen
Benosians."

                  *          *          *

     Shortly before sunset  Kera and Stefan made their way  to a small
village in the  mountains, at the crossroads where  they were supposed
to turn southeast.
     "I guess  we're making good  time, since  we made it  here before
sundown," Kera commented.
     A  stream ran  on  the  north side  of  the  crossroads and  Kera
dismounted  Hasina,  letting  her   quench  her  thirst.  Stefan  also
dismounted and soon all three horses were in the middle of the stream.
     "There's a lake up that  way," Stefan pointed north. "It's locked
between mountains, about a league north of here. It's very hard to get
to,  but very  beautiful. My  father hunts  there every  summer. Every
summer except this one..."
     "You two will go there, again. As  soon as the war is over," Kera
assured him.
     He nodded.  "It's very  quiet there, just  birds and  the beavers
that dammed up the river... And north of that is a valley full of wild
game."
     "Maybe if  the Duke doesn't have  a problem with it,  someone can
take you here this summer," Kera offered.
     "Maybe," Stefan agreed.
     "Is there an inn here?"
     "There's one  down the road. It's  not a very good  one, but it's
the only one in the village."
     "Then we'll have to make the most of it," Kera said. "Come on."
     They got their horses and walked down the road to the inn.
     "We  need two  rooms," Kera  told  the innkeeper  once they  were
inside. "And we need stabling for three horses."
     "Are there three of you?" the man asked.
     "There are three horses. Two of us."
     "Kill someone on the way?" the man laughed.
     "Yes,"  Kera answered,  annoyed at  his nosiness  and the  stupid
laugh.
     "Well, here you go. Two keys, two rooms, two Rounds."
     "Two Rounds,"  Kera placed two  silver coins on the  counter. "Do
you serve dinner?"
     "Yes, we do."
     "Do you want to eat here?" she asked Stefan.
     "It's fifteen  leagues to  the next  village," he  answered. "And
this is the only inn and tavern here."
     "All right,  we'll eat here," she  agreed and turned back  to the
innkeeper. "There  are three  horses outside. You  can't miss  them. I
want them stabled, fed and brushed down."
     "That'll be another fifteen Bits, five a horse."
     Kera put another Round on the  counter. "I expect to find them in
VERY good shape tomorrow morning."
     "You'll find them in great shape, missy."
     Kera set her jaw,  but did not answer the man.  There was no need
to pick  a fight. They would  only be staying here  overnight. She and
Stefan went upstairs  to leave their things it their  rooms, then came
back to the common room downstairs to eat. It was dark outside by this
time  and  the   tavern  was  partially  full,   mostly  populated  by
middle-aged  men, drinking  and laughing  and complaining  about their
wives.
     "How about right here?" Kera indicated to an out of the way table
by the wall.
     "Sure," Stefan agreed. He waited for Kera to select a chair, then
helped her with it.
     "Stefan, I  don't want you doing  that again," Kera said  after a
moment's hesitation.
     "Why not?" he sat down across from her.
     "Because of your  social rank and because of my  goals for myself
and...and because I'm not a cripple and can do it myself."
     "Then perhaps you should start  addressing me correctly, too," he
said caustically.
     "I don't  think so," Kera  answered in mocking serious  tones and
Stefan laughed.
     "I thought I'd be a gentleman and show some chivalry."
     "I  appreciate the  gesture  -- it  was very  sweet  -- but  also
inappropriate and it's something I'm not used to."
     "All right," Stefan agreed. "If you insist."
     "Forcibly, if I have to."
     A lanky wench  came over to the table. "All  right, you two, make
it short. What do you want?"
     "You first," Stefan  said and Kera decided not to  argue with him
again.
     "What have you got?"
     "Dinner special  is five  Bits. Chicken,  duck or  mutton. Turkey
will cost  you six, pheasant is  seven. Ribs and beef  are seven Bits,
venison is nine. We have stew and soup, for three Bits a cup."
     "Turkey sounds good," Kera said.
     "Turkey," Stefan agreed.
     "Ale, mead, wine," the wench went  on. "Milk?" she glanced at the
Baron's son.
     "Milk," Kera said.
     Stefan looked at her and set his jaw. "Water."
     "Cost you the same," the wench warned.
     "Water," he repeated.
     "And bring us a bowl of fruit," Kera instructed.
     The serving girl left and Kera looked at Stefan. "Milk?"
     "Men don't drink milk."
     "You're one of those..."
     "I have to be in public," Stefan said. "And this past year father
has been having me drink ale and  mead at functions, as well. I am the
next Baron, after all."
     "You can drink what ever you want once we get to Hawksbridge, but
on the road stick to milk and water," Kera said.
     "Water. Men don't drink milk."
     "So I've heard."
     "Kera," Stefan  said, "I  told you  about Hawksbridge.  Would you
tell me a little about Dargon?"
     "Dargon..." It  seemed worlds  away. "Dargon's  a small  place. I
didn't think of it this way before,  but I've seen a little of Baranur
now. It's a beautiful city, if you  stay in the right part of town and
don't go outside  after dark." She chuckled,  remembering. "It's home.
Dirt and misery and bandits -- I'm still from there."
     The serving  girl came back,  placing bread, cheese and  milk and
water on the table.  "That'll be eighteen Bits as soon  as I bring the
rest of it," she warned.
     "The new  part of the city  is the most beautiful,"  Kera went on
once they were left alone. "That's  where Dargon Keep if built. It was
built on  top of  some old ruins,  so in some  places the  streets are
very, very old. Some say a thousand or two thousand years old, but the
town of Dargon is just over two  centuries and the new part isn't even
a hundred years old...
     "There's a  port that  spans the  length of  the beach,  too. And
during the summer the water..."
     "Kera," Stefan interrupted her, tilting his head to the side.
     Kera turned,  just in  time to see  a large man  sit down  at the
table by her. "Kid bothering you?" he asked.
     A second man sat on her other side. "We can make him go away."
     "Aw, look, milk," the first man said.
     Kera held her breath not to gag at the stench of liquor.
     "The boy's just having water," the other one said.
     "What,  boy,  ale? No  milk?  Or  do  you  drink hers?"  the  man
indicated to Kera.
     "I think that's quite enough," Kera stood up.
     "Aw, come  on, spend the  night with  me," the drunk  advanced on
her. "What has he got that I don't?"
     "Manners."
     "Har, har," the drunk choked, backing Kera against the wall.
     "We're not interested," she warned. "Leave."
     "We're interested," the second  man towered behind his companion.
"So why don't you  send the boy to bed and we'll  find another one for
you."
     Kera looked around. The other patrons had moved further back, the
nearest few tables being abandoned  with unfinished meals. Neither the
innkeeper, nor the serving wench were anywhere to be seen.
     "I  think you  should  go,"  Kera repeated.  "We  don't want  any
trouble."
     "Trouble?" the drunk laughed. "We don't want it either!"
     Kera drew  her dragger  and swung  it across  the man's  gut. The
blade skipped across the tough hauberk  and bit into his arm, throwing
a bloody streak across the wall.
     "Bitch!"
     Her  fist, reinforced  by  the dagger  hilt,  impacted the  man's
stomach, making  him double over and  with a final swing,  she planted
the base of the hilt into the back of his head, making him drop.
     The second man stood stunned  for a moment, then advanced towards
her, fumbling with the dagger at his belt.
     "Leave 'er alone!" Stefan yelled,  grabbing the water pitcher off
the table and swinging it at  the man. The wood vessel crashed against
the drunk's head, splintering and spilling water. The man stumbled and
fell as well.
     "Go, go," the  innkeeper rushed up to them. He  blotted the water
and blood on the table. "Go, before they figure out what hit 'em. I'll
have the meals sent up to your rooms."

                  *          *          *

     Kera stretched  in bed, savoring  the warmth of the  old blanket.
The black  of the  night slowly dissolved  into reddish  hues, forming
outlines of the furniture. Was it time  to get up? She sat up, holding
the blanket  tightly around her  shoulders. The night air  was chilly,
even colder than the drafty old castle she had been staying at.
     Outside  something creaked,  the  sound of  a  rusty wheel  joint
turning. A  whip snapped, followed  by a "move  it, you old  nag." The
whip snapped again.
     Was that a thud that woke her up a few moments before? Kera could
not remember.  She got up,  with the blanket,  and walked over  to the
window, to look  out, but by the time she  pushed the latched shutters
open, the road past the stables was empty.
     "Damn." It was  the middle of the night, the  eastern sky showing
no evidence  of morning light. "Like  I've got nothing better  to do."
She returned to  the bed and fell  on it in a tangle  of blankets, but
for some reason sleep had already left her for the night.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1                        Love an Adventure
                             Part Two
                       by David/Orny Liscomb
         (b.c.k.a )

*             This story is intended for mature readers, and          *
*        may not be suitable for all audiences. Although this         *
*        story was not written as erotica, it does contain            *
*        explicit depictions of sex and other adult themes            *
*        that some readers may find distasteful or morally            *
*        offensive.                                                   *

     The afternoon  sun was hot and  bright overhead as Dale  made his
way across the hayfield outside Dargon.  In the distance he could hear
the voices of  the people practicing at the archery  range, but he was
too busy thinking about the events of the day to pay much attention.
     Just this morning  he'd been sitting, transcribing  a history for
his father, wishing  something interesting would happen  for a change.
Now it seemed so far away!
     He had decided  to go visit his friend, Simon  the stew merchant,
but the old sailor had told him something that Dale was only beginning
to understand. He'd said that you  didn't have to travel the world and
rescue princesses in order to find adventure. Adventure was just doing
something  that  you'd never  done  before,  and  the old  seaman  had
insisted  that  there   were  plenty  of  interesting   things  to  be
experienced right in Dargon.
     Dale had been skeptical, but Simon had convinced him to try doing
something small but new, like visit a fortune teller. So Dale had gone
to see Zavut the seer, and it actually had been kind of fun. Zavut had
told him  that the  young man's  future included  a new  approach, new
friends, overindulgence, and resolution. It didn't make a whole lot of
sense, but it had been fun.
     As he  left Zavut' booth,  Dale spotted  Erica, a girl  he liked,
listening to the  music outside Jenzun's shop. In  his newfound spirit
of adventure,  he had decided  to talk to her.  She invited him  to go
swimming with a bunch of friends  at a nearby quarry, and although the
quarry was off limits to kids, Dale told her he'd go.
     It had  sounded like a  grand adventure at  the time, but  now he
wasn't  quite so  sure. He'd  heard of  kids getting  hurt out  at the
quarry  -- it  really wasn't  a safe  place. And  although the  quarry
sounded like a fun  place to swim, he wondered what  the kids who went
out there did. Would someone dare him  to jump into the water from one
of the  ledges? And the  kids who went out  to the quarry  always hung
around in  their own  little group.  They seemed  a little  strange to
Dale, and  with each step he  became more and more  uncomfortable with
the  whole idea.  But somehow  he kept  walking, and  the path  he was
following  eventually came  through  a  stand of  aspen  and  up to  a
clearing overlooking the quarry.
     "Dale!" Erica came  bounding up to his side and  hugged him. Dale
didn't quite  know how to  respond. He looked helplessly  over Erica's
shoulder at  the handful of  other teens  who were watching  them with
bemused expressions. Erica  sure felt good in his  arms, though! After
several moments she broke the embrace and took him by the hand. "Isn't
it beautiful?"
     Dale  took in  the area.  The kids  were sitting  in a  clearing,
shaded by the aspens he had passed through. A little ways away was the
lip of the quarry,  and forty feet down, the lake  that had filled it.
Ledges from  ten to seventy  feet high  surrounded the lake.  A little
further away Dale  could see the current quarry that  had been started
when this one was abandoned. And between them stood an immense pile of
broken granite blocks, some as big as a wagon!
     Erica followed his gaze. "That's the Chasm. It's full of half-cut
stone that wasn't cut right." She  turned him around. "Come on, I have
to introduce you to everyone."
     They walked  down into the  clearing and joined the  others. Dale
felt  a little  uncomfortable. "You  don't have  to introduce  me," he
whispered. "I know most of these kids."
     Erica smiled at him, as if  he understood nothing. "Yeah, but you
don't know their  *real* names! Everyone here has a  secret name. When
you've been here  a few times, you'll  get to make up  your real name,
too. And remember, I'm not Erica. I'm Paws. Straight?"
     Dale was even more confused. A dubious "Yeah..."
     One young  woman was standing  apart from the  others, practicing
with  a  hand-and-a-half  sword  that flashed  silver  in  the  bright
sunlight. She  was very  dark-skinned, with  black hair  and beautiful
dark brown eyes. Erica approached  her first. "Dale, this is Windsong.
She's an artist." She smiled warmly and Dale returned her greeting.
     The three of them walked over to where the others were sitting on
the ground. A heavy-set boy that  he knew was named Parker offered him
a mug of liquid and a smile. "Hey, Dale. Drink up -- you'll be needing
this later on!"
     Erica  -- or,  rather, Paws  --  nodded. "This  is Bearcub.  He's
harmless," she  added as  she exchanged a  meaningful glance  with the
boy. Unfortunately, Dale wasn't privy to the message. He took a sip of
the drink, which tasted like bitter apple cider.
     Next, Paws  introduced Seagull,  a smiling  young man  with long,
dirty blond  hair. Dale  knew that Seagull  was really  an innkeeper's
son, but no more than that. Next to  him sat a boy that Dale knew from
the classes his father, the scribe, had taught. Although Dale knew him
as Baird, Paws introduced him as Webster.
     Dale sat down and quietly listened to the group chatter. Paws sat
with him. After a few moments,  Windsong piped up. "Hey, let's go down
and crawl around the Chasm!"
     Everyone jumped  up, and Paws helped  Dale up. Just as  they were
about to leave, Paws scooped up Dale's half-full mug of cider from the
ground and gave  it to him. "Hey,  boy. Finish this up  before we go."
Dale shrugged and drained it.

     The walk down to the Chasm  was pleasant and warm. Walking behind
Windsong, he noticed that she was limping, and occasionally leaning on
Seagull for support. When he asked  Paws what was wrong, she told him,
"Windsong's stubborn  as a cat. She  was running home a  fortnight ago
and was  run down  by a  man on horseback,  and she  refuses to  see a
healer." Hearing this, Windsong turned around and grinned in reply.
     After a short walk around the  lake, they reached the Chasm. Huge
granite blocks and  boulders were piled forty feet  high. Dale thought
it looked  like a great place  for a rockslide; but  Windsong, despite
her  injury, hobbled  ahead of  everyone else  and leapt  up onto  the
nearest  block. "First  one to  the top  gets the  prize!" The  others
scrambled to follow.
     Hanging behind,  Dale looked skeptically  at Paws. "Is  it really
safe to be climbing around up there?"
     She  smiled. "Yeah.  We've never  been able  to move  any of  the
rocks, and we've tried. They don't shift at all. We've even named some
of the  rocks and  the caves  underneath. Come on,  I'll show  you Fat
Man's Misery..."
     Instead  of climbing  up the  outside of  the slag  pile, as  the
others had done, Paws led Dale  to a small crevasse between the stones
and into the base of the pile itself. They crawled on hands and knees,
and made  their way slowly  inward. Eventually,  they came to  a small
open area, where they flopped against the wall and rested.
     "This," Paws said between deep  breaths, "is the Cloak Room." The
laughter of  the others could be  heard, but it sounded  very distant.
Dale was pretty worked up, but he didn't know whether he was scared or
just excited.  He tried not to  think about the tons  of rock balanced
haphazardly just above his head. Despite his fatigue, he found Erica's
heavy breathing  very erotic, and  tried to  gather the nerve  to kiss
her. He wished he knew how to tell when a girl wanted to be kissed. It
just wasn't fair that he had to  make the first move! Even though he'd
never told her, she somehow ought to know that he liked her!
     Dale waited  too long,  and the  moment passed.  Paws got  up and
disappeared into  a tall but very  thin fissure in the  opposite wall.
"Coming?"
     Dale sighed  as he got  up and wedged  himself into the  two foot
wide opening. The crevasse was no more than twelve feet deep. Paws was
waiting for him at the other end. "Well," he asked, "now what?"
     "Watch this!" Paws  turned so that she was facing  him and jumped
straight up.  At the top  of her jump, she  pushed her hands  and feet
outward against the  walls, and stuck, suspended three  feet above the
floor. "Follow me." With that, she started making her way straight up,
alternately moving hands  and feet, but always  staying wedged against
the  walls of  the  crevasse.  By the  time  Dale  had gotten  himself
properly wedged, she was already fifteen  feet above him. "This is why
we call it Fat  Man's Misery!" he heard her call as  he tried his best
to keep up.
     Twenty feet  up, he  paused and  looked down.  This was  really a
great  place! The  rock was  cold against  the warmth  of his  scuffed
hands, and he could feel its  weight all around him. His leather boots
couldn't get much purchase on the granite  face, so he put most of his
weight  on his  arms.  Being a  scribe's son,  his  arms weren't  very
strong, and they soon began to ache. His heart pounded in his chest in
exhilaration.
     Paws' looked down at him. "It's easier if you scurry up -- if you
stop, you won't get started again!"
     When  she  was  about  thirty  feet above  the  floor,  Dale  saw
someone's hand pull her up and onto  a ledge out of sight. Then he saw
her head poke out again. "How are you doing?"
     "I'm almost there." He pushed and clambered upward one more time,
catching  the hairy  arm that  was waiting  to pull  him up.  Paws and
Bearcub were standing on the ledge, and Dale could see sunlight on the
boulders behind them.
     Dale got a bearhug. "Welcome to  the Tower!" Dale just panted and
grinned. He followed the others as they picked their way to the top of
the slag heap.  Everyone was sitting around, admiring the  view of the
two quarries: the old quarry that had  filled in to form a small lake,
and the new, active quarry on the other side.
     "So who won the race to the top?" Paws asked.
     "Bearcub  did,"  Seagull  snorted.  "He  jumped  a  span  that  I
couldn't..."
     Dale wasn't  surprised -- Bearcub  was the biggest of  the bunch,
and hadn't  had any trouble  hauling him  out of the  crevasse moments
earlier. He looked at Windsong expectantly. "So what's the prize?"
     No one answered for a second,  and Dale got the feeling that he'd
asked a bad question. Bearcub jumped in with, "It's a surprise."
     After another pause, Paws looked over  at Dale. "Whew. That was a
lot of work,  and this sun is really hot."  Then, addressing the group
as a whole, "Anyone for a swim?"
     Everyone thought that was a  wonderful idea, especially Dale, and
they picked their way carefully down  to the quarry's edge and back to
where  they had  gathered  before.  As soon  as  they  arrived at  the
campsite, everyone started removing their clothes. Dale hesitated, but
followed suit, patently  avoiding looking at anyone else.  By the time
he was done,  everyone except he and  Paws were lined up  at the ledge
overlooking the lake.
     Walking over to him, she said, "You sure take a long time getting
undressed." He  tried to keep  from looking  directly at her,  but she
caught him. "Why aren't you looking  at me? You really are too modest,
Dale. Don't you think I'm pretty?"
     Dale had  been brought  up to  be polite,  and that  included not
staring at  women. But Paws wanted  him to look, and  seemed amused by
his behavior.  He fought  with himself and  looked. Her  long burgundy
hair flowed over her shoulders and down her front, partially obscuring
her breasts.  Between her legs was  a small triangle of  matching fur.
Her hips  were cocked to  the side in an  suggestive pose, and  a hand
idly twirled one  lock of hair. Dale  wasn't in much of  a position to
judge how pretty she was -- he just wanted to touch her!
     "Dost thou like what thou dost see?" she teased.
     "Yes. You're beautiful!"
     "So  are you."  Dale had  forgotten his  own nudity  and blushed,
subconsciously  turning  his  shoulder  toward her  in  modesty.  Dale
couldn't  possibly think  of  himself as  "beautiful",  and it  really
embarrassed him. Paws giggled, then  turned and bounded off toward the
others. "Come on!"
     Everyone but Bearcub and Windsong were in the water when they got
to the  ledge. Dale  noticed that Bearcub  had considerably  more body
hair than  he did, which made  him kind of self-conscious.  But Dale's
eyes lingered on Windsong's dark skin and muscular frame.
     "I guess it's my turn," said Bearcub as he walked a few feet back
from the ledge.  Dale stood with the two women  and watched as Bearcub
ran up to the edge of the cliff and jumped off, landing in the water a
second later  with a big  splash. Dale walked  to the edge  and looked
down; the  water was a  good thirty-five feet below  them. Apparently,
being a quarry, it was deep enough to jump right in.
     He'd heard  stories about kids  who had gotten hurt  jumping into
the quarry. That was why the adults didn't let the kids go there. Even
though most  of the others had  gone before him, Dale  didn't like the
idea very much.
     "Is this the only way to get in?" he asked.
     Windsong turned, looked him up  and down appraisingly and smiled,
which  made Dale  feel really  self-conscious again.  "No. After  Paws
dives in, we'll  go down to the  lowest ledge over the  water. With my
knee the way it is, the  Evils," nodding toward the others, "won't let
me jump  in from anywhere  else," she pouted.  She made it  sound like
they were punishing her, rather than thinking of her safety. But after
seeing  her aggressive  disregard for  her injury  at the  Chasm, Dale
figured he sided with 'the Evils'.
     They watched as Paws got a  running start and dove in head first.
Then Windsong leaned  on Dale and they climbed down  to a lower ledge.
Dale really enjoyed  the feeling of having Windsong's  arm around him.
And he  was very aware of  each time her naked  breast brushed against
him,  although she  didn't seem  to notice  it at  all. When  they got
there, Dale  wished that  the trip had  been considerably  longer. And
that he  still had his  breeches on! Fortunately,  Windsong apparently
hadn't noticed *that*, either.
     "Now, all you have to do is  jump in. And keep your hands at your
side."
     Dale stood at the edge and  peered over. It was about twelve feet
above the water. "Is it cold?"
     "It's beautiful!" Paws shouted to him from below. "Jump in!"
     Dale  composed himself.  He really  wasn't very  comfortable with
heights, but he knew  that he was a very good  swimmer. He'd even done
some diving off  the docks, but they were usually  not this high above
the water. At  least here he was directly over  the water and wouldn't
have to get a running start. He nervously took two steps and leapt out
over the water.
     For a  moment it  seemed like  he was suspended  in air,  then he
began to  fall. Time seemed  to have slowed  down, because he  had the
time to look around him and see Paws and Bearcub treading water below,
and  notice the  blueness of  the  sky and  the rugged  cliffs of  the
quarry. He even  heard the call of  a gull over the rush  of air about
his ears. Surely he'd been falling  much longer than Bearcub had taken
when he jumped from the higher ledge!
     His feet slapped through the surface and his body drove deep into
the water,  tickled by  a million  little air  bubbles as  they rushed
upward. As he kicked and struggled  back to the surface, he thought he
could hear Paws voice. He opened his  eyes and looked up at the cliffs
of  the  quarry and  the  woods  around  them  from a  completely  new
perspective.
     "That was great! Let's do it again!"
     Everyone  laughed, and  Paws showed  him  where to  climb up  the
granite face to get  to the ledge where she and  the others had jumped
from. Standing at the edge of the cliff, Dale could see that he'd have
to get  a running start  in order to  clear another ledge  that jutted
further out. He walked a few paces back from the edge and stood, ready
to jump. His heart raced with excitement and a little fear. What if he
slipped just as he jumped? What if he hit the water wrong? He couldn't
even see where he was going to land!
     He willed  himself to take  the first  step, and suddenly  it was
decided. He  couldn't turn  back now, lest  he seriously  hurt himself
trying to  stop. He  took three  more strides before  he saw  the lake
suddenly open up beneath him. His bare foot felt every grain of gravel
on rock as he leapt out and over the water. Again, he hung momentarily
suspended  above the  lake. Then  he  plunged downward  with his  arms
outstretched  behind him  like the  wings  of a  gliding eagle  before
pulling them  to his sides  as he impacted the  water. It took  a long
time before his body stopped sinking, and  he had to swim quite a ways
back to the surface.
     Dale continued jumping and  diving from several different ledges.
He had never had such a wonderful time!

     But everyone eventually  tired of swimming, and  they headed back
up to the encampment. Following Paws, Dale carefully picked his way up
the granite  face. His skin tingled  as the water evaporated  from his
nude body  in the warm summer  sun, and his eyes  followed Paws' ample
form just in  front of him. Her hips swayed  and he would occasionally
see  her  naked  breast  bobbing  as she  climbed,  her  nipples  very
prominent after the cool swim. He felt compelled to touch her, to grab
her and  make love to  her, but he tried  to keep his  desires hidden.
Unfortunately, that wasn't so easy to do without breeches!
     Soon they reached the clearing where everyone had stripped before
going down to swim. Before he could get to his clothes, Paws turned to
face him, her deep brown eyes shining.
     "How did you like *that*?"
     Dale smiled, momentarily  fancying that she was  referring to the
climb up. "That was really great.  Especially the cliff jumping -- I'd
never done anything like that before... Thanks for inviting me to come
along." Dale had certainly had a  wonderful adventure, and had lots to
tell Simon the stew merchant next time he saw his old friend.
     Paws  returned his  smile and  took his  hand. "I've  got another
surprise for you, too. Come on!"  She pulled him off towards the copse
of aspen that stood nearby.
     "Um... Can I grab my clothes first?"
     "Dale! Don't  be so modest. Isn't  it better to feel  the sun and
wind on your  skin?" She pirouetted in celebration,  and Dale wondered
at her. He envied her sensuality --  he might feel the same joy as she
felt, but if he showed it like that, people would laugh at him.
     Dale let himself be led down a  worn path that led around the top
of the quarry and toward a small  pile of cut stone he'd seen earlier.
Paws led him  past it, into another clearing that  contained a mass of
undergrowth.
     "Look for a  plant with a big, orangey-red fruit.  We want one of
them -- don't take any more, straight?"
     They rummaged  around the undergrowth for  several minutes before
they  found a  plant that  had two  reddish fruit.  Paws sat  down and
offered him one, waiting for him to bite into it.
     The rind was soft, and the pulp red and juicy. As he bit into it,
the red juice ran  down his chin from both corners  of his mouth. Paws
laughed. "That's just  the way you have to eat  it. It's rather messy,
but that's okay..." She bit into it, and Dale watched as the juice ran
sensuously down her chin and dripped  onto her naked chest. She slowly
ran  her tongue  across  her lips,  and once  again  he found  himself
suppressing the desire to kiss her.
     Dale took another  bite and savored the taste. It  was sweet, yet
had a certain  bite to it. The  juice was warm, and he  could feel its
heat  spreading through  his body  as  he swallowed.  "It's warm!"  he
giggled.
     Paws laughed and nodded. He could see that it had the same effect
on her; her face and chest were flushed a rosy pink.
     Dale  took another  lusty bite  and juice  squirted all  over his
hands and in his lap. "Ummm... So what *is* this, anyways?"
     Paws smiled and fell into his arms. "Nightfruit..."
     Dale's eyes  opened wide.  Nightfruit? Nightfruit was  very rare,
and  was usually  only  given  to newlyweds  on  their wedding  night!
Everyone knew that it was supposed  to enhance desire. Dale could feel
its warm  surge building  irresistibly. She'd tricked  him! But,  in a
way, it had  been in the back  of his mind ever  since he'd approached
her earlier that  afternoon at Jenzun's booth. And even  though he was
torn between joy  and fear of what  might happen, she felt  so good in
his arms...
     Erica  watched quietly  as these  thoughts rushed  through Dale's
head. Then she reached up and kissed him; her soft, moist lips met his
tenderly but irresistibly. They fell back into the undergrowth in each
others' arms and began to make love.
     Dale's eyes closed as he focused  on each moist kiss. However, he
was troubled  by the nagging  sense of responsibility that  his father
had instilled  in him.  Was this  the right thing  to do?  Weren't you
supposed to wait  until you were married? But he  also had friends who
bragged about having made love. But  good boys didn't do these things.
And he  also knew  girls who  had children at  his age...  He suddenly
broke off and sat up. "What's wrong?" Erica asked him.
     "Well,  it's not  right... I  don't want  to take  the chance  of
becoming a father."
     Erica caressed his  back and smiled. "Remember that  drink I told
you  to finish?  That wasn't  just cider,  dear. You  won't be  making
anyone pregnant for two whole days..." She smiled conspiratorially.
     Dale still  didn't feel quite  right about going forward.  He was
still a little scared, even though he  didn't know why. As he tried to
sort through his  indecision, Erica put her arms around  him and began
lightly caressing the nape of his  neck. She brought her lips close to
his ear. As she whispered to him, he could feel her warm breath on his
neck. "Lover..."
     No one had ever  used that name for him, and it  sent a shiver of
excitement down his spine. His  resistance crumbled like a sand castle
before the  tide as Erica  pushed him down,  onto his back,  and began
raining kisses  on his neck  and chest. Her  leg slid between  his and
began grinding against his crotch. He  tried to match her motions with
his hips as  he stared unfocusedly up into the  branches of the aspens
above, lost in sensation. He  caressed Erica's back, then her buttocks
as she  subtly guided  his hands  lower. His  hands explored  the soft
warmth of her flesh  as her lips and tongue traced  the muscles of his
chest.  Her kisses  made  their way  up  his neck  to  his chin,  then
suddenly her lips found his, swarming over them urgently.
     With their lips locked, she sat up a little, supporting him as he
followed.  She rolled  onto her  back and  Dale was  free to  take the
active role. He began exploring her neck and shoulders with his lips.
     "Nibble..." she suggested, and he complied. Her hands pressed his
lips into  her neck, silently encouraging  him to bite harder.  As her
excitement became  more vocal,  Dale found  her reactions  feeding his
enthusiasm. She  guided his lips  to the base  of her neck  and lower.
Dale could taste  the sticky Nightfruit where it had  dripped onto her
chest. He stopped  for a moment to admire her  breasts before he began
to kiss them. Her reaction was a breathless "Yesssss..."
     As he continued, he began to grind his leg against her crotch, as
she  had  done earlier.  Again,  she  responded enthusiastically,  her
breath coming in short gasps. Then she brought his hand to her crotch.
He began massaging her maidenhair, and registered surprise at how bony
her pubic mound was.
     Then she guided his hand  lower. "Inside me..." she pleaded. Dale
wasn't very comfortable with his knowledge  of what he was supposed to
do, but he managed  to find his way around. He  slid his middle finger
inside her nether lips, as her hips bucked to meet him. Inside, it was
warm and  satiny-soft and  very wet,  and he felt  her tugging  at his
finger. He closed his eyes and imagined  what it would feel like to be
inside her.  Her hand  found his  manhood and  began stroking  it with
long, forceful thrusts. He was completely lost in the sensations.
     Her closed eyes  opened and he could see the  desire in them. "Do
you want me?"
     "Oh, yes!"  was all he  managed to get  out. She pushed  him back
onto his  back, and straddled  him. Then  she took his  achingly erect
manhood and  guided it to  her. She  hovered over him  an excruciating
moment before impaling  herself upon him. The sudden  wet, satiny heat
surrounding his  manhood felt so  incredibly good! Erica kept  him all
the way  inside her  just for a  moment, then began  to move  back and
forth. Dale  had never felt so  close to anyone before.  His wide eyes
locked  with Erica's,  communicating  intense love.  Dale kneaded  her
buttocks as they slapped against his thighs. Her womanhood grasped his
member on  each thrust, milking him.  Suddenly, Dale knew that  he was
about to come, and  a half second later his back  arched in ecstasy as
he exploded inside this beautiful woman.
     Their motions slowly subsided, and Erica slowly backed off Dale's
spent manhood. It slipped out of  her and fell limply onto his stomach
with a very  wet splat that Dale found horribly  embarrassing. The two
of them shared a smile over it,  and Erica took Dale into her arms. He
closed his eyes  and enjoyed the feeling,  occasionally shivering with
the intense memory of  how delicious it felt to be  inside a woman for
the first time.

     He woke with his face nestled  in the warmth of Erica's chest. He
turned and  looked up  into her  deep brown eyes  as she  greeted him.
"Hello, lover. Have a nice nap?"
     Dale could  hardly contain his emotion.  "You're beautiful. Marry
me?"
     She smiled in  a bemused sort of way, then  pinched his nipple so
hard that he  flinched. "You're so cute!" She drew  his face back into
her chest. "Here, have a tit."
     Apparently that was  a 'No'. He buried his nose  against her soft
breast for a while more, then  asked, "What about the others? Did they
go back to town?"
     "They're still around. Come on, let's track them down!"
     Dale  followed as  Paws led  him back  toward the  path. "There's
Webster  and Seagull,"  she pointed  the couple  out. Beneath  a beech
tree, the two men were locked in  an embrace. Although he knew that it
wasn't that uncommon, he'd never seen two men together. He didn't know
quite how  to react to  it, but he  felt a twinge  in his loins  as he
watched.
     They walked on toward the campsite in silence. Dale was trying to
figure out how  he felt about what  he'd seen. He knew  how his father
felt about men who loved one another, but if they were both happy, was
any harm being done? Was it something he could see himself doing? That
wasn't  a  very comfortable  question!  As  if Simon's  definition  of
adventure and  making love to Erica  hadn't given him enough  to think
about already! They walked on, hand in hand.
     He and Paws entered the  clearing to find Bearcub giving Windsong
a  back rub.  Dale noticed  the  discarded Nightfruit  on the  blanket
beside the two,  and noted the blush on their  cheeks and chests. Paws
held Dale's hand as they quietly approached.
     Dale again found  himself admiring Windsong's nude  body. She was
very dark,  with long, straight  black hair  and deep brown  eyes. Her
breasts were smaller than Paws', and shaped differently.
     Paws knelt down directly in front  of Windsong, so that they were
both kneeling, facing  one another, nude. Their eyes  locked, and Dale
could see  the feelings they  shared -- these  two women were  in love
with one  another! As he stared  in amazement, Paws moved  forward and
kissed Windsong on the  lips, as gentle and loving a  kiss as Dale had
ever imagined.
     Dale was completely mesmerized by the scene before him. He stared
as the  two kissed each  other deeply and passionately,  their breasts
touching as  lightly as their  lips. On  one level, it  really excited
him, but on a deeper level he acknowledged that it was by far the most
beautiful thing  he'd ever  seen. His eyes  remained riveted  on Paws'
full lips  as they  traced their  way down  Windsong's throat,  to her
cleavage,  and  fastened  onto   her  succulent  breast.  Dale  gaped,
awestruck at the beauty of the  scene. As he watched his lover working
on Windsong's nipple, Dale whispered to  no one in general, "That's so
beautiful!" The  artist's deep  brown eyes  flitted half-open  and met
Dale's wide-eyed stare. She smiled  and squeezed his hand, then closed
her eyes in concentration.
     Dale  saw Bearcub  come up  behind Paws  and begin  massaging her
breasts.  Then the  two kissed  deeply before  Bearcub joined  Paws in
nibbling and aggressively sucking Windsong's breasts. Dale would never
have been so  rough himself, but apparently it was  okay, for Windsong
thrashed her head quickly from side to side in ecstasy.
     Paws moved downward  and traced Windsong's legs  with her tongue,
slowly settling  on her womanhood.  Dale watched as she  licked around
Windsong's blossom, and  the dark woman writhed and moaned  as if each
loving caress were a lashing.  Dale stared in wordless appreciation of
the  love and  excitement that  was  being shared  with him.  Finally,
grasping  the hair  of  each of  her lovers,  Windsong  exploded in  a
furious orgasm that left everyone spent and panting. And smiling.
     Paws stretched, kissed Bearcub, and  then Dale. Her tongue darted
inside his mouth, and he could smell and taste Windsong's womanhood on
her. It was sweet and musky and  heady, and struck a chord deep inside
him. It was something Dale knew he'd never forget.
     Then  Windsong leaned  up and  kissed Bearcub  and Paws  and then
Dale. Before  he knew it,  Dale even got a  kiss from Bearcub!  It was
both very  similar to  kissing a  woman, and  very different.  He felt
small next to the big man, which was a very different feeling.
     Their energy spent, the lovers all  lay in a pile on the blanket.
Dale didn't know why, but even  the powerful scent of the women around
him somehow  left him  feeling very  safe and  secure and  loved. He'd
never felt such a wonderful unity before.

     Dale had  sat and reflected  for a  few minutes when  Seagull and
Webster arrived  at the campsite.  The newcomers all  gathered around,
and suddenly everyone was exchanging  hugs and kisses of greeting with
everyone else.
     "Thank goodness  that's over with!"  said Webster, giving  Paws a
hug. "I  hate having to be  on best behavior when  guests are around!"
Everyone  laughed and  sat down  to  talk. Windsong  grabbed Dale  and
pulled  him down  next to  her.  With her  arms around  his neck,  she
commented, "I'm keeping this one!"  in an authoritative tone. Although
Dale couldn't make  up his mind whether he felt  embarrassed or proud,
he certainly felt good.
     Dale  posed his  question  to  the group  as  a  whole. "I  don't
understand. Do you act like this all the time?"
     Bearcub, sitting  on the other  side of Windsong,  replied. "It's
like this. We're kind of a family, like we're all married. We all care
about each other, and we like making love to each other."
     "But isn't this  kind of strange? How come you're  not jealous of
each other?"
     Bearcub responded, "What's strange to me  is the idea that if I'm
in love with  Seagull, I can't be  in love with Paws,  too. Loving her
doesn't reduce  my love  for him."  That kind  of made  sense. Bearcub
continued, "I'm  not jealous of  you, either, because  Paws' affection
for you  isn't any threat  to her relationship  with me. In  fact, I'm
glad, because  it's made  you both  happier, and I  can share  in that
happiness."  He glanced  slyly at  Paws. "You  can't imagine  how long
she's been going on about you!"
     Dale looked at his lover, and she was blushing. Apparently it was
true!
     Bearcub continued. "And we all had  to encourage her to bring you
out here. We did that because we  knew it would make her happy, and we
care about her."
     Dale struggled to  keep up with the conversation  and think about
his own  feelings. "But this isn't  right -- you can't  seriously live
this way?"
     Seagull picked  up the argument.  "But if we lived  like everyone
else, we would all  have to choose one husband or  wife and reject the
others, and no one  would be happy. We really do  love each other, and
it's much easier this way." With a wry smile: "Although having several
lovers can be just as much of a problem, too."
     "I never knew any of this existed.  You don't act this way in the
city..."
     "The only time we're free to show  each other how we feel is when
we're out  here," added Webster.  "So we  come out here  pretty often.
Someday maybe we'll live in our own house or a farm outside Dargon."
     As the conversation continued, Dale's mind worked to keep up with
the concepts  and their implications.  It sounded like they  were very
happy  thinking of  themselves  as  one big  family.  Dale thought  to
himself about  whether or not  he could live  in such a  group. Loving
more than one person might not be  so difficult, but could he give his
lovers the same freedom? Would he  ever be able to support and nurture
a lover's love the way Bearcub had encouraged Paws?
     He sure had  lots to think about! Although  he certainly couldn't
say that he loved all these people, he liked them and felt comfortable
with them.  But did he  really care about  these people? The  idea was
very  appealing.  But  was  that  just  because  he  was  looking  for
excitement and  adventure? Did *they*  genuinely love one  another, or
were *they* just looking for excitement and adventure?
     To look at them, Dale thought it was the former. But the idea was
so strange! He'd never thought there was  any other road but for a man
to marry a  woman and have a  family. In Dargon, men  didn't love men,
and there  was no such  thing as a  group marriage. His  father called
such people "freaks". But Dale knew these kids; they weren't "freaks".
Baird was one  of the smartest kids  he knew, and one  of the students
his father liked best! Surely his father didn't know this about Baird!
     Already  today his  father had  been proven  wrong about  fortune
tellers and  the quarry. Could  his father, a knowledgeable  scribe to
the Duke of Dargon,  also have been wrong about this?  And if so, what
did that  mean for all the  other rules and principles  his father had
instilled in him? Although his  father had undoubtedly meant well, did
he now have to question everything his father had taught him?
     One thing  was certain: Simon's simple  statement about adventure
had led Dale very far afield.

     Eventually, Paws  took Dale  aside and walked  with him  down the
path. "You should  head back to the  city now. We have  some things we
need to talk about as a group."
     "Is one of them me?" Dale inquired.
     "Of course!" She  gave him a quick but passionate  kiss. "And I'm
sure you've got plenty to think about, too!"
     "That's for sure." Dale sighed heavily.  "I just wish I never had
to leave."
     "Me, too."
     After a pause, Dale spoke again. "You know, this morning a friend
told me that all  I had to do to find adventure  was do something I've
never done  before. After  all the  things that  I've done  today, I'm
beginning to think he's right."
     They walked  on for a  moment before Paws responded.  "My biggest
adventure today was  bringing you here. When we met  at Jenzun's booth
this morning, I knew that I wanted to bring you out here, but I almost
missed  it because  I was  afraid to  take the  chance. If  you hadn't
approached me, it never would have happened."
     Dale thought  about that  as she continued.  "I believe  that you
should never deny yourself anything if  you think you will regret that
decision later. So  many people go through life  thinking that they'll
be happy just as soon as winter  is over, or their children are grown,
or whatever, that they never enjoy  today. They go through their whole
lives waiting  for tomorrows. Then,  when they're old, they  look back
and realize that they've never spent  a single day happy or content. I
don't want to  be like that. You  only get one chance  to enjoy today.
I'm glad I took this chance."
     Paws stopped as they reached the end of the path, where the woods
met the hayfields. In the distance,  Dale looked upon the distant town
from a very new perspective.
     "So,  what  do  you  think  of our  little  family?"  she  asked,
approaching him from behind and wrapping her arms about him.
     Dale smiled, but had no idea  what to say. "It's hard to believe.
It's so different. It really seems  like a family. You're all so happy
together, you know?"
     She took both his hands in hers. "Yeah. We try to give each other
as much  of ourselves as we  can. We *are*  a family. We all  love one
another  very  much."   Then  she  frowned.  "But   the  adults  don't
understand. When we first got together, it was Seagull and Bearcub and
I: two men and  a woman. When we told our parents,  they laughed at us
and  told us  to grow  up.  When we  persisted, they  just got  angry.
Seagull's parents eventually  threw him out of the  family. They can't
see that there can  be any other way other than one  boy and one girl.
We have to be kind of careful who knows about us."
     "That's why you use nicknames?"
     "Sort of.  When we're in town,  we act like Erica  and Parker and
Baird. Erica  acts like everyone in  Dargon expects Erica to  act. Out
here, I'm  not Erica  -- I'm  Paws, and  Paws is  kind of  a different
person: the person I really want to be. Someday they won't be separate
people."
     "I know what I want to be called, if I can be part of the group."
Paws cocked her head in inquiry. "Sluice."
     She  smiled. "Straight!  But I  should get  back to  the others."
Then, with a very mischievous twinkle in her eye: "See you next time?"
     Dale sighed and smiled. "I love you."
     "And we love you."
     Dale turned and walked silently back toward Dargon, contemplating
the day's events and the meaning of Paws' last statement.

     Dale made sure that he caught  up with Simon Salamagundi the next
morning.
     "Hey, Dale! So wassa fortune teller a good adventure?"
     Dale had forgotten  all about the fortune teller!  Simon had sent
him  there to  prove to  him  that adventure  could be  found even  in
Dargon, if you were  open to it and knew how to look.  What was it the
seer had told him he'd encounter?  A new approach, new friends and new
relationships, indulgence, and a favorable resolution.
     "Well, I guess you're right,  Simon. There certainly does seem to
be some adventure to be had in boring old Dargon, after all!"
     The old sailor gave him a  gentle poke. "Good. No more talk about
running off to faraway places?"
     "Nope," said Dale with a grin. "I think there's plenty to keep me
occupied right here in Dargon." Simon would think that the trip to the
fortune teller  he'd suggested had  done the trick.  In a way  it had,
although there was much more to the story than that. And much more yet
to tell. But this time it was Dale's turn to keep a secret.


                       Love an Adventure
                        Author's Comment
                     by David/Orny Liscomb

     "Love an Adventure" is a story about growth. The protagonist,
Dale, has several mind-expanding experiences and comes out a very
different person on the other side. But as much as Dale grows, the
story's unstated goals are the growth of DargonZine and you, its
readers.

     "Love an Adventure" pushes the informal self-imposed boundaries
that the Dargon Project authors have lived under since the project's
inception in 1985. It is the first Dargon story to contain on-screen
sex, which we have historically avoided. Probably more
controversially, the story arguably contains positive depictions of
drug use, dangerous behavior, bisexuality, polyamory, teen sex, group
sex, casual sex, and raises serious questions about consentuality. It
also does not portray the practice of "safe sex", which has become a
necessity of modern life. It is far afield from what we've been
comfortable writing to date. Like Dale, we are growing and trying new
things.
     It was just a matter of time before sex and these other issues
made their way into the "Dargoniverse" as the authors call it. It is
my hope that this story will show that there is a legitimate place for
sex in Dargon, or any form of literature, when it is dealt with
maturely and in the pursuit of a valid literary goal.

     In "Love an Adventure", my literary goal is that the story will
also help the reader grow. Even with its positive depiction of
alternative lifestyles, the real purpose of the story is what Dale
learns from Simon in the first half of the narrative. Adventures are
for everyone, and happen every time you do something that you've never
done before. You don't need to do anything special to find adventure,
because it exists everywhere you go; you just need to be open to new
experiences. Your results may not be as exotic as the adventures Dale
has had, but then again they might, and I guarantee that you will grow
as a person.

     I hope that it is obvious that "Love an Adventure" is something
other than a pornographic heterosexual male fantasy masquerading as
literature. It is intended to be a very personal statement about life,
and a study of the protagonist's emotions as he comes to understand
this philosophy and follow the fascinating places that it takes him.
Future stories about this group are planned.

     Comments are very strongly encouraged, whether they be in
agreement or disagreement, and whether they deal with adventure, the
role of sex in DargonZine, polyamory, or whatever. You may contact the
author directly at or you may send
mail directly to the DargonZine writers' group at
, where it will be echoed to all Dargon
Project writers.

     I'd also like to thank the people who have (sometimes completely
unknowingly) helped this story, and the bits of my own that show
through, be written: Ailsa di Mipp, Ace, Dafydd, Lothie, Nodrog
Cur-chaser, Recki, Max, Sonja, Amq, Lory, Claudia, Lauren, Ayse,
Curwen, and the other Dargon Project writers. I hope both stories
bring you as much pleasure as I experienced by participating in their
writing.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1  (C)    Copyright   August,   1994,   DargonZine,     Editor   Dafydd
. All  rights revert to the  authors. These stories
may  not  be  reproduced  or   redistributed  (save  in  the  case  of
reproducing  the whole  'zine  for further  distribution) without  the
express permission of the author involved.






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 D    D  AAAA RRR  G GG O  O N N N   Z     I N N N E     || Number 4
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========================================================================
DargonZine                                     Distributed: 10/12/1994
Volume 7, Number 4                             Circulation:      1,083
========================================================================

                               Contents

Editorial                    Ornoth D.A. Liscomb
...I Shall Repay             Max Khaytsus           Yuli 25-27, 1014
CFV: rec.mag.dargon          Ornoth D.A. Liscomb

========================================================================
DargonZine is the publication vehicle of the Dargon Project, a
collaborative group of aspiring fantasy writers on the Internet.
We welcome new readers and writers interested in joining the project.
Please address all correspondance to .
Back issues are available from ftp.etext.org in pub/Zines/DargonZine.

DargonZine 7-4, (C) Copyright October, 1994, the Dargon Project.
Editor Ornoth D.A. Liscomb . All rights reserved.
All rights are reassigned to the individual contributors. Stories may
not be reproduced or redistributed without the explicit permission of
the author(s) involved, except in the case of freely reproducing entire
issues for further distribution. Reproduction for profit is forbidden.
========================================================================

                              Editorial
                        by Ornoth D.A. Liscomb
                       

    "Haven't I seen you somewhere before?" What better use for that
cheesy opening line?
    It's been six years since I wrote my last editorial and shut FSFnet
(DargonZine's predecessor) down. In the fall of 1988 I turned the
leadership of the Dargon Project and the production of its magazine over
to one of our best writers, John White (aka Dafydd). John has done an
admirable job keeping the writers writing and reaching new readers. He's
put out several dozen issues totalling over 50,000 lines of text. He
deserves recognition and thanks for the effort he's put into making
DargonZine a success.
    As he mentioned in his editorial in DargonZine 7-3, I have
reassumed editorial responsabilities. What's that mean? Well, because
all the Dargon Project authors collaborate on the actual job of proofing
and critiquing stories, you shouldn't expect to see major changes in the
content of the magazine. The job of the editor is primarily the
production side of things: compiling and distributing issues,
publicizing the zine, managing the infrastructure necessary for author
collaboration, and some direction setting.
    There are many changes in the works on this production side. We've
developed DargonZine readers' and writers' FAQs to periodically post to
likely Usenet newsgroups. We are hoping to set up an automated
subscription bot, and exploring other interfaces beyond ASCII text.
We're also hoping to find a site to sponsor us and provide us a
permanent home and FTP site.
    This issue is an example of another thing we'll be trying to get
away from: one-story issues. In the future, there'll be more, smaller
stories per issue, and more serialization. No more gargantuan
single-story issues.
    We're also working to have our newsgroup, rec.mag.fsfnet, revamped.
A vote is currently under way to permit us to rename the newsgroup to
rec.mag.dargon and make it an unmoderated newsgroup, so that it can be
used not only for distribution of issues, but for feedback and
discussion between the readers and the writing staff. The text of the
"Call for Votes" appears at the end of this issue; *PLEASE* take the
time to send an email message to , with a body text
of:

       I vote YES on rec.mag.dargon

Then, get everyone you know to do the same. Every ballot is crucial,
so please do whatever you can to get YES votes.

********************************************************************
*   IMPORTANT!!! IF MORE THAN 1/3 OF THE VOTES RECEIVED ARE 'NO'   *
*   VOTES, OR IF WE DON'T RECEIVE 100 MORE 'YES' VOTES THAN 'NO'   *
*   VOTES, WE WON'T BE ABLE TO MAKE THIS CHANGE!!! PLEASE VOTE!!   *
********************************************************************

    In addition to the visible changes, we're also working on many
things behind the scenes. The biggest of these is a huge database of
Dargon's people, places, and things, that cross-references them with the
stories in which they appear. It's quite an undertaking, but it'll be a
priceless help for our writers, both old and new.

    Bitnet readers may notice that issues are now being delivered to
them as email, rather than via SENDFILE or DISK DUMP. We apologize for
any inconvenience, but for technical reasons I am unable to continue to
support those file formats.
    Thanks to those of you who sent feedback regarding "Love an
Adventure", which was printed in 7-2 and 7-3. It was the first sexually
explicit story we have ever printed, and your comments give us better
insight into our readership. Your continuing feedback is
enthusiastically encouraged.

    Let me close with a familiar refrain to those of you who remember
the days of FSFnet. DargonZine is as much your creation as it is mine or
John's or the writers'. Your interest and participation are what
determines whether we are successful or not. And as we prepare to
celebrate the tenth anniversary of FSFnet's first issue with a
blockbuster two-issue reprint of the "Best of Dargon", we gratefully
acknowledge that you, the readers, have made FSFnet/DargonZine the
longest running electronic magazine on the Internet.
    However, it is imperative that we continue to solicit new readers,
and there's a very serious need for new writers. Although we plan to
increase our visibility, it's important that you, the reader, do what
you can to help us spread the word to people who might be interested.
    And VOTE YES for rec.mag.dargon!!!

    With that said, this issue features another story by Max Khaytsus,
our most prolific writer in recent years. I had the pleasure of meeting
Max and nearly all of the current Dargon writers on a road trip I took
this spring, which was a wonderful experience. Max impressed me as
articulate, opinionated, and very detail-oriented, and we had great fun
terrorizing the staff and patrons of the Johnson Space Center. "...I
Shall Repay" takes place during the war between the kingdoms of Baranur
and Beinison, and recounts the shipboard exploits of his longstanding
protagonist, a certain Rien Keegan...

========================================================================

                           ...I Shall Repay
                           by Max Khaytsus
                 
                           Yuli 25-27, 1014

         Skalen Deven Yasarin. That name alone was more than
    enough to take any Beinison regiment any distance. He, just
    like his blood relatives, was supposed to be dead, a symbol of
    what will happen to those who would disagree with the imperial
    line, commoner and noble alike. It was a different reason that
    had brought the Imperial Beinison Army and Navy to the shores
    of Baranur, but the reason did not matter to Deven. His
    single-minded goal was the large cog in the Shandayma Harbor,
    the _Golden_Sword,_ fighting the strong currents at the Laraka
    delta. She majestically stood against the strong current,
    holding out better than even the larger, sturdier galleons at
    her side. She was the ship that carried a number of sages,
    among them the venerable Lord Haurance Cinofrid, one of the
    greatest scryers of his day.
         "I've got you," Deven laughed, watching the ship from
    shore. "Another day ... two. You won't float well with a hole
    in your belly."
         He looked down at the two dead sailors at his feet. There
    was a sense of satisfaction that another two of his enemies
    were dead by his own hand. Four decades ago he would have
    proudly called them his countrymen, but that pride was long
    since gone, forever replaced with anger and bitterness. No
    amount of Beinison blood would ever restore his family to life
    and he would keep that blood flowing as long as he could, to
    force the Empire to remember his loss.

    "Commander?" a man's voice followed hurried knocking on the cabin
door. "Commander, you're needed on deck."
    Muriel Dainyn shifted in her hammock, letting the book she held
close on her finger. "I'll be right there!" 'It's the wind. It's always
the wind,' she thought, feeling the gentle rocking of the hammock. The
motion soothed her, bringing back memories of a little girl on board the
merchant vessel _Eastern_Star_ many years before. She swung out of the
hammock with practiced ease, again opening the book and tossing a coin
between the pages to keep her place, then proceeded up on deck.
    "Ma'am," a sailor said, passing her in the long alleyway she needed
to navigate to get on deck. She greeted him, but did not stop, wanting
to resolve the problems above and return to her novel.
    "Commander?" a new voice greeted her as she appeared on deck.
    "Lord Cinofrid. A pleasure to see you on deck so early in the
morning."
    The elderly man bowed, his grey eyes picking up the sparkle of the
sun. "The pleasure's all mine, Commander."
    "Commander Dainyn?" a sailor called from the quarterdeck.
    "Yes?" she looked up.
    "Wind's shifting west, Commander. We need to turn. We can't fight
the current and the wind!"
    "Do it!"
    "North or south?"
    "You best handle this," the sage said, noticing the anxiety in the
woman's face.
    "Thank you, my lord." She hurried up the companionway to the bridge
over the quarterdeck, taking the stairs two or three at a time. "Icath?"
she called the first mate.
    "Ma'am?"
    "Can't you handle this?"
    "No, ma'am. Whichever way we turn, we've got _Broken_Beak_ behind
us and she's close enough that we'll take her fore and jib in a turn."
    The woman turned and looked at _Swift_Sparrow,_ the large galleon
aft of them, holding her own into the wind, too close for any fancy
maneuvering.
    "Damn Kaar! Using me for a wind break again! I've got it on my mind
to knock that jib right off his deck!"
    "He's a captain, ma'am. One of Talens' favorites," the mate
reminded her.
    "And my father's a duke ... not one of Untar's favorites. Let's see
how fast Kaar dumps in his pants." She looked around, noticing the
expectant sailors, all watching her. "Helm, hold her steady. Gennaker
and mainsail down!"
    "We'll lose wind," Icath said.
    "And Kaar better move his cow, or she'll have a broken beak for
sure."
    Sailors released lines, causing the large sails to drop and the
_Golden_Sword_ to catch the current. The cog slowly drifted back, the
smaller sails still holding the wind and fighting the current.
    "Turn back and look, Icath. I don't have the nerve."
    The mate adjusted his cap, taking the opportunity to glance over
his shoulder. "They're watching us."
    "You'd think I was a Baranurian or something!" the woman exclaimed.
    "Kaar's an old sailor. He doesn't think you belong."
    "Tell him I don't want to be here any more than he wants me here,"
she muttered.
    "Vane shifted," Icath noted.
    Muriel looked up at the streamer over the crow's nest. "Dropped
sails in time. I'd hate to think where we'd be otherwise."
    "Pennant to stern!" someone on deck yelled.
    Muriel and Icath turned to look back at a sailor on deck of the
_Sparrow,_ signalling them with a red flag. "Signal him to move back!"
Muriel ordered.
    "Commander," the helmsman said, "I can't hold her into the wind."
The rocking of the deck was long an indication of that.
    "Prepare to put port lee on my order."
    "_Sparrow_ needs to back off, or we'll be putting her jib though
our side," Icath noted.
    "Aye, sir, but if she don't, she'll put her jib up our poop," the
helmsman answered.
    Muriel watched a man signal the _Sparrow_ with a pennant, but no
answer came back. "Drop sea anchor," she ordered.
    "Ma'am? That'll drag us."
    "Risk, Icath. It's all about risk. Cavalry will take a phalanx if
it consists of cowards."
    "She's falling back," the signalman announced.
    "Mizzen up, lee to port!" Muriel ordered. Sailors heaved on ropes
in response and the helmsman spun the wheel to the right. "Sea anchor
up!"
    The _Golden_Sword_ slowly settled into the new current.
    "Doesn't make your day, does it?" Icath asked.
    "Oh, it makes it, all right. Makes it all bad."
    "Sorry, ma'am."
    "Not your doing, Icath. Just watch our back."
    "Yes, ma'am," he nodded and went to the helmsman as she took the
companionway down to middeck.
    "Lord Cinofrid?" Muriel found the old sage looking off towards the
nearing land as the ship was repositioned in the water. "I'm sorry about
that scene."
    "It's quite all right, Commander. I'm just a passenger on your
vessel."
    "So am I, my lord. I'm here only for political reasons."
    "Your fame on land precedes you," Cinofrid said, "but you shouldn't
be a commander when you're a captain."
    "I don't want to be a captain, my lord. I want my sword and my
horse and my regiment. And an enemy to fight."
    "But you're here now."
    Muriel flung a strand of oakum overboard. "I'm here because my
father is a great captain, too old to go to war, and has dreams of me
carrying his burgee into battle. I'd have been better off going with
that fleet to Dargon. At least they get to land."
    "It's all about land to you, isn't it?" the sage laughed.
    "I was born on land. I sure intend to live on it!"
    "Do you know what your name means, Muriel?"
    She looked up at him, a little confused. This was the first time in
a month he called her by her given name. Before this it was always
'Commander', just like with the rest of her crew.
    "It means 'sea-bright'. I'll bet that wasn't an accident on your
father's part."
    "Then why did he encourage me to be in the army?"
    "I don't know that. I never met the duke," Cinofrid answered, "but
you have here a chance to be a legend on sea as well as land. This is an
opportunity no one before you has had."
    "My lord, I may know the terms and maneuvers and command respect of
my men, but when I eat breakfast and the ship rocks, I sure wish I was
on solid ground."
    The old wizard laughed. "So do I."
    "I best get back to my tasks," Muriel said, secretly thinking about
the novel waiting in her quarters. There were few real duties to handle
while waiting for orders in the middle of the bay -- nothing Icath could
not handle himself, except perhaps for the occasional pig-headed move by
Captain Kaar or one of his officers.
    "I should, too," Cinofrid said. "I do my best work rested, in
mornings."
    "I'll walk you down," Muriel offered, letting go of the gunwale.
    They made only a few steps, when the man in the crow's nest yelled
out, "Man in the water!" Activity quickly picked up on deck, with
sailors rushing to rails, looking into the sea. Muriel instinctively
turned to the _Swift_Sparrow,_ expecting to see someone in the water,
but the lookout yelled again, "Man in water on steer-board!"
    "Steer-board?" Muriel turned back to the side of the ship she was
just on. There was no trace of anyone in the water. She neared the
gunwale, looking into the water.
    "Commander?" the mate appeared at her side. "What do we do?"
    "Where is he, Icath? I can't see a thing!"
    "Right there," he pointed to some debris in the water about quarter
league distant.
    "But that's just some planks ... a broken crate?" the woman
squinted to see better.
    "You need to work on your sea-eyes," the sailor laughed. "That's a
man."
    "He looks dead," someone announced.
    "No he's not," someone else yelled.
    "Lookout?" Icath called up. "What's the word?"
    "Alive, I think -- he's holding on!"
    "Commander?" Icath turned to the woman again. "Should we get 'im
from the drink?"
    "Yes."
    "He's probably Baranurian."
    "Get him, before Kaar sees him. He might be important."
    "And if he's not?"
    Muriel looked at the nearing debris and the man she could now make
out holding on to it. "If not, we'll see. We can always throw him back."
    "Baear, Marbin, get that man out!" Icath ordered.
    Two men scrambled for the davit extending over the bulwark from
midship. Some others moved a gangplank into position to aid their
efforts.
    "Arm a couple of men, just in case," Muriel told the mate.
    Icath barked out more orders, taking charge of the rescue. The
debris was going to pass relatively close to the ship and no effort to
move it was needed, but it would not be close enough to make the rescue
easy.
    "Commander," Lord Cinofrid approached the ship's captain, "if you
would, take notice of Captain Kaar and his crew."
    She looked over her shoulder at the _Swift_Sparrow,_ no more than
one hundred feet off _Golden_Sword's_ port. The galleon's crew stood on
deck, watching the events unfold on her ship, Dasgant Kaar in the
forefront, arms folded, a scowl on his face.
    "Someone go for a swim?" Kaar yelled, noticing Muriel looking at
him.
    "The cook went fishing!" she yelled back.
    "I've tasted your cook's work, Captain Dainyn. Leave him for the
sharks!" The men around Kaar laughed.
    Muriel turned away, looking at her men work.
    "Won't you respond?" the sage asked.
    "No. He's not worth it," she said, trying to show more interest in
the action on the other side of her ship. "Besides," she sighed, "I
don't know what to say."
    "It's not what you say, but how you say it," Cinofrid advised.
"Don't let him intimidate you."
    "Ma'am, _Broken_Beak's_ circling 'round," one of the sailors said,
indicating to the galleon having raised mainsail and started around the
cog's bow.
    "How much longer?" Muriel asked. "I don't want Kaar to see what
we're doing. Icath?! What's going on?"
    "We almost got him," Icath called back. He had stepped over the
bulwark and was holding on to the backstay, to keep from falling. Below
and around him sailors cast lines in attempt to secure the debris.
    "Hurry it along," Muriel said. "Kaar's getting too curious."
    The mate glanced up at the galleon, making a wide circle, now half
way to the cog's bow. "Baear, just pull him in. Don't worry about the
planks."
    Muriel looked at the sage, then at the _Swift_Sparrow._ The galleon
had indeed deserved that name, having gone most of the way to her ship's
bow in such a short time. She fought the easterly wind, making the turn
and that gave a few more moments for the sailors attempting the rescue.
All they needed was just a few moments longer.
    "You're a competitive woman, Commander," Cinofrid laughed. "I see
why you like war."
    "I don't like Kaar and the more I can make his belly ache, worrying
about what it is I caught, the better I'll feel."
    A line on the davit broke, snapping from broadside and flying into
the mainmast, where it tangled on the mainstay. "Hold him up!" Icath
yelled.
    "Helm to steer-board!" Muriel called, ordering a turn into the
wind. The ship moved to the right slowly, blocking the _Sparrow's_ view
of the rescue.
    "All right, just hoist it up," Icath called down. "Don't bother
with the raft."
    Men heaved on the ropes strung overboard and brought up a plank on
which sat a wet sailor, holding on to a semi-conscious man. Two sailors
swung the davit in, locking the gooseneck that supported it in place.
    "Move him to the carling," Muriel instructed, knowing that would
take her catch completely out of sight of the _Sparrow._ "Icath, wrap it
up!"
    The ship's physician leaned over the rescued man and started
checking his condition. A group of sailors gathered around them, all
trying to get a good look at their catch, obscuring their captain's view
as well as their own.
    Icath Taryl assisted the last two sailors on deck as the
_Swift_Sparrow_ made her way around the _Golden_Sword's_ bow, Dasgant
Kaar leaning on his ship's jib, looking at the crowd on deck and the
debris in the water. Icath saluted the large captain as the ships again
closed. "Good day to run circles around cogs, Captain."
    "What'd you catch, Taryl? Your cook or a shark?"
    "Shark caught the cook, sir. We didn't get much."

    Muriel entered the cargo hold, where the rescued man was placed,
away from the prying eyes of the _Sparrow's_ curious crew and captain.
The man they rescued was alive and well, although rather beat up and
tired.
    "A day or two rest and I expect he'll be as good as new," the
physician speculated. "He took some water, but he's in good shape."
    "Thank you, doctor," she answered, studying her catch. He was a
tall man, maybe a little better than six foot, with blond hair and
bright blue eyes. His clothes were torn from what must have been a
struggle that forced him into the water and she suspected that he was
not a peasant. "I'll call you if there's anything else, doctor."
    The physician nodded and left.
    "Wait outside," Muriel instructed the two armed guards who followed
her down on Icath's orders. "No one comes in. If I need help, I'll call
you."
    "Yes, Commander," the men answered and left.
    Muriel approached her prisoner. He lay, still dripping water, on a
platform built of crates with supplies. As she approached, he tried to
sit up, but she motioned for him not to. "What is your name?" she asked,
speaking in Benosian. There was little chance the man would understand,
but it was her native tongue and the one she felt most comfortable in.
There was no indication the man understood. That could only mean he was
not on her side in this war.
    "Are you Baranurian?" she asked in the local tongue. It seemed like
he grasped some words, but not enough to make sense of them. That
surprised her somewhat, but she did not give up. "Do you speak
Galician?" she asked in the only other language she knew.
    The man forced himself up on his elbows. "I am Galician," he
answered. He took a deep breath and lay back down, obviously too
exhausted to support himself. "Where am I?"
    "You're aboard the _Golden_Sword_ of the Royal Beinison Navy. What
is your name?" Seeing the man was not Baranurian, Muriel relaxed a bit.
He was not as big a threat as she feared he might turn out to be, and
she was curious what he was doing out in the bay, so far from his
homeland.
    "My name is Rien Keegan," he answered. "I'm very grateful for your
help."
    "I'd have thrown you back if I thought you were Baranurian," she
said.
    Rien turned his head to look at her upon hearing that. "There are
sharks out there."
    "There's a war out there."
    "Does life mean so little to you that it can be disposed of so
easily?"
    "An enemy's life? Sure." Muriel sat down on a crate across from
Rien, studying him.
    "Well, I guess we all feed on death in one way or another," Rien
answered, turning his head away from the woman.
    Muriel glanced up at the beam that ran above him, that his eyes had
to be locked on. "What makes you say that? What do you do?"
    "I'm somewhat of a scholar."
    "A scholar?" She examined his form. There were two types of
scholars she met. The fat ones who sat on their rumps all day and
complained and the skinny ones, who sat on their rumps and complained
just as much. This Rien Keegan looked nothing like a scholar. He was
well muscled, well tanned and clearly weather-worn. "You don't look much
like a scholar."
    "What does one look like?"
    "What does one do?"
    Rien looked at her, understanding the question. "Books are
perceptions of the past, by people who experienced and recorded it. Most
accounts are biased by what those recording them believed personally, or
what they were paid to believe or write. History isn't just a story from
the past, a few faded words on parchment or a legend passed from father
to son. What we do now, we do because someone else did so before us and
the way we can learn about ourselves is by studying ourselves. We are
all reflections of our past."
    Muriel smiled, trying to hide the smile from her prisoner by
looking away. "You're a philosopher."
    "I'm a scholar who doesn't look for answers in books. If we stop
exploring life today, who will write the books about modern life that
future generations will want to read?"
    "What are you looking for in Baranur?"
    "Roots."
    "Whose?"
    Rien did not answer for some time. "Everyone's. The west coast of
Cherisk is where Fretheod fell. It's where the world was reborn."
    "Is that so?"
    Rien shifted on his crates. "Just tell me I'm crazy and leave it at
that."
    "All scholars are eccentric," Muriel answered. "I'm more interested
in why Baranur now. And why the river?"
    "Perhaps I should ask you why Baranur now and why the river?"
    "I have my orders."
    "I have my research. I told you why Baranur. This is the west-most
part of Cherisk. As for the river ..."
    "Yes?" Muriel asked after a prolonged pause.
    "Let's just call it bad timing."
    "You were attacked?"
    "Yes."
    "By?"
    "A man with a sword."
    "Benosian?"
    "A man with a sword. He did not tell me who he was fighting for."
    Muriel stood up. "You look like someone who can defend himself."
    "Not against an armed opponent," Rien sighed.
    "Those are the fortunes of war."
    "There are no fortunes in war."
    Muriel frowned. "You best rest. I have other duties to attend to. I
will have food sent to you shortly." She walked to the door, pausing as
she heard a struggling gasp behind her.
    "Who are you?"
    She turned to see Rien sitting up on the crate. He was slouching
forward, holding on to his ribs. "I am Commander Muriel Dainyn, captain
of this vessel. My physician said you're merely bruised. You will be
fine in a few days. I will have him mix something for your pain." She
waited a moment longer, then turned and left the hold, giving the guards
outside instructions to feed the prisoner and wait.
    She returned on deck and finding a remote spot along the bulwark,
leaned on the rail and watched the sea. This self-proclaimed scholar she
caught did not strike her like what he claimed he was. He was fit, tan,
strong. He could be a scholar, but she had a feeling. He just did not
seem the type.
    "Commander?" the first mate's voice disturbed her contemplations.
    "Right here, Icath."
    He leaned on the bulwark by her, looking down to where the water
licked at the hull below. "How's our fish?"
    "He claims to be Galician ... and a scholar."
    "Is he?"
    Muriel shrugged. "He speaks Galician. Better than I. But I don't
know the first thing about scholars."
    "He's pretty fit," Icath said. "Didn't strike me like a book
lover."
    "Same here."
    "Why was he in the drink?"
    "Said someone attacked him." Muriel turned, placing her back
against the rail. "Anyone here speak Galician?"
    "Can't say. Lord Cinofrid, perhaps. He'd tell you if our fish's a
scholar."
    "He has more important things to do than question my prisoners,"
the woman answered. "Let's not forget why he's here."
    Icath nodded. "You're right. But I forget why we're here
sometimes."
    "How's Kaar?"
    "_Broken_Beak_ backed off. Kaar hasn't been on deck since the
rescue."
    "Watch him like he watches me, Icath. I don't trust that man one
bit."
    "Nor I, Commander. If it were up to men like him, you'd have no
place in the service of the Emperor."
    "Yes, I would. As a rug."
    Icath turned to look at her. "Those are harsh words."
    "I know Kaar."
    "I'll watch, ma'am."
    Muriel turned back to the water as the mate left, reviewing the
talk she had with her prisoner. Could he be a Galician scholar? 'Keegan'
-- was that a Galician name? She kicked at a loose bulwark board.

    After the evening meal, Muriel told the guards to bring the
prisoner to her on deck, then stay at a distance and watch. She wanted
to give him a sense of security and a chance to tell her his story
again. She did not have to wait long. Moments later, the two guards
reappeared with the scholar and led him up to the fore of the ship.
    "I understand you're feeling better," Muriel said, looking him up
and down. She had not mistaken about his build. He was tall and well
muscled, not like any scholar she had ever met.
    "Much better," he smiled, sitting down on a crate. She noticed him
wince as he changed positions.
    "My physician informs me your shoulder and ribs are sore, but there
is little bruising."
    "Lucky twist," Rien answered. "Very lucky, indeed."
    "How did it happen?"
    He let out a deep breath. "I was making my way into town, when a
man confronted me at the edge of the docks. He drew his sword and ..."
Rien looked up. "You're going to make me tell this story until you're
satisfied it does not change."
    "I have to be careful in a war."
    He nodded. "The man didn't say anything. Just drew his sword and
started swinging. I was able to thrust my pack before me and it took the
first hit, but he cut it, and his sword caught my sleeve. His second
blow was to my side. I suppose that having caught in my clothes, the
sword twisted and the flat of the blade pushed me over into the river. I
must have been stunned, because the next thing I knew, I was holding on
to driftwood, being battered against the side of your ship.
    "I wish I could tell you who that man was. I wish I knew myself.
I've met my share of brigands and robbers, but this was the first man
who was unwilling to talk."
    "You always try talking to those who draw steel on you?" Muriel
asked, amused.
    "I try. Sometimes it works."
    "Tell me."
    Rien looked up. "This is hardly an interrogation."
    "You'd rather I interrogated you?"
    "No, please ..."
    "Then amuse me by telling me a story."
    "I ..." Rien paused, thinking. "I guess it was three or four years
ago. I was in Lederia, in the highlands, when my horse's path was
blocked by a fallen tree. I got out of my saddle to lead the animal
through the brush, when two men appeared from it, both holding swords. I
had the feeling they would take my money, but I did not expect they
would take me as well.
    "They wanted my horse, I imagine, because they went through great
efforts to be gentle with it and ..."
    "I thought I heard Galician speech," Haurance Cinofrid appeared
from the darkness. "I'm sorry to interrupt, but I love the language. It
has words for things we build sentences to describe."
    Muriel frowned. She had agreed with the sage that he would intrude
on their discussion and evaluate her prisoner, which he did right on
time, but she wanted to hear the rest of the scholar's story and the
sage's interruption quickly removed any chance of that happening this
night.
    Rien glanced at the old man, looking him up and down. He was a
grey-eyed, grey-haired man in his sixties, appearing somewhat brittle,
but rather agile for someone of his advanced years.
    Muriel stood up. "Lord Haurance Cinofrid, Rien Keegan."
    Cinofrid approached. "You're the man who was pulled from the water
this morning."
    Rien stood up as the sage approached and greeted the man in the
traditional Benosian greeting. The old man responded in kind, a little
surprised.
    "You've been to our lands?" he asked, letting go of Rien's arm.
    "I am familiar with some customs, my lord."
    "I wish I could say the same about Galicia, but your borders are
closed to most foreigners."
    They all sat down again. "My Lord King is a man of old beliefs of
family and privacy."
    "I understand your Lord King is an ancient man," Cinofrid noted.
    "He is an old man, but far from ancient. His isolation gives birth
to many rumors."
    "So I can imagine." The sage fell silent for a moment, casting a
glance at Muriel. "I'm not interrupting, am I?"
    "Not at all, my lord. I was being entertained with scholarly
tales."
    "You are a scholar, then?" Cinofrid asked.
    "I am a scholar," Rien agreed.
    "Your discipline?"
    Rien shrugged. "People?"
    "A historian? A philosopher?"
    "A little of both, I guess. I look at life and try to make sense of
it."
    Cinofrid laughed. "Puglewav, Shewu, Elepniwra ... Keegan?"
    "I would be honored if some day my name is listed with the greatest
thinkers of Fretheod."
    "Some would call them harlequins and soothsayers."
    "What would you call them, my lord?" Rien asked.
    "I'd call them men who had too much free time, whose purses grew
and energies dwindled, so they travelled the lands, giving people
advice. Puglewav was killed because he dared speak."
    "But he said things that are to this day the basis of our
existence."
    "But was he right?"
    "He was to me. He said, 'an unexamined life is not worth living,'
so I study the lives that people lead."
    "He also said that 'no man knowingly does evil'," the sage pointed
out.
    "You don't think he was right?"
    "Certainly the men who took your money and your horse, and the one
who attacked you when you entered the city were were not 'good men',"
Muriel said.
    "Oh, you're not going to involve me in a political discussion,
because that's where this question always leads. If you want to
understand ethics, you have to understand Shewu."
    "Surely you have an opinion," Cinofrid protested.
    "I do," Rien said, "but let me assure you that it is not the same
as yours. And it is different from a Baranurian you may find in this
town. Even the two of you, I suspect, differ in opinions on the
divisions between good and bad."
    "Good and bad are the lines that divide Gow from Amante," Muriel
said.
    "And the knights of Beinison align themselves with Gow, the
Protector?" Rien asked.
    "Of course!"
    "Does that mean the knights of Baranur are aligned with Amante, the
Masked God?" Rien went on. "Surely they don't view themselves as
following the god of criminals, executioners and gladiators!" He paused
long enough to let his words sink in, but not long enough to let his
audience answer. "Good and bad are the lines that divide the twins,
Sanar, the Wise and Talam, the Green."
    "But they're both gods of healing and nurture and growth," Muriel
protested.
    "But one is a king."
    Silence lasted for a long span of time, disturbed only by the sound
of the waves lapping against the sides of the ship. Muriel kept looking
at Rien, Cinofrid off into the murky darkness of the harbor. Somewhere
on deck boards creaked as sailors attended to their chores on the dark
deck of the _Golden_Sword._ A loose sail flapped in the light breeze
blowing in from the south.
    "I don't understand."
    Rien turned to look at Muriel. "Think about it. It has nothing to
do with what they do and everything with who they are." He stood up as
the two guards who had brought him here came back, alerted by the sudden
silence. "I see my keepers are here to take me back." He indicated to
the two men as they appeared from the shadows. "Good night, Captain.
Good night, Lord Cinofrid."
    He walked over to the two soldiers and let them escort him into the
darkness.
    Muriel remained quiet well after their footsteps disappeared below
deck. She tried to make eye contact with the old sage, but failed,
twice. Then, looking into the dark water beyond the ship, spoke. "Is he
a scholar?"
    "He asks hard questions."
    "Does that make him a Galician scholar?"
    "Perhaps."
    "My lord ..."
    "He affected you," the sage interrupted.
    "He made me think about his world."
    "Galicia?"
    Muriel shook her head. "He made me think about what makes us
different."
    "Then perhaps he is what he claims. Puglewav was killed for this
crime."
    Muriel sighed. "He said he was not going to bring up politics."
    "By saying he would not, he did," the sage stated. "And he knew
when to take leave. He did not let the discussion fall on the morality
of the war."
    "But he did let it lie with us," the woman said. She stood up and
leaned on the bulwark. "What do I do with him?"
    "Give him a day or two to recover, then return him to shore, or
arrange passage to Beinison on one of our returning ships, should he
desire it."
    "You don't think he's a threat?"
    "No more than I am, Commander."
    Muriel frowned. "You're Untar's eyes."
    "The eyes are old and tired. They don't see as well as they used
to. The army struggles more as it reaches further inland. My range is
tasked."
    Muriel turned back to the sea, leaning on the ship as the little
girl she used to be had. The ocean had remained much as she remembered
it, except much of the childhood romance had turned to mystery of the
vast expanse, and the bulwark grew smaller and less comfortable. Life
had only managed to become more complex.

    "You're up early, Commander," Icath called down to Muriel before
she was completely out on deck. She paused, squinting up into the bright
sunlight, holding on to the fidley for support. The first mate stood on
the quarterdeck, fists on his sides, a pipe in his mouth. He adjusted
his cap as the woman made her way to the upper-most deck.
    "Thought you said you were going to take night watch."
    "Took it."
    Muriel pulled a cable hanging over the toerail back on board,
taking the opportunity to glance into the clear blue water.
    "_Broken_Beak_ almost tore our jib off at daeg," Icath muttered.
"She must've gone up into the delta at night, then hurried back down in
the morning. Kaar's sitting on us like a vulture!"
    Muriel calmly turned and looked at the large galleon, holding wind
not far away. There were two sailors on deck watching the
_Golden_Sword._ "How close did she come?"
    "Quite close. Close enough, I could smell their breakfast."
    "What were they having?"
    "Maggots on rye," Icath spat. "And salt water."
    The woman laughed. "You stayed up to tell me that?"
    "Stayed up to watch the raffenrakers."
    "Take a break, Icath. I've got plenty of dizzy sailors as it is,"
Muriel said.
    "Too tired to sleep," he answered, taking a deep puff of smoke.
    "I've got a book in my cabin -- _Lives_of_Lords_and_Princes_ --
guaranteed to put you to sleep, if you can put it down ..."
    "That the one you been reading?" Icath asked.
    "The same."
    Icath shook the ash from his pipe. "I don't like to read."
    "Either way, get off the deck. You've been up for a full day now."
    He nodded. "Watch the topsail. It's been tearing loose all night.
I've had the bowman set it twice this morning." He paused, looking
about. "Galician been very quiet. Probably still asleep. Cinofrid came
up to sniff the wind. Cook said he wants to make port for new supplies.
All right, all right. I'm going." He shook the pipe out again and
proceeded below deck.
    Muriel watched him go, then glanced up at the topsail. She could
see a corner binding flapping in the wind. "Bowman, what's with my
sails?" she called down.
    "Need a fresh line, ma'am! I'll need to restring the lines next
time we put into port!"
    She nodded to him. Five days since they left port and everyone
wanted back already. The nod turned into a shaking of the head. "In a
few days, Bar."
    He went about his business and she turned to look at the
_Swift_Sparrow._ The galleon had neared a bit since she looked at it
last and standing on deck, before the castle, was Kaar himself.
    "Promises to be a good day, Captain," he called to her, in spite of
the dark clouds gathering in the west. He made a few steps forward,
coming up to the bulwark of his ship.
    "Good for swallowing the anchor," Muriel agreed.
    "Now, Captain, is that any way to talk to a fellow soldier?"
    She sighed and turned her back to him, not having anything more to
say.
    "Who was that fish you caught yesterday?" Kaar continued his
questioning. "I understand he was out for a long swim."
    Muriel calmly proceeded to the lower deck, letting the echos of the
unanswered questions remain on the wind. She went below deck, to the
cargo section where the Galician scholar was being held. The two guards
at the door stiffened up as she approached.
    "'Morning, ma'am," one said.
    "How's my guest?" she asked.
    "He's up, ma'am."
    "Open the door."
    The guard fumbled with the key and let her in, waiting for further
instructions in the corridor.
    Muriel entered the hold, not bothering to close the door behind
her. Rien Keegan lay across a row of crates he had apparently arranged
himself. His arm lay across his face, shielding his eyes from the
non-existent light. There was a blanket lying on the floor, at the base
of the crates. Muriel paused, looking at his motionless form. "You're in
damn good shape for a book lover, Keegan."
    His arm slipped, the back of his hand slapping against the wooden
deck. He quickly pulled it back up, making a fist. "Ah ..."
    "Don't hurt yourself. My physician isn't good with splinters."
    Rien brought his hand to his eyes. "I hope someone here is."
    "Let's go on deck," Muriel said. "Have you sniff some wind."
    She turned and walked out, pausing by the guards. "Bring us a
breakfast on deck. Nothing fancy."
    "Yes, ma'am."
    She turned, watching Rien get up and follow her out. When she saw
him pause to take a deep breath before standing up and try to disguise a
slight limp, she felt a guilty pull at her heart. "You'd be better off
sleeping in a hammock," she said when he caught up. "There are a few in
the hold."
    "I didn't want to be presumptuous."
    "If you're worried about imposing ..."
    "I already am, I know," he interrupted. "But you haven't offered me
my freedom."
    "Where are you going to go? You're about as deep in the war as you
could get."
    "It'd be worse on the front line."
    "Maybe ..."
    They came up on deck and Rien paused, giving Muriel a chance to
pick the direction. "Why maybe?"
    "Up there they only deal with the moment," Muriel explained. "Here
I have to live with what they left me. I'd rather be at the front."
    "At the front or home?"
    Muriel headed for the fore of the ship and Rien followed. "At home,
but if I have to be in a war, I'd rather fight it, than watch the
wounded and the prisoners and the bureaucrats."
    "I think I qualify as all three," Rien smirked.
    Muriel laughed, stopping at the very edge of the foredeck. "You do,
don't you?"
    Rien proceeded to the bulwark and took a look over the side.
    "It's clean today," Muriel said. "That's very rare. Most days the
river carries a lot of mud into the bay, making the water brown, but
today Moire is at rest."
    Rien shook his head. "Looks like it's going to storm."
    "We'll put further out when it does," Muriel said. "It's a good
idea to keep distance from shore in storms."
    "How far out?" Rien asked.
    "Depends. A league or two. Whatever my helmsman feels comfortable
with. If we catch a high wave crest, we can come down on a pretty low
trough and that can crack the strake. Or worse yet, we can scrape bottom
or rip the hull on rocks."
    "I feel safe already."
    A sailor appeared with a tray of food. "Where would you like this,
ma'am?"
    She indicated to a barrel tied down on deck.
    "It is safer than other occupations."
    "Even in a war?"
    "Pull up a crate," Muriel indicated to the meal.
    Rien studied her for a moment. "You always treat your prisoners
this way?"
    "If you're Galician, you're not my prisoner."
    "And I'm welcome to a hammock and breakfast?"
    "Yes," she smiled.
    Rien sat down and she pulled up another crate across from him. At
this point she decided to trust him a little more. Even if he did not
look it, he seemed like a scholar and was rather defensive about his
work. He was always polite and not once indicated desire to run or cause
trouble. If his mouth was the most trouble he could be, she found him
not to be a threat.
    "That ship," Rien pointed to the _Broken_Beak,_ off port, "is
rather close."
    "That's _Swift_Sparrow,_" Muriel said, starting on her breakfast.
"Her captain doesn't know how to keep his distance."
    Rien studied the ship for a while, as they ate. "Looks like she ran
into something," he commented on the newer looking wood of the jib and
the fore of the ship.
    "We call her '_Broken_Beak_'," Muriel said. "A year or so ago, Kaar
caught a good wind and ran her up the Royal Docks at Tasantil. Brought
down a whole pier."
    "And the Emperor didn't get mad?"
    "That was Untar the First, just a few months before he died. People
say he laughed so hard, he wet himself."
    Rien smiled. "Sounds like it could make a good myth in a generation
or two."
    "It probably will," Muriel agreed. "I already heard rumors that he
was falling ill back then. I suspect they're not true, though. He was a
tough old man."
    "And his son?"
    "His son wants to be tough. He wants to be the legend his father
is."
    "Is that the reason for the war?"
    Muriel stopped eating and looked critically at Rien. "Last night
you said you don't involve yourself in political discussions because
..."
    "I'm sorry. I was trying to lure a personal opinion out of you."
    She shook her head. "I follow my Emperor. If he orders we take
Baranur, I travel on land. If he orders we war with Bichu, I will walk
over water. If his wish is to challenge Veran the Bold, I will follow
him through the fires of hell."
    Almost as if in response, a sudden gust of wind rocked the ship.
Muriel instantly got to her feet. "Bowman, take down that sail!"
    "Yes, ma'am!" a heavy set bearded man yelled back.
    She sat back down, putting her head in her hands. "I don't know
where we're going to get a new topsail ..." She brushed her hair back.
"Sometimes I hate this job."
    "You can't replace your sail?" Rien asked cautiously.
    "We can't replace a thing," Muriel said bitterly. "Our lines are
overextended." She was going to say more, but did not. Baranur's leaders
did not realize how thin the Beinison lines had become and she was not
going to enlighten the Galician scholar about how much the invading
force had to sacrifice to push the way it had from Sharks' Cove to Port
Sevlyn. They lost three thousand men taking the city. They must have
lost a quarter that getting to Port Sevlyn in five days. "The supply
ships are all in the south. Warships have to resupply the troops here.
And we don't have enough for ourselves, much less the front lines."
    "Sounds like you're already following Untar through the fires of
hell."
    "What I do, I do for my Lord."
    Rien sat back on his crate, finished with his meal. "Your lord must
be a very unique man."
    "He is."
    Rien eyed the dagger lying on the tray on the barrel. "May I?"
    "What for?" Muriel asked.
    "Splinter."
    She nodded, cautious that he not trick her. He reached out and
picked it up, carefully cleaned the edge and then scratched the tip over
the back of his hand. A moment passed and Rien again ran the blade over
his skin.
    "Not coming out?"
    "I can't get myself to press it harder." He moved the dagger again
and it slipped from his grasp. Rien quickly reached for it and returned
it to the tray. "Sorry." A drop of blood ran down his fingers.
    Muriel shook her head. "I'm sorry I ever doubted you're a scholar,"
she laughed.
    Rien covered his hand, applying pressure to the cut. "I think I got
it."
    "Good thing you kept your fingers," Muriel answered. She paused,
looking at the chain and medallion now hanging outside Rien's tunic. The
pattern looked vaguely familiar.
    "Sorry about the mess."
    "Not like the first time there's been blood on this deck. Let's go
wash it out."
    Rien stood up, the medallion swinging as he righted himself. Muriel
caught it and took a closer look.
    "This crest. Is it Benosian?"
    Rien nodded. "Someone I used to chase gave it to me."
    "A woman?"
    "A woman."
    "Beinisonian?"
    He nodded again. "I told you, I travel."
    "Well, come on."
    "Ship to fore!" the lookout in the crow's nest yelled.
    Muriel turned to see the _Swift_Sparrow_ slowly turn in the water
ahead of them, pointing her jib off their port. Her new course would
take her only twenty or thirty feet off their port side.
    "Helm to port!" Muriel yelled. "Keep our bow to them!"
    The _Golden_Sword_ groaned under the shifting weight, but managed
to keep her jib pointed at the large galleon, forcing the other ship to
pull further away as she adjusted course.
    "What the hell do you think you're doing?!" Muriel yelled at Kaar,
standing at the bow of his ship. "We're supposed to be on the same
side!"
    Kaar's smug expression betrayed his intention to get a look at
Rien.
    A hatch burst open and Icath Taryl, the first mate, jumped out on
deck. He froze seeing the galleon pass within grappling range and
instinctively reached for a sword that was not there. "Kaar, you pull
this stunt again and you're going to have burning tar on your deck!"
    The galleon's captain let out a laugh. "I don't think your meager
crew could handle the assault of my men. Swim with the small fish, Icath
-- your own captain's more your size. You girls have a lot of growing to
do."
    The tray the morning meal had been served on went flying over the
water, impacting the hull of the _Swift_Sparrow_ with a loud clank.
    "I should add," Kaar yelled as the distance between the ships grew,
"your captain, Icath, even throws like a woman ..."

    Muriel Dainyn adjusted her hair, watching two sailors stretch two
torn sails on deck. The strong morning wind made their task harder, but
they managed to pin the two stretches of cloth under a pair of crates.
    "Figure we can make a whole sail out of this, ma'am," one of the
men guessed. "Be pretty heavy, though."
    "It'll have to do," Muriel said. "At least we didn't lose any of
the big sails."
    "Lost some rigging," the sailor complained.
    Muriel walked around the stretched out sails, wondering where she
would find their replacements. The rigging was easy. There was probably
a league and a half of strong rope in the hold. They could re-rig the
ship if they wanted, but sails were hard to find in the middle of a war.
She looked up at the mast from which the wind of the previous night's
storm tore the rigging, pulling down and tearing a folded sail. It was
really no one's fault. Just bad luck.
    "Commander?"
    She turned to face the first mate.
    "We took a little water, but no more than in the belly of a good
drunk. No hull damage and the deck is fine. We got off easy for a storm
like that."
    "Where am I going to get sails, Icath? Yesterday it was one. Today
I need two."
    "We can try for a trade," he tilted his head towards the other
ships in the bay.
    "For what, Icath? Rope?"
    "We can ask Talens for sails in exchange for rigging. Say we'll
give 'im enough rope to hang everyone left in Sharks' Cove."
    Laughter sounded from the men on deck. "We'll even do the work, if
he gives us a few days at a tavern," someone yelled out.
    Icath glanced up to the quarter deck, where the yell came from.
"Aren't you supposed to be rigging?"
    "Gallows are just as easy, sir!"
    Muriel looked at her first mate and laughed. "You're losing."
    "I don't mind a little bantering with the men," he answered. "And
something tells me they enjoy it, too. You should join in."
    Muriel shook her head. "I should find us some sails."
    "Why don't you ask Lord Cinofrid?" Icath suggested. "He might know
the right people."
    "I suppose you're right," Muriel said. "He's really been making
more use of us than we of him. I think I will call on him." She cast one
last glance at the men patching the torn sails and went below deck.
    Haurance Cinofrid's cabin was a small hold to the aft of the ship.
It held food and water on long voyages, but here, not far from shore and
a town ready to offer produce, it was a comfortably large room for the
sage to do his work in relative quiet and safety. She paused at the door
and knocked lightly. She knew the sage to be at work this hour of the
morning, but he had never turned anyone away.
    No answer came to the knock, but the unlocked door cracked open and
Muriel entered the hold. The sage sat at the table that was brought in
for him, a large wood bowl of water before him. Two candles burned on
the table, casting gloomy shadows on the elderly man. He was deep in
concentration.
    Muriel paused for a moment, wondering if she would disturb his
work, but then closed the door behind her and approached the sage. There
was a faint image in the bowl. A forest and a damaged city wall. For a
moment she thought she could see people moving along the wall, but the
picture paled.
    "Sit, Commander. I'll be with you in a moment."
    She looked at the sage, sitting in his chair, unmoving, eyes
tightly closed. He sensed her?
    The image in the bowl cleared up. From above green trees a hill
could be seen. An army stood on that hill. A small force. The enemy's
force. The standard that flew before the troops was of the Kingdom of
Baranur and next to it flew two others. Muriel could not identify them.
The image once again flickered, pulling away from the hill, across the
forest, letting the picture blur as everything passed by at a rapid
pace. The candles blew out.
    Haurance Cinofrid opened his eyes.
    "Gateway?" Muriel asked.
    He shook his head. "Closer. Much closer ..."
    "Where did they come from?"
    "Up north, perhaps. Our scouts missed them, but they're few in
number. They're not a threat. They're caught between our forces in Port
Sevlyn and the army at Gateway. I will inform the local commander to
send a messenger to Port Sevlyn ..."
    "I wish I could be there ..." Muriel sighed. "It's so hard knowing
what's happening out there and not being able to take part."
    "There are plenty of battles here, Commander," the sage said.
"Resistance in the town, a citizen army building in the south, Captain
Kaar ..." He smiled sadly. "I sense there is more, but I can't see it.
Something watching me ... another sage, perhaps. The enemy can see
me ..."
    "You'll be perfectly safe on the _Golden_Sword,_" Muriel assured
the old sage. "The sailors are skilled and our few troops are well
trained."
    Cinofrid nodded. "I don't fear for my well being on your vessel,
Commander."
    "I am glad," Muriel answered. It was time to talk business. "I hope
I didn't interrupt ..." she said, knowing well enough that she did
intrude on the sage's work.
    A kind smile spread on the sage's face. "Your interruptions are
always a pleasure. What can I do for you, Commander?"
    "When you're out there, looking around," Muriel indicated to the
bowl, "you wouldn't have happened to spot a sail or two I can have?"
    Cinofrid laughed. "A sail?"
    "Last night's storm damaged ours," the captain explained. "We have
no spares."
    "Is it serious?" the sage asked, his expression now somber.
    "Not really. It's just the topsail and the skysail," Muriel
explain. "They're small sails, but they do help."
    "I haven't paid much attention to sails, I'm afraid," Lord Cinofrid
answered. "I know there are none in the forest."
    "Well, I was hoping you'd know ..."
    He shook his head. "War and sails are your aptitudes."
    "Well, I guess you help me once and I expect you to help me with
everything," Muriel started to rise.
    "Do you mean lord Keegan?"
    "The one man in this city who can't hold a knife."
    "He visited with me last night," the sage said. "I was meaning to
tell you. During the storm I couldn't get my work done and he couldn't
sleep. I ran across him and his guards in the corridor and we struck up
a conversation. He's a most interesting man."
    "I'm surprised my men let him out of the hold without checking with
me first," Muriel frowned.
    "With a loop of bandages on his hand, in addition to his costumery
groaning, he did not seem like a threat to me."
    "What did you talk about?"
    "His travels, Baranur, Galicia. He holds many interesting opinions.
To a philosophical aspirant such as myself, he's a fountain of ideas.
He's lucky it was you and not Captain Kaar that picked him up."
    "Lucky, huh?"

    "Commander," Icath Taryl approached his captain, talking quietly so
the other men on deck would not pay attention. "Last time _Broken_Beak_
passed by, they tossed this on board." He held out a rock, with a piece
of string and a rolled-up sheet of parchment.
    "They're throwing rocks at us now? Where'd they get a rock?"
    "Read the note."
    Muriel took the scroll from the first mate and unrolled it. Black
ink, somewhat runny from the heavy humidity, cursively covered two short
lines. "Captain Dainyn, we must meet. Dasgant Kaar."
    "If I didn't value the parchment, I'd tell you to throw it to the
sharks."
    "You won't meet with him?"
    "What for? He hasn't done anything but insult me and endanger my
ship for the last month." She glanced at the _Swift_Sparrow,_ holding
sail not far away. "Give me that." She took the rock from Icath.
    "What are you going to do?"
    Muriel walked to the stern of her ship and studied the galleon. A
few moments passed and the galleon neared. Kaar and two other men
appeared on deck. Kaar seemed anxious.
    "Throw like a girl, do I?" Muriel yelled when the gap between the
ships narrowed significantly and flung the rock at the men on the other
ship. The missile impacted solidly with one of the men with Kaar and
flailing his arms in surprise, he tumbled backwards.
    Brushing the dirt off her hands, Muriel turned her back on the
speechless crew of the _Swift_Sparrow_ and retreated to mid-deck. "You
know, that felt good," she confided in Icath. "I wish I had another
rock. Who did I hit?"
    "I think that was their physician," the first mate answered. "You
know Kaar will be mad as all hell over this."
    "He started it."
    Icath chuckled. "There was one dry rock in all of Shandayma and you
just threw it away."
    "I wish I had another," Muriel muttered again.
    "Ma'am, sir?" a sailor walked up to them. "A man on the _Sparrow_
just plunged in the water. He's swimming this way."
    "Was it the one I hit?"
    "I don't think so, Commander."
    "Icath?"
    "I'll check on him," the first mate nodded.
    Muriel watched the two men leave, then sat down on a crate anchored
down on deck, watching other sailors gather at the steer-board of the
vessel as the swimmer was pulled on board. Through all this Icath stood
behind the men, arms folded, a furrowed brow, the corners of his mouth
giving his normally stern expression a tinge of evil. 'He's as mad as I
am,' she laughed to herself.
    The _Swift_Sparrow_ held sail at a respectable distance, having
backed off after Muriel flung the rock. There were plenty of men on deck
watching the rescue. A half dozen or so held spears and a few more stood
by the sails. It was obvious they were worried about the man coming on
board.
    When the swimmer finally appeared, Icath stepped forward. He said
something and the man answered. "You talk to me!" Icath yelled. The man
obviously refused.
    Icath folded his arms, studying the man for a long time, then
turned and looked at his captain.
    Muriel nodded for the man to be brought to her. He was dressed like
an officer and arrogantly pushed his way between the sailors gathered on
deck, following Icath. A full but neat beard hid his expression as he
made the short distance across deck.
    "He refuses to talk to anyone but you, Commander," Icath reported.
    Muriel set her jaw. "You will talk to my first officer."
    "I was sent to talk to you." His voice was deep, sea-worn.
    "Who are you?" Icath demanded.
    "Answer him," Muriel said after seeing the answer was not going to
come.
    "Lasiel Browin, pilot of the _Swift_Sparrow._"
    Without warning, Icath spun, delivering a roundhouse punch to the
man's jaw, sending him down on deck. "Keep your distance, fish kisser,
or I'm going to break your neck!"
    Muriel cast a stern look at her first mate, but said nothing. A
pair of sailors helped the man up.
    "What did you want?"
    He wiped the blood from his lip, turning his back to Icath.
"Captain Kaar sent me to ask that you come talk to him about urgent
matters."
    "I have nothing to talk to Kaar about."
    "I am to stay here until you are done, to ensure your safe return."
    "What does he want to talk to me about?" Muriel demanded.
    "I can't say," Lasiel answered.
    "Try." Icath's hand clamped on the back of the helmsman's neck.
"Say it, or you're not walking off this ship alive."
    "I don't know. I am here to tell you that it's urgent ... very
urgent, in fact."
    Muriel glanced at Icath. "What do you think?"
    He let the helmsman go. "Kaar must be pretty sore at you by now.
And so's half his crew."
    "Captain Dainyn's safety is guaranteed," Lasiel assured.
    "I'll talk to him," Muriel said. "Go signal him."
    The mob of sailors on deck accompanied the man to complete the task
and Muriel turned to Icath. "I want you to grapple that ship and not let
go until I'm back. And I want a spear detail on deck. Everyone who's got
a sword wears it. Keep Lord Cinofrid and the Galician below."
    "Yes, ma'am," Icath said and rushed away.
    Muriel watched Lasiel signal the _Swift_Sparrow_ to approach and
the two ships again neared.
    "Hold her steady," Muriel yelled to her own helmsman. "Let them do
all the work."
    A pair of grappling irons came over the gunwale, then a pair more
flew in the other direction, securing the ships to one another. It took
a long time to narrow the gap between the vessels. When the commotion
settled down, Muriel approached Kaar, who stood on his ship, a mere
hand's reach away.
    "What did you want?"
    "Come on board."
    "We can talk this way."
    "I want you to talk with someone else. I don't want him on deck."
    Muriel glanced back at Icath and her men holding the pilot of the
_Swift_Sparrow._
    "No tricks," Kaar promised. "Please."
    He extended his hand and she accepted it, first stepping across the
gunwale of her ship, then the gap between the vessels and finally over
the bulwark of the _Swift_Sparrow._ Kaar did not release her until she
was safely across.
    "I wanted you to talk with my first mate," Kaar said as they left
the _Golden_Sword_ behind them. "Or rather, he wanted to talk to you and
I felt it was important that he does."
    "He could have come on deck, or swam over himself," Muriel said.
"This charade you're creating is pointless."
    "You will understand," Kaar said. He escorted Muriel below deck to
a large well lit and decorated stateroom where two other men waited. One
Muriel immediately recognized as the man she hit with the rock. The
other she did not know.
    As Kaar and Muriel entered, the two men stood up and greeted their
guest.
    "My first mate, Aldyn Kile Nephlan," Kaar introduced the tall
muscular man Muriel did not know, "and my physician, Lord Reuus
Merramnez."
    "I am sorry, my lord," Muriel sighed as the physician faced her.
    "Think nothing of it, my lady."
    "Please, sit down," Kaar indicated to the chairs around a table
that took up most of the room.
    Muriel chose her chair and the other men settled around her. Kaar
sat at her side, his first mate directly across from her and the
physician next to the first mate, opposite his captain.
    "That man you fished out two days ago," Kaar said, "could you tell
us who he is?"
    "That's all you brought me here for?"
    "We suspect you may not realize who he is," Aldyn said.
    "He is a Galician scholar," Muriel answered. "I didn't believe him,
but he had a long talk with Lord Cinofrid and if the Sage believes him,
that's good enough for me."
    "Your scholar," Aldyn frowned, "is a Baranurian soldier." He paused
to let Muriel express her disbelief.
    "Don't frown, Captain," Kaar advised. "Hear him out."
    "Your scholar," Aldyn continued distastefully, "and I have somewhat
of a history. About ten days ago I was in the city, with some of the
men. We had two days in port and wanted to relax. We went to a tavern
and spent the day there and headed back in the evening. Just short of
the docks, we were assaulted by two men and a woman. The men with me
were killed. A man and the woman probably died. The survivor was the man
you fished out."
    "I don't think so," Muriel shook her head. "He hasn't been in town
that long and he knows nothing of fighting."
    "He knows plenty of fighting, I assure you," Aldyn said. "The men I
was with could swear to that, too, if they could. Perhaps a face to face
confrontation would prove it to you? I've been careful to avoid showing
my face on deck."
    "You're mad," Muriel said. "He doesn't even speak Baranurian!"
    "He speaks Baranurian," Aldyn said, "and if I'm right, his
Beinisonian is rather good, too."
    "I don't think so," Muriel turned to Kaar.
    "All the proof we have is two dead sailors and my first mate's
story. I doubt he killed those men himself. When our men returned to the
site of battle to pick up the bodies, it was a rather grisly scene. I
have no reason to question the story."
    "All right," Muriel agreed, "if I let you on board and give you a
chance to talk to this Baranurian warrior, will your anxiety be
relieved?"
    Aldyn nodded.
    "It would," Kaar agreed. "And I won't bother you again."
    "Kaar, you're not going to bother me again either way."
    He laughed.
    "Let's get it over with," Muriel got up. "If I know Icath, he's
boiling tar to throw at you by now."
    The three men got up and followed her back on deck.
    "I'll go over alone," Aldyn said to Kaar. "I'm sure there'll be no
risk. There are plenty of sailors on the _Sword._"
    "Be careful nonetheless," Kaar instructed. "We'll cut the cables so
it doesn't arouse the Baranurian's suspicions ... if that's all right
with you, Captain Dainyn?"
    "Perfectly all right," she responded, stopping at the bulwark of
Kaar's ship. "What kind of an idiot docks steer-board?" she paused,
looking at Icath, across the gap between the ships.
    "We did, ma'am."
    She shook her head and started her climb. "We're having a guest
join us, Icath. Don't hit him."
    The first mate offered his captain help getting across while other
sailors aided the man following her.
    "Icath Taryl," Muriel introduced her first mate, "Aldyn Kile
Nephlan, first mate of the _Swift_Sparrow._"
    "Cut the lines," Kaar barked an order from the deck of his galleon.
    "Release their grapples," Muriel ordered her men.
    "What's this about?" Icath asked. He nervously took out his pipe
and started stuffing it with tobacco.
    "Your fish is Baranurian," Aldyn said. "I'm here to prove it."
    Icath skeptically folded his arms.
    "They'll leave us alone after this," Muriel told him. "That alone
is worth it."
    "And you just took his word for that, I'll bet," Icath muttered.
    Muriel's expression darkened, but she did not respond. "Let the
pilot go," she yelled to her sailors. "Helmsman, pull us away, fore to
current!"
    The _Golden_Sword_ slowly turned in the bay's current, facing the
delta of the Laraka and the tall winding spire above the keep in the
middle of the river.
    "What's Cinofrid doing on deck?"
    "He was curious," Icath explained, "and getting him to go below is
like asking the wind to turn."
    "Sage," Muriel called the elderly man over. Both he and the
_Sparrow's_ pilot made their way over to her.
    "My lady," the sage bowed. "It's a pleasure this morning."
    "It's a pleasure every morning, my lord. I was wondering if you
still believe that the man we caught is a Galician scholar."
    "Having discussed the arts of philosophy with him, I have to say
he's very learned -- and opinionated -- and seeing he only speaks
Galician, I can't imagine him to be anything but. I stand by my initial
statement."
    "This gentleman here," Muriel indicated to the first officer of the
_Swift_Sparrow,_ "believes he's not."
    "And never having seen this man, what do you base your claim on?"
the sage inquired.
    "But I have seen this man before. I met him in battle ten days
ago."
    "Then he will recognize you if he sees you?"
    "That's what I hope to show."
    "Do you just want him brought on deck?" Muriel asked.
    "It would probably be easiest," Aldyn agreed.
    "Marbin, bring the Galician up here," Muriel ordered one of the
sailors.
    "Right away, Commander."
    Lord Cinofrid sat down on a crate. "This will be an interesting
display whether you're right or not."
    "I'm right," Aldyn eyed the sage. "I know I'm right."
    Icath sat down by the sage. "Do you care to wager, my lord?"
    "I suspect we'll be wagering on the same side," the sage leaned
over in mock whisper and both men laughed.
    "Why don't you start talking to him and I'll walk over then," Aldyn
suggested. "I don't want to give him the advantage."
    "Go," Muriel nodded and he departed, leaving her with Icath and
Cinofrid and Lasiel, the galleon's pilot.
    "Listen," Icath said to the man standing by Muriel, "I'm sorry for
punching you. That was out of line."
    "It's all right. We're all a little heated now," Lasiel said. "We
all follow orders."
    "You hit him?" the sage asked.
    "Right on the jaw," Icath agreed.
    The sage shook his head.
    "It's fine, my lord," Lasiel said. "It was a heated moment and I
was pretty pigheaded myself. I'll get over it. The teeth are fine."
    "They're coming," Icath warned.
    "Act normal."
    "Commander?" two sailors stopped by the group, Rien between them.
    Everyone turned to the scholar. "Good morning, Keegan," Muriel said
in Galician. "Take a seat."
    "Commander," he greeted her cautiously, then did the same with
Icath and Cinofrid. When Icath stood up, he sat on the crate as
instructed by the woman captain.
    "Rien Keegan, Lasiel Browin" Muriel made the introduction. "Lasiel
is with the Advocate General," she went on. "We have to ferry him down
coast and when I mentioned your adventure on the docks to him, he wanted
to know about that man you fought."
    "He fought me," Rein corrected.
    "Any description would help," Muriel said.
    "He wore a helmet," Rien said thoughtfully, "but he had a light
brown beard ..."
    "Would you be able to recognize him?" a voice sounded behind Rien.
    Rien stood up and turned, his eyes narrowing at the site of the
_Swift_Sparrow's_ first mate. The expression on his face betrayed a
glimmer of angry recognition.
    "... Because I recognize you!" the man yelled in Beinisonian and
grabbed Rien's tunic, pulling him close. "And once again, it's just you
and me."
    Rien's arms instinctively came up to break the other man's hold on
him, but Aldyn gave him a shove.
    "I don't know you," Rien struggled to sit up on the deck.
    Icath and Lasiel helped Rien up, but did not release him.
    "I don't think anyone here believes that," Aldyn said. He again
took Rien's tunic in his fist and pulled the supposed Galician forward,
against the grip of the men holding him. Rien grimaced as the chain of
his medallion tightened around his neck. "You ambushed and killed my
men," Aldyn went on. "In cold blood, with no mercy. You will answer for
these crimes." He gave Rien a rough shove, tearing his tunic and the
chain around his neck, letting the medal fall. "You will pay."
    The medal fell to the deck, spinning about for a moment, echoing
the words.
    "You!" Cinofrid suddenly stood up. He almost tripped on the folds
of his robe, stepping away from the crate. "You're the one!"
    A small flame danced on the deck, around the now still medal and a
circle of mist rose around it.

         A cloaked figure shifted in the settling darkness,
    letting the wind wrap the black cloak around the body, with
    just the very bottom of the hem playing with the wind. Waves
    in the bay steadily licked at the pier, producing occasional
    groaning sounds from the wood.
         The man chuckled. It was done. It was done at a terrible
    cost, but it was done. It was both for justice and victory.
         "Deven?" another figure came on the pier. The man was
    tall, dressed in light armor and wearing a sword. His long
    blond hair blew in the wind, offering no resistance to the
    elements. "Deven?"
         The cloaked figure turned. "You saved the ship."
         "Our deal was for the sage."
         "It was for all of them. You liked the woman."
         "I learned the enemy had heart and soul ... even the sage."
         "You don't know the enemy." The cloaked man turned back
    to the waves.
         "It's time to go, Deven. We did all we could. Adrea's
    dead. You had your revenge and I had mine."
         The cloaked man turned again. "Death no longer satisfies
    me. There is nothing I can take from them to make them feel as
    empty as I do. There is nothing that they have that's as
    valuable as what they took from me."
         The armored man reached out, holding a medallion on a
    chain out for the other. "It's over for now."
         The cloaked figure moved near, accepting the offering
    with a pale hand. "This symbol will yet burn in the hearts and
    minds of those who defied it, of those who had not the courage
    to stand up for what was right. The empire will bow to the
    name Yasarin."
         A distant flash of lightning cut across the now dark sky
    somewhere off in the distance and a rumble of rolling thunder
    suppressed the sound of the surf.

========================================================================

                 REPOST: FIRST CALL FOR VOTES (of 2)
                   unmoderated group rec.mag.dargon

Newsgroups line:
rec.mag.dargon    DargonZine fantasy fiction emag issues and discussion.

Votes must be received by 23:59:59 UTC, 1 November 1994.

After this CFV appears on news.announce.newgroups it will be sent to
the mailing list Dargon Project writers' group and
the DargonZine readership as a whole.  The posting will be clearly
labelled as a "repost" of a CFV in news.announce.newgroups.

This vote is being conducted by a neutral third party.  For voting
questions only contact rdippold@qualcomm.com.  For questions about the
proposed group contact Ornoth D.A. Liscomb


CHARTER

Rec.mag.dargon will be used both for the distribution of DargonZine, an
electronic magazine, and also for open public discussion of the
magazine's content.

DargonZine prints fiction produced by aspiring amateur writers who are
members of the Dargon Project, which has been active since 1985. Dargon
Project stories are all set in a shared medieval fantasy setting (a la
"Thieves' World"). "Dargon" refers to the town and surrounding lands
where most stories take place, as well as the surname of the area's
ruling family. DargonZine has worldwide distribution. Email
subscriptions can be obtained from .

Starting with the existing newsgroup rec.mag.fsfnet, the proposal should
be thought of in two parts: removal of the existing moderation, and
renaming the newsgroup. Although there are two distinct changes taking
place, they will be voted on as a single proposal.

Rec.mag.fsfnet was originally created with the intent to serve solely as
a moderated distribution vehicle for issues. At present, the only
articles posted to the newsgroup are issues of DargonZine as they are
published. However, the Dargon Project writers would like to remove the
moderation from the newsgroup so that it can be opened up for reader
feedback and exchange of opinions and ideas between the readership and
the writers.

However, we would also like to take this opportunity to change the name
of the newsgroup. The Dargon Project first began publishing stories in
FSFnet, an electronic magazine that ran from 1984 through 1988, during
which time the newsgroup rec.msg.fsfnet was created. When FSFnet's
editor graduated and left the network, the new editor began putting out
issues under the name DargonZine. Because FSFnet has been defunct for
over five years it is appropriate that we change the newsgroup name to
something more recognizable. Our readers would immediately associate
rec.mag.dargon with the Dargon Project and DargonZine.


HOW TO VOTE

Send MAIL to:   voting@qualcomm.com

Your mail message should contain one of the following statements:
     I vote YES on rec.mag.dargon
     I vote NO on rec.mag.dargon

You may also ABSTAIN in place of YES/NO - this will not affect the
outcome. Anything else may be rejected by the automatic vote counting
program. The votetaker will respond to your received ballots with a
personal acknowledgement by mail - if you do not receive one within
several days, try again. It's your responsibility to make sure your
vote is registered correctly.

One vote counted per person, no more than one per account. Addresses and
votes of all voters will be published in the final voting results list.

========================================================================






 DDDDD                              ZZZZZZ                //
 D    D  AAAA RRR  GGGG OOOO NN  N      Z  I NN  N EEEE  ||
 D     D A  A R  R G    O  O N N N     Z   I N N N E     || Volume 7
-=========================================================+|)
 D    D  AAAA RRR  G GG O  O N N N   Z     I N N N E     || Number 5
 DDDDD   A  A R  R GGGG OOOO N  NN  ZZZZZZ I N  NN EEEE  ||
                                                          \\
                                                            \
========================================================================
DargonZine                                     Distributed: 11/15/1994
Volume 7, Number 5                             Circulation:        617
========================================================================

                               Contents

Editorial                    Ornoth D.A. Liscomb
A Lesson Learned             Bill Erdley            Yule 08, 1014
Tracks                       Jon Evans              Yule 24, 1014
Kidnapped 2                  Max Khaytsus           Yule 23, 1014

========================================================================
DargonZine is the publication vehicle of the Dargon Project, a
collaborative group of aspiring fantasy writers on the Internet.
We welcome new readers and writers interested in joining the project.
Please address all correspondance to .
Back issues are available from ftp.etext.org in pub/Zines/DargonZine.
Issues and public discussion are posted to newsgroup rec.mag.dargon.

DargonZine 7-5, (C) Copyright November, 1994, the Dargon Project.
Editor Ornoth D.A. Liscomb . All rights reserved.
All rights are reassigned to the individual contributors. Stories may
not be reproduced or redistributed without the explicit permission of
the author(s) involved, except in the case of freely reproducing entire
issues for further distribution. Reproduction for profit is forbidden.
========================================================================

                              Editorial
                        by Ornoth D.A. Liscomb
                       

    In the minutes before I send out a new issue, I always get
butterflies. It's a moment not only of pride, but of anxiety as well.
Did I remember to update the circulation and issue numbers? Did I format
all the submissions correctly? Is the JCL I send to Listserv correct?
And the question that always concerns me most: how will the network
react to the 100+ megabytes of traffic I'm about to generate?
    Well, for Volume 7 Number 4 the answer to that question was: badly.
And if you notice this issue's circulation as compared to last, you'll
get an idea why.
    When I sent out 7-4, I received errors from over 400 invalid
recipients, and most of the error reports included full copies of the
issue I'd sent. Now, sending an issue out is easy -- I send just one
copy to Listserv. But neither myself nor my upstream sites were able to
effectively deal with the 50+ megabytes of rejected mail that I
received. Oops! Hence the new policy of sending out a small "trial
balloon" mail file a few days prior to sending the actual issue.
    The rejected mail was almost entirely "unknown user" and "unknown
site" messages. The latter appears to be a symptom of Bitnet sites
switching to being Internet-only sites. Unfortunately, for many of these
sites, I have no way to construct an Internet domain based upon their
old Bitnet node name. I've tried to track down several sites, but the
majority remain unknown. Anyone with any bright ideas on how to reach
these people, please speak up!
    This also highlights the importance of Bitnet users notifying me of
their Internet domains. I'd encourage all subscribers who are on Bitnet
to find out their Internet address and send mail to me at
to verify that I am sending to their Internet
domain, rather than a Bitnet address that may expire.

    Weighing in on the other end of the scale was the passage of the
rec.mag.dargon voting by a margin of 156 to 37! Our old newsgroup,
rec.mag.fsfnet, has been renamed rec.mag.dargon. It will not only be
used to distribute issues, but is also open to postings by anyone, for
open discussion between DargonZine readers and writers. I'd like to
encourage you to post your comments to rec.mag.dargon, and again thank
everyone who participated in the vote -- it wouldn't have happened
without your help!
    We have an interesting problem, however. Lots of wargamers started
flooding rec.mag.dargon, thinking it was a forum for TSR's Dragon
Magazine. While we're still dealing with the chaos that resulted, a
number of these fantasy gamers have requested subscriptions! Since 7-4
came out in mid-October, over fifty new subscribers have signed on, and
we've had the biggest influx of new writers in years!

    Another pleasant thing that happened recently is that Christy
Phillips has made the back issues of both FSFnet and DargonZine
available in a special ezine library of America Online (AOL). She'll
also be making new issues available as they come out. This is a great
development, because we've historically had problems getting issues
distributed to AOL users, due to their flaky mail system and that
system's annoying and arbitrary email file size limitations. Kujos (sic)
to Christy!
    AOL users should be able to access the back issue collection via:

            Keyword PDA
            *Mac* users select "Software Libraries"
            *All* users then select "Palmtop Paperbacks"
            The path from there is:
               Ezine Libraries->Science Fiction/Fantasy/DargonZine.

    With all that said, I'd like to welcome the readers who have
recently joined us, and once again echo the familiar refrain. Spread the
word about DargonZine to people you think would be interested, and if
you're a serious aspiring writer who'd like to join the project, we'd
love to hear from you!

    This issue begins with a short story about Derrio, Bill Erdley's
deaf squire to Luthias Connall. I met Bill on my road trip this spring.
You should send him mail congratulating him on his recent marriage --
and while you're at it, congratulate him on getting "A Lesson Learned"
printed, after it sat on the back burner for months. Bill will appear
again very shortly with "the Evening After" and "the Scent of Balsam".
    Bill's story is followed by "Grim" Jon Evans' newest, "Tracks", in
which Goren Winston, the Lord Keeper of Gateway Keep faces an important
decision. Grim's a very gracious and laid back host, but beware his
penchant for stealing your shampoo! He's been one of the movers and
shakers in the project of late, and he too will appear again very
shortly, with "Storm Dancer", the first installment in a new storyline
that I'm sure you'll enjoy.
    And, of course, the omnipresent Max Khaytsus makes yet another
appearrance with the continuation of his story "Kidnapped".
    So, read on! Oh, and write if you find work!

========================================================================

                           A Lesson Learned
                            by Bill Erdley
                       
                            Yule 08, 1014

    "Good Evening, Squire." The tone of voice made it clear that there
were no good wishes in the greeting. The youth stepped in front of
Derrio, blocking his path. "I said 'Good evening'. Aren't you going to
answer me?" Derrio tried to walk around the lad, keeping his eyes cast
downward in an attempt to avoid what he knew was coming. The boy pushed
Derrio back. Derrio's head snapped up and he stared at the belligerent
youth.
    *Go* *Away*
    "Don't flap your arms at me, buffoon! You insult me by not
answering my greeting. I think that you need to be taught a lesson in
courtesy ..." The youth leapt at Derrio, arms extended. Derrio, instead
of retreating as the youth expected, stepped to the side, pushing the
stumbling bully past him, then ran. He didn't feel like fighting again.

    The marching and the chores were hard, the training was tough, and
the constant state of near panic had everyone on edge; but nothing was
as bad as the taunting that had become an everyday occurrence. Derrio
was constantly having to avoid people who meant him harm, and face up to
people who tried to make him cringe. He tried to avoid trouble as much
as he could, but it seemed that trouble sought him out. He finally went
to Luthias.
    *Question* *Why* *Squires* *Hate* *Me*
    Luthias, his mind on matters of war and peace, didn't catch all of
Derrio's signs, and shook his head. "I don't understand."
    *Squires* *Fight* *Me* *Much*
    "The other squires fight with you?"
    *Yes*
    "Do you provoke them?"
    *No*
    "Do you fight back?"
    *Yes*
    "Who's squires are they?"
    *Knight* *Nose* *Large*
    The knight chuckled at his squire's description, but sobered
quickly. "Ongis. I might have known. The man's arrogance has even
outgrown his rather large nose. And, it appears, his squires are
learning well from him."
    *Squire* *Laugh* *Me*
    "Derrio, there are two ways to deal with a bully. You can do
nothing, or you can do something that will make him stop. Doing nothing
may help, or it may make him angrier. There is, however, the matter of
an unrequited blow -- something that no knight will ever stand for."
    *Question* *I* *Fight* *They* *Stop*
    The knight's face softened. "Perhaps. You can make his attacks too
painful to continue, or too embarrassing. You must find a way to
accomplish one of those two objectives. It is quite a bit like the war
we are fighting. The only way to get the Benisons to stop is to
embarrass them so badly at court that they don't want to continue, or
hurt them so badly in the field that they can't continue. Only with this
war, the chance for the former is past, and we are limited to the
latter." His mind back on the war, Luthias turned and walked into his
tent.
    That evening, when Luthias sent the youth off to find Michiya, the
bully caught up with him again, and this time he brought friends. Two of
them caught Derrio from behind and held him, while Mikus, Derrio's
original opponent, stood before him.
    "Now, idiot, you will learn to respect your betters ..."
    WHAM! The blow drove the breath from Derrio's lungs.
    "... and with that respect, you'll learn courtesy ..."
    WHAM! The bile rose in his throat.
    "... and you definitely need to learn courtesy ..."
    WHAM!
    "ENOUGH!!!" Luthias' voice was a sweet sound, indeed. The boys
released Derrio and he slumped to the ground, spent. The sound of flesh
hitting flesh sounded briefly through the damp air, but it wasn't Derrio
that was being struck. "Cowards!! You haven't the courage to face your
opponents one-on-one! If you were my squires, not only would I release
you from apprenticeship, but I would beat you to within an inch of your
cowardly lives! Go, before I forget my responsibility to this army and
reduce its numbers by three! GO!"
    The three ruffians scrambled to their feet and ran. "Are you OK?"
Luthias' concern was evident in his soft tone.
    *Small* *Rest*
    "Michiya has returned to my tent. Come back with me and clean
yourself up."

    The next morning, Derrio's chores again took him into the camp at
large, and once again he and Mikus crossed paths.
    "Derrio, I'm gonna tear you apart! Not only did I get a beating
from Sir Luthias, but Sir Ongis punished me for embarrassing him. You're
not gonna cause me any more trouble."
    Derrio's vision began to tinge with a bloody haze. This was
infuriating! He couldn't even leave the tent anymore without having to
defend himself.
    Mikus and Derrio circled each other for a moment, Mikus searching
for an opening, and Derrio looking for an escape. Mikus moved first,
rushing Derrio. But instead of running away, Derrio lunged forward,
throwing a "sunfist" punch as Michiya had shown him. Fist met face, and
the youth fell to the ground, blood fountaining from his nose and mouth.
    *Greetings*
    Derrio stepped around the fallen youth and walked away.

    Later, as Derrio approached Luthias' tent, he could hear voices
raised in anger. He stopped outside the tent flap to listen.
    "It is not your place to lesson my squires in courtesy!" a dark
voice roared.
    Sir Luthias' voice was steady. "You are wrong, sir. It is the duty
of a Knight to correct the behavior of all those who aspire to the
chain."
    The dark voice answered. "My squires behave as I teach them." With
that, the dark voice acquired a name: Sir Ongis.
    "As does my squire," Luthias replied. "I taught him to give a curt
reply to anyone churlish enough to taunt him."
    Sir Ongis snorted. "So your idea of a 'curt reply' is a blow to the
mouth?" Derrio started. The news of his lashing out at Mikus had reached
Luthias before Derrio could get back to explain.
    "My squire is mute, sir. He can only speak with his hands."
    Derrio smiled.
    "You! I should teach you a lesson in how to respect your betters!"
    "At your leisure, sir. I look forward to thrashing you as
thoroughly as my squire thrashes yours."
    Derrio's smile broadened.
    There was a short silence, then Luthias spoke again. "Shall I have
you escorted to your pavilion?"
    Derrio backed away, and found himself hiding behind several horses.
    "Dismissed." Luthias' voice had within it the note of finality. Sir
Ongis burst from the tent, strode several paces, then stopped; obviously
attempting to regain control over his temper before he returned to his
tent. He spied Derrio standing by the horses.
    "I will teach your knight the lesson that he badly needs, a lesson
in manners." The knight was speaking softly, as if to prevent Luthias
from overhearing. "And when I am finished, YOU will learn a lesson in
respect!" He then turned and stormed off. For several minutes, Derrio
stood and quieted his quivering insides. He not only feared Ongis'
threat, but Luthias' retribution as well, for it was his fault that
Ongis had been here. Finally, his shaking halted, he approached the
tent.
    "If it rains tonight, we might have a little trouble. Mud could --"
Sir Luthias looked up and spied Derrio entering the glow of the
campfire. "Come here, Derrio."
    The Knight inspected his squire sternly, noting the blood, the
dirt, and the bruises. "Brawling with Ongis' squires again?"
    Here it comes, Derrio thought. He hung his head and nodded. Luthias
waited a moment before asking, "Did you win?" Derrio couldn't help but
grin, thinking that perhaps he would escape punishment.
    "Good. Now come over here and look at the plan for tomorrow."
    He didn't get angry! I thought for sure that he'd be upset because
I disgraced him in front of Sir Ongis. He crossed over to the fire and
looked at the markings on the ground.
    Luthias used his stick as a pointer and explained, "We'll meet
Beinison here, and after a while, we'll retreat into this meadow. The
archers will be hidden in the trees around the field. The troops will
split into four parts -- one to protect the archers on each side, and
the last to seal off the meadow -- and the archers will open fire."
    Derrio studied the plan intensely. It suddenly dawned on him
    ... this was a trap! A trap wasn't honorable! It didn't allow the
opponent a fair chance.
    *Trap*
    "Yes, of course, it's a trap," Luthias agreed. The Knight laughed
at Derrio's appalled expression. "What's wrong? Don't you think it will
work?"
    *No* Derrio shook his head. He pointed an accusing finger at the
Knight Captain, another at the battle plans, then shook his head.
    *You* *No* *Do* *This*
    "Unlike me?" Luthias didn't understand his squire at all. "What do
you mean?"
    Disgusted, Derrio motioned reproachfully at the trap. *This* *No*
*Honor*
    Again, Luthias misunderstood. "It's not evil! This is war, Derrio.
I'm trying to save lives."
    *This* *Death*
    Luthias had to admit it. "Yes, it will kill many, too, but that's
the purpose."
    The squire was confused and angry. Luthias had taught him about
honor, now he was about to perform a most dishonorable act; and many
people would die because of it.
    *This* *No *Honor*
    The knight was getting angry. "This isn't a matter of good and
evil, Derrio, this is war."
    *NO* *You* *No *Honor*
    Luthias hurled his drawing stick into the fire in frustration. "You
can't judge me by my battle plans!" Luthias cried. "A man's conduct in
PEACE makes him good or evil, Derrio, not his conduct in war. The only
moral decision in war is whether or not to start one. After that, it's
survival -- kill or be killed, and end as quickly as you can."
    But doesn't war include honor. Isn't there to be justice, fairness,
in battle? The young man's confusion grew. *Question* *This* *Fair*
    Luthias smiled. "Of course, it's fair. There are no rules in war."
    Confusion suddenly rushed onto silent Derrio's face. *Question*
*You* *Lawrence* *Fight* Luthias shook his head, not understanding.
*Knight* *Drink* *Cup* Again, Luthias shook his head. Exasperated,
Derrio grabbed a small stick and wrote in the dirt, "LAWRENCE."
    "Oh." Luthias said, finally comprehending Derrio's question. "That
wasn't the same."
    Derrio shook his head in utter bewilderment. Luthias now seemed to
understand Derrio's confusion. "Single combat does have rules. It's not
the same as war."
    Derrio again shook his head.
    "You used to wrestle Sir Edward's squires, didn't you?" Derrio
nodded, uncertain. "You were ... playing a game of sorts, and there were
rules. With Ongis' squires, though, you're just trying to beat them into
the ground." Derrio nodded again, still not understanding. "When you
wrestle Sir Edward's squires, it's like a Knight's single combat. You
fight by rules. Thrashing Ongis' boys is like a war -- the object is to
win, and win fast."
    Derrio considered this. *Question* *You* *Kill* *Lawrence*
    "Yes. I would have killed Sir Lawrence if I had to, Derrio, but I
would have done it under the rules of chivalry."
    *Question* *Trap* *Kill* *Lawrence*
    Luthias shrugged. "If he's there tomorrow, he'll die by the bow,
the same as the rest, if all goes well."
    *Lawrence* *Honor*
    "He is a good man," Luthias agreed, "but if I were in his trap, he
would let me die, too. This is war, Derrio, and we all do what we must."
    *I* *Not* *Understand*
    Luthias smiled sadly. "You'll learn." Luthias gazed down at his
hands. "Believe me, Derrio; you'll learn. We all do."

    That night Derrio thought long about Luthias' plans for the
upcoming battle and the differences between a battle of war and a battle
of honor. Fighting had always been an honorable conflict between two
equal opponents -- with rules and courtesies and the better man winning.
Now Luthias is making a difference between war and combat. If war is
"get him before he gets you", and chivalrous combat is "prove to him
that you are a better fighter", where is the line drawn between them? If
two knights meet on the battlefield in the middle of a skirmish, how do
they fight? Do they follow the chivalrous rules of combat, or do they do
anything that they can to win? Luthias had also talked about the trouble
with Ongis' squires. He made it sound like a war, with the outcome being
the only important thing; "to win and win fast." But if honor was a
"sometime" thing, was it really important?
    Sleep was a long time in coming.
    When the morning sun was greeted by the call of "Break Camp!" and
"Prepare to March!", the young squire had come to a decision. 'Honor',
as a concept, was like combat. One could follow the rules, or ignore
them. It was a choice, and each individual situation demanded a
decision. Choose to act chivilrously or not, choose to follow the rules
or break them ...
    ... Choose to win or to lose.

    *Greetings*.
    "Look mates, it's the talker!" Mikus could hardly believe his eyes.
    Before him stood Derrio, right here in Ongis' compound! "I believe
he's come for his daily lesson ..."
    Derrio's gestures were unmistakable. *You* *Me* *Fight* *Now* Then
he turned and walked out of the compound.
    "Hey! Why not fight right here?"
    Derrio kept walking.
    "Hey, Idiot! Where are you going?" Mikus and his fellow squires ran
to catch up to Derrio. Mikus grabbed Derrio by the shoulder to spin him
around. "It's time to ..."
    WHAM! Derrio spun around and swung his hand over the outstretched
arm of Mikus. Before the youth could react, Derrio stuck him in the
throat with an open hand slap, causing Mikus to fall to the ground,
gasping and gagging. The other two squires stepped toward Derrio, and he
pulled a cudgel from beneath his cloak.
    *Come* The smile that accompanied the gesture was icy and hard. One
lunged at Derrio from the right. Derrio stepped forward, spun, and
struck the other boy between the legs with the club. He stepped sideways
to avoid another rush, then swung around and down, striking the last
youth in the back of the skull. All of his assailants down, Derrio
turned back to Mikus, who was still trying to lose the constricting
feeling in his throat. Mikus, seeing Derrio's approach, tried to rise,
but Derrio swung the club and struck Mikus in the knees, felling him
once again. Then he stepped up to his fallen adversary, looking down
into the fearful eyes of a coward.
    *You* *No* *Knight* Then he spat in the face of the frightened boy.
As he turned and strode back to his own tent, he wondered if his last
words were to Mikus, or to himself.

========================================================================

                                Tracks
                             by Jon Evans
                           
                            Yule 24, 1014

    Marcus Ridgewater walked slowly down the main hall of Gateway Keep,
the links of chain in his armor less than perfect after the previous
days' battles. The broad sword at his side came within a foot of the
ground as he half-walked half-loped toward his rightful leader, Goren
Winston, Lord Keeper of Gateway Keep. Marcus' wounds were many. Arrows
which had grazed his armor left bruises on his skin. Sword cuts left
loose links hanging from his armor, and blood stains on his shirt and
pants. He looked nothing like the epitome of chivalric knights in shiny
armor. But then, he was not a knight.
    Goren Winston sat in his father's seat at the head of the table.
The chair was large, with ornate patterns carved into its heavy wood,
and almost made Goren appear to be a large child. Goren, however, while
not his father's size and bulk, could not be mistaken as such. His beard
was thick and unkempt, and the sadness in his eyes hinted at more than
his 23 years. In the last year, he had killed both his father and his
brother. Only one had been an accident.
    He rubbed his fingers through his beard, scratching along his jaw,
and stared vaguely beyond the table. His leg ached where a shard from a
magical stone had pierced his skin and muscles. The rest of the cuts and
bruises on his own body had faded into a single, continuous, dull pain
which generally permeated his whole being. The salves which he had
administered to the cuts would heal them, in time, but his right leg
would forever burden him with a slight limp.
    "Lord Keeper," Marcus spoke in his most formal tone. Goren had all
but ignored Marcus' approach, and was slightly startled at the sound.
    "What is it, castellan?" Goren sat straight in his father's chair
-- his own chair, now -- and looked at Marcus.
    "My lord, with the assistance of Lord Morion and Sir Luthias, the
Beinison threat has been forced into retreat. Furthermore, with Lord
Morion's men continuing presence at Gateway Keep, and the military
advice of Lord Morion himself, I'm confident that Gateway Keep is not in
need of my services, at this time."
    "What are you talking about, Marcus?"
    "Now that my presence is not required, I intend to take a leave of
absence from Gateway, my lord. My son is missing, and I intend to find
him."
    "You can't leave, Marcus."
    "Lord Keeper--"
    "Have you got the slightest idea where to begin?" Goren looked at
his father's best friend. A man who had been almost a father to him.
"You are under orders from the Crown. You serve in a military unit
dedicated to the service of Baranur, and Baranur is at war. You can't
leave now just because you're going through a personal emergency. You've
got a responsibility."
    "My lord, some men have found a drain in the dungeons that has been
uncovered. It leads into the Vodyanoi, and it's large enough to fit a
small man, or a boy. I've also discovered a youth who saw Thomas leave
with ... Captain Clay."
    "Clay?"
    "Aye. The boy was told to keep quiet about it. Clay cooked up some
story about a mission he and Thomas were going on. But not that Beinison
is gone and they haven't returned, I suppose the boy thinks they might
be in a bit of trouble."
    Goren stared at the floor in front of Marcus. Captain Bartholomew
Clay was the mercenary that had plotted with Goren's brother, Ne'on, to
kill their father and usurp the seat of Keeper of Gateway. They had
succeeded on both accounts, and imprisoned Goren for months before he
was able to escape. Goren owed a debt to Bartholomew Clay that he dearly
wished to repay. "I suppose you're right. Let's check out that drain."

    Goren squatted by the edge of the drain while Marcus held aloft the
oil lantern. The flame afforded little visibility in the dark stone
passages of Gateway's dungeons, and almost no light shone down into the
drain.
    "Can you see anything?"
    "Yes," Goren replied, looking at Marcus. "Darkness. The lamp casts
its own shadow into the drain. I'll have to go down into it."
    "Goren," Marcus put his left hand on Goren's shoulder. "Let me. If
anything should happen-"
    "What? Marcus, look at you. You're almost twice around the size of
me. I'll be hard put to get into that drain, but you could never fit.
And if you did, how would we get you out? Besides, I've got a stake in
this, too. I want Clay's head." Goren searched around the floor. "Why
isn't there an old torch or something around here? What happened to
castle dungeons with wooden planks and torch ends littering the ground?"
    Marcus smiled. "She's less than thirty years old, Goren. And your
father wasn't the type to send every peasant who couldn't pay taxes into
the dungeons. This area wasn't used but more than two or three times."
    "Yes." Goren's gaze seemed to focus beyond the wall. "And I was one
of them. Tell me, Marcus ... where exactly was my cell?"
    "That direction," Marcus pointed down the tunnel. "Go right. Only
cell on the left."
    Goren started walking toward it with Marcus at his heels. "Is it
unlocked?"
    "Maybe."
    When they came to the cell, Goren entered it. Running his hand
through the straw pile that passed for his bed, he found the object of
his search. He pulled out a half-burned torch. "I was going to use this
on the guards, and try to escape," he explained to Marcus. "But I never
had the strength for it. It was all I had."
    Goren's feet found small footholds in the drain's walls as he
lowered himself waist deep into the hole. It was a close fit. By the
time his shoulders were in, he had only a few inches to spare. The air
was stagnant, and the closeness of the walls seemed to press in on him.
He had a sense of the drain hole getting smaller, and the passage
shrinking. He knew it was only fear playing tricks with his mind, but
his heart beat faster. He had to will himself to breath slowly, relax
his body. He knew that if he panicked he could be stuck in that hole for
a long time.
    "Goren, I don't like this." Marcus scolded him. "Ol's balls, we're
grown men. We should get one of the guards to go down there first."
    "Well," Goren gasped out in between steps. "You name a guard you
can think of that deserves to go through this, and I'll send him
through. But most of the men are wounded, and besides ..." Goren looked
up at Marcus and smiled. "This is the most fun I've had in a long time.
Now hand me that torch so I can work my way down."

    Marcus sighed and reached for the torch. As Marcus' hand closed on
the handle, he noticed a surprised look come over Goren's face. A soft
"ulp" escaped Goren's lips, and the Lord Keeper of Gateway began to
slide away through the hole.
    "Goren!" Marcus yelled. He dropped the torch and nearly kicked out
the lantern in an effort to grab his friend, but Goren had slid beyond
his reach. Slowly, a few feet at a time, Goren's face began to disappear
from view. "Goren! Are you alright?"
    "Fine." Goren replied. "I'm moving slowly, at the moment. The walls
of this drain are a little slimier than I thought. I think there's an
opening beneath me, if I can get down a little further without breaking
my neck."
    "Do you want the torch?" Marcus called.
    "No! My hands are wedged at my sides." After a moment he added,
"And I don't much fancy the smell of burning hair."
    Two shadows separated themselves from the walls of the dungeon. One
drew a long knife from it's sheath. The other removed a crowbar from
beneath its cloak.
    "Evening, Castellan. Can we be of help?"
    "Yes," Marcus replied without turning around. "Go get a rope and a
few more lanterns. And a couple of the young guards in training. They
can fit through the hole easily."
    "I'm afraid I'm too tired to run all the way back up those stairs,
sir," said the shadow with the long knife. "Maybe my friend, here-"
    "No, no, sir," his friend replied. "Me leg's still sore from
fightin' off Beinison, and livin' down here these past few days, we
ain't had but much to eat. I don't think I could muster the strength."
    Marcus turned around slowly to see the two figures before him.
Thin, ragged, desperate men with weapons. And no room for Marcus to draw
his broadsword. Were they deserters? No. Their faces looked familiar,
though.
    When a sparkle of recognition entered Marcus' eyes, the first one
spoke. "Aye, Ridgewater. The last of the Black Arm. Now step away from
that drain."
    Marcus looked down the hole. "Goren, here comes the torch," he
said, and kicked the torch down the hole before stepping away. Goren's
yell began to rise up from the drain and then stopped.
    "Me and Nick, here, seem to have come across a bit o' luck," the
first one continued. "We wanted you for offing our mates. But getting
the Keeper with the same deal is a bargain we hadn't dreamed of." He
looked to his friend. "Clay will have to pay us extra for Winston."
    "Not if we don't bring back a piece of him, Will. One of us'll have
to go down there in a few days and get an ear or somethin'."
    "What has Clay to do with this?" Marcus asked cautiously. He
glanced around for something he could use as a weapon. His armor would
probably protect him from a stab or two of the knife. Possibly soften
the blow of the crowbar. But with nothing to strike at them, they could
keep their distance and beat him senseless.
    "The Captain found us," Nick said. "Last of the Black Arm. Gave us
two gold marks apiece, he did. Told us you'd be comin' this way,
probably alone. And that if we got rid o' you, we could get out of here
without havin' to crawl through that hell at your feet."
    "So Clay did go through that hole?"
    "Aye," Nick answered.
    "Was there a boy with him?"

    "Goren, here comes the torch" were the last words Goren heard
before the torch slipped over the edge of the drain. Goren couldn't
reach out to grasp it. As it landed on his head, he let out a short cry
of pain. The smell of burning hair quickly filled his small confines.
There was only one thing to do. He let go.
    The rough walls of the drain, covered in the slime of decade-old
garbage and excrement, were uncompromising. But as he slid further down
the drain, he was able to move his left arm up to grab the base of the
torch. If he was going to die, at least his scalp wasn't going to be
burned off in the process. His decent accelerated gradually. He was
unable to prevent his fall. His boots kicked uselessly against rough
edges, and with his right hand he grasped fruitlessly at ridges and
knobs in the rock.
    After almost a mene of slipping and sliding, he fell out of the
hole and into the air, and landed on a bed of sand and grime. The torch
flame cast odd shadows on the rough-hewn walls. Long-tailed creatures
scurried at the edge of the flickering light, and the sound of running
water emanated from his right. At the sight of one of the red-eyed
creatures, he nearly cried out. Rats. Some with bodies almost two feet
in length, and tails slithering along behind.
    Goren's sudden landing and the introduction of light into their
otherwise dark demesne scattered the rats away from Goren, but they
began to sense his fear. He was trapped, he knew, and had no idea what
had happened to Marcus. He remembered hearing voices, someone telling
Marcus to step away from the hole, and then his slide had begun.
    "Marcus!" he called out. "Are you there?"
    No answer. He did not think he would be receiving help any time
soon. And the rats were getting brave. He stabbed the burning torch at
one of the nearest rats, searing it. Its squeal and the smell of burning
meat let the other rats know that Goren was capable of defending
himself.
    They were wary. They almost seemed to be gauging him, planning
their attack. There were scores, perhaps hundreds, of them. Crawling and
squirming on the ground, fighting for space. Several of them crept
closer, still out of range of his torch, and began to circle him,
looking for an opening. How close could they get? How quickly could he
defend himself? He knew they were pushing his limits, weakening their
prey, just as he had weakened animals he had hunted.
    As a few more of the rats began to circle him, he noticed the light
was getting dimmer. His torch was burning low. When it went out, his
life would be over. He desperately looked about the area. Refuse, human
waste, rats, and water. There was a small crack in the wall where the
water entered the cave, and a larger one where the stream left. He
noticed that while some of the rats entered and left the cave from the
one crack, they avoided the crack where the water exited the cave. Why?
    He did not know. In the faint light remaining, he did not care. His
only chance to escape from a painful, agonizing death was to follow the
current. Retrospectively, climbing down the hole that had led to this
room seemed to be a bad idea.

    Nick charged Marcus with the crowbar, swinging wildly as he came.
In the few moments since the melee had ensued, Marcus had noticed they
were weak. They must have been telling the truth about being here for
several days without much food. And since there were no prisoners for
the dungeon, and all the guards were reassigned to defend Gateway and
initiate its rebuilding, no one would be delivering food to any guards
stationed in this part of the castle.
    Still, the crowbar Nick used had struck him several times, leaving
him winded and bruised. But the low-cut stone ceiling which felt so
oppressive was inhibiting to Nick's swing. As he charged this time, the
bar knocked the ceiling, stalling his swing. Marcus struck upward with
his fist, catching the man in his throat.
    Nick dropped the crowbar and gasped for air. Will had kept his
distance, staying away from Nick's wild swings and gauging the
castellan's ability. As Marcus picked up the crowbar, fear seemed to
settle in the knife-wielder's eyes. Marcus swung the crowbar hard at
Nick's head. He heard the cracking of bone as Nick's skull spilled blood
and brains against the impacting weapon. Then he advanced on the other.
    The knife shook in Will's hand as he extended it in defense. Marcus
walked confidently toward him, striking the knife aside and breaking
Will's hand in the process. Will turned to run, but a kick from Marcus
swept his legs out from under him. Marcus grabbed the thug and turned
him over, staring hatred and pain into Will's eyes. He raised the
crowbar.
    "Kill me now, castellan," Will managed to cry, "and you'll never
find your son."
    The crowbar hesitated. "Bring me to him." He hauled the thief up by
his neck, grasping the lantern with the same hand as the crowbar. "And
he'd better be healthy."
    "My life for his," bargained Will. "You let me go if I show you
where he is, okay?" Marcus' stare was his only reply. "Right. Mine for
his. He's real close by, see."
    Will brought him down the hall and through a door. That door led to
another hall, which led around a corner, to a secluded section of the
dungeon that was unused. Had never been used, in fact, until now. And
there was Thomas.
    Thomas was chained to a wall, gagged and blindfolded. By the looks
of his head and the skin on his bones, he had been beaten and starved
for several days. He was unconscious and hanging by his swollen wrists.
Marcus ran to him, setting the lantern on the floor, and tried to wake
him.
    Thomas was beyond reaching, for the moment. He was breathing,
barely, but only just hanging on to life. With the lantern's light
closer to Thomas' body, Marcus could see the extent to which the thugs
had punished his boy. He turned toward Will, hatred and pain filling his
eyes again. And, this time, a touch of ... revenge? The smell of urine
filled the thug's britches. Marcus advanced toward him, raising the
crowbar with a sinister grin.

    Goren was surrounded by a swirling mass of water, tumbling and
tossing him in each direction. There was no way for him to see where he
was or where he was going. One moment he had been crawling backwards
through the stream, using the torch's remaining fire to ward off the
rats. The next, he had slipped, landing face-first in the water,
dropping the torch, and being swept away by the current.
    There was no light without the torch. He had been pulled under to a
deeper, faster moving current. At the first turn, he had been slammed
into a stone wall of the underground waterway, and the air had been
knocked out of his body. Now his lungs screamed for air, and the
tightness in his chest seemed ready to burst. As he was hurled through
the water, he wondered how the water would taste. He tried not to
imagine the choking feeling of his lungs trying to breath the liquid. It
would be better than being eaten by rats, he thought momentarily.
    Suddenly, bubbles surrounded him. Light emerged into the watery
passage, and he began floating upward, no longer knocking against the
passage ceiling. He emerged, exhausted, into bright sunlight. He was
floating on a river, less than ten yards from one shore, and the current
was slowly edging him towards the overhanging trees. He let it.
    When his feet finally touched ground, he had regained enough
strength to drag himself out of the water and crawl to the shore. His
remaining clothing -- breeches, a shirt, a belt, and a pair of boots --
hung heavily on him, filled with the waters that had almost claimed his
life. His injured leg throbbed, but held his weight. He was alive. It
felt good.
    He looked around. He was on the Laraka, about a quarter of a league
north west of Gateway keep. He could see Gateway's walls in the
distance, and he instinctively backed into the brush at the river's
edge.
    "Why did I do that?" Goren asked himself. "All I need to do is hail
them, and they'll send a few horses out to get me.
    "And then you'll be back in Gateway, sitting on your father's
chair, presiding over your father's business. Bored depressed, and
lonely," he answered his own question. "And probably talking to yourself
more than anyone else."
    Face it, he thought, you don't want to go back. And this is the
perfect opportunity to leave. They'll think you're dead. "If you keep
talking to yourself," he continued out loud, "you might be dead anyway."
    He checked his resources, as if he had already made his decision:
he had clothes suitable for the summer season, although not perfect for
travelling; a long knife was sheathed in his left boot; and a small
pouch with one ... two ... three marks and ... four rounds. "A treasure
for a king," he remarked dryly.
    Still. What reason could take him away from Gateway? Had he not
just denied Marcus, less than a bell ago, the right to go searching for
his son? What about responsibility? What about his father's legacy? Had
he the right to remove himself from the duties the King had entrusted
him with? As keeper of Gateway, did he not have a responsibility to the
men within the keep, as well as the townspeople in the villages under
its protection? Would he be the hypocrite, saying "follow my thoughts,
not my actions"?
    As he thought about this dilemma, his mind a pendulum swinging from
responsibility at one end and freedom at the other, he spied a small
stack of dead branches that had been used as a campfire. He made his way
out of the scrub he had hidden in, and approached the old campfire.
Kneeling down, he smelled it, ground some of the dead soot through his
fingers. There were boot tracks nearby: one man, small feet. Possibly a
heavy child? No ... Clay.
    The name sprung to mind instantly, and he knew he was right. Clay
had taken the waterway out of Gateway, also, and landed on this very
shore. He kept a small fire at night, hidden from both Beinison and
Gateway by the trees on the shoreline. But he could not have left until
the battle was decided. If Beinison had entered Gateway keep, the scouts
would have been brought in, and Clay could escape the region. If
Gateway's troops had held out, as they had done with the timely
assistance of Luthias Connall and his cavalry, then Beinison would be
fleeing with all speed, and the scouts would move with them.
    Either way, with the battle for Gateway Keep ended less than two
days past, Clay's trail was relatively fresh. There had been no rain.
Goren was an accomplished hunter. And Clay had no idea that Goren was
following him.
    Now Goren's debate was ended. He would not return to Gateway. But
he would send Marcus a note, once he reached a civilized town, and let
him know he was on Clay's trail. In his own mind, he had justification.
He had tracks.

========================================================================

                              Kidnapped
                               Part Two
                           by Max Khaytsus
                 
                            Yule 23, 1014

    Kera stretched in bed, savoring the warmth of the old blanket. The
black of the night slowly dissolved into reddish hues, forming outlines
of the furniture. Was it time to get up? She sat up, holding the blanket
tightly around her shoulders. The night air was chilly, even colder than
the drafty old castle she had been staying at.
    Outside something creaked, the sound of a rusty wheel joint
turning. A whip snapped, followed by a "move it, you old nag." The whip
snapped again.
    Was that a thud that woke her up a few moments before? Kera could
not remember. She got up, with the blanket, and walked over to the
window, to look out, but by the time she pushed the latched shutters
open, the road past the stables was empty.
    "Damn." It was the middle of the night, the eastern sky showing no
evidence of morning light. "Like I've got nothing better to do." She
returned to the bed and fell on it in a tangle of blankets, but for some
reason sleep had already left her for the night.

    "Innkeep?" Kera called, hurrying down the stairs. "Innkeep?"
    The large man from the night before yawned in his chair at the
front desk and looked up.
    "The boy I was with last night. Have you seen him?"
    "Not since last night," he rocked in his chair, not paying
attention.
    "His door is unlocked and he's missing. Where is he?"
    "Probably went out ..."
    "I was up, I would have heard," Kera said. "And he'd have to walk
past you to come down the stairs."
    "Look, I don't know," the man tried righting the chair, but Kera
reached over the counter and grabbed his tunic, momentarily holding him
suspended in the air, barely balanced on the two worn legs of the chair.
    "You better be telling the truth!"
    She pushed him back against the wall, the chair groaning under his
weight and rushed outside.
    Where could Stefan had gone so early, without telling her? She
rushed to the stables, to check on the horses. Hasina and Kelsey were
peacefully pulling at grass just outside the stables, their pens open
for no apparent reason. Stefan's own horse remained in its stall,
securely locked.
    "What happened to you, girl?" Kera pulled Hasina's head up. The
horse solemnly chewed on the grass she managed to grab on the way up,
showing no eagerness to answer the question.
    "Kelsey," Kera whistled and Rien's horse slowly walked over to her.
"You two stay here," she threw a hitching rope around their necks and
wrapped the other end around a post.
    Something happened during the night. The stalls were opened and
horses let out. Did someone try to steal them? If so, the horses would
have refused to go far. But who would do that? Stefan? Why then try to
take them, but not his own stallion? And why did he not tell her he was
leaving?
    She looked around again, up and down the road, then up at the
window of her room. The squeaking wheels! Kera examined the ground. So
many tracks. A nearby puddle of mud contained the tracks of at least a
half dozen different wheels, but no useful clues.
    Kera returned to the inn, suspiciously eyeing the proprietor. "If
you know anything about the boy's disappearance," she warned.
    He shrugged. "Told ya already. I don't know."
    "If anything happens to him, I'll hold you responsible,
understand?" She did not wait for an answer and hurried up the stairs to
look in Stefan's room.
    The room was empty, all personal belongings she saw Stefan bring in
the night before now missing. The bed was still unmade and the pillow
lay on the floor on the far side of the bed, but no evidence of trouble.
What reason would he have to leave?
    Kera looked out the window. Hasina and Kelsey stood below, slowly
taking apart the bush next to them.
    What if he did not leave? What if he was taken? That cart or wagon
she heard at night. What if he was kidnapped and taken? Could someone
have recognized him or followed them from Valdasly? What would they
gain? The Baron was gone, quite likely for the entire summer.
    But ... but if there was a kidnapper who did not know any better.
    Kera hurried back down, almost knocking over the serving wench from
the night before.
    "I beg your pardon," the young woman said, holding tightly to the
baluster to avoid falling. She was conservatively dressed and quieter
than the night before. Kera did not answer, taking steps three or four
at a time.
    "Did any guests leave during the night?" she demanded of the owner.
    "Your companion, it seems like."
    "Any one else?"
    "No."
    She entered the common room, trying to convince herself to relax.
She was running herself ragged. It was no wonder she could not think.
Taking a deep breath, Kera sat down at the table she and Stefan used the
previous night.
    Could it have been the two men they had a run-in with the night
before? That seemed the most natural answer, but why did they take
Stefan and not her? He hardly did anything. She humiliated one, beat him
up, knocked him cold.
    "You want something to eat?" a matronly woman appeared from
nowhere.
    "Eggs and ... Just a normal breakfast."
    "Right away, miss."
    Kera leaned back in her chair, looking around the empty common
room. It was still very early and no patrons had yet arrived. She folded
her arms, wondering how Rien would handle this problem. He always seemed
to have the answer to any problem. He always managed to see something
that stood out that she never gave a second thought to. What was it?
Kera started recalling the details of the night before. She saw those
men earlier, right after she and Stefan came in, drinking at the bar.
The plump woman was serving at the bar then. After that she became
involved in the conversation with Stefan, telling him about Dargon. That
was when the two men came over. And right afterwards, the innkeeper came
over and told them to go to their rooms to avoid trouble.
    Maybe he knew those men, maybe he just wanted to avoid a fight at
his inn. Most inn and tavern owners yell that it is bad for business to
have patrons fighting, but from her own experience that only drew larger
crowds and more silver for the mead.
    Noticing the proprietor watching her, she motioned him over.
    "Those two men from yesterday. Do you know where I could find
them?"
    He looked flustered. "No, I don't."
    "I'm warning you," Kera repeated. "If you know something, tell me.
If I find out you're lying ..."
    The plump woman came back with the breakfast Kera ordered and a
warm cup of milk. "Stop bothering the girl, Arty. Go fix those loose
steps. Lord knows, if someone important falls, we'll never hear the end
of it."
    The man grumbled and left, looking suspiciously relieved at being
given a task.
    "Are you all right, child?" the woman went on.
    "I'm fine," Kera answered. "Thank you." She did not want to involve
the woman. There did not seem to be a reason to.
    "Then you have a good meal and just call me if you want anything
else."
    "Thank you," Kera muttered.
    She picked at her food, worried about Stefan, about what she would
tell the Duke if she could not find him. Why did this have to happen
now? The Baron trusted her with his son and she lost him the first night
away from the keep. He probably would have been better off at home, with
no protection.
    She fumbled with the meal a little longer, forcing herself to eat a
few more bites, then, leaving a few coins on the table, got up and left.
She was too nervous to eat, too nervous to sit still and when she got
outside, she felt an unsettling ache in her stomach. An acrid taste
filled her mouth and she could feel the food refusing to stay down.
    "Damn." She leaned on Hasina's side, feeling feverish, but relieved
that she no longer had to vomit. Hasina shifted, as if in sympathy,
offering Kera a shoulder of support.
    "Horses don't get this sick, do they?" Kera tried to joke.
    "Actually horses can get pretty sick, miss, if you run them
enough."
    She looked up at the young man sitting a top a horse not far away.
    "Are you feeling well?"
    "Fine. Just fine." She pulled the rope holding her two horses off
the post and turned to go.
    "Wait up, miss," the man jumped off his horse. "I understand you're
having a problem."
    She turned and looked at him, dressed in soiled clothes, with a
deep bruise under his eye, unkempt hair.
    "I don't think you could help me. Thank you."
    "We haven't been introduced," the man stepped into her path, his
horse obediently following behind him. "Bajuin Daret. I'm the constable
in this village."
    Kera felt another contraction in her stomach and swallowed hard to
avoid throwing up again, although she suspected there was nothing left
in her.
    "Are you sure you're all right?"
    "Yes, I am!" she snapped. "What do you want from me?"
    "I understand the boy you arrived with is missing."
    "What's it to you?"
    "I told you, I'm the constable. Here," he pulled the chain of
office from his tunic and showed Kera a signet ring. "In this village I
carry the authority of the Duke. Let me help."
    "All right, find him. He's got brown hair, he's fifteen, my
height."
    "Why don't you confirm a suspicion for me first?"
    "What?"
    Bajuin leaned on the post where the horses had been hitched. "You
picked a fight with a pair of scruffy looking fellows last night in the
tavern."
    "Is that a question?"
    "No, it's a statement," the man shook his head. "And I think you
think they took him."
    "How do you know that?"
    "I'm the constable," he said. "I have to know these things."
    "Look, you better go," Kera said. "Anyone can get a chain and a
ring like that."
    "They could, but that's against the law. I assure you, I am the
constable."
    "Then how do you know about this?"
    "My cousin told me."
    "And who's your cousin?"
    "The daughter of the man who runs this establishment," Bajuin said.
    "The serving girl or the old woman?"
    He shook his head. "Do you want help or not?"
    "If you don't know who those men are, you're absolutely useless to
me."
    "Are you sure the boy was taken?"
    "I think so," Kera sighed. "He did not take his horse, nor mine and
his things are gone."
    "Is he a responsible type?"
    "Very. His father is a very strict man. I doubt he ran away."
    "`His father'? I'm to take it the two of you aren't related?"
    "That is correct."
    "Who's his father and where is he?"
    "His father's at war. I'm taking to boy to Hawksbridge." Kera was
not about to say more than that. She did not need to find any more
trouble than what had already found her.
    "All right, you go back to your room and wait. I'll check on those
men to see if it was them."
    "I'm coming with you."
    "You're staying here."
    "That boy is my responsibility until I get him to Hawksbridge! I'm
going with you!"
    "Look," Bajuin took Kera by her shoulders, "I've had a really rough
night. I'm sore, I'm tired, I'm in pain. I don't need some nanny who
can't keep her breakfast down and a kid under wraps following me around
like a sick puppy. Go to your room and wait."
    Kera broke his hold on her with anger. "I'm not some child to be
bossed around by you! If Stefan was kidnapped, there was nothing I could
do to prevent it, including tieing him down to his bed! I was given a
job to do and I'm damn well going to do it with or without your help!"
    "Okay, his name's Stefan," Bajuin said. "That's a start."
    Kera set her jaw. She was not going to let the subject be changed.
    "All right, you can come, but you're going to stay out of my way or
I'm going to forget about all this and go home."
    "Do I need my horse?"
    "No, it's in walking distance."
    Bajuin walked Kera back to the stables where she secured Hasina and
Kelsey in stalls and they then proceeded to visit the houses of the two
men.
    "Those your horses?" Bajuin asked as they walked down the road
towards a cluster of small wooden homes.
    "One of them. The other's a friend's."
    "Where's your friend?"
    Kera eyed him. "At war."
    "Seems like a everyone you know's at war."
    "Well, it's a big war, isn't it?"
    "Yeah, it is. Who are you going to see in Hawksbridge?"
    "Are all constables so nosy?" Kera asked.
    "All the ones who do a good job."
    "You find him and I'll believe it."
    They stopped before a dusty house with a damaged porch, damp and
moldy from excessive moisture, sagging into the ground on one side, but
obviously lived in. Bajuin knocked.
    "Do me a favor and let me do the talking, would you?"
    "Sure," Kera nodded.
    After a moment the door was opened by a thin young woman. "Good
morrow to you, Constable."
    "Good morning, Sarse. Is your husband home?"
    "What had he done? Gotten another wench pregnant?" Sarse eyed Kera
suspiciously. "The lazy bastard should be out in the field, tending his
crops!"
    The door slammed noisily, catching Bajuin in the arm.
    "Oh ..." he groaned, backing away.
    "Are you all right?" Kera asked.
    "No." He straightened out. "Come on. We can check on Skaly while
we're here."
    Kera followed the constable down the street. "What happened to you,
anyway?"
    He looked at her. "I found who was trampling the Mayor's wheat
field."
    "He must've been bigger than you," Kera commented.
    "Quite a bit bigger. This house."
    Kera again waited while Bajuin went up to the door and knocked.
There was no answer. He waited and knocked again, then tried the door.
It creaked open, revealing the dark interior of the house.
    "Skaly? Urta? Hello?"
    He pulled the door shut and walked back to the street. "No one
there. Let's go to the stables and get the horses. We'll check the
fields."
    "What if they're not there?" Kera asked.
    "Then I'll ride around until I find them," Bajuin said. "Is there
any reason they'd want to kidnap the boy?"
    "I don't know," Kera said. "He hit one of them with a pitcher, but
I ... Well, they have more of a reason to be mad at me."
    Bajuin nodded. "Maybe they entered the wrong room. Maybe they're
trying to get back at you ..."
    "You're not surprised that they're accused," Kera noted.
    "Those two? Not one bit. They're about as low as low can get. I was
beginning to worry they haven't been in any fights recently."
    At the inn Kera quickly saddled Hasina and joined Bajuin outside.
    "Do you know how to use that?" he indicated to the sword hanging
off the saddle.
    "I held it once or twice," Kera answered.
    "Then you best leave it peace bound," he instructed and kicked his
horse into a light trot.
    "Pig-headed, chauvinistic ass," Kera kicked Hasina.
    "We'll have to make one stop on the way," Bajuin told Kera when she
caught up. "I need to talk to the Mayor."
    "Constable," Kera said, "I'm not sure how to phrase this best, but
I have the feeling the innkeeper knows something of this and is hiding
it."
    "Of the kidnapping? Probably." They rode in silence for a while.
"You see, my uncle isn't as young as he used to be. There was a time
he'd have been among the first to help you, but now he's older and
sicker and my cousin hasn't married yet, so everything's on his
shoulders. So long as his inn isn't threatened, he'll lead a quiet meek
existence as far away from bullies and troublemakers as he can. He's
afraid that if he does anything to help you, it will come back to haunt
him and it's a risk he doesn't want to take. That's why I offered my
help. It's not just my duty to you. It's also what I owe him."
    "So what did your cousin tell you?"
    "She said your companion was kidnapped and that Flary and Skaly
were probably involved."
    "Flary and Skaly? Sounds like you know them pretty well."
    "It's a small community and they've spent a good deal of time
keeping me company in the last few years," Bajuin laughed at a private
joke. "I'm very, very close to them."
    They stopped at a large white stone house and Bajuin hopped off his
horse, grunting as he hit the ground.
    "Oh, gods," a plump woman hurried down from the porch. "What ever
happened to you, Constable?"
    "Good morning, Madam."
    "Clauneil!" the woman yelled. "The Constable is here!"
    "Are you all right, Constable? Your eye and your hair and ... oh,
those clothes are ruined. What did you do?"
    A short plump man bounced his way down the stairs towards the
street.
    "Good morning, Lord Mayor," Bajuin bowed.
    "What happened to you, Constable?"
    It appeared to Kera that Bajuin was searching for the right words.
    "I found your despoiler, Lord Mayor. It was Ol' South Paw ..."
    "Oh, goodness!" the woman exclaimed. "You didn't fight Ol' South
Paw, did you?"
    "Yes, ma'am. From the creek to the road and back."
    "You didn't kill him, did you?" the Mayor asked.
    "No, my Lord, but I highly suggest you put some men to guard the
field tonight."
    "Yes, yes, of course ..." he muttered.
    "I best go, Mayor," Bajuin said. "I need to help this woman find
her companion and then I need some sleep."
    The Mayor and his wife bid their goodbyes and Bajuin again mounted
his horse.
    "Who's Ol' South Paw?" Kera asked as they rode away from the
Mayor's home.
    "Ol' South Paw is the biggest, toughest, meanest bear in these
parts. He usually stops coming around early summer and we don't see him
until the following spring, but this year he's been rather regular in
his visits."
    "You fought with a bear?"
    "He did most of the fighting," Bajuin laughed. "I did all of the
running."
    "I'm sorry," Kera said. "I didn't realize. You should be resting,
not helping me."
    "No, no. I'm fine. Let's check the fields since we're out here,
then we'll decide what to do next."
    "All right," Kera agreed.
    "What's your name?"
    Kera looked at him, surprised. He had not asked before. "Kera. My
name's Kera."
    "Just Kera?"
    "Yeah, just Kera."
    "You're hiding something from me, Kera," the constable warned.
    "Try not to forget that you're the one to come to me and offer
help."
    "What would you do without me?" he asked.
    "I don't know," Kera shrugged. "But I'd find a way. Your uncle
obviously knows who I'm after."
    At the northern edge of the village Bajuin signalled Kera to stop
and scanned the sloping field with his eyes. Not one person was in site
anywhere in the field.
    "This is where you farm?" Kera asked.
    "What of it?"
    "It's ... that's just a dirt patch!"
    "Well, we all can't be as lucky as you! We live in the mountains
and make the most of what we have, including farm land. It's small and
rocky, but it feeds the village and there's enough to sell in the city
to buy warm clothes for the winter."
    "Sorry."
    Bajuin grumbled something and rode on.
    Kera waited for a moment, then followed. "So what now?"
    "Now you go to the inn and I'll go get some sleep and I'll look
again afterwards."
    Not answering, Kera yanked Hasina around and proceeded northeast on
the twisting road.
    "Hey, the village's the other way!" Bajuin called after her.
    "Then you go there! I've got a boy to find."
    The clatter of hooves on the dirt road sounded behind Kera as the
Constable caught up to her. "I can't let you do this alone."
    "Afraid for your reputation if I find him first?"
    "Afraid something will happen to you."
    "I can take care of myself."
    "Not against those two," he sighed. "Look," he got his horse to
block Hasina's path, "neither Flary, nor Skaly worked an honest day in
their lives. They've been causing trouble since they were born and I
have reason to believe they've killed people in the past. Dearly as I
want to see them hang, I haven't the proof. But I do know they're
dangerous and that you shouldn't be looking for them alone. If they have
the boy, and haven't hurt him yet, I doubt they will now. Just trust me
on this."
    "Constable," Kera pulled Hasina to a halt, "the fact that Stefan is
missing is enough to force me to look for him. The suspicion that a pair
of brigands kidnapped him makes it that much more critical that I find
him soon. Either help me, or get your horse out of my way."
    He sighed. "Look, I know it's hard, but ..."
    "I refuse to argue with you!" Kera jerked Hasina around the
make-shift road block.
    "All right, all right. Let's go find the kid."
    Kera stared at him silently, her jaw set, Hasina shifting
impatiently below her, sensing her agitation.
    "Did you hear anything last night?" Bajuin asked. "Any conversation
Flary and Skaly were having before coming over to you?"
    Kera shook her head. "No." Rien would have. He always did. "I did
wake up in the middle of the night," she added. "I heard some noises and
a squeaky cart or wagon going by the inn."
    "In the middle of the night?"
    Kera nodded. "A man yelled for a horse to move on. Called it a
`nag' -- something I haven't heard in a long time."
    "Voice sound familiar?"
    "I don't know ... I could've dreamed the whole thing."
    "But you wouldn't have brought it up if you believed you did,"
Bajuin said.
    "No, I guess not. And this morning I found my horses out of their
stables, but not Stefan's horse. That's why I think he was taken. If he
had left on his own, he'd have taken his stallion, which remained in his
stall all night."
    "Why not take your horses?" the Constable inquired. "They're rather
expensive, powerful creatures."
    "They're well trained. They wouldn't trust a stranger and you'd
have a hell of a time staying on one if I weren't around. I think
someone may have tried taking them, but they put up a fight."
    Bajuin nodded thoughtfully. "Sounds like you've thought all this
out already. One more thing, though. Why did you throw up this morning?"
    "I don't know. Nervous, I guess."
    "Nervous? You sure you weren't poisoned? Or drugged?"
    "I don't know. Why drug me to get me sick?"
    "Just a thought," Bajuin shrugged. He looked up and down the road.
"You don't happen to remember seeing a wagon at Skaly's, do you?"
    Kera shook her head. "I don't remember seeing a wagon all morning.
And I've been watching for them."
    "Skaly has a small wagon. Just seems convenient it's been moved
after all this time ..."
    "There is one more place I'd like to look, Constable," Kera said.
"Stefan told me there's a lake north of here, with a valley north of it
that's hard to get to, but has plenty of good hunting. He and his father
went hunting there a lot. Maybe he just ran off to visit there ..."
    "That'll take the whole morning," Bajuin warned. "There are two
ways to get there -- on foot, with a good league of the worst terrain
this side of Hawksbridge, or by riding around the cluster of hills over
there. Takes the same amount of time."
    "Let's do it, then."
    "That's a lot of time for someone in as much a hurry as you."
    "That's what I wanted to look at anyhow," Kera said. "Help me?"
    "Come on," he agreed. "You rather ride or hike?"
    "Ride," Kera said. "I don't think my stomach will let me do much
climbing."

    It was nearing noon when Kera and Bajuin reached the north shore of
the lake, having gone a good ten leagues north, then down a narrow
canyon into a valley and back down the meadow to the lake.
    "Nothing," Kera muttered, looking at the muddy soil at the edge of
the water. "As if no one had set foot here in months."
    "I doubt anyone has," Bajuin jumped off his horse. "It's hard to
get to, as you've seen. The locals don't come here too often, though we
tend to get visitors -- nobility, mostly, or hunters and trappers -- but
we've had a long winter and there's a war on, so few people come here
these days."
    He guided his horse to the water and backed away to the grassy
patch where his boots did not sink into the mud.
    Kera jumped off Hasina, letting her get some water as well.
    "Disappointed?"
    "About Stefan? Yes." She looked down the meadow from where they
came. "First time I ever wanted someone to be irresponsible ..."
    "We'll find him," Bajuin assured her. "Don't worry."
    "What if it's not Flary and Skaly?" Kera asked. "What if something
else happened to him?"
    "We'll find him and he'll be fine," Bajuin repeated. "Just to have
a clear conscience, let's ride around the lake to get back. It's about
the same distance, and we'll come out on a good road five leagues
outside the village. It'll be time to eat soon, anyhow."

    "Constable! Constable!" a man in the road waved his arms wildly as
Kera and Bajuin made the last turn in the road towards the village.
    "What a crazy job to have," Bajuin spurred his horse on and Kera
followed, keeping Hasina to a trot behind the Constable's galloping
horse.
    By the time she made it to where the man was, she missed the
beginning of the conversation and Bajuin had already dismounted his
horse and followed the man who called him to the edge of the road. She
jumped off Hasina and followed the two men to look down into the dry
water channel at the side of the road. Another man stood in the
depression, bending over a body.
    "Skaly?" Bajuin asked the other man and he nodded.
    "Stabbed to death, Constable."
    Bajuin looked at Kera. "Maybe we are looking in the right place,
after all." He climbed down into the ditch and examined the wounds on
the body, talking quietly to the man already there. They then both
climbed out and started looking at the tracks in the dirt.
    "What are you looking for?" the man who had first flagged them down
asked.
    "Horse or wagon tracks," Bajuin answered. "Doesn't look like he was
killed here. I'd expect more blood from a death wound."
    "How about this?" Kera took a step back from where she was
standing.
    "That's it," the second man said. "No one would drive this this
close to the edge of the road."
    "Uh-huh," Bajuin knelt down. "And hooves clearly point west." He
checked the dryness of the soil with his finger and got up. "Gerik, go
back to the village and get the doctor or the smith to come out and get
the body. And tell Lord Mayor that we have a murder on our hands and may
be dealing with a kidnapping."
    "Right away, Constable."
    "And ask Lord Mayor to deputize some men and send them this way."
    When the two men left, Bajuin walked back to Kera, waiting at the
side of the road. "What do you think?" she asked.
    "I think they had a falling out on the way and Flary killed Skaly.
The question is, where were they going?"
    Kera pointed west.
    "Yes, but why? And why kill him? They've been friends for years
..."
    Kera shrugged.
    "No point wasting time," Bajuin got on his horse. "Let's go find
him. He must have a good five bell start on us."
    Kera got back on her horse and they silently rode west at a trot.
    The choice of road struck Kera as equally strange, it being the
same road on which she and Stefan arrived. It was not a major road and
one through rather difficult terrain. There was nothing on it for a good
fifty leagues. Nothing before Valdasly Keep, that is.
    Could Stefan had tricked them into taking this road? If so, why? He
knew his father had left for the war. It made no sense.
    Some time after the sun passed the mid-day mark, Kera and Bajuin
decided to take a break. There was no reason to run the horses into the
ground in the middle of no where. They found a small spring and drank
from it, giving the horses a chance to quench their thirst as well. They
ate nothing, having neither supplies, nor weapons to hunt with, other
than their swords, and even if they had, they did not intend to stay
long enough to prepare a meal.
    "You know, Kera, I've been thinking," Bajuin said, "and I keep
coming up with the same answer every time. There's nothing on this road
for leagues and leagues, until the scattered villages down by
Charnelwood. And there's Valdasly Keep, Sir Dower's Barony. And Baron
Dower has a son, whose name, I believe, is Stefan. Am I right?"
    Kera only looked away.
    "You bitch. Had you told me this morning, the whole village
would've been out looking for him now."
    Kera took a deep breath, but refused to answer.
    "Well? Why this road? Why go back? Why a murder? What are you
hiding?"
    "I can only guess that he tricked them to take this road. I can't
imagine why. Baron Dower left for the war yesterday morning. The Keep is
practically empty."
    "What if it's a ransom kidnapping?" Bajuin asked. "It's a sound
motive: Flary and Skaly recognise the boy, kidnap him to hold for money,
have a disagreement and Skaly is killed."
    "Could be," Kera agreed.
    "Which just leaves me with one question," Bajuin went on. "Why is
the boy travelling with you?"
    "As opposed to whom?"
    "A knight or a man-at-arms?"
    "You're making an assumption," Kera answered.
    "Am I right?"
    "I refuse to discuss it."
    "Am I?"
    "That is between Baron Dower, Duke Glavenford and myself," Kera got
up and walked over to Hasina. "Are you coming or is this as far as
you're going?"
    "I'm coming," Bajuin got up.

    Darkness in the mountains comes in a wink of an eye and by mid
afternoon Bajuin voiced the question of continuing on at night. "These
are dangerous roads in the dark," he pointed out. "Anything can happen."
    "Afraid of the forest spirits?" Kera laughed. She knew she was, but
this was not the forest to be afraid in.
    "I prefer to call it common sense," came the answer. "Start looking
for a good place to make camp. I'm sure we'll catch up to them tomorrow
morning."
    "That's what you said several bells ago about this evening."
    "I was wrong. I didn't expect he made so much distance in a day."
    "How far do you figure?"
    Bajuin shrugged. "I can't imagine him being more than five leagues
ahead of us now."
    "You're saying he went thirty leagues in one day in a wagon hitched
to one horse, up hill?" Kera asked.
    "One or two horses, but yes, that's exactly what I'm saying. You
said it took you a full day to travel the whole way?"
    "Just about."
    "Then let's figure he made it about half as far in the same amount
of time."
    "I just hope we're following the right hunch on the right trail,"
Kera said. "If not, we'll have lost two days and gods only know what
could've happened to Stefan in this time."
    "Don't worry, we'll find him," Bajuin said, as he had been saying
all day long.
    "Do you really believe that or are you just saying that to prevent
me from worrying? Because if you are ..."
    Bajuin started to say something, but Kera stopped him.
    "... don't tell me. I don't want to know."
    He nodded. "We will find them."
    "Do you think the Mayor will send ..." Kera fell silent, detecting
a new smell on the wind.
    "If he'll organize help? Of course he will. He's ..."
    Kera rose her hand to silence Bajuin. "Do you smell that?"
    "What?" he smelled the air. "Pollen?"
    "Smoke."
    He stopped his horse and looked around. "Smoke? That means we've
either found people or a forest fire ..."
    The wind blew from the west and Kera strained her eyes to catch any
indication of a fire in the quarter league to the next turn in the road
ahead of them. "There must be something beyond that bend."
    "Are you sure? I don't smell anything."
    "I'm positive," Kera kicked Hasina into a gallop. The thundersteed,
a stronger, faster animal, quickly outpaced the Constable's saddle
horse, in spite of his protests, and moments later she was at the bend
in the road. Dismounting on the run, Kera pushed Hasina off to the side
of the road where shrubbery was plenty and proceeded to stealthily
advance forward.
    "Wait for me!" Bajuin joined her. "What the hell are you going to
do alone?"
    "I'll know when I see the fire."
    They made the turn and proceeded down the road, along the wild
bushes growing along the side of the road like mushrooms after a rain.
    "I can smell it," Bajuin suddenly said.
    "About time."
    Ahead of them was a clearing, set some twenty yards in from the
road, with an open fire, but no trace of people. Not seeing anyone
around, Bajuin got up and walked over to the fire. Judging from the
burning logs, it was far from fresh, but at the same time, not old
enough to have burned itself out.
    "Whoever made it can't be far ahead of us," Kera said.
    "No," Bajuin agreed, kicking dirt over the fire. "Let's go get
him!"
    They hurried back to their horses, but as they made the curve in
the road, a large man on a brown and grey horse, wearing home-made
armor, blocked their path.
    "Flary?" Bajuin asked.
    "Evenin', Constable!" the man lowered a pike he was holding and
kicked his horse hard enough to make it leap forward. Before Bajuin had
a chance to react, the pike impacted his shoulder, carrying him a few
yards back on the thrust, before he fell to the ground with a yell of
pain.
    The rider turned his horse, adjusting his grip on the pike.
    "What's the matter, Constable? Can't stand up and fight?"
    "Flary ..." Bajuin gasped. "Don't do it. There's help on the way.
If you kill me ..."
    "If I kill you, they'll what? Hang me? Ha! Constable, you don't
know how long I've been waiting to do this!" And once again his kicked
his horse into a charge, this time letting it simply trample the man on
the ground.
    At the sight of this, Kera made a break for her horse. Hasina still
carried her sword and bow. And a powerful mount could be of much use.
    "Oh no, you don't!" Flary brought his horse around, seeing Kera's
destination. "You an' I still have a score to settle!"
    Kera leaped out of the way of his horse just in time to avoid
getting hit.
    "But I want you alive," he turned his mount, "so you'll have to
wait until the Constable and I are done."
    "Flary!" Bajuin was now standing in the road. He held his sword in
the off hand, his right shoulder torn and punctured and his weapon arm
absolutely useless. "You leave her out it! It's just you and me!"
    "Gladly, Constable," the brigand turned his horse again and headed
for the new challenger.
    Kera grabbed a thick fallen branch and swung it at ground level as
the horse trotted by her, splintering the wood and forcing the horse to
stumble, but not doing enough to cause it to fall or throw its rider.
    "Oh, girl, that was stupid," Flary broke off his charge. He turned
and lowered his pike, preparing for a charge. The horse already had a
limp, but impact from the sharp edge on the end of the pike was nothing
less than a guarantee of crippling pain.
    Kera quickly looked around and picked up a somewhat larger fallen
branch. It was too heavy for her to swing and too dry and brittle to be
used for a weapon, but it was all she had available and it was the only
way she saw of getting her opponent off his horse. Rien was right, as
was Sir Brand. Chivalry held little place in the world they lived in.
The goal was to stay alive. The means mattered little. And this time, it
was the opponent who held the advantage.
    "Flary, don't!" Bajuin yelled as the horse lunged forward. The tip
of the pike extended a good six feet beyond the horse. Not as dangerous
as facing a lance, but equally deadly.
    "Sevelin, please ..." Kera leveled the branch she held at the
oncoming rider, letting its base rest against the ground and the far end
remain in the air, level with Flary. As the horse and rider neared to
striking distance, Kera took a step forward and dropped to one knee,
letting the branch drop lower, changing the target from the rider to his
horse. Her sudden advance was too unexpected for Flary to slow or turn
his horse and his own weapon remained too high, passing clear over
Kera's head. A moment later the branch Kera held splintered, as it
penetrated the horse's flesh at the base of the left front leg and sank
deep into the beast's body as the charge continued past her. With an
agonizing neighing sound, the horse fell to the ground, throwing its
rider clear.
    Completing her roll out of the way of her attacker, Kera whistled
for Hasina and as her mount approached, yanked the sword from its saddle
sheath. "Go," she slapped the horse, not wanting it to become Flary's
target.
    Flary stood up, bruised and shaken and mad enough to spit rock.
"You're dead, bitch!"
    "Flary, don't!" Bajuin yelled again, hurrying towards them, but he
was too far and too hurt to make any difference.
    Kera readied her sword as her armed and better armored opponent
reached her. In her mind she remembered Sir Brand's instructions from
their last match.
    "Don't let a running opponent force you to back away. You lose any
bracing you have when you do it. Instead lean in with your shield. Give
me a target you want, not what I want."
    "But what if I have no shield?"
    "Then use your sword. Make me want to back off."
    And she swung, causing Flary to come to a sudden stop as the tip of
the blade shaved a spark from his chest plate.
    He countered with a powerful swing, sending strong vibrations down
Kera's sword, making her take an involuntary step back. He was twice her
size, probably three times the weight and better armored than she
thought she could handle.
    Flary swung in a cross pattern, making Kera dodge twice, bringing
her to one knee, below him. He rose his sword above his head for one
final blow.
    Sir Brand's voice sounded in Kera's head again. "That was a feint.
I swung left, you went right. I had a choice of your head, your shield
or your sword." The sword above her started its downward plunge. "Push
forward as you get up," the voice persisted. "I lose my swing when we're
this close. I have to step back."
    As the man's arms came down, Kera advanced, getting up, his elbows
impacting her shoulders, but because of his much greater height, the
blow did little damage and he only lost his solid grip on his blade. Not
wasting the precious moments she won, Kera drew the dagger from her belt
and forced it through a crack in the armor overlays of her opponent's
side. As he grunted in pain, she backed away and adjusted her grip on
her sword.
    Another blow came across her blade, but noticeably weaker. A thin
trail of blood ran down Flary's leg, staining the dirt in the road. Kera
took a swing, purposefully high, forcing Flary to raise his weapon for a
block, then leveled her blade off, hitting the soft padding under the
man's left arm.
    Flary staggered as the padding absorbed the blood from his wound,
now holding the sword in his right arm.
    "Yield," Kera warned. She did not want him dead.
    "Gods damn you!" his blade undercut hers, throwing her arm up. She
almost lost the grip on her sword.
    "You ignored me. You fought my shield," Kera suddenly remembered
Sir Brand's words. He warned her that inexperienced fighters perceived
their opponent's weapons and armor as a greater threat to them. Flary
was big and strong, but he knew little of fighting. Less than she.
    She stepped closer, narrowing the gap between them. He had neither
the skill, nor the agility to defend against the short quick thrusts she
could make. The first blow was placed against his gut, where the dagger
had previously made the cut, forcing him to gasp in pain. The second
crashed across his arm, braking his grip on his sword. Blood splattered
up as Kera realized there was only cloth protecting his lower arm. She
planted a final blow to the man's side, sending him stumbling to the
ground.
    "You lose!"
    Bajuin finally managed to stumble his way over to her as she stood
over the beaten brigand. "Now it's over," she said, kneeling down. She
picked up her dagger off the ground and leaned over Flary. "Where's the
boy?"

========================================================================






 DDDDD                              ZZZZZZ                //
 D    D  AAAA RRR  GGGG OOOO NN  N      Z  I NN  N EEEE  ||
 D     D A  A R  R G    O  O N N N     Z   I N N N E     || Volume 7
-=========================================================+|)
 D    D  AAAA RRR  G GG O  O N N N   Z     I N N N E     || Number 6
 DDDDD   A  A R  R GGGG OOOO N  NN  ZZZZZZ I N  NN EEEE  ||
                                                          \\
                                                            \
========================================================================
DargonZine                                     Distributed: 12/14/1994
Volume 7, Number 6                             Circulation:        634
========================================================================

                               Contents

Editorial                    Ornoth D.A. Liscomb
Rifts                        Max Khaytsus           Seber 1-10, 1014
Endgame                      Rogers Cadenhead       Seber 10, 1014

========================================================================
DargonZine is the publication vehicle of the Dargon Project, a
collaborative group of aspiring fantasy writers on the Internet.
We welcome new readers and writers interested in joining the project.
Please address all correspondance to .
Back issues are available from ftp.etext.org in pub/Zines/DargonZine.
Issues and public discussion are posted to newsgroup rec.mag.dargon.

DargonZine 7-6, (C) Copyright December, 1994, the Dargon Project.
Editor Ornoth D.A. Liscomb . All rights reserved.
All rights are reassigned to the individual contributors. Stories may
not be reproduced or redistributed without the explicit permission of
the author(s) involved, except in the case of freely reproducing entire
issues for further distribution. Reproduction for profit is forbidden.
========================================================================

                              Editorial
                        by Ornoth D.A. Liscomb
                       

    Perhaps at some point I will be able to use this space for witty
personal observations or pointed editorial opinions on topics ranging
from the Information Superhypeway to Order Rodentia. Unfortunately,
there have been so many changes to announce that I've had neither time
nor space to indulge my expository inclinations.
    And this issue is no exception, for this editorial is dedicated
(primarily) to the announcement that DargonZine now supports
"notification subscriptions". Users who select this subscription option
will not receive complete issues by mail, but only a notice that the
issue has been distributed. This is designed for those users who would
rather fetch their issues from rec.mag.dargon or our FTP site rather
than wake up to find a 100K mail file in their incoming mail queue.
    This is useful to us, as well, because it allows us to keep a more
accurate count of readers who obtain their issues through secondary
channels in preference to direct subscriptions. If you regularly read
DargonZine via rec.mag.dargon or the FTP site, we'd like to add you to
this "notify list", so that we have a better idea of how many people
read DargonZine on a regular basis.
    If you are interested in changing your subscription to a
"notification subscription", please drop mail so stating to
, and you'll be switched over.

    In other news, we're in the process of infiltrating the Delphi
online service. In the near future (it's still under construction!),
Delphi users will be able to find the FAQ and recent issues in the
Fanzines database of the Science Fiction & Fantasy SIG. The Internet
archive site for DargonZine is available on the Internet Gopher menu in
the SF&F SIG. Look under the Fantasy Sites, Newsgroups and Homepages
selection. The Dargon Project newsgroup is also on the Usenet Reader
menu in the SF&F SIG.
   Thanks to Gordie Meyer for helping us get set up over there.

    The final bit of news is that during the month of January, we'll be
celebrating the 10th anniversary of the founding of FSFnet, DargonZine's
predecessor. We'll be distributing a huge two-issue compilation of the
Best of the Dargon Project, reprinting some of the stories that we are
most proud to have brought you during the past decade.
    Special hardcopy versions are also being planned. They will contain
artwork and other material not available in the electronic versions.
Information on availability will be forthcoming.

    This issue features two stories that depict some of Dargon's less
savory characters. Max is back with "Rifts", which continues his
exploration of Dargon's underworld and the city guards who combat it.
And we have "Endgame", which marks the first story by Rogers Cadenhead.
Actually, Rogers first joined the project back in 1987! He fled after a
short stint, but has (against his better wisdom, perhaps) returned. And
now he's finally breaking into the pages of DargonZine. Let's hope that
it won't take another eight years for him to print his next story (which
should be a beaut', judging by the synopsis we've seen).
   Onward!

========================================================================

                                Rifts
                           by Max Khaytsus
                 
                           Seber 1-10, 1014

        "I'm afraid we're not the same Dargon we used to be."
                           -- Kalen Darklen

    A large wagon pulled by an overworked horse rumbled down the
street, a misaligned wheel rattling unevenly against the rough
cobblestones. The driver's whip snapped in the dark, causing the horse
to speed up, the clicking of the bad wheel developing a more even rhythm
as the wagon rushed off into the distance.
    Quiet once again settled in the deserted street and a dirty-orange
tabby braved the darkness, rapidly crossing the street before some other
contraption decided to cut across his path. A crashing noise sounded
behind him and he froze in mid-trot, looking up and down the street. It
was dark and quiet. The tabby glanced back to the alley in which he had
settled down to rest in a warm pile of debris, where two noisy men had
disturbed his peace, causing him to flee. He paused, deciding if he
should run further or wait them out. The sound of footsteps up the
street made his decision for him and in a streak of orange he
disappeared under the steps of the building on the far side of the
street.
    "You hear that, Kiney?" a whisper sounded in the alley. "Kiney?"
    "Shut up, you fool!"
    "But ..."
    "Shh!"
    Silence fell on the alley as a lantern light floated down the
street. It rocked back and forth in a careless grasp and for a moment
threatened to enter the alley. In a moment the light faded and a mene
later so did the sound of the footsteps. The shadows again moved.
    "Was that the guard, Kiney?"
    "Don't know."
    "What was it?"
    "Shut up."
    A man stood up and reached for the windowsill above his head. His
fingers deftly played with the shutters and they came undone. "Never so
easy!"
    "Kiney, what if the owner's home?"
    "Then you'll kill him."
    "I've never killed anyone, Kiney. I don't know how to do it."
    "Shut up."
    The man's hands wrapped around the window's ledge and he started to
pull himself up. His feet aided his efforts and in a moment he was
inside the dark room.
    "Kiney, where are you?"
    "Shh! Give me your hand."
    A shadowy hand reached out the window and helped the other man up,
then both figures disappeared into the house. Quiet again ruled the dark
alley, but the calmness did not remain long. There was a clank and a
crash and yell and not long after a man hopped out the window and
reached up to accept a bag.
    "Is he really dead, Kiney?"
    "Come on!"
    "Is he?"
    "Just shut up and give me the bag!"
    The large bundle was passed down, followed by the figure that held
it.
    "Is he?"
    "Yes!"
    "Do dead people go to heaven, Kiney? Mums said they die and go to
the Stevene."
    "Shut up!"
    They moved to the edge of the alley and Kiney paused, looking for
and listening to any signs of others. As he stopped, his larger
companion bumped into him and lost his grip on the bag. The overfilled
sack slipped out of the man's arms and tumbled to the ground, spilling
the pilfered items at the mouth of the alley. Silverware clattered on
the ground around the two men, including one adventuresome platter that
decided to roll out of the alley and down the street.
    "You idiot!" Kiney hissed, spinning about. His exclamation was
accented by a sudden gasp -- only then did the two men notice a woman
hiding in the shadows of the old structure. "Grab her!" Kiney yelled as
she bolted. She was close enough for him to get a good grip on her cloak
and they both tumbled down among the spilled contents of the bag.

    Jerid Taishent looked down into the castle courtyard from the long
stone balcony halfway up the facade of the fortress. The massive stone
wall of the keep rose a hundred feet ahead of him, its top rampart level
with the balcony. Two guards stood talking on the wall and his gaze
paused on them. Through no fault of their own, the guards were never
where they were needed most. The entire time since war had come and gone
from Dargon, all his time had been dedicated to keeping the Duchy
running. It was not his job, but with Clifton Dargon battling the
Beinison fleet, Luthias Connall fighting the Beinison army and Lansing
Bartol recruiting and training troops in the south of the Duchy, the
lieutenant of the First Dargon Militia found himself performing a job
never meant to be his.
    "I understand your concerns, Lord Arstead," Jerid said to the young
man sitting at the table behind him. "I had a sister myself ..."
    "What can you do to help?"
    Jerid turned. "Right now not much. There's a war on. This town is
in ruins and it won't begin to be repaired for a long time to come. I
wish nothing more than to order a squad of men to track down those who
killed your sister, but I have not the troops to spare. We are extremely
shorthanded here and the public knows it. Some choose to use this
opportunity to plunder the city and the citizens."
    "So you say there's no protection even for noble blood?"
    "My Lord ..." Jerid shifted uncomfortably. The answer was 'yes',
but he was not about to use that word. "We are only a quarter of the
force we were before the war. The town guard is barely a half. And all
the remaining troops are green. We do what we can. What we have the
power to do."
    Arstead shook his head. "Maybe you'd use different words if you had
known my sister ... or if you had to tell our mother how she died."
    "I'm sorry. We're doing all we can. I wish we could do more."
    "You're the law here. You can do what you want."
    "My Lord," Jerid faced the noble across the table, "with the power
I hold comes a responsibility for things far above and beyond what the
nobility may need. My first duty is to the Duke, to his lands and his
people and I must protect his interests to the best of my ability. My
responsibility is to the living. My second duty is to avenge the dead.
When I have the time and the troops, that shall be done."
    "I'm sorry you feel that way," Arstead stood up. "My grandfather
shall be mentioning that in his letter to your Duke."
    "The Duke's ship is the _Shining_Star_. Send your letter through
the Port of Armand and it will get there faster."
    Arstead stiffened up at the response. "Good day, Sir Taishent."
    "Good day."
    Jerid returned to the edge of the balcony and listened as the
departing footsteps fell somewhere behind him. The letter, he knew,
would be worthless, save to aggravate Lord Clifton at a time such as
this. He did the best with what he had and the Duke had known that when
leaving for war. A door slammed loudly in the chambers.
    "Page?" he called into the room.
    "Yes, my Lord?" soft footsteps were followed by a young girl's
voice.
    He had not intended to turn, but this was unusual enough to warrant
his attention and Jerid took his eyes off the distant green forest
beyond the castle wall. In the doorway stood a young girl, thirteen or
fourteen, the crest of the House of Dargon proudly displayed on a guard
uniform that was a little too large. The girl's long blond hair made him
think of his own daughter. She was only six now, but where would she be
if she were ten years older and where will she be in ten years with the
war now on?
    "You called, my Lord?" the girl asked again.
    "Yes. Tell Madame Sepagary I will see her now and have Vogel bring
his parchment and inks."
    "Right away, my Lord." And she disappeared behind the curtain.

    A shadow of a man blended into the scaffolding at the base of the
castle wall as a dying lantern hurried down the walk. It was carried by
a guard and followed by another, both armored and armed, the Ducal crest
displayed on their clothes.
    A heavy fist fell on the castle gate. "Sarge!" The gates creaked
open.
    "Out of oil," someone said.
    "Come on in."
    Shuffling footsteps sounded, followed by the doors creaking closed.
The shadow again emerged from the wall, followed by a tall lanky man
dressed in sandy-grayish clothes. He looked towards the castle gates,
then up the road leading into town. All was once again quiet.
    He gripped the scaffolding and rapidly ascended to the crack in the
wall where a lucky catapult or ballista round must have penetrated the
castle's defenses during the siege. The opening was now mostly repaired,
only needing the proper stones to be laid so the style of the wall
remained the same. He looked up to the top of the scaffolding, some six
or eight feet short of the top of the castle wall. They probably made it
short on purpose, but short was fine, too. He finished his climb, waited
for the guard above to pass and then jumped, letting his hands wrap
around the edge of the battlement. He would not have been able to do
that in armor.
    The footsteps on the wall lost their rhythm and paused. Only the
crickets below disturbed the quiet of the night. The guard muttered
something and went on.
    Another moment passed and the thief climbed over the embrasure and
landed softly on the castle wall walk. No one was in sight. A few
flickering lights in the castle revealed the windows of those who could
not sleep, but the one window that was important was dark, as it was
supposed to be.
    The man quickly crossed to the other side of the wall and glanced
down. Three soldiers stood talking below, a dying lantern held in their
midst. He judged the distance between the wall and the castle. It was
too far to get across by any means other than crossing the courtyard. It
was not to be done.
    Returning footsteps alerted the thief to hurry down the wall to the
west side of the castle where the roof of the stables rose better than
halfway up the castle wall. It was a good fifteen foot drop, but it was
the best and quickest way to get down the castle wall. As the guard's
footsteps neared, he flung himself over the edge and landed softly on
the stable's roof. The footsteps again paused and the thief attempted to
blend in with the darkness.
    Something slammed on the roof, hit against his shoulder and fell
over the edge of the roof. Startled, the thief rolled over, just in time
to see a rock hit the roof where his head was a moment before. Startled
at his discovery, he rolled over again, backed up to the wall and felt
for his dagger. It was a long blade, since a full sword would get in the
way, and under normal conditions it was more than enough, but now,
discovered, he feared it would not keep him alive long enough to finish
the job.
    Another rock bounced across the roof and rolled over the edge.
There were footsteps above. "Rotten cats!" a curse floated down. "STAY
OFF THE WALL!"
    A pained smile spread across the thief's face as he rubbed his sore
shoulder. Quiet as a cat. Mistaken for a cat. At least he was not
drowned like one.
    Once the guard had passed, the man once again started moving. He
hopped off the roof of the stables into a bale of hay and proceeded
across the dark side of the castle's courtyard. Along the roof there
were no customary gargoyle heads or weather-protecting ledges or even
statues of the local heroes. That would make the scaling of the wall
more of a challenge, but the dark of the courtyard and the reduced guard
were an added bonus to making the theft a success.

    "I had not realized that unfortunate girl had been one of yours, my
dear," Liriss muttered, pacing the length of the rich carpet. "I wish
you had told me sooner. I am not sure what I may be able to do to help
now."
    The plump, matronly Eliza Tillipanary remained in her chair as the
crime lord circled the room. "I thought the girl had returned home as
she kept saying she wanted to do," the woman explained. "It was not
until recently that one of the other girls, who also cleans in the
Duke's castle, brought to my attention that a noble from Arvalia has
been looking for the unfortunate's killer."
    "Noble. What noble?" Liriss stopped.
    "I believe his name was Arstead."
    "Arstead ... Arstead ... from Arvalia?"
    "That's what she said."
    "Never heard of him," Liriss shook his head. "Should I find the
killers, what do you want done with them?"
    Tillipanary shrugged. "You know I take no interest in your work. Do
what you will. I just want them and their friends to know that even
frontiers have justice."
    Liriss laughed. "If they hang me, my dear, they'll hang you right
next to me. Everyone knows my work."
    The matron shook her head. "I don't. You merely offer me a service
I can not obtain from the town guard."
    Liriss laughed again. "I will look for the killer and be sure to
tell you who they are."
    "See about finding them first," Tillipanary warned. "We will
discuss who they are then." She stood up and adjusted her dress. "Now, I
still have plenty to do, so I'll be going. Be sure to let me know your
progress."
    "Good evening, my dear," Liriss saw the woman to his office door
and closed it after her. As he returned to his desk, he made a mental
note to ask Kesrin to look into the murder and see if he could locate
who had committed it. If it were one of his own people, the search would
be easy and fast, but the punishment would be more difficult to mete
out. If it were someone outside his organization, the search would take
more time, but the punishment would be a pleasure. Others must know that
the city belongs to one man.
    A knock sounded on the door just as he sat down and the perky nose
of his assistant Rene appeared through the crack. "I'm sorry to bother
you again my Lord, but there's a 'Pike' here to see you."
    "Yes," Liriss stood up. "Send him in."
    "Straight," the girl disappeared.
    Liriss prepared himself for the visitor.
    The door again opened and a tall young man walked in. His dark hair
was carelessly brushed back and he had a slight limp, but he did not let
it bother him and rapidly crossed the room to the desk. "A pleasure as
always, my Lord," he nodded to Liriss.
    "You're back soon," the crime lord commented. "And with a limp
..."
    "A minor mishap," the young man admitted. "Dargon Castle was not
built for scaling."
    "You've been there already?"
    Pike removed a pouch from his belt and placed it before Liriss.
"I've been there."
    Liriss quickly snatched up the offering and pulled open the
strings. From inside he removed a cloth-wrapped box and from that a flat
headed ring. He examined it, then removing a burning candle from a
girandole, dripped some wax on the table and imprinted the ring in it.
    Pike took a step closer to the table to take a look as Liriss
worked. The crime lord produced a parchment from the stack in the corner
and compared the impression in the wax to an impression on the
parchment.
    "Perfect!"
    "You had doubts?"
    "I am impressed by your speed."
    Pike smiled. "You do realize the seal is worthless for official
business without the appropriate signature."
    "Don't concern yourself with that," Liriss laughed. He opened a
desk drawer and took out a pouch. "Impressed with your speed, but ready
for the delivery."
    Pike accepted the pouch and placed it on his belt where the other
had hung. The contents jingled as they passed hands.
    "You won't check?"
    "I trust you. And if it's not there, I'll steal the signet back."
    Liriss concealed a smile. The world had too few honest thieves. "I
have another task for you, if you feel up to it."
    "If it requires no climbing for a few days ..."
    "That's up to you. I have no interest in the process of execution
of the job."
    "All right, then."
    "I have ... I *had* a lieutenant who fell into the hands of the
guard. I want him back."
    "I assume he's larger than the signet?"
    "Significantly."
    "My prices rise with the weight."
    "How much?"
    "Where is he being held?"
    Liriss sat down, indicating for Pike to do the same. "In the Old
Guard House, in the center of town. The prisoners are held in the
basement."
    "You're talking about high risk here, my Lord," Pike took the
offered seat. "There's the entry and exit I have to take into
consideration and your man's willingness to leave."
    "He'll die if he doesn't," Liriss said. "You'll get two Marks if he
does."
    "Two and a half."
    "And a half?"
    "I like odd numbers," Pike explained.
    "That is rather odd," Liriss agreed. He considered for a moment.
"Two and a half it is. I need him back."
    "... or ..." Pike suggested.
    "Or?"
    "Or one Mark and the name of the man who killed Miriam Arstead."
    Liriss' eyes betrayed surprise. "A popular girl."
    "Have others asked?"
    "The question is, have others asked you?"
    "A contract, my Lord. I merely need a name."
    "A contract by whom?" Liriss demanded.
    "A brother, a father, a lover ... Does it matter?" Pike shrugged.
    "It might."
    "Not when money is paid, my Lord, just like in your agreement with
me. I was offered money for a name. I did not ask why."
    "Revenge's the usual motive," Liriss explained.
    "So I suspect," Pike agreed, "but it's none of my business. If you
get me the name, I'm willing to do the job for less. Is that to your
satisfaction?"
    Liriss rubbed his chin. Eliza implied she wanted the killer
punished. Pike implied someone was ready to do that. That only left
Liriss as a broker of information with reduced expenses on his part. "I
believe that deal is more than fair, Pike. One Mark and I will look into
the murder personally."
    Pike smiled. "A deal, then. Now, my Lord, who is it that you need
rescued?"

    "In here," a guardsman pushed open a second floor office door for
the young noble and let him in. Arstead entered the small cluttered
office and paused patiently before the desk loaded with papers and an
empty scabbard. The dark-haired, dark-eyed officer wearing lieutenant
pins indicated for a moment's time and completed an entry in his
journal. "What can I do for you?"
    "Sir Darklen?"
    Kalen stood up. "I am."
    "My name is Janos Arstead. I understand you were the one looking
for the killer of Miriam Arstead."
    "You're her husband?" the Guard Lieutenant asked.
    "Brother. I came to Dargon as soon as my family was notified. My
father is in the war and my grandfather is far too old to travel. I have
to be responsible for the family now."
    "Please, sit down." Kalen again took his seat and closed his
journal, using the scabbard to hold his place between the pages. He had
no good news to give and plenty of bad. He had been far too busy in the
past few days to make any sort of progress on the increasingly violent
incidents that had been surfacing around the city and barely managed to
hand out assignments to junior officers, most of whom were barely
qualified to wear swords, much less do investigative work. Perhaps an
offer of hospitality would make things easier.
    "Would you like anything? Mead? Ale?"
    "I would like to know who killed my sister."
    Kalen shook his head. "I'm sorry. As of the last report I received,
this morning, we had not found the killer. Our resources are stretched
and time is an issue. It will be a while longer before I can give you a
definite answer."
    "The trail may grow cold by then, Sir Darklen."
    "I realize that, but there are dozens of crimes taking place every
day. We don't have the men to do the job right and I'll be the first to
admit that. Have you requested assistance from the Duke's Adjutant?
Right now Lieutenant Taishent is in that position."
    "I met with Sir Taishent yesterday," Arstead answered. "When we
learned about the death, my grandfather gave me a letter of introduction
to help expedite the matter, but that was met rather coldly. I had hoped
the House of Dargon would be of help, but clearly ties of nobility do
not stretch across the Duchies of Baranur."
    "I'm sorry," Kalen shook his head. "The system worked much better
before the war. Hurt as we are, with as many men as we've sent off to
war, I'm afraid we're not the same Dargon we used to be. I wish I could
do more to help."
    "Perhaps I should be the one to offer help, Sir. It is my sister,
after all."
    "What could you do to help us?"
    "Investigate? Just how short on men are you? Perhaps I can help to
fill in?"
    Kalen let a ghost of a smile escape. "Lord Arstead, we're half the
force we used to be before the war. One more man will not make a
difference, particularly if he is new to the city and not trained in our
methods. The offer is appreciated, but not feasible."
    "Are you saying justice will go undone?" Arstead's tone became more
demanding.
    "No. I'm saying justice will need more time."
    "That's unacceptable, Sir," Arstead set his jaw.
    Kalen's soft expression melted away. He stood up, the journal
falling off the desk. "Unacceptable? The same men who killed your
sister, killed a renownd scribe, a personal friend of the Duke's family,
yet the crime receives no greater priority to be solved. Your family is
part of the masses that come through this city. Do not make the
assumption that noble blood will make a difference in a shattered
duchy."
    Arstead stood up as well. "I see I may have request assistance from
the Duke himself."
    The chair behind Kalen tumbled over. "I'll be more than happy to
forward that letter for you, along with my report that a dozen of my men
were killed or injured in a raid last week. Don't make assumptions that
your lineage matters to a duchy crippled by war! Get out of my office!"

    "Told you it was our lucky day!" One guardsman slapped another on
the back and took a few rapid steps, leaping on the back of a waiting
horse. His companion also quickened his pace and mounted the steed near
the first.
    "Horseback duty for a week! I think I can get to like this job!"
    "Let's go get 'em, boy!" The first man's heels connected with his
horse's sides and they disappeared into the night.
    "Hold on there!" the other guard yelled, trying to adjust the
saddle. "Wait for me!" The second horse jumped into a trot and also
disappeared into the night.
    Silence descended on the dark street and a shadowy figure drifted
across the alley behind the guard house. It crossed the street to the
Dargon Town Guard Stables and disappeared inside completely undetected.
    In the dim light of the stables, Pike discarded his black cloak in
an empty stall, revealing the blue and grey uniform of the town guard.
It was a great risk showing up here dressed as a guard. Reduced as they
were, the guards would probably know one another, but this was for a
quick job in the night, one that would be discovered no more than a bell
or two after being done, if that long. When put into the right
perspective, the impersonation of a guard was the least of his concerns.
    He checked a few horses, working his way towards the rear door to
the guard house and calmly walked through. A woman in a guard uniform
passed him, nodding a hello. Pike responded in kind and slowly walked
down the corridor to the back stairs. Liriss' directions were rather
specific. Offices and storage upstairs, holding cells downstairs. He
quickly glanced up the stairwell and descended into the basement. A lone
sleepy guard stretched at the sound of footsteps and shifted in the
creaky chair.
    "Yes?" the soldier asked as Pike approached.
    "I have it right here," Pike reached into his pouch, drawing the
guard closer by his curiosity. His fists connected with the guard's chin
and the chair tipped over, the unconscious guard rolling up against the
wall.
    Pike paused to take note of the room. Small, dark. Stairs leading
up on one side, a heavy metal door on the other. A small table and a
chair for the guard. There were four candelabras in the walls, three
candles each, but they produced barely enough light to see the metal
door and the unconscious guard on the floor. Pike pulled the guard up
and replaced him in the chair, removing the ring of keys from his belt
in the process.
    It took a few moments to find the proper key and pause to listen
for sounds both on the other side of the door and in the corridor at the
other end of the stairs. Satisfied with the lack of activity, Pike
turned the key in the lock and pushed open the door. The well-oiled
hinges made no sound as the door swung open and Pike quietly stepped
inside, carefully closing the door behind him.
    A wall candelabra served as the only source of light. Removing a
single candle, Pike proceeded down the long corridor, looking at the
sleeping prisoners and the occasional names on the wall. About half of
the cells were populated, although not all with prisoners were tagged.
At one such cell, when Pike brought the candle close to the wall to see
if there was a name, the prisoner jumped out of bed and rushed the bars.
He collided with the door with a wild scream, arms reaching for the blue
and grey uniform before him. Pike hurried to back away as one of the
muscular hands grabbed his shoulder and was able to pull away only when
the hair on the prisoner's arm caught fire from the flame of the candle.
    "I'm gonna kill you, you damn bastard!" the prisoner roared.
    "Next time," Pike forced himself to keep his cool, "I'll douse you
with oil before taking the candle to you."
    The man fell silent and took several steps back.
    Satisfied with the results, Pike continued down the corridor of the
semi-awake prisoners until coming to a cell carrying the name he was
looking for. He banged his arm on the door. "Get up!"
    The body on the cot stirred and a man sat up. "What?"
    "Interrogation. Let's go." He unlocked the door and pulled it open.
"This way."
    The man in the cell hesitated.
    "Kuvan Ovnik?" Pike asked.
    "Yes, yes." The man stood up and came to the open door. He looked
to be in good shape, although very dirty and unshaven. In the dim candle
light Pike could barely see the remnants of an old bruise on the man's
cheek. "Not enough entertainment at night?" the prisoner spat.
    Pike gave him a shove forward. "Spit again and you'll be cleaning
the floor with your tongue."
    Ovnik stopped and gave his captor a chilling look. "I'll remember
your face."
    "You do that."
    They made it to the end of the corridor and went through the door.
Pike closed and locked it as Ovnik glanced over at the unconscious
guard.
    "Take his clothes."
    "What?"
    "I was sent to get you out. We won't make it out of here with you
dressed like this. Take his clothes."
    Ovnik chuckled. "Oh, I knew they'd send someone."

    Liriss matched his gaze with Kesrin, waiting patiently for his
lieutenant to react. Kesrin, in his usual style, gave no hint of
surprise at having seen Ovnik just a moment before. Even as the
footsteps of his old friend faded down the corridor, he calmly sat in
the chair across from his lord.
    "Any reason he's in chains?"
    "He lied to me, Kesrin," Liriss picked up the half full wine goblet
and took a sip. He swallowed with satisfaction. "I don't like it when
people turn on me, Kesrin. When they do, I have to go to a great expense
to make sure others know what a bad decision that is. Lord Dargon may be
losing control of his city, but I'll be damned before I lose control of
mine. Make sure I don't have to do this again, Kesrin. It pains me so to
see trust misplaced. And good men, too. This shouldn't be."
    "Of course, my Lord," Kesrin answered in his usual calm voice.
    "Good. Now go and make sure that Ovnik's fate is not shared by
others."
    Kesrin rose slower than usual. "And that fate, Lord?"
    "I feel good today, Kesrin. He will have a slow death." The crime
lord's laughter trailed his lieutenant into the corridor and as the door
closed, the older man's face sombered up. "Put a little fear of me into
you, Kesrin. Loyalty must be unconditional, even if it stems from fear."

========================================================================

                               Endgame
                         by Rogers Cadenhead
                           
                            Seber 10, 1014

The village of Tench

    The reader leaned over the Wheel of Life, a drop of sweat falling
from his forehead onto the ornately decorated cloth. Eight signs of
Makdiar's zodiac were painted inside slices of a circle on the aged
fabric's surface. Eight smaller symbols separated the signs, and at the
center was the mark of Destiny.
    It was unseasonably hot for Tench in Seber, and there was precious
little breeze coming in through an open window. The two men knelt on
opposite sides of the Wheel, in a small room at the Duck Inn.
    The fat-faced reader hovered over the wooden discs and uttered a
soft incantation:

    May Araminia's grace
    Fall upon this Wheel
    Like the first kiss of spring
    On a graveyard.

    The reference to the goddess of good fortune was part of the pitch,
Teyvas noted with amusement. The rogue expected to receive happy news
about a bountiful tomorrow. There was no profit in ill tidings, after
all.
    The reader gestured for Teyvas to pick up the nine discs that were
blue in color. Teyvas did so, and he was told, "Close your eyes and make
a picture in them of your birth sign. Can you see the Torch?"
    Teyvas, clamping his eyelids shut as tightly as he could, saw
orange and red flickering. He tried to make a torch out of it but the
glimmerings were elusive. "I can see Pyrale," he said.
    "Cast the discs!" the reader said, and Teyvas opened his fist to
let the discs spill out over the wheel. For more than a mene, the reader
looked over the scattered objects and mumbled a few disparate words to
himself. The cutpurse reached behind his back and scratched at a
slow-healing sore near his midsection. This action prompted no notice
from the reader, and Teyvas smiled to see how self-absorbed the man was.
    Finally, the reader offered his interpretation. He pointed a pale
finger at a blue disc that lay near the only red one. "This is the
heart, and it is resting on Pyrale, your birth sign," he began. "You are
a man of fiery passions."
    The reader looked to Teyvas for a comment, but he wanted to hear
more so he said nothing. Several other discs were described, based on
their resting places and the reader's gift for metaphor, but it became
obvious that he was saving the best for last.
    "This disc represents the body, your own mortal flesh," the reader
stated ominously. "It lies on Valonus the Oak, which means you will not
be called from this realm for many years."
    If Teyvas had needed more proof of the insincerity of the Wheel,
this prediction would suffice. He knew there would be no life for him
beyond 25 years, if he even got that far. Teyvas welcomed a young man's
death -- after his parents were killed in their beds when Dargon guards
raided their camp in 1004, Teyvas promised himself that he would die on
his feet. He was well on the way to keeping that vow.
    Teyvas pointed to a disc that had fallen on a smaller part of the
wheel. "What does this mean?" he asked.
    The reader looked a bit flustered, then said, "Occasionally, a
casting falls in a way that cannot be explained in the teachings," he
said. "This is such a case. The disc for future foe has landed on the
Crown, the symbol for the past."
    "That is indeed a puzzle," Teyvas said, amused at the misfortune.
    "Verily," the reader said. "In such cases, you must find the answer
in your own heart." He moved on to another spot on the Wheel. "This last
disc is your course of action, and it has landed on Kafarn, the water
symbol. You will be traveling soon, on a long journey that will be of
importance, perhaps by seaborne route ..."
    Teyvas interrupted him, pointing to the symbol for Gefflin the Fox,
which was his real birth sign. "What of this, then?" he asked. The
reader was surprised to see a disc there, and was unaware that it had
been the thief's doing.
    "This is the symbol for treachery," the reader said. He was
planning to elaborate further, but was interrupted again, more
forcefully this time. Teyvas had pulled a knife from his boot and buried
it in the man's fleshy midsection before another word could be shared
between them. The reader gasped, and a strangely comforting hand was
placed on his shoulder by Teyvas. The fortune-teller fell with a shudder
as the knife was yanked from side to side before being removed. As
Teyvas pushed the man aside, a drop of blood fell from the unfortunate's
mouth and landed on the Wheel.
    The blood was about the size of a disc, and of similar coloration
to the red token. "Your body disc has landed on Valonus," Teyvas said to
the fallen reader. "You have a long life in front of you."

    It had not been difficult to get out of Tench with the reader's
money and the silver earring that he wore. The room was on the second
floor, and Teyvas climbed out the window and retrieved his horse from
the stables. Teyvas had hoped for more good fortune from the reader, but
was not unhappy because he needed to leave town in any case. Tench was a
crossroads village with a few squalid taverns and a rough reputation.
Teyvas had hoped to meet Lana the Snake there, a dark-hearted beauty
whose exploits were legendary. Lana was nowhere to be found, and the
only explanation he got was crazy talk about the assassin losing an arm
in a fight with her twin.
    There would be other opportunities, he thought, and other women of
questionable moral character to look after. Though he had just turned
seventeen, Teyvas had a puckish smile and a calculated indifference that
women found attractive. He had amassed a lengthy history of conquest,
but in recent days the young man had narrowed his standards to a
particular breed of femininity. He now sought women who were as hateful
and fearless as he was, traits he imagined for his own mother when she
was courted by his father.
    Teyvas' parents had been bandits, a profession he was proud to
carry on. Ten years ago, they had been part of an encampment five
leagues south of Dargon that had demanded a toll from travelers. He
lived there, playing with the other children who were spawned by the
bandits, but that life changed when Captain Tamar Armstrong led a Dargon
guard unit on a raid of the camp. Armstrong, a general now, had been
ordered to teach a lesson to those who would break the laws of the
duchy. The lesson was taught. The boy's parents were among the first to
die -- a guardsman entered their shelter and cut them down with his
sword before they could even stand. Teyvas, who was seven at the time,
was taken into the city and placed in a home for orphans.
    The ride back to Dargon would be a long one, and not very pleasant,
since Teyvas could not keep to the main roads. There would be soldiers
about in great numbers, because of the war, and he did not want to
chance an encounter with them out in the open. Someone might remember
him from a past exploit in the city, or he might also be conscripted
into the army.
    The trip passed without event, save for a horrific storm on the
11th of Seber that forced him to seek the cover of trees. By the time he
arrived in Dargon, he was nursing a headcold, so he sold the horse he no
longer needed and used the money to buy a room in the waterfront
district. The building was next to a brothel, and the thief could hear
the hawker's cries, as well as other carrying on, well into the night.
    Teyvas kept to the docks for many days, a little worried that two
murders he was involved in might be catching up with him. When he
stopped at one of his favorite haunts, Teyvas was told that town
guardsmen were looking for him in connection with the deaths. Zaran, a
companion of his, must have confessed to the crimes while the thief was
in Tench.
    The two of them had dragged a woman into an alley, killing her
servant when he intervened.
    Zaran had wanted to take her, and Teyvas was willing to let his
oafish friend have the pleasure of her company before they robbed her.
Unfortunately, another hero chanced upon the little tryst. The portly
fellow laid Zaran low with a skillet, of all things, and Teyvas was
forced to cut down the man as he escaped. Teyvas now had learned the
name of the middle-aged hero: Thomas Shopkeeper. His persistent widow
had sung Shopkeeper's praises throughout the city, and the city fathers
had taken notice. They wanted the slayer brought to justice.
    Teyvas needed to get out of Dargon, perhaps permanently. He could
head back to Tench or a village like it, but the number of people who
knew his face was getting perilously high. The best thing to do would be
to book passage on a ship, but he did not have enough funds to leave
Cherisk behind.
    To remedy the situation, Teyvas left the docks and meandered
towards the upper-class reaches of Dargon. He lingered on a street lined
with temples, hoping to find suitable prey leaving from an evening
service.
    As the last strands of sunlight faded to the west, Teyvas watched a
slender woman with a long tan cloak leaving a small shrine to Sbeppo.
She was carrying a book as long as her forearm, and the thief concluded
that she must be a scribe, since that was Sbeppo's sphere of influence.
It was heartening to see the glint of gold around her slender neck,
since Teyvas could not linger long in this district without arousing
suspicion.
    The little scribe walked purposefully towards the market center of
Dargon, evidently with some tasks in mind. When she turned away from a
shop-lined avenue and headed across a tree-lined street, Teyvas cut
across a grassy patch of land to get closer to her. He began dogging her
steps, only 10 feet or so behind her, and she finally took notice of
him. There was no one else on the street with them, and she knew what a
bad position the shortcut had left her in.
    This dance of prey and predator was something that Teyvas wanted to
savor, to extend until he could practically taste the fear exuded by his
victim, a scent that hung heavy like a musk. But there was no time for
play.
    Teyvas moved with the grace of a cat, knocking the scribe off the
path and into some overgrown grass. She turned over and pushed at him
with a weak thrust of her right hand, but the thief had undone her by
pulling his knife across her throat. As a torrent of blood flowed from
this second smile, Teyvas realized that the scribe was not as she
seemed.
    For starters, she was actually a man. A slight, almost elfin
looking man, but definitely male. He took the necklace, a pouch of coins
and the contents of a shirt pouch -- thin slivers of glass coated with a
powdery dust. He found a fourth sliver in the man's right hand, as if he
was planning to do something with it. Teyvas touched his tongue gently
to the sliver, to see if the dust was some kind of drug he had
experienced.
    There was no taste, but Teyvas found all the explanation he needed
when he looked more closely at the dying man, who was beginning to
tremble convulsively. The book that he clutched tightly to his breast
was covered with runes and other markings, whose origin was
unmistakeably arcane.
    He had killed a mage. Teyvas cursed the luck that had put this
spell-wielder into his path. If the shopkeeper was not enough of a
burden, this would be his undoing. The thief had made long practice of
avoiding magic and its practitioners. He pried the book from the hands
of the mage, kicking the now-dead man in the ribs so hard that bones
snapped.
    As Teyvas was walking away, three cloaked figures suddenly
approached him from a street 50 feet distant. One pointed a finger at
him and yelled in a guttural language Teyvas had never heard before.

    The rope was pulled so tightly around his neck that Teyvas thought
it would kill him prematurely. His promise was going to be kept; he
would die on his feet, before hundreds of Dargon's citizens who had
assembled to send him off. The crowd looked up at the gallows with
expectant faces, glad to have a diversion from the all-consuming
passions of the war with Beinison.
    A female lieutenant named Ilona Milnor read the accusations
levelled against him, and the sentence that had been meted out in the
name of Duke Clifton Dargon the Second. There was a dull efficiency to
her demeanor, and Teyvas was instantly attracted to her indifference.
She had better things to do, and the young thief earnestly wished that
he was one of them.
    After the murder two weeks ago, Teyvas had been captured by town
guards as he was being dragged off by three Nar-Enthruen mages. He found
out that the victim belonged to a 23-year-old arcane society that
fiercely protected its own, affirming the thief's lifelong fear of
magicians. The Nar-Enthruen were disappointed to hand him over to the
guards, and had complained bitterly when it was ruled that they could
not have the killer back.
    Still, they exacted one concession from the town guard before
today's hanging. A hollow-faced Nar elder had spent an afternoon outside
of Teyvas' cell, asking him numerous questions about his life and the
crimes that he had committed. He was forthright, hoping some measure of
infamy would outlive him, but the somber man did not seem impressed. As
the Nar elder left, he spat some kind of curse at Teyvas in the exotic
language of the Nar, and it left the thief with a strange coldness in
his bones that did not fade.
    It was time for Teyvas to pay for the murders of Thomas Shopkeeper
and the mage. Ilona stepped over to a hoist that would pull his ragged
frame up the gibbet.
    "Do you have any last words?" she asked.
    "Only these," he said, looking into her eyes directly. "I love
you." He smiled as she signaled for two attendants to turn the hoisting
mechanism. For a moment, Teyvas looked down with a cheery air at the
crowd that had gathered to see him off. He felt important for perhaps
the first time in his life. This elation faded quickly, replaced by the
burning pain of the rope. The weight of his body pulled at his neck, and
Teyvas strained for a breath he could not take.
    For 20 minutes, onlookers watched as the thief danced on the
gibbet, his feet gyrating to find purchase on the ground below him.
Teyvas had promised to die on his feet, and as his consciousness faded
he was still trying to extend an outstretched foot downward to the
earth. His sorry path through the world reached an end.
    But it was not the end at all.
    Teyvas wiped his eyes, which had somehow become filled with smoke,
and found that he was standing in a kitchen where roasted meats were
charred black from overcooking. Through a closed door he could hear
dozens of people talking in an adjacent room.
    Instinctively, he reached to pull the meats away from the cooking
fire, wondering if he was meant to prepare food in the life after death.
He noticed that his own arm was slender, and pasty-white in color. He
looked down at his body, and really began to wonder about his
predicament.
    "J'mirg's blood!" Teyvas exclaimed in a sonorous, high-pitched
squeal. He clutched at his chest in terror and amazement. "I'm a
squirmin' female!"

    After a few minutes of hysteria, Teyvas settled down to the fact
that he had been reborn as a woman after being hanged for two murders in
the city of Dargon. He was a mature woman in a tavern maid's attire,
hunched over roasting fires in a kitchen. She had burnt most of
tonight's main course. Teyvas could hear the sounds of merriment from a
nearby room, and he gingerly opened a door to peer out.
    There were about 20 people in the dank establishment, which was
decorated with boar's heads and the pelts of numerous forest animals. A
poorly executed painting of King Haralan hung above a fireplace.
    "Adrana!" a man screamed at him -- her! -- as he approached from an
adjacent bar. The boisterous character was a stocky barkeep with a long
beard and unclean attire. He grabbed her around the waist once he came
close enough to do so. "That foul smell had best not be the meat you're
preparin', or we're going to have a riot on our hands."
    Teyvas shrugged Adrana's shoulders, suddenly embarrassed that a man
was touching her in such a brusque manner. The thief would have liked to
remove the offending hand with a blade, but this wench carried no
weapons. Even if she had, he realized that the barkeep could physically
dominate the woman if he chose to do so. This sense of inferiority was
new to him.
    "Ol's balls, woman!" the barkeep cursed. "You really did burn the
food ... show me what you did." He pushed her back into the kitchen, and
gazed upon the ruined meats she had pulled from the fires.
    For a moment, he stared at the food as if his glance could restore
it, but his face reddened and he turned to Adrana. "Your stupidity has
cost me for the last time, you old crone," he said.
    A feeling of shame and fear washed over Teyvas, two emotions he did
not possess before assuming this woman's form. He tried to stammer some
kind of reply, "It, it was ..."
    Before he could finish, the burly barkeep brought the back of his
hand across Adrana's face so hard that she was knocked to the corner of
the kitchen. A tin pitcher full of grease was upended by one of her
flailing arms as she attempted to break her fall, and the hot liquid
spattered against her leg, causing excruciating pain. The barkeep was
not hurt by the grease, but the accident enraged him further, and he
approached her to mete out more punishment. Teyvas was not going to let
this continue, woman or no woman.
    He lifted himself to a crouching position and grabbed a butcher's
knife. Adrana's arms were not strong enough to plunge it deeply into the
barkeep's chest, but Teyvas hoped the dullard would not realize that.
    "Adrana," the barkeep said, a little quieter than he had been.
    "I'm leaving," Teyvas-Adrana said. "If you move I'll gut you like a
fish, and feed your entrails to those codswallops out there."
    The barkeep backed off a step. "Don't come beggin' tomorrow morn,
woman!" he said.
    "I won't," Teyvas-Adrana replied. She left through the tavern's
back door, and headed to a well-lit public street in front of the
building. Teyvas could see the duke's castle and a few familiar guard
towers in the distance, so he knew he was still in Dargon. For a
half-bell he walked the streets aimlessly, in the general direction of
his apartment in the waterfront district. As he came closer to it,
Teyvas suddenly realized that it wasn't really his home any longer. He
wandered away.
    Teyvas was too stunned to be alive in this woman's body to
appreciate the escape from the hangman's noose. There were no rope burns
on his neck, but he could still feel the itch of the cord wrapped
tightly under his chin. The grinding sound of the hoist pulling him onto
the gibbet reverberated in his head like the clangor of a Lederian
battle-drum.
    Teyvas did not know what to do next. The few friends he had would
not believe this, and some were likely to seize the opportunity to avail
themselves of Adrana. From his vantage point, he could see she was not
entirely unattractive.
    With no other options to consider, Teyvas took himself back to the
tavern, hoping to find someone who could tell him where Adrana lived so
that he could sleep there. Unfortunately, as he crept into the kitchen
through a back door, Teyvas saw the barkeep, sitting on a stool a few
feet away and drinking wine from a bottle.
    "I knew you'd come back," he said, pulling himself to his feet with
considerable effort. The unclean man wiped his beard with the back of
his hand and then grabbed a knife. It was the same blade Teyvas had
threatened him with a few hours ago.
    "No wife of mine treats me like that," the barkeep said. He smiled
savagely at her, his teeth glinting like jagged rocks on the shoreline.

    Teyvas sat up in a dark room and pulled a sheet off his body,
screaming. The competing smells of excrement and death told him that he
was in a dungeon cell. He was back under Dargon Keep, he reasoned, and
had dreamed of his own hanging and the experience as Adrana. The last
part was still horrifying to him, and though her murder was a figment of
the mind he could not help but clutch at his neck in sympathetic pain.
    The nightmare that had visited itself upon that woman was beyond
anything Teyvas could conjure, and he wished the Nar elder was around so
that he could tell the man his own crimes were minor. Teyvas had
dispatched his victims with efficiency, and had never taken sexual
liberties with any of them. To torture a woman and to rape her so
violently was unimaginably grotesque, even to him.
    Still, it was just a dream, probably an effort by the gods to
introduce him to the sensations of guilt and remorse. It was not going
to work, he thought, and laughed weakly. As he did so, the ends of his
beard rubbed against his chest.
    Teyvas did not have a beard. He found himself in a new form, some
kind of squat, muscular figure who was covered in flea-infested hair.
What happened to Adrana really happened, to him, and the rebirth had
come again.
    "Damn you, spell-tosser!" he yelled in agony, and Teyvas threw his
new body against the solid wood of the cell door until it was bruised
and bloody. He fell asleep on the floor, a throbbing and badly sprained
arm lying askew at his side.
    He awoke to the banging sound of a metal pan being slammed against
the walls outside the cell. Teyvas lifted himself to his feet, crying in
pain as the injuries of the previous night asserted themselves upon his
conscious body.
    Peering through a small barred hole in the door, Teyvas saw a guard
clad in the duke's colors heading down the hall. He recognized her as
one of those who walked him to the gibbet the day before, though he had
no way of telling if that was really how long ago it took place. He was
still in Dargon.
    Sitting back down on his noxious pallet, Teyvas looked himself
over. He was some kind of wild man, with a stone-solid upper body,
stubby legs and dark olive skin. Most of the injuries he inflicted upon
this form would heal quickly, but the left forearm was still extremely
sore.
    When his sensibilities started to return, Teyvas began to think
about the curious visit from the Nar-Enthruen elder shortly before his
execution. Rosgode was his name, and he claimed that the visit was for
an interrogation about the thief's "sundered life," as the elder put it.
Rosgode acted as if there were some kind of spiritual reason for needing
to know such details.
    "Do you not wish to tell me?" Rosgode asked. "Surely you must know
that you are already doomed." There was a sympathy to this last
statement, as if the old man took a fatherly interest in his subject.
Teyvas did not believe in the sentiment, but was flattered at the
attention he was receiving.
    "I will share it all with you, spell-tosser," he said, "and when
you walk out of this place you will know that I wanted to be here."
    Teyvas told the mage about the carefree life of a roving bandit
clan, and how rich with joy he had been before the devil Tamar had taken
it all away. He explained how Dargon's orphan shelters were haphazard
operations that would expel children for troublemaking whenever expenses
went beyond the funds alloted by the Dargon government. He told of
fighting with wild pigs and dogs for refuse tossed in the middle of city
streets at age ten.
    While Teyvas spoke, Rosgode cupped his hands together as if he
could catch the conversation like rainwater. Teyvas thought it was odd
but was too wrapped up in himself to consider it further.
    He continued his tale, hoping that Rosgode had a strong memory and
would take the story beyond the dungeon walls. Teyvas told him about
living in the dying houses when the Red Plague struck in 1007, stealing
food from the palsied hands of victims when he could, hoping that he
would join their suffering. But he never became sick from the exposure,
and it even led to the only honest job he ever had, as a charnel runner
taking the dead to be burned.
    "Why did you never try to kill Tamar?" Rosgode inquired. "Did you
not despise him for what his men did to your parents?"
    "I despise them," Teyvas said. "They were weak and deserved what
they got."
    When Teyvas' tale reached the murder of Rosgode's compatriot and
the thief's subsequent confinement, the Nar elder stood up, clasped his
hands together and held them tight as if he were holding a cricket. He
stared at the young man in the cell and suddenly said something
unintelligible in his own tongue. The sneer on Rosgode's face made
Teyvas feel that it was some kind of curse, and it laid a chill on his
bones.
    Sitting in this new cell, Teyvas surmised that the spell-caster had
used their conversation as a pretense to enact some kind of Nar-Enthruen
hex. Adrana's demise at the hands of her husband was visited upon him as
punishment, and a sense of dread fell over him as he wondered what might
come next.
    He did not have much time to speculate about it. The day progressed
and guards delivered gruel masquerading as food. Teyvas was still trying
to stomach it when his cell door was unlocked and another inmate stepped
inside.
    "I'd wager 13 marks you didn't expect a visitor today, kinsman,"
the prisoner said, pulling his lips back as a wolf does, revealing a
sinister smile. The man was from Kimerron, a small country of barbarians
that had lost a war with Beinison. He removed a short knife from a
pocket in his leggings. "It cost a king's ransom to get this shank," he
said. "Your lord sends his warmest regards."

    After his third death in Dargon, Teyvas was reborn in a widening
spire of sites and situations.
    At Gateway, he was a foot soldier of Beinison skewered by a
Lederian colour sergeant. At Sharks' Cove, he was a slaver whose
property rose up against him, tying him up and setting him ablaze. At
Shireton, he was a halfwit stoned to death for exhibiting inappropriate
affection for livestock.
    As the number of expended lives grew, the thief stopped resisting
the fate that had been bestowed upon him. For a time he contented
himself with the relative peace of drowning, submerging himself in the
water before others could choose a more appropriate end for him. He
began to lose his attachment to the mortal form, and imagined himself as
a floating wisp of golden cloud, skimming the top of trees in one locale
and then dissipating, only to reform somewhere else at the direction of
the prevailing winds.
    When the number of his reincarnated forms reached 17, Teyvas found
himself kneeling in a small alcove, looking upwards at a bronze
statuette of Sbeppo, the patron deity of scribes and the written word.
There was a reflective glass behind the sculpture, and Teyvas gazed into
it. His face was that of a frail, tawny-haired man. He carried a
rune-covered book as large as his forearm. For several minutes, the
thief stared into the eyes of the last man he had killed. He breathed
deeply, filling the body with life, and thought about the way he had
taken this vitality away from the mage.
    Teyvas pushed aside the curtains that separated the alcove from a
larger chamber of worship. Two men in lily-white robes stood near the
back of the room, talking quietly. The altar was empty because the
evening services had ended several menes ago.
    Setting the book down, Teyvas ascended to the raised dais that
contained the altar, a pair of tables and a large illustrated
manuscript. The book was open to a drawing of a mother giving birth to a
younger woman who was pregnant herself. The thief was not aware of the
significance of the book, but he could tell that it was valuable and of
import to the people who worshipped here. He yanked a torch from its
holder on one wall, an act that took all the strength this elflike body
possessed.
    At this point, the two robed men approached him in alarm. "Get
yourself off there, brother!" one said.
    "Come any closer, brother, and we find out if this book will burn,"
Teyvas replied. "Bring me Rosgode of the Nar-Enthruen!"
    It did not take long for the elder mage to reach the temple. "Have
you gone mad?" he asked emphatically as he strode down the aisle towards
the dais.
    "For someone you have killed more than a dozen times over, I am
remarkably sane," Teyvas said. He wished he could summon the other
Teyvas, who was probably wandering the temple area at this point,
looking for someone to rob. He would give the boy all of the mage's
riches, if he could, and send him away from Cherisk for good.
    "This is nonsense-talk, Alder," Rosgode said. "What kind of
enchantment are you talking about?"
    Alder-Teyvas was growing fatigued, and he knew that he could only
keep everyone at a distance for a few more menes.
    "I am out of your time, and I am not your friend," Teyvas said.
"Later tonight, I was a thief who murdered Alder and was captured. You
came to my cell and I told my crimes to your hands. When you left, you
spoke a Nar curse upon me.
    "I was hanged, and reborn as someone who was fated to die," Teyvas
continued. "I am reborn and reborn, and I die every time."
    Rosgode looked stunned for a moment, but the expression was
replaced by one of comprehension. "The hand-telling is a way to remove a
man's crimes," he said. "If I did that, I took them so you would not
have the evil to draw upon in a future life."
    The response made sense to Teyvas, gave him an answer to why he was
unable to resist being the victim of 17 successive crimes. The evil had
been stolen away from him, and he had not found anything to take its
place.
    The elder took a gentle step back, and held out his hand as if
trying to keep Teyvas calm so the book would not be harmed. But there
was fear in the pits of Rosgode's ruminant eyes. This was a revelation
to the tired cutpurse who had been freed from the finality of death.
Rosgode had not expected the spell to come to a circle like this --
before he had even cast it.
    It was all Teyvas needed to see. He knew what had to be done.
    Alder-Teyvas dropped the torch onto the holy book of Sbeppo,
causing two nearby priests to cry out in agony and rush onto the dais.
As this happened, Teyvas reached into a pouch on Alder's shirt and
pulled out four powder-covered slivers of glass. He knew that they were
a weapon of some kind, since the original Alder had intended to use one
before his throat was slit.
    Rosgode was unable to react, jostled by onlookers who were rushing
in to assist their fellows. Teyvas put the glass in his mouth and held
it with his teeth as he leapt onto the elder. He wrapped both arms
around the mage, who was attempting some form of evasive magic, and bit
down as hard as he could.
    White fire erupted from his mouth, spewing forth a clarified heat
that blinded all those who gazed upon it. Rosgode, whose head was
directly in its path, was beyond such concerns about his vision.

    Teyvas stood on the deck of the _Laughing Gale_, a merchant ship
headed to several trading ports on the eastern coast of Duurom. He found
the money to leave Dargon for good: A miracle had visited itself upon
him in the form of a fracas at the Temple of Sbeppo.
    As he waited in the area, hoping to find a templegoer headed home
with too much money and too little sense, Teyvas saw a spell-tosser
confronting his brethren inside a temple. The frail man rose up like a
snake baring its fangs, and as the thief headed for a closer look, a
white fire erupted from the mage's mouth.
    This sorcerous act unleashed a potent magic that left one man dead
and another dying. Rather than attending to the surviving mage, his
fellows worked feverishly to save a book that had become damaged. "The
illustration of the birth and rebirth has been lost," a man wailed.
"That page cannot be saved!"
    As they left to attend to the manuscript, Teyvas was able to walk
into the temple and clean the altar of its golden adornments. An
offering box that rattled with coins was also left behind by Sbeppo's
faithful.
    Teyvas used the easily gained fortune to book passage on the _Gale_
two weeks later. He watched the continent of Cherisk recede to the east
as the ship headed northwest into colder waters. Finally, when the land
faded from his sight, he headed down to the hold where passengers were
to sleep. Filthy straw covered the floor and the blankets were
threadbare and moth-eaten, but he fell asleep like the duke's heir
esconced in a feather bed.
    "Get up, dog!" The bark of the ship's captain was unmistakable,
sounding like a shovel dragged across stones. Teyvas stumbled to stand
but did not move quickly enough, and four hands pulled him to his feet.
    Hovering next to the captain, a round face slowly came into focus
for Teyvas. When it did, he did not have to ask the reason for the
nighttime visit.
    It was the teller from Tench, whose fortune was much better than
Teyvas had thought when he left the man for dead.
    "This is him," the fat-faced man told the captain as a sailor found
a blade among Teyvas' belongings. It was the only weapon he had carried
onto the ship.
    The Wheel reader brought himself closer to the thief, and Teyvas
could smell the ointment that was caked upon the man's midsection, salve
that closed the hole opened by a knife.
    "I must offer apology to you for a mistake in your reading," the
teller said, his voice weak but deliberate. "The Wheel's promise of a
long life has been shown to be false."
    A blackjack was brought down upon Teyvas' head by one of the
captain's men. As red light filled his sight, and warmth radiated from
the back of his skull, the thief received the last indicator of his
future from the reader.
    "You are about to embark upon a seaborne journey," he rasped. Two
sailors wrapped the legs of Teyvas in chains, and a bloody cloth was
stuffed into his mouth.
    A hearty shout rose from the crew of the _Gale_ as the son of
bandits was tossed overboard. Teyvas landed feet-first when he reached
the ocean floor, a dying sob trapped in his throat by the Wheel of Life.

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========================================================================
DargonZine                                     Distributed: 04/01/1995
Volume 8, Number 1                             Circulation:        623
========================================================================

                               Contents

Editorial                    Ornoth D.A. Liscomb
The Evening After ...        Bill Erdley            Yule 22, 1014
Storm Dancer                 Jon Evans              Seber 11-12, 1014
The Scent of Balsam          Bill Erdley            Late Seber, 1014

========================================================================
DargonZine is the publication vehicle of the Dargon Project, a
collaborative group of aspiring fantasy writers on the Internet.
We welcome new readers and writers interested in joining the project.
Please address all correspondance to .
Back issues are available from ftp.etext.org in pub/Zines/DargonZine.
Issues and public discussion are posted to newsgroup rec.mag.dargon.

DargonZine 8-1, ISSN 1080-9910, (C) Copyright April, 1995 by
the Dargon Project. Editor: Ornoth D.A. Liscomb .
All rights reserved. All rights are reassigned to the individual
contributors. Stories may not be reproduced or redistributed without
the explicit permission of the author(s) involved, except in the case
of freely reproducing entire issues for further distribution.
Reproduction of issues or any portions thereof for profit is forbidden.
========================================================================

                              Editorial
                        by Ornoth D.A. Liscomb
                       

    I hope you all enjoyed the special two-issue "Best of DargonZine"
reprints. I can tell you that our veteran writers definitely enjoyed the
respite from my constant appeals for submissions! And the writers who
recently joined us have used the time to get up to speed and prepare
their first submissions. But now it's time to get back to work!
    The biggest news since our last editorial (early December), is that
you will now notice an ISSN number in our banner page. The primary
benefit of this is the legitimization of DargonZine as an
internationally recognized periodical. Major thanks to "Grim" Jon Evans
for singlehandedly making that happen.
    The only other news is that DargonZine 8-2 will follow reasonably
closely on the heels of this issue, and will include the first stories
from the bumper crop of new writers who joined the project at the end of
1994. We have nearly 20 stories that are currently in the peer review
process, so we should have plenty of reading material for you very
shortly!
    Thanks for your continuing interest, and keep spreading the word!

    This issue features stories by two of our veteran writers. In
contrast to his previous works (particularly his "Sons of Gateway"
series), Jon Evans' "Storm Dancer" is a light, humorous, well-written,
and delightful story that introduces us to a new protagonist -- a young
man named Thedos. We're all anxious to see followup stories.
    "The Evening After" and "the Scent of Balsam" continue Bill
Erdley's exploration of Derrio, the deaf squire of Luthias Connall, the
Knight Captain of the Northern Marches. As the Beinison army continues
to pillage cities and countryside that once owed fealty to the kingdom
of Baranur, the Baranurian troops begin to realize that war isn't
anything like the songs the bards once sung ...

========================================================================

                        The Evening After ...
                            by Bill Erdley
                       
                            Yule 22, 1014

    Three times today I should have died.
    I owe my life to three different men. Well, actually two, since the
third is dead.
    Tired. I'm tired and I want to sleep. I can't.
    There's no real memory of the battle. There are pictures in my
head, but they all run together like the blood in the rain.
    I killed my first opponent today.
    He screamed as he fell to the ground. There he sobbed once, gasped,
and died.
    There is no honor in killing. There is no honor in dying. Honor
exists for its own sake.
    I try to roll over, but my body refuses.
    I got my first wounds today. Bruises on my legs and sides, a nasty
gash across my shoulder, and a lump on my head.
    I hurt.
    Three times today I should have died.
    Apart from those who stood, and fell, before me, I remember Sir
Luthias and Michiya. Like two demonic reapers in the devil's own field,
they swung and chopped and cut, harvesting a macabre crop of souls to be
sent back to wherever those souls came from.
    Why can't I fall asleep?
    Sir Luthias saved me by knocking me to the ground while
simultaneously parrying the swing that would have separated my head from
my shoulders.

    The mud was already salty with blood. It splashed into my face as I
fell, and when I cleared it from my eyes and spat it from my mouth, my
assailant was dead on the ground and Sir Luthias was already on to his
next combat.
    My shoulder hurts; the deep, throbbing pain of a joint begging for
rest.
    I fought beside Sir Luthias.
    They didn't seem to know how to counter one of the tricks that Sir
Luthias taught me. Again and again I used it. Swing, counter, swing,
twist, thrust; and my sword would bite a shoulder or a neck. Once, my
sword caught as a man went down. As I reached for it, another man
stepped in and swung. I dodged, but I was open for his next strike.
Michiya, without changing his rhythm, caught my opponent with a backhand
slash to the head, then continued to fight his own battle. The dead man
almost landed on me as he fell...
    Never have I heard so much pain. Screaming. Moaning. Sobbing. There
was a constant sound. It was the sound of the dying. I never knew death
had a voice.
    During a lull, Sir Luthias complimented my ability and "tenacity",
a word which I had him explain. I didn't tell him that I was afraid;
that I fought for my life. He already knew.
    I just want to sleep. I try to roll over again.
    It is the eyes, most of all, that I see when I close my own. The
sightless, fixed stare of the dead. My mistake was to look into those
eyes. Just once. I saw death's face.
    There is no honor in killing.
    I was struck in the shoulder by a man that I didn't see. I fell, my
sword falling from my fingers as my arm screamed out in pain. I tried to
crawl back from the fighting, but he came at me, a terrible smile
spreading across his face. A man from the company that I had traveled
with stepped between us and swung. I rose from the mud and tried once
again take up my sword. My arm screamed again, so I switched hands. The
man who saved me fell. His killer moved on to another fight, perhaps
forgetting me. I looked at my shoulder, and saw the blood pouring forth.
I turned from the fighting to find a healer.
    My head throbs to a slower rhythm now, but it still throbs. It
throbs with every beat of my heart. It throbs because I still live. For
that, I am grateful. Still, I wish I could sleep.
    There is no honor in dying.
    I tripped over a body while running back to the line. The Beinison
man lived, but his pain...
    "Kill me." he cried. "Please, I beg you."
    I shook my head. I showed him the sign for healer, then turned to
run and find one.
    He cursed me. "I am defeated!" he cried. "To live with defeat is
worse than death. I will NOT live in dishonor!"
    I fetched the healers, but he was dead when we returned.
    The eyes. Those cursed eyes. How can I sleep when every time I
close my eyes I see theirs.
    Honor exists for its own sake.

    The tent flap moved and Sir Luthias entered, followed by Michiya
and a man in dirty white robes who I thought was a healer. Luthias
looked at me and asked "How are you doing?"
    *I* *Live* I manage to keep my injured arm quiet.
    He nodded. "You will fight again."
    *Fight* *Yes* *Sleep* *No.*
    Again, he nodded. I think that he understood. The healer moved to
me and handed me a small bottle. "Drink this."
    I did, and almost instantly felt my eyes begin to close, as if they
were too heavy to hold open.
    *Question* *I* *Dream.*
    Sir Luthias' voice sounded distant and vaguely sorrowful.
    "I hope not."

========================================================================

                             Storm Dancer
                             by Jon Evans
                           
                          Seber 11-12, 1014

    The brisk ocean breeze drifted off the water and worked its way
into the woods surrounding the bay. Slowed by the trees and scrub of a
northern wood, it traveled inland, becoming less than a draft, and
turned a warm Seber day into a comfortable day to work.
    Picking up his ax, he looked about the woods for previously felled
trees. This day, he cut wood for his mother, the blacksmith, who
insisted on old, dry wood. Walking through the light forests east of his
home town, he enjoyed the soft chill in the air. The leaves were
turning, their reds and oranges mingling with patches of blue sky now
visible through the trees.
    The smell of the ocean carried through the air, and Thedos' blood
raced. Images of ships lurching forward in the water, waves and wind
carrying their precious cargos from lands south and west of Baranur. The
sea was where he wanted to be, not chopping wood for his mother, or
farming vegetables with his father. His father had spent two years on a
merchant ship, trading with Beinison port cities, before marrying
Thedos' mother. He was more his father's son than his mother's.
    He would be seventeen years old, this Nober. And while he had no
ambition to become a blacksmith, he resented his mother's refusal to
teach him the trade. His mother's ancestors had always passed the trade
to their daughters, and she was not about to break tradition.
    He wandered through the brush, following animal trails which he
knew would lead him toward his invariable destination. "It's too nice a
morning to spend chopping wood," he thought. "Besides, the storm which
had raged three nights past would just as likely have felled trees at
the water's edge as in the woods."
    Thedos could hear the surf in the distance as he stepped through
the woodland brush. As he neared a thorny bush, he removed his shirt.
The last time he went home with a torn shirt, his mother had nearly
skinned him. And, when she found where he had spent his morning, rather
than chopping, farming, or trapping, he had been punished for a week.
    Passing through the thicket, he topped a small, sandy hill and saw
his destination: the cove. It was only thirty five of his paces across,
and between twenty and forty paces from brush to shore, depending on the
tide.
    No one, as far as he was able to tell, knew of this cove.
Occasionally, he'd seen animals or birds around the water. Once he even
glimpsed a small sea animal on the beach, but it hobbled back into the
water as soon as it noticed him. Someone, however, had found it now.
Beached inside the bay was a small, single-masted sailing ship. It
appeared to be grounded against a sand bar about fifty feet from the
shore. Approaching it cautiously, he noticed that no one was visibly on
board.
    "Halloooo," he called. "Ahoy the ship!"
    No answer.
    As he neared the water's edge, he could see that the mast had been
cracked, and there was a hole about two feet above the water line.
Instantly, tales of ghost ships and pirates came to mind. He had
listened to Captain Kent tell of dangerous adventures on the open sea,
and far-away lands.
    He looked about the beach to be certain no one was around, then
slipped his feet out of his sandals and removed the rest of his
clothing. He again checked the cove for people. He knew no one was ever
in the area, but still he imagined the embarrassment he would feel if
someone saw him standing completely naked by the water's edge.
    The cold northern waters chilled his feet and legs as he waded out
to waist deep waters. He swam here often in mid summer, when the cool
waters offered refreshing contrast to the hot days. But now that it was
getting late in the season, he had less desire for the water's cool
comfort. When he dove into the water and began swimming toward the ship,
the cold water splashing against his body had an almost numbing affect.
    As he reached the ship, he easily pulled himself up to the hole in
its side. With his eyes unaccustomed to the darkness, all he could see
was a few odd shapes and the shimmer of water on the floor. "The boat
may have been here for several days," he thought, "probably beached
during the recent storm."
    As Thedos' eyes grew accustomed to the darkness, he pulled himself
through the hole. It was just big enough for him to lift his body
through, being careful not to scrape his groin across the splintered
wood.
    The interior of the boat was cramped and low, and he had to hunch
over to stand on his feet. He had seen fishing boats like this, the
insides of which were used to store nets, rope, food, and materials to
mend sails. This one, however, was bare but for a small box and the
water at his knees. The box was on the third step of a ladder leading up
to a hatch. Thedos walked to the ladder and reached for the box.
    Pain stabbed through his left ankle, and he knocked the box off the
step. It splashed into the water and floated while Thedos examined his
ankle: a small sword had been left below the water line, which Thedos
had not seen in the darkness. A trickle of blood mingled with the water
at his feet -- it was only a small cut.
    He lifted the sword from the floor, being careful not to cut
himself. Its previous owner had taken excellent care to keep it oiled
and sharpened because its edge was keen and its surface was not rusted,
even after being in the salt water. Its weight was unfamiliar in his
hands, balanced more toward the grip than the head. He was used to the
heaviness of an ax, which constantly tried to pull its head to the
ground.
    He gripped the sword in his left hand and reached up with his
right, groping along the almost unseen ceiling for a latch above the
ladder. When he found it, he slid the latch open and pushed the hatch
upward. Sunshine spilled in from the outside. He grabbed the box and
brought it and the sword on deck.
    When he stepped out into the sunshine, he could see the entire ship
before him. The boat was about 25 feet from fore to aft, and 10 feet
port to starboard, with one mast in the center. It was a well designed
ship. The railings had been damaged, somewhat, but the wood was sturdy
and nicely carved. The deck, for the most part, was undamaged. There
were no signs of inhabitants, but someone must have manned her before
she arrived: there was the remains of a make-shift scorpion on her
foredeck.
    "Well, it doesn't matter," he thought. "For the moment, she's
mine!" Placing the box and sword on the deck, he stood at the opening
for the gangplank and looked down. Only a few feet to the water.
Stepping back a pace, he steadied himself, then leapt forward. He seemed
to float in the air for a moment, then landed in the water with a
resounding splash.
    When he surfaced, he had a smile as wide as the cove. "This is
going to be a good morning," he thought. He immediately swam back to the
hole, crawled into the ship, and worked his way back up to the deck.

    Half a bell later, he was lying on the deck, sunning himself. It
had been a beautiful morning, and the sun was high overhead. Midday meal
would be served in one or two bells. "Wouldn't it be nice," he thought,
"if I could just sail into Dargon arbor, sign on a crew, and ship off to
Bichu, or the Caldo, or somewhere exotic. My own ship," he thought, and
looked around at the wreck.
    "But it's not such a wreck," he mused. "It's in fair shape, aside
from the mast, the hole in the side, and some damage to the railing. The
sail could use some patching, and a good mast would need to be found,
but it could be repaired." If only he had the money. If only he had the
time. If only ...
    He looked around again, contemplating the whole of the ship. Why
couldn't he? His mother and sister were blacksmiths in the duchy of
Dargon. Between the war and rebuilding the city, they always had plenty
of work. Duke Dargon had decreed that any wrecked ships found along the
coast of Dargon could be claimed by the finder. While most of the ships
either had been destroyed or carried into Dargon proper by the winds and
tide, this one was still unclaimed.
    He thought for a moment. It was midday, now. If he skipped his
meal, he could make it to Dargon around second bell. If he brought the
fee of fifteen rounds, he could take a scribe out to the boat, file the
claim, and be the proud owner of a ship. Albeit a slightly used one.
    But he would never get the money. His mother had been saving all
the silver for his older sister, Cara, who was practicing to be a
silversmith. She would not give up the money to invest in a ship,
particularly one which would cost more money to repair. He sighed. The
least he could do is ask. Perhaps his father could say something ...
anything.

    He got home just as the vegetables and bread were lain on the
table. His father, Braewen, looked up and smiled, "Hi, Thedos. How'd the
wood hunting go?"
    Thedos smiled back, creating a near-perfect image of his father's
face. Only his hair was different, being longer than that of his
father's, and his father's shoulders were broader. Both had hazel eyes,
light complexions reddened by the past summer, and a strong jaw.
"Actually, I found a lot of wood. But I didn't cut any." He could not
wait any longer. "Could I skip midday meal?"
    Braewen looked at the boy. His brown hair was a little damp around
the neck, and his skin looked slightly burned. He noticed the sand
sticking to the boy's feet. Braewen smiled. "Gave up the wood cutting to
go swimming, and now you want to skip the meal? Don't worry, Thedos --
and don't tell your mother I said this -- but there's enough wood
stacked up at the smithy to last us through tomorrow. Cut some after
midday, and stack it here. You can bring it to the smithy tomorrow."
    "Well, I wasn't going to cut any wood, this even'." Thedos began
cautiously.
    Braewen's eyes squinted as he sized up his son, trying to determine
what he was up to. "What, exactly, *were* you thinking of doing, then,
Thedos?"
    "I need fifteen rounds, and I have to go into Dargon."
    "No."
    "But--"
    "You know your mother's saving silver. And we don't have that much
copper, and we sure as Stevene's Word don't have any gold. And you can't
just ask for money to go into Dargon with. What are you thinking?"
Braewen frowned. Thedos gulped. It was going to be harder than he
thought.
    "I- I found ... a boat."
    "So, you were out on your boat all morning? Were you at least
fishing? This was a beautiful day to work, and what were you doing?
Hmnn?"
    Suddenly, his father looked more imposing than Thedos had
remembered. And if his father was against it, his mother would never
allow it. "I was swimming, like you said. But I found this boat -- it's
more of a ship, really -- and I want to claim it in Dargon. We could
sell it, or fix it, or ..."
    "It needs fixing? Do you know how much that costs? *And* you need
the fifteen rounds--"
    "But it's not that bad!"
    Thedos looked like a hurt puppy. He gave up trying to convince his
father, and sat down on a stool. Picking up some fresh beans, he began
eating his midday meal.
    After a short time, his mother entered, covered in soot and dirt,
and sweating from the heat of the kiln. Her leather smock was black,
with small burn marks in it, and her thick shirt stretched across a
large back. Her sleeves were rolled up, revealing unusually large arms.
Her blond hair was cropped short, like her husband's, revealing bright
blue eyes. But her face was soft, if determined.
    "Good day, Brae ... how's this side running?", she asked. She took
a seat next to her son and noticed his melancholy expression. "What's
wrong with you, Ted?"
    "Thedos spent the morning swimming, instead of cutting wood."
Braewen offered.
    "Ah ..." she nodded, looking at her son. "And?" she asked Thedos.
    "I need fifteen rounds to claim a ship I found."
    "Fifteen rounds! You know Cara needs the silver to apprentice, and
we don't have that much money to throw around! A ship! Where is this
ship? What's it look like?"
    "In ..." he hesitated. He didn't want anyone to know where his cove
was, not even his parents. But if he did not tell them, they would never
give him the money. "Never mind."

    "I'll find some other way of getting fifteen rounds," he thought as
he walked back into the forest. There had to be something he could do.
"How much did wood sell for, at the market? Not enough," he wagered. And
he had no other skills to sell, thanks to his mother's refusal to teach
him to smith. He had no savings of his own. His mother and father had
simply given him money when he needed it. But never for an expense like
this.
    Slowly, as all avenues to his desire seemed to close, a small
thought bubbled in his brain: "I could steal it."
    No. He clamped that thought down immediately. He was not a thief.
And he did not know anyone who could afford to lose any money, let alone
fifteen rounds. His was the wealthiest family in the small village, and
only because the war had placed so much demand on smiths.
    But he could go into Dargon, where gold and silver were as common
as the people walking the streets.
    No! He was not going into Dargon to steal gold or silver. He wasn't
going anywhere. He was going to chop wood, and stack it at his house. He
was going to work away his thoughts of stealing and gold and Dargon. But
not the ship. Somehow, he'd find a way to get fifteen rounds.
    He came across a tree that had been felled during the storm, three
days before. And, while the wood was still slightly damp, the branches
were not so dense as to hinder his swing. This would be fine work for
the afternoon.
    He planted his feet firmly in the ground, about shoulder- length
apart, and faced his target squarely. With his right hand at the base of
the head and his left hand on the bottom of the handle, he lifted the
ax. As he swung the ax down, his right hand glided across the wooden
handle, meeting his left hand just as the ax head bit into the wood. "A
good swing," he thought.

    Braewen sat at his kitchen table, cleaning vegetables and fruit.
"The fruit will be rotten, soon," he thought. "I'll make up some juice,
add some nuts and berries, and heat it with some wine over the fire. If
I store it in a barrel for a month, it should take the bite out of a
cold night."
    He thought, then, about Thedos. The boy wanted to own a ship. He
remembered his own days on the _Sea_Cutter_, with dreams of travelling
to far away lands and great adventures on the open sea. Well, the only
far away land he'd ever been to was Beinison, which did not require much
travel on the open sea. Most of the time, the ship had been within sight
of the continent. After a year of returning to the same, dirty, port
towns time and time again, he had regretted signing on.
    "Perhaps," he thought, "if I'd owned his own ship. Maybe that would
have made the difference. Sailing to Bichu or the Fire Sea might have
been exciting, and the open sea would certainly have been less boring --
and more dangerous -- than staying along the coastline. The rewards
would have been better, too," he mused.
    He stood up, leaving the vegetables and fruit on the kitchen table,
and walked to his room. "There were rewards," he thought. Such as being
able to establish his wife in her own smithy. She was skilled, when he
met her, and the way she commanded herself and others sparked his
interest. Certainly, she was not everyone's idea of a classic beauty.
But there was a way she held herself. She did not require his presence,
the way a common village woman might. She *wanted* his presence. He
smiled.
    But Thedos probably felt less than wanted, with two sisters in the
house. Both were apprenticing smiths, receiving most of the attention
from their mother. The girls were being given more opportunities for
their future than he. Lianna's family apprenticed trades through their
daughters so the girls would not have to depend on others for their
livelihood. Aside from farming a small field for seasonal vegetables and
chopping wood, Braewen had no skills to pass on to his son.
    He lifted the straw mattress he and his wife shared and slid it to
the side. Beneath the floorboards of the room was a steel box, unlocked.
He and his wife kept the family's savings there. He opened the box and
removed a leather pouch, which contained seventeen rounds. It was the
last of the "rewards" which he'd gathered in his sailing endeavors. The
other money -- silver and copper -- amounted to about 35 rounds. It was
enough to last most of the families in this village for several years.
    He could afford to give fifteen of his last seventeen rounds to his
son, to register the ship. The rounds had been in the pouch for six
years, since he had last spent twelve rounds on a dress for his wife.
She had traded it for a leather smock and hammer for Cara's
apprenticeship. He sighed. But what guarantee had he that Thedos would
be able to repair the ship? Continue with his boyhood desire? If it was
just a phase Thedos was going through, it would be a waste of money. And
without seeing the ship, Braewen had no way of telling if his money
would be put to any good use.
    "Brae!"
    The door to his house was nearly ripped off its hinges as his wife
burst in. "Brae! Come quick!" she called, looking about the kitchen, the
fruits and vegetables still sitting on the table. "Where are you?"
    Braewen entered from the hall that led towards their room. "What is
it?"
    "It's Cara," Lianna said. There was a gleam of pride in her eyes,
and a smile beamed from her face. "Mr. Gordon, a silversmith in Dargon,
agreed to apprentice her for the next year! And only twenty-five rounds!
Quick -- run and get the money. I'll meet you back at the smithy."
    As his wife bolted back through the doorway, heading to the smithy,
Braewen ran to the bedroom. Leaving the box and his pouch on their
mattress, he gathered twenty-five rounds from the larger pile and ran
back out the door.

    Two bells after midday, Thedos entered the wood shed behind his
family's house, carrying an armload of logs. He had forgotten the rope
he used to tie bundles together and to his back, and had to leave his ax
by the tree. "As soon as I get the rope," he thought, "I'll run back to
the tree."
    "Father," he called as he walked into the house. No answer. There
was fresh food sitting on the kitchen table, in various stages of
preparation, but his father was nowhere to be found. He knew the rope
was in the closet by his parents' room, and he went to fetch it.
    As he passed by his parents' room, he stopped. On their mattress
was a pile of silver and copper coins. He hesitated. Mentally, he
counted the money from where he stood. His pulse quickened as his mind
refused to believe what he was contemplating. If there was one family in
the village that could afford to have fifteen rounds stolen, it was his.
His breathing was heavy and his throat dry.
    He glanced around the room and down the hall. No one was in the
house. Again, his eyes found the silver. It looked as if the fifteen
rounds on the right side of the pile had been separated from the rest.
How easy it would be to grab the coins and run. He could be in Dargon by
the fourth bell, and home in time for the evening meal. No one was home,
the money was left on the bed. Anyone could have stumbled into their
home and taken it. And he'd have his ship.

    Braewen, Lianna, and their eldest daughter, Cara, entered the
house. A trunk would need to be packed, with sufficient clothes and
equipment to last her the year. She would only be a few hours away; but
she would be apprenticing six days a week, and there wouldn't be much
time to transport her belongings between towns.
    Braewen went down the hall while Lianna and Cara went directly to
the room where Cara and Lysande slept. It was much smaller than the room
in which Braewen and his wife slept, but there was less need for space.
There was no mirror, for one, and fewer clothes hung on pegs in the
wall. On the trunk at the foot of the bed sat a wooden doll and a book.
The wooden doll had been given to Cara when she was seven, and the book,
_Fretheod_Romances_, belonged to Lysande. Inside the trunk were the
clothes Cara and Lysande would wear to church, one day a week.
    Braewen appeared at the entrance to the room. "Leah," he softly
called. Lianna looked at her husband's anguished expression and the
sadness in his eyes. She stepped out in the hall to talk with him.

    It was just fourth bell when Thedos had arrived at the edge of
Dargon, slightly sweaty but still breathing well. He'd removed his shirt
to wrap the silver, not wanting passing strangers to see him with a
handful of coins. By the time he'd made it to the Ducal Buildings, it
was half way to fifth bell, and the sun was low in the sky. He didn't
have much time.
    "Excuse me," he said as he entered the building. It was a large
room, with three desks separating it into smaller areas. The man in the
office wore a dark brown robe with a silvery sash across his waist, and
leather sandals. There were two women, also in robes, at the other
desks, carefully applying quill to paper. A city guard in chain mail and
holding a spear stood at the edge of the doorway. "Is this the building
where official records are kept?"
    The robed man looked up. His face was grey and wrinkled, and his
eyebrows reminded Thedos of thick bushes found at the edge of ponds.
"What does it say on the door, son?" His gravely voice was harsh and
tired.
    Thedos paused, and looked at the door. "I don't know ... I can't
read."
    The man nodded and approached Thedos. "My name is Galwyn. What can
I do for you?"
    "I found a ship. I want to claim it."
    "Did you?" Galwyn eyed Thedos. "And where is this ship?"
    "It's ... I can't tell you."
    "Then I can't help you."
    "I'm not sure the name of the place. It's in a cove, east of here."
    "What kind of ship is it?"
    "I think it's a small bireme. I'm not sure."
    "What's its name?"
    "It doesn't have one. I think it was Beinisonian, but I couldn't
find a name plate."
    "And you can't read."
    "I read a little!" Thedos protested. "Just not very well."
    "There is not a great deal you *do* know about this ship, is
there?"
    "No, sir."
    Galwyn spoke slowly, "Do you know there's a fee to register a
craft?"
    "Yes," Thedos stepped forward. "I have it here." He lifted the
bundle in his hands and shook it lightly. The silver clinked softly.
    "And where did *you* get fifteen rounds?" the guardsman asked,
taking a close look at Thedos.
    Thedos' voice cracked. "My father gave it to me ..." His lie was
unconvincing. He looked at himself. His pants were dirty from the road,
mud was caked on his feet, and the dust of the city clung to his sweaty
chest. His hair was unkempt, having gone swimming that morning, and his
face was covered with a light fuzz of which, until now, he had been
proud. Entering the building with the coins rolled up in his shirt, he
looked like a common street rat who had stumbled across an unlucky
citizen. "My mother is a blacksmith in-"
    "Your *mother*?" the guard interrupted. Galwyn snickered. The guard
guffawed. Thedos turned and sprinted out the door.

    When Thedos returned home, it was past seven bells. Once he had
left Dargon city, he had slowed his sprint to a walk. Now, shirtless,
dirty, and without either his ax or wood in the shed, he would have to
explain his whereabouts for the past two hours. Of course, there was
also the silver.
    About a hundred feet from his doorstep, he stopped and looked at
the bundle in his hands. He couldn't claim to have lost it, or used it
already. He had stolen from his parents; he didn't want to avoid it by
lying to them. But, he did not think they had been fair to him. They had
not seriously considered his asking for the money. They had brushed it
off as if it were some foolish notion of a young boy living a wild
dream. He supposed it was possible they were right. Perhaps he did not
wish to be a sailor. But to be *something* ... Something other than the
wood-cutting, vegetable-farming son of a woman blacksmith.
    His father had mentioned how easy life had been, sailing between
ports. Fighting the ocean storms, and the occasional skirmish with
pirates ... it all sounded like such fun. And he had enjoyed spending
the time with his shipmates, a group comprised entirely of men. Growing
up with two sisters, Thedos thought the idea of being part of a crew
made entirely of men sounded appealing. It would be nice just to get
away from his sisters for a little while. And some day, if he was rich
enough, he could pull his ship back into the cove, drop anchor, and just
lay in the sun -- no crew, no sisters, no one.
    When he got closer to his house, the door opened. Instantly, his
stomach seemed to drop to his knees, and his chest felt very heavy. His
father's silhouette framed the doorway. Thedos hoped his father
understood why he did it. Perhaps if he could explain it to him ...
After all, his father also had to live in the house with three women.
But then his mother seemed to appear. Thedos heard her speak, and his
father retreated, taking Thedos' hopes with him. His mother would never
understand his need to get away.
    One sentence was all she needed. Four simple words spoke volumes to
Thedos. They meant there was no hiding. She knew exactly who had taken
the silver, and why. She knew he was going to be punished. She had
probably already determined what the punishment was going to be. "Give
me the silver," she said.
    Thedos offered her his rolled up shirt containing the fifteen
rounds. She did not take it. She only looked at him. There was no humor
in her face. Her lips had not the slightest curve of a smile. Her
eyebrows were heavy and closely knit, overshadowing her eyes.
    Thedos unrolled his shirt, carefully removing and counting each of
the fifteen pieces of silver, before handing her the coins. This time,
she took them. Thedos felt very tired. He wanted to sleep. He did not
want to be in his cove, diving off his ship, and swimming in his water.
He did not want to be here, now, in front of his mother. He wanted
nothingness; blackness; isolation from everything. She was willing to
give him that much.
    "There'll be no evening meal for you, tonight."
    "Yes, ma'am." Thedos could not even lift his eyes to hers. He
slouched where he stood, not daring to look up.
    "Your clothes are a mess, and your father is not going to wash
them."
    "No, ma'am."
    "There's barely any wood in the shed, and less at the smithy."
    "Yes, ma'am."
    "You'd best get some sleep. You can be up early in the morning, if
you like."
    It was not a matter of his liking. In sixteen years, it had never
been a matter of his liking. It was a matter of preferring one form of
punishment over another. And it was she who was given preference. It was
more effective. She would say little or nothing to him over the next few
days until he could not stand it any longer. Then, crying, he would
apologize profusely, embarrassing himself in front of his family. She
would accept it, pat him on the head and patronize him. And make him
perform some rigorous task to placate her. He hated her for it, but he
loved her too much not to seek forgiveness.
    "Yes, ma'am." Thedos retired to his room.

    It was very early in the morning when Thedos awoke. He had little
love for that time of day. It was brisk, with a cold breeze, and no sun
to warm the body. Still, he stepped out of his bed, walked to where his
clothes hung on pegs in the wall, and quickly dressed.
    Thedos ate his breakfast while walking through the woods almost a
full bell before sunrise. He had to find the tree where he had been
cutting wood, the previous day, and hope his ax was still there. There
weren't too many people who would steal a woodsman's ax, in these parts,
but there were all sorts of curious critters that believed anything they
could move was rightfully theirs. Apparently, one of them had decided it
was too much trouble. After searching about the broken and chopped
portions of the tree, he spotted his ax a few feet from where he
remembered leaving it. This early in the morning, the woods were too
dark to see what type of creature had tried to take it, but Thedos could
see the small tracks around the ax.
    He lifted the ax and took his stance in front of the felled tree.
Swing. Chop. Swing. Chop. Swing. Crack!
    "STEVENE'S BLOODY NECK!" he screamed. "Can anything else *possibly*
go wrong?"
    He looked down at the ax. The handle had split at the base of the
head. Now he would have to get the head fixed to another handle. He
thought for a moment. He knew his mother did not have any handles at her
smithy -- she dealt exclusively in iron and brass. And there wasn't a
woodsmith this side of Dargon, anyway. He looked at the handle again.
Could he carve a new handle in less time than it would take him to go
back and forth to Dargon? Not likely. And he would still have to attach
the head and pound some nails in to keep it from slipping off.
    "Of course," he said to no one in particular, "this is going to
cost money. And OBVIOUSLY it's MY fault!"

    His father was not pleased to give Thedos the money to repair the
ax. However, Thedos had shown him the tool, and it should only cost a
round. Thedos had been given two, just in case. Braewen had nothing else
to say to Thedos.
    As he waited for the ax to be repaired, however, Thedos had an
idea. Simon Salamugundi, the soup seller, knew a lot of shipwrights.
Perhaps Thedos could convince one to look at his ship, and estimate the
damage and cost of repairs. Simon had given him several names, with
various recommendations. Thedos ultimately decided on the cheapest.
    "Hello," Thedos greeted a woman as he knocked on a door. "I'm
looking for Skar Jansen."
    "You've found her," the woman replied. Her voice nearly cackled
with age.
    Simon had said Skar would give Thedos the best price in town.
Thedos, not realizing "Skar" was the woman's given name, had expected to
see a gruesomely deformed man whose face had been ravaged in some heroic
sea battle. Instead, he was greeted by an unattractive woman who looked
to be in her early forties. She was dressed as Thedos had seen many
ships' mates: a loose, warm shirt which could be tucked in and tied up
tight for a cold day covered her torso; long pants made for working ran
down to the top of functional leather boots; and her greying brown hair
was kept out of her eyes with a brown leather thong tied behind her
head.
    "Oh, I- I'm sorry," he stammered. "It's just ... I ... uh ..."
    Her expression became less cheerful. "You were expecting a man."
    "Yes."
    "Sorry to disappoint you."
    "No! No disappointment. I just ... I'm looking for someone to take
a look at my ship. It needs repair, and I'm not certain how much."
    "*Your* ship?" She looked doubtful. She knew there were young
captains who had made their name during the war, fighting for Baranur in
the navy or in mercenary fleets, but this one did not have the look of a
captain. He looked like a page.
    "Yes, sort of. I'm claiming it. I haven't given it a name, yet, but
I know where it is. It's slightly damaged, and needs repairs. I was
wondering ... I don't know how much work it needs, or how much it will
cost."
    "How did you come to me?" she inquired. This boy seemed to fairly
intelligent to her. "He must be less than 20 years old," she thought,
"yet he's already out to get his own ship. I wonder if he knows what
he's doing?"
    "Simon Salamagundi said you were cheap. I mean," he quickly added,
slightly embarrassed, "that your prices are cheap. That you won't charge
a lot. I don't have a lot of money ... I'm sort of just looking for a
price." His voice trailed off with his last sentence. He did not know if
she would take the time to close up her shop and look at the ship.
    "The reason *my prices* are cheap," she said, "is that I often
invest in what I'm repairing. Would that be a problem?"
    "I'm not certain what you mean."
    "I mean, if I repair your ship for a small price, I'll want a
percentage of your profits on every trip you make with the vessel. Or,
if you sell the vessel and I haven't realized a certain level of income,
a portion of the final sale will be allocated for myself, up to one
hundred percent of the ship's full value, depending on the sale price of
the ship and the extent of the repairs necessary."
    Thedos looked quizzically at her. "I'm not sure ..."
    "Forget it. Let's just take a look at the ship, shall we?"
    "Okay. It's a bit of a walk from here."
    "How far is 'a bit'?" she asked.
    "Two bells?"
    "Why don't we take my horse."

    Riding back from Dargon saved Thedos almost two bells' time in
getting the ax finished. The ride, however, made him uncomfortable. Skar
sat in the saddle with Thedos behind her on the horse's rump. Each step
jarred him to the left or right, and he had no stirrups to balance
himself. Furthermore, he had to use one hand to hold onto the ax,
keeping it away from the horse's flanks. With only one arm to secure
himself, he had to hold on to Skar's ample waist for dear life. He had
the feeling she enjoyed the ride more than he did. He could almost
picture her like some ghoul from Hell, cackling wildly in the wind as
she galloped down the road, her few remaining teeth dotting her mouth
like a group of islands lost in a vast ocean. By the time they came
within walking distance to his cove, he was glad to remove himself from
the horse's back.
    "That's her," he said, pointing to the ship. It had been only a day
since he'd seen her, but he felt as though he missed her already. The
ship did not seem to have changed position at all, and was not lying any
deeper in the water, save for the tide's change. The water was now
lapping at the hole in her forecastle, and little bits of debris could
be seen floating just inside the ship.
    "Hmmnn ... interesting. Beinison, I'd say." Skar began. She pulled
an eyeglass from a pouch at her side and slid it open. Studying the ship
through the glass, she began her assessment.
    "Main mast is broken ... secondary mast seems missing. See the iron
rings on her foredeck where it would be tied down?" She pointed while
she looked through the glass, but Thedos could not see what she meant.
"Main beam seems right enough, above the water. She's taking it in
through the forecastle, though. Won't stand the open sea. I can patch
that up before moving her into dock. Rails need repairs, flooring inside
is going to be useless wherever there's leaking."
    She pulled the glass away from her eye and slid it shut. "That's
the best I can give you from here," she said, "and it may be worse. My
hope is that she didn't damage the main beam when she bellied into that
sand bar. If there were any rocks, she might have cracked it a bit. And
you can just about kiss her goodbye, if that's the case."
    "So ... How much are we talking?"
    "If it's not that bad ... a few marks for the hole in her side.
Rounds for the railing. Marks if you want to keep to the style. Masts
will run you standard pricing, you can't go through me for that. Plus
floor boards, drying her out, coating her. Pre-launch bath. Time in the
dock. Anyone else would cost you seven to ten marks, plus masts, which
will run you another two or three marks."
    "Stevene's Word!" Thedos muttered.
    Skar smiled. "It's not that bad, really. I could charge you five
marks, plus a percentage. If you plan on using her."
    "Yes!" Thedos added, quickly. "I want to take her to Bichu and
Duparyn and the Valenfaer Ocean, and trade clothes and spices and
things. My father used to sail with a crew, and he still knows a lot of
men. I can have her manned in less than a bell, if I can repair her."
Thedos was not entirely certain how much of what he had said was true.
He knew his father still had friends who sailed and traded, but whether
or not they would sail with him ... It seemed to work.
    "Another option, Thedos," Skar almost whispered. There was a hint
of conspiracy in her voice, and she leaned over as if she were telling
him a secret. "Is to sell *me* the ship. I can repair her for less than
I'd charge you, and you could be her captain." She put her right arm
around his shoulders and drew him into a huddle while she spoke, as if
anyone might overhear what she was suggesting. "What would you say to an
offer of ..." She seemed to be gauging the ship's worth. "... nine
marks!"
    The gold was very tempting. With the nine marks, he could ... why,
he could do anything! Of course he had not yet registered the ship. But,
he was sure he could sell her the ship just as soon as he registered it.
It was only fair. He had found it, and it was in his cove.
    "Uh ..." he stammered. "It's not really registered, yet. I don't
know ..."
    "You haven't registered it, yet?" she asked.
    This time, her voice was less louder, less conspiratorial. "No. I'm
in the process. I have to raise the fifteen rounds ..."
    "Oh," she replied. Her smile was perfectly even as she pulled away
from him, but something seemed to be missing. "Well, I tell you what. As
soon as you register the ship, come see me." She winked. "We'll talk
about it." With that, she stepped back through the brush. In a moment,
Thedos heard her horse neigh, and she galloped off.
    That was odd, he thought, but he dismissed it. While he was in the
cove, he decided to swim out to the boat one more time. He wanted to
take the box and the sword back home with him. Seeing as he was still
about a bell ahead of schedule getting back from repairing his ax, he
had the time to dry off before bringing them home. Maybe he'd even take
a jump or two off the side ...

    The large fireplace in the kitchen was double-sided and, therefore,
served two purposes. It afforded his father a means of cooking food in
the kitchen, and provided warmth and light for the main room during the
evening, when the steel doors were opened. The doors were Lianna's
construction and idea. She wanted neither the house to burn down nor
grease to be splattered on the rug in the main room. Regardless, from
the occasional times Thedos and his sisters were allowed to eat or drink
in the main room, the rug was less than spotless.
    While sitting in his chair, Braewen thought about his son, and the
fact that he had stolen the silver. True, he rationalized, he was going
to give it to Thedos, anyway. That did not remove the fact that Thedos
had committed a crime and, worse yet, a sin in the eyes of Stevene.
    "Well," he thought lightly, "I don't know how much I hold onto the
ideas of the Stevene. God knows I've done some rotten things in my days.
Being a sailor, you learn to curse, and fight, and drink, and even go
whoring. But it also teaches you to respect other people's belongings."
    Thedos wanted the ship, that much was certain. And while it would
cost quite a lot to have it repaired, Thedos could at least own it.
Maybe sign on as a hand for another ship, and use his earnings to pay
for the repairs. Maybe just sell it, if he could find a buyer interested
in it.
    Thedos entered the room with a box in his hand. His father looked
at him. Braewen did not smile, but he was not frowning, either. Thedos
approached him.
    "Do we have a file or something I can force this lock with?"
    Braewen instantly looked scornfully at his son. Had he stolen
something else? This was beginning to be a habit!
    "Where'd you get the box?" he asked, tentatively.
    "It was on the ship."
    "When did you have time to get it?" Braewen prodded further. If
there was a lie, Thedos probably would slip up. "On the other hand," he
thought, "I'm already suspecting my son of having stolen it."
    "Today. When I was in town, I convinced a shipwright to come out to
the ship and look at it with me. We took her horse, so I saved almost a
bell's time and was still able to have her look at it."
    "Ah," Braewen smiled. "That's how you still got all that wood
chopped, even though the ax had broken. For a moment there, I thought
you had learned to fly!"
    "Not yet," Thedos smiled, thinking of the second jump he had taken
off the ship's bow. "But I figure if I can open this box, maybe there's
something in it that will help me pay for the registration fee. It's
heavy enough, and I can hear something in there."
    "What did he say?"
    "Who?"
    "The shipwright you had look at the ship."
    "Oh. That was kind of funny, but then, she's a woman."
    "You had a female shipwright look at it?" his father asked. He
seemed concerned.
    "Yes. Skar Jansen." Thedos' eyebrows knitted thoughtfully. "Very
odd woman."
    "Yes, right, go on."
    "Oh, well, she said it would cost me around ten marks to repair,
unless I sold her the ship and settled for being the captain."
    "But you can't sell the ship until you register it." Braewen
offered.
    "Right, that's what I told her. Then she said goodbye. She wants me
to talk to her after I register the ship."
    "What time was this?" Braewen asked.
    "Just before midday."
    Braewen sighed. His son had been taken. Probably. Skar Jansen,
according to friends of his, was a ruthless business person who made
opportunities for herself in shipping. She preyed on less fortunate
owners of ships, repairing them for half the cost and collecting
percentages of the profits for years. A fairly nice means of doing
business, it seemed, but she was known to lock captains into deals that
lasted longer than the ships they had repaired. She was also the full
owner of at least three ships that he knew of, and she had never sailed
a day in her life. He didn't like her.
    "Did you give her the name of the ship?"
    "It doesn't have one. None that I could find, anyway."
    Braewen smiled. "Then she can't register the ship, either," he
said. "Unless she has friends in the Ducal offices," he added.
    "Why would *she* register the ship?" Thedos asked.
    "Because, Ted ... she's really not a nice person. She's a good
craftsman, but what her craft *is* ..."
    "She seemed pretty nice to me."
    Braewen laughed. "Yes, I'm certain she did! But listen to me on
this one, Ted. Don't go to her for anything. She can't be trusted."
    "So what am I supposed to do?"
    "Get up early, tomorrow morning. Very early. There should be pitch
somewhere in the ship's cargo hold-"
    "There were no cargo holds, just a lot of hammocks. I think it was
used to transport men before the attack on Dargon."
    "Well, there should be pitch, there, somewhere. No ship travels
without it. Find a stick or something and write a name on the side of
the ship. Did she see the whole ship?"
    "No, we just stood on the shore."
    "Good. Write it on the side that she didn't see."
    "Father ... I'm not real good with words. Writing and reading, and
all that."
    His father sighed. Something else he didn't know about his own son.
He really should have spent more time with him. His daughters had always
gotten Leah's attention. "I'll go with you."
    "What should I name it?"
    Braewen thought about it. "I don't know. She's yours. Or she will
be. You think of one. It doesn't matter. Just give her a name, then get
to Dargon as quick as you can. As soon as the Ducal offices open --
that'll be about a bell past sunrise -- register the ship. If she's
already pulled something, maybe we can contest it."
    Thedos hesitated. "I'll need fifteen rounds."
    Braewen noticed that his son's entire spirit depleted with that
statement. It was partly his fault, Braewen thought. "What am I going to
do, crucify you for fifteen pieces of silver?" He smiled a half-hearted
smile. "You'll have it. I'll talk to your mother tonight. In fact," he
added. "I'd better start getting the evening meal ready. Your mother
will be back, soon. She took Cara to a village on the other side of
Dargon, today. Cara begins her apprenticeship as a silversmith tomorrow
morning."
    Thedos was dumbstruck. "I didn't even get a chance to say goodbye,"
Thedos said.
    "Well, worry about it tomorrow. Maybe after your visit to Dargon,
you'll have some good news for her."

========================================================================

                         The Scent of Balsam
                            by Bill Erdley
                       
                           Late Seber, 1014

    A breeze, and with it the scent of balsam, caressed him as he stood
in the doorway of the ballroom. The large chamber was decorated like a
hall of the harvest, sprinkled with festive trappings and garlands of
fall flowers. To the left, several musicians prepared for the night's
revelry, arranging their chairs and tuning their instruments; playing
lively little tunes to the empty hall and the flowers. A group of tables
stood clustered to the right; empty now, but the evening would find them
overflowing with food and drink. At the far end of the hall, a fountain
murmured. Water flowed from the pitchers of three maidens, each as
lovely of face and figure as had ever been captured by artist's brush or
sculptor's chisel. And within its basin, more flowers floated.
    The flowers of the harvest.
    The flowers of life.
    Life; that was what would be celebrated here tonight. Life in all
of its glory, all of its wonder, all of its beauty. Music would play,
dancers would whirl, people would laugh and love and live. It was what
these decorations were all about. Life.
    The man turned from the doorway, misty eyes cast downward. "'Life,"
he thought, "a celebration of beauty and joy; a gift given us by the
gods.'" He remembered the words that he had been taught as a child, not
so many years ago.
    And the memory made him sad.
    Later, as the musicians played and the dancers spun, the man stood
alone, expressionless, in his small room. From there he could hear the
music drifting on the evening breeze. In his mind's eye he could see the
dancers in their graceful movements. He could hear them and he could see
them, but he could not feel with them. The celebration of life was lost
to him; as though life itself had been lost to him. In one of his hands
he held a small piece of parchment, badly creased and tattered; in the
other, a small circlet of braided hair. These two pieces of his past
were more precious to him than any other possession, yet at this moment,
his aching heart wished that these gifts, and the accompanying memories,
would vanish. He brought the circlet to his face, and with it he
caressed his cheek. Through the smell of leather and smoke and sweat, he
could still smell a hint of balsam, her favorite scent. Or did he just
imagine it? He closed his eyes and a tear fell onto the ring of
memories.
    His mind drifted to his experience with, in the opinion of several
of the stable boys, the wisest man in Magnus. He had gone to ask if
there were any way to forget the past. Instead of an answer, the sage
made several strange requests. One was that he was to visit often with
slate and chalk. It was obvious that the sage wished to teach, though
the subject was a mystery. Also, the sage requested that the youth
attend the victory celebration tonight. That was one request that would
have to go unfulfilled.
    He thought back to the day when the army had ridden into the city.
He felt grand, proud and dignified. He rode just behind his knight, Sir
Luthias, but in his mind he imagined that the cheers were for him alone.
The people cheered for the return of the men, and for the ending of the
war as well. It had been bitter and costly affair, and many of the men
who had ridden from the gates of this city in the past months would
never return. He looked into the faces of the people in the crowd. Those
drawn and haggard faces belonged to people who had been starved and
beaten and besieged. Yet he saw only their looks of appreciation and
awe. To him, this was a glorious time; to them, a time of relief, of
weary thanksgiving for the end to the madness. Looking back on it now,
he remembered what he hadn't noticed before; and he understood.
    He drifted back even further. He thought of the battles, the death,
the pain that he had seen. He had witnessed the best and the worst of
mankind; the honor and courage on one side, and the cruelty and the
savagery on the other. He remembered with sickening vividness his first
melee, seeing his enemy fall before him with a cry. He remembered his
first wounds; the pain, the fear, the bitter disappointment with
himself. It seemed that he could remember much about the war, but very
little of it was pleasant.
    Except for the letter and the braid.
    He carefully unfolded the parchment, creased and worn from many
months of handling. He had taught himself to read all of the words, so
he wouldn't need someone else to read it for him. Now, he re-read the
words that he could have spoken from memory.

         'Please forgive my mother for saying those terrible
    things. We have spoken long about this, and I understand her
    fear. My father was a member of the militia. He died at Oron's
    Crossroads.'

    "Yes. The battle at Oron's Crossroads was a bloody rout from which
very few of the Baranurian soldiers escaped with their lives. It was one
of the worst defeats of the war -- and one which would not soon be
forgotten by the many wives and children who lost husbands and fathers
in that massacre."

         'My mother didn't want me to know the same pain that she
    had known.'

    "How well I can understand her sentiments. My father also died in
this war; as did my sister. Yes, I think I know something of the pain
that she spoke of."

         'She said "I will not have my daughter marry a warrior",
    but I asked her if she would keep her daughter from marrying a
    knight!'

    "Oh young and innocent child! There is only one difference between
the two. The knight must fight bound by rules and codes as well as armor
and shield, while the warrior has only his weapon and his courage. They
both fight with anger and fury and terror and pain. They both hear the
sounds and smell the smells and taste the tastes of fear and horror.
They both bleed. And they both die."

         'You will be a knight someday, Derrio. This I know in my
    heart. When you return, I will marry you, with or without my
    mother's blessing!'

    "Would you still wish to marry me now, dear girl? I have changed. I
have become sad and cold. I have become a killer of men whose only fault
was to be born on the wrong side of some imaginary line which divides
two nations. They fought because they were told to fight, and they died
because I knew that, if they did not, I would. Sometimes, when I think
about it, I loathe myself."

         'I wait for thee, my knight to be. Be safe and be well.'

    "But you didn't wait. I did as you asked -- I stayed as safe as I
could, although there were many days when I faced the wrong end of a
sword. I stayed as well as I was able, although I was sickened by the
sights and sounds and smells of death and battle. But you didn't wait. I
came back to you, for you, but you didn't wait for me. Why!? WHY DIDN'T
YOU WAIT FOR ME!? WHY DID YOU HAVE TO DIE BEFORE I GOT BACK?!!
    The sounds of his wracking sobs carried to the window, where they
mingled with the music from the banquet hall.
    Tired and weak from crying, he staggered from the room and into the
street. He ran from the happy music, which haunted him like a spectre.
He fled blindly, not knowing or caring where he went. He slowed as he
approached the docks. Few ships were docked there, for most of the piers
were charred or smashed. One ship which was docked there, the GANNESS
PRIDE, was missing an entire mast and a spar. Its railing was missing in
places, and, near the back, a gaping hole was torn in her side. The war
had touched the docks. He walked on.
    He came to a section of the city which had been the scene of
intense fighting. Men had fought from house to house. Alleys were won
and held and lost again. Buildings became objectives to reach, prizes to
be won, goals to be paid for in blood. Here, a broken shield lay
discarded in an alleyway; there, part of a mail shirt colored by the
brown stain of dried blood. He stopped before a building which was
familiar. Once upon a time, children had met here at night and told dark
stories by candlelight. Now the door had been torn from its hinges, and
in several places, sword nicks and blood patches marked the passing of
recent events. The war had touched here, too. He moved on.
    Suddenly, he knew where his feet were taking him. Turning the
corner, he saw the doorway from which a woman had once called to him,
telling him not to be afraid. Within the walls of that house, he had
eaten a meal, spoken of himself to a stranger, and proposed marriage to
the woman that he loved. Now the doorway, the walls, all of it was
charred and blackened. For blocks, from here to the edge of the city, a
great fire had swept. It was said that magic had moved the fire along;
and that the Benisonians had hoped to use the fire, and the chaos that
it caused, to sweep deeper into the city. The city had been miraculously
spared total destruction by a freakish rain squall, but not until an
entire quarter of the city had been ravaged. Not many people were in
their houses, they had fled to the keep for safety; but many more were
lost to the inferno.
    And she was one of them.
    He walked slowly toward the doorway, its blackened frame beckoning
to him like a succubus. His heart rebelled, screaming in terror to flee,
to stop, to do anything but walk through that portal. His mind, however,
had to see, had to know for certain that his eyes saw the truth. He
hesitated at the threshold, then stepped inside. A hole in the roof
allowed moonlight to enter, casting strange shadows in the gloom. The
destruction was complete. The walls were shattered and broken, the
furniture was ashes. With his foot, he toyed with a pile of ash in a
room where meals had once been served. A small cloud of dust rose, then
settled quickly, or disappeared into the unlit corners of the room.
Another room, and more piles of ash and broken memories. He walked to
the back of the small house. Here the entire roof had collapsed, leaving
ghostly half-walls pointing jagged fingers at the moon. It was
impossible to tell what this room had held. Perhaps it had been a
bedroom. What dreams had been dreamt here? What plans had been made,
then remade, then discarded. Had this been her room? Had she slept here?
    Did she die here?
    He sat down and leaned his tired body against an unsteady wall. He
had been angry, but that had passed. He had cried the bitter tears of
mourning, but they, too, had dried and disappeared. He looked with
sadness at the moon, shining its light on the desolate scene. He found
that he was holding her braid of hair in his hands, caressing it. He
held it to his face, trying to once again smell the smell that reminded
him of her. Was it there?
    After their entrance into the city, he had found her mother among
the throngs. He looked at her face, into her eyes, and at once knew that
his love was gone. For what he saw in that sad woman's eyes was the same
vile emptiness that he felt when he held his sister's broken body in his
arms. "She is missing." she had said, "I haven't seen her since the
fire. I've looked and looked, but she just isn't here." He didn't
believe her then, and had searched for her himself, for days on end. He
neglected his duties as a squire, but Luthias didn't need him much these
days, busy as he was with other things. Finally, Luthias had confronted
him and made him face the truth. "Death is a part of life that we cannot
avoid." Luthias was obviously speaking from experience, since deep
within his voice was a compassion and a sympathy born only of intense,
consuming sorrow. "You must face it now as you faced it in battle, with
courage and strength." His courage had lasted until he had reached his
room, then he fell upon his bed and wept in agony.
    That had been days ago. He rose and wiped the ash from his
trousers.
    "It is time to walk from the past into the future. I must let you
go, my love. I must accept the truth and walk on."
    He turned and walked from the house, a final tear wetting his
cheek. He gently placed the braided circlet back in the pouch where he
had carried it for so many months. And he walked; past the house where
they had listened to stories, past the streets where they had walked in
the moonlight, past the docks where they had met. Again he could hear
faint strains of music, the celebration was still going on. He entered
the keep and strode quickly to his room. He changed his clothes, brushed
his hair, and pulled on his good boots. Then he turned and left again,
only this time he walked toward the music.
    He entered the hall and was almost overwhelmed by the crush of
people. He could see that the dancers were occupying most of the floor,
and what was left was taken up by people eating and drinking and talking
and laughing. He searched carefully, and finally found Sir Luthias
standing near the fountain. He worked his way onto the dance floor,
which was only slightly less crowded than the rest of the hall. Sir
Luthias saw him coming, and smiled.
    "I am pleased that you decided to join us." The knight's voice was
soft and gentle, and in his eyes was the light of understanding.
    He said nothing, but walked instead to the fountain, whose quiet
mutterings were barely audible above the music and revelry behind him.
He gazed into the water, breathing deeply of the mingled scents of the
flowers that floated within. Behind the fountain hung boughs of balsam.
He breathed, and for the first time in days, felt a peace which had
eluded him.
    He turned back to Luthias and bowed slightly. He gently drew the
circlet from his pouch and showed it to Luthias.
    *I* *Say* *Goodbye*

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 D     D A  A R  R G    O  O N N N     Z   I N N N E     || Volume 8
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 D    D  AAAA RRR  G GG O  O N N N   Z     I N N N E     || Number 2
 DDDDD   A  A R  R GGGG OOOO N  NN  ZZZZZZ I N  NN EEEE  ||
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========================================================================
DargonZine                                     Distributed: 05/13/1995
Volume 8, Number 2                             Circulation:        609
========================================================================

                               Contents

Editorial                    Ornoth D.A. Liscomb
A Lighter Burden             Jim Owens              Firil, 1015
Ship of Doom                 Carlo N. Samson        Seber 1013
"I am my Lord's Possession"  Alan Lauderdale        20 Firil-7 Naia,
                                                      1004

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DargonZine is the publication vehicle of the Dargon Project, a
collaborative group of aspiring fantasy writers on the Internet.
We welcome new readers and writers interested in joining the project.
Please address all correspondance to .
Back issues are available from ftp.etext.org in pub/Zines/DargonZine.
Issues and public discussion are posted to newsgroup rec.mag.dargon.

DargonZine 8-2, ISSN 1080-9910, (C) Copyright May, 1995 by
the Dargon Project. Editor: Ornoth D.A. Liscomb .
All rights reserved. All rights are reassigned to the individual
contributors. Stories may not be reproduced or redistributed without
the explicit permission of the author(s) involved, except in the case
of freely reproducing entire issues for further distribution.
Reproduction of issues or any portions thereof for profit is forbidden.
========================================================================

                              Editorial
                        by Ornoth D.A. Liscomb
                       

It's not really an important point, but there was recently some
discussion on the newsgroup rec.mag.dargon about the role that Robert
Aspirin's "Thieves' World" books had in inspiring the Dargon Project,
and I thought it worth reiterating here.

Dargon does bear a strong resemblance to "Thieves' World" (henceforth:
TW). And in a sense it's true that in 1985 TW inspired me to start a
collaborative fantasy writing project that would print stories in
FSFnet, the fantasy and SF emag that I'd founded a year earlier. I can't
argue with that.

Way back then, TW was the only popular example of a collaborative
writing project, and that description hadn't even been coined yet. So at
that time I usually described the Dargon Project as "similar to Robert
Aspirin's Thieves' World series" because that was really the most
effective way of getting the concept across. However, the TW books are
not as ubiquotous as they once were, and several other similar projects
have led to a popular understanding of what a collaborative writing
project is without having to tie it to TW. So a while ago I dropped the
"Thieves' World-like" comparison from the DargonZine FAQ.

But why is it so important to drop the reference to TW, anyways? you
might ask...

Well, from the start, TW served more as a negative model for the Dargon
Project than a positive one, and I (and many of the writers) consciously
tried to avoid the problems we thought had killed the TW series. These
included (but were not limited to) powerful/destabilizing magic,
archetypal/stereotypical characters, superlative characters, authors
investing ego in their characters, competition between writers who tried
to make their characters "better" than the rest, resorting to
end-of-the-world plotlines, authors working virtually independently and
"springing" their stories on the others, and so forth. Fortunately, we
didn't have to suffer the added complexities of divvying up the
royalties and the temptation (that many TW writers succumbed to) of
printing garbage just because it was guaranteed to sell or because they
were contractually obligated to produce.

So with all those criticisms of TW, you can perhaps understand why I
wince when people cite it as "the inspiration for the Dargon Project".

Looking back on that list of things we wanted to avoid, I think we (the
Dargon Project) have done a pretty good job of avoiding the pitfalls
that were TW's fatal flaws. I can only think of one glaring failure
where someone managed to violate several of those guidelines, and
years later we're still trying to restore the project to normalcy!

Beyond that, I think our problems have been minor. I just chastised the
writers about "springing" surprises on people, but that wasn't because
people were doing things behind others' backs, but because an author
might waste a lot of time in writing a first draft of an inappropriate
storyline if he/she doesn't run an outline by the group first. And while
we do occasionally print garbage too, the reason for that isn't
financial gain or obligation, but because we're amateur writers learning
how to write, and it doesn't always come out as well as we'd like.

We've also got problems of our own, though. The Baranur/Beinison war has
taken us six years to write, and it's still going strong (despite all
efforts to the contrary)> Taking on something that big was probably our
biggest mistake. There's also ongoing conflict between the high and low
fantasy camps, the people who want background detail and those who think
it shouldn't be defined until it's needed, the realist versus escapist
camps, the newbies versus the geezers, those who think fantasy stories
need themes versus those who say it's ok to just write to entertain, and
so forth. There are *ALWAYS* things to argue about in the authors'
discussion group (and if there aren't any, we'll create some!), but
hopefully that's all healthy discussion that everyone learns from.

But enough pontificating. We've got a great issue lined up for you here.
Leading off, we have a thought-provoking story by none other than Jim
Owens. Jim last appearred in FSFnet 9-3. That was December of *1987*!!!
He dropped off the net for the longest time, but he returns with this
great short. We hope to see more from him, as well as a couple other
veterans who have recently resurfaced.

We follow that up with a new Cydric story by Carlo Samson. Carlo is also
an old-timer, and was last published in DargonZine 6-5, which was
December of 1993. Carlo and a couple other authors will be visiting me
in Boston later in the month, and I'm sure there'll be stories to tell
in the next editorial! Hopefully we can motivate Carlo to get stories
out a little more frequently than once every 18 months! Carlo's last
story left his protagonist (Cydric) in port, about to embark upon a
voyage of exploration. "Ship of Doom" takes place at an unspecified
point in that journey, which Carlo's future stories will present in more
detail.

And batting cleanup is a great story by one of our newest writers: Alan
Lauderdale. Alan joined the project in January and has hit the ground
running. I found "I am my Lord's Possession" engrossing, and I hope you
enjoy it as much as I have. And Alan assures us that his next story is
already half written, so hopefully it won't be too long before his works
appear again.

At present, I don't have an ETA for the next issue, but it'll be out
just as soon as I've got the submissions! Hopefully this excellent issue
will help tide you over until then.

========================================================================

                           A Lighter Burden
                             by Jim Owens
                       
                             Firil, 1015

    The day had dawned cold and gloomy. It was raining, light but
steady, just as it had been for several days. Levy's heart was heavy
within him as he stepped outside. He looked to his left, to where Sarah
was bent over, working in her herb garden, little Jen sitting beside
her. Sarah straightened a moment, her swelling belly becoming apparent.
She glanced at him, but then bent back to her work. Levy's heart sunk
even lower. He turned away from her and walked on.
    He crested the hill his house was built on. He looked down into the
valley where his wheat crop was planted. Muddy water lay where wheat had
sprouted only days before. Only as he walked closer could he begin to
make out the young shoots, laden with mud. Levy's heart hit bottom.
    I'll no doubt lose most of the planting, Levy thought. The shoots
will damp off and then we'll have neither seed nor crop. Why do we have
such problems?, he asked, only partly to himself. Most of the winter
wheat was taken south to help feed the soldiers during the war, leaving
barely enough for food and planting. Without this crop, we'll have to
sell my tools to get through the winter, assuming we could even find a
buyer. He looked heavenward. Is this fair? He turned back towards the
house, disheartened.
    At the top again, Levy glanced over at Sarah, still working in her
garden. The sight, which nomally would have brought him comfort, if not
joy, now merely added to the leaden weight in his soul. Married for over
seven years, Levy wondered, and yet we still cannot agree on such a
simple thing. How will we be able to agree on something like raising a
boy? Or girl, he reminded himself; Sarah wants a girl. Levy sighed. We
can't even decide whether we want a girl or a boy, he mused. He almost
laughed -- good thing they hadn't had to choose on the first three!
    He lifted his eyes to gaze at the town ruins on the neighboring
hilltop. Here and there among the shattered houses he could see the new
buildings taking form. What a burden, he thought. They take our food,
they take our men, and leave us to the scavengers. To add insult to
injury, we don't even have enough men left to properly rebuild the
buildings the raiders knocked down. Levy snorted in disgust. It would
take weeks just to haul off all the debris. Still, it had to be done
before they can build the new houses, Levy reminded himself. Then, too,
much of the debris could also be used in the new homes. In every
obstacle there's an opportunity, he reminded himself. You could build a
lot of houses with what was lying in heaps on the distant hill. Just
like the one Sarah wants.
    Levy walked into the tool shed, to get his tools for the day's
work. The smell of metal filled his nose. Suddenly he longed to be back
working metal, cutting it, selling his services to the highest bidder,
like he had in his younger days in Dargon. In Dargon, he could make
enough money to build a big house, with a separate bedroom for the
children! He savored the thought of having privacy again -- Eli, the
oldest, was starting to notice the sounds at night. Not that there had
been many of them lately, he mused ruefully. Again he glanced back at
the herb garden.
    What would be so bad about moving into the village, he wondered.
With the war over the press gangs would again be banned, and a clump of
houses would no longer seem an inviting target for food-gathering raids.
Still, why crowd into town when all the countryside lies open and
waiting? He had set his house apart from the others for a reason -- Levy
prefered some solitude. With life in town came problems not of one's own
making, the problems that other people brought with them.
    But it can be good to be where the people are, he countered, taking
Sarah's side in his mind. Our children ought to grow up with other
children to play with, to learn from. They have cousins there, and aunts
and uncles (not to mention two solicitous grandparents). Besides, Sarah
wants the hustle and bustle of town life. After growing up in isolation
she wants to be with people now. Then too, the marketplace is there,
with its goods and stuffs, which should be plentiful with the war past.
    And the men would now be returning. He remembered the angry
disputes in town, with some wanting to go and fight, and Levy insisting
that war was not the way, not how the Barels had lived their lives in
the past. Moving back into town would mean the returning soldiers and
their resentment and hostility. Or perhaps not. Perhaps a few years in
the field had taught them what Levy already knew -- war was a waster, an
enemy, not a gain or a glory. Or, Levy shuddered, perhaps they would not
be coming home at all. He dreaded the thought of his little town, bereft
of its men, its strength, its hope. Either way, town would not be an
especially joyous place in the near future -- at least not for Levy.
    So many things to consider, so many points to ponder, he thought.
Levy stood and stared into the distance for a long moment, weighing his
feelings. Sarah's got good reasons for wanting to go back, he finally
realized, but I just don't want to live in town. I want to live here.
With his feelings again clear, Levy headed down toward his sodden
ground.

    The next day dawned clear and warm, outside at least; Sarah still
wasn't talking. Levy walked over the hill and down to the wheat field.
He saw what seemed to be a large rat grazing on the far side. He stooped
for a rock, then threw it, the near miss sending the startled animal off
into the nearby brush. He stopped at the side of the field, where he
found a surprise. Despite the silt weighing them down, thousands of
wheat shoots had pushed themselves aloft, straining towards the sun.
    Levy beamed at the sight.
    "Well done, faithful servants. You push aside this world's burdens
as you fight for life." Levy paused thoughtfully. Now there's a thought.
What burden am I laboring under? Am I a faithful servant? He sat there
in a funk, part of his mind pondering this concept, part of his mind
resentful at having been brought up short from its normal routine.
    Lately I've been very aware of what I want, Levy admitted, yet I
haven't thought much of what anyone else wants. Eli, for instance. Have
I ever considered that he might benefit from being around the other men?
Or Eleya, the middle one, would she benefit from being around the women?
Would they all be better off seeing their grandparents more often? Or
the grandparents, seeing them?
    He stared unseeing across the field. How often had someone
complained about the long trip to his shop to have something fixed? A
growing realization plagued him. Perhaps I've been putting too much of
myself on others these years. During the war I've not been much help to
many in town. Oh, I've helped Mattan and Father and the widows, but life
has been hard for everyone, and I've been out here. The Barel way is to
serve, not fight, and I can't serve very well out here. Perhaps it's
time I served someone other than myself, he concluded, his thoughts
returning to Sarah. He walked back to the house, deep in thought.
    Levy walked to where Sarah was pouring milk into a large tank. He
set aside the bucket, and took her in his arms.
    "I've been thinking. Perhaps you are right."
    Sarah's eyes were quick and distrustful. "Are we going to move into
town?"
    "If you think that would be best."
    She softened, her arms not as stiff. She returned his embrace,
tucking her head under his chin. "What made you change your mind?"
    Levy sighed. "Our heaviest burdens are the ones we make for
ourselves. Mine finally got too heavy." He looked into her upturned
face. "I'd like to carry yours for a while, instead."

========================================================================

                             Ship of Doom
                          by Carlo N. Samson
                     
                              Seber 1013

    Cydric awoke in darkness, confused; for a moment he believed he was
in his bedroom at the castle, until he remembered it had been months
since he had slept in a real bed. He lay still, waiting for his strength
to return; his body ached as if from prolonged exertion, and his clothes
felt cold and damp.
    Fragmentary images of water flashed through his mind, with memories
which, no matter how hard he concentrated, remained tantalizingly out of
reach. After several minutes he gave up the effort; he slowed his
breathing and listened intently. Gradually he became aware of the sounds
of creaking wood, lapping water, and a faint flapping sound. He felt
rough wood beneath his fingertips, and soon perceived that whatever he
was lying on was slowly rocking.
    A ship, Cydric thought. I'm on a ship.
    The realization allowed him to retrieve one of the memories that
floated beyond his grasp. He had been on a ship -- the _Vanguard
Voyager_ -- and there had been a storm in the middle of the night. He
had been on deck when the captain ordered him to go below. A wave
crashed into the ship, and the captain was thrown hard against the
starboard rail. He went to aid her, but another wave smashed into the
vessel, and he felt himself being swept over the side into the churning
sea ...
    Feeling somewhat stronger, Cydric levered himself into a sitting
position. Aside from the ache, he felt relatively whole. His tunic and
breeches had begun to dry, but wetness still remained in his boots. How
long had he been lying here? And where was here? Was he back on the
_Vanguard Voyager?_
    He realized that the darkness seemed to be lifting; he was out on
deck near an opening in the bulwark. Huge tattered sails flapped from
the ship's three giant masts, and the rigging seemed burned and torn in
several places. There was also the very faint smell of smoke in the air,
but he was unsure whether it was from tobacco or wood.
    The thought of tobacco brought on a powerful urge to smoke. He felt
for his leather pouch and was relieved to find it still attached to his
belt. To his disappointment, the tobacco was thoroughly wet. He sighed;
it didn't matter anyway, since he was missing his pipe. He checked for
his dagger and was satisfied to find it still at his side.
    Warily, the young man rose to his feet. He appeared to be the only
one on deck. This was a bigger ship than the _Voyager_, but its crew was
far less considerate. Why else would they have left him to dry out on
deck like a wet washcloth? He had no memory of being rescued in the
first place ...
    He recalled flailing about in the water to keep himself afloat. The
_Voyager_ was nearly invisible in the darkness and rain, and he had felt
himself being swept away from the vessel. He had shouted until his
throat was raw, but no one seemed to hear and soon he had completely
lost sight of the ship. He continued struggling in the water, but it
wasn't long before he felt himself slowly sinking, dropping down through
the dark sea and into unconsciousness ...

    "Hello?" he called out. "Ahoy! Anybody on board?" Silence. It was
now considerably lighter than it had been when he first awoke. He
thought it might be nearing dawn, but the light seemed to have a strange
greenish cast to it. Upon realizing this, a warm thin sweat of anxiety
broke over him. Without quite knowing why, he rushed to the bow of the
ship, where a large catapult was mounted. He peered over the rail at the
figurehead; it was a large black dragon, its massive wooden head thrown
back and its mouth open in a silent roar. Cydric stood transfixed,
gripping the wooden rail. There was something in his gap-riddled memory
about the dragon, but he couldn't quite grasp it.
    A cold chill suddenly ran through him, and he felt a presence
nearby. He tensed, wanting desperately to look behind him yet lacking
the nerve to do so. Finally, he forced himself to turn around.
    For a moment he saw nothing. Then a shadowy form coalesced out of
the air in front of him. It was a young man of about Cydric's age and
general build, dressed in clothes that were at least fifty years out of
style.
    Suddenly afraid, Cydric pressed himself back against the rail and
tensed for a leap over the side. The strange youth raised a hand and
looked at Cydric with fearful eyes. "Go," he said in a thin, almost
inaudible voice. Cydric remained frozen where he stood, unable to take
his eyes off the ghost, for that was surely what it was, as surely as
this was a ship of ghosts.
    The spectral youth cast a glance over his shoulder, and his eyes
filled with alarm. "Go, please!" it said, almost imploringly. He looked
behind once again, and abruptly vanished.
    Cydric stared at the spot where the youth had been, unwilling to
relax even the slightest bit. This is a drowning-dream, he told himself.
It must be!
    A few moments later, Cydric felt another wave of coldness, but this
time it was accompanied by a feeling of overwhelming fatigue. He felt a
strong desire to yawn, and his sight dimmed as if his eyes were closing.
An instant later the feelings vanished like a candle flame being blown
out, and he saw --
    The ship was no longer deserted and no longer a derelict.
Rough-looking sailors, all in old-fashioned seaman's garb, crawled among
the intact rigging and tended to the full, billowing sails. Other
crewmen scurried about to orders barked by a large thickly-bearded man
who surveyed the scene from the aft deck.
    Unsure what to do, Cydric stood where he was in the hope that he
would go unnoticed. That hope proved in vain, for the bearded man soon
began storming his way toward him. Cydric decided that this was the
moment to go overboard.
    He turned around and prepared to launch himself over the rail, but
a strong hand gripped his shoulder and slammed him down. Cydric struck
the deck and sprawled onto his back. The bearded man glared down at him
and said, "So, Tullis! Wanting to bail on us, eh? You gutless worm!" He
reached down and hauled Cydric up until their noses were almost
touching. "The captain'll be right pleased to see you."
    Cydric closed his nostrils against the man's foul breath. "I -- I'm
not Tullis," he said with as much composure as he could muster. "I'm not
-- I was in a storm, and --"
    The bearded man laughed. "Did you break your head when you fell?"
He called over his shoulder to a pair of nearby sailors. "Take Tully Boy
here down to the captain. He was wanting to jump the gunnels!"
    "No, I --" Cydric wrenched himself from the man's grasp and backed
away. "I don't belong on this ship. I don't know --"
    The bearded man lunged forward with surprising speed and struck
Cydric savagely on the side of the head. The young man felt an explosion
of pain in his mind and went limp, collapsing to the deck.

    Dim thoughts drifted through Cydric's mind as he teetered on the
edge of oblivion. A flash of green -- green lightning? A name -- Sarkos?
A black ship with the figurehead of a dragon ...
    Slowly he returned to consciousness. He was on the floor of a
silent room that smelled of must and decay. When his eyes adjusted,
Cydric could see the silhouette of a man outlined by a single lantern
that was mounted on the wall. The man was seated behind a small table,
and his face was hidden by flickering shadows.
    The man said nothing as Cydric slowly rose to his feet. For several
long moments neither spoke; finally, the silence was broken as the man
said in a cold, deliberate voice, "So, Tullis. You've ... returned."
    "My -- my name isn't Tullis," Cydric said, aware of how loud his
voice seemed to sound. Cydric strained to see the man's face through the
gloom of the cabin. A realization struck him; continuing to stare at the
man's face, Cydric said, "Forgive me, *Sarkos*, but I'm not a member of
your crew."
    The man seemed to stiffen at the mention of the name. In the same
cold voice he said, "You'll address me as Captain."
    Cydric held his breath and said nothing.
    "ANSWER ME!" Sarkos suddenly cried, slamming his fist on the table.
Cydric jerked back, deeply startled. A moment later he found his voice
and replied, "Yes -- Captain." He decided it was prudent not to
antagonize the man.
    Sarkos rose and turned the lantern up slightly, increasing the
light just enough for Cydric to make out the Captain's lean, slender
frame, his dark hair and short beard, and the deep-set, hollow eyes
embedded in a long, tired face. Sarkos sat down again and regarded
Cydric with the expression of a man who has just discovered a worm in
his piece of bread.
    "I don't know why you've ... come back, but nothing has changed,"
Sarkos said tonelessly. "I am the captain; on this ship my word is law.
I have the right to punish those who break my laws." A humorless grin
tugged at his mouth. "You think you are above my justice?" He paused.
"Do you?" he repeated slowly, his eyes narrowing.
    "No, Captain," Cydric replied quickly, a tingle of fear racing up
his spine. Sarkos was a dangerous man, there was no question of that.
    "And was it worth it, do you think?" Sarkos was not looking at
Cydric, but somewhat past him. "I had every right. I still have the
right. Do you think it was worth it?" Without waiting for an answer,
Sarkos placed an intricately-carved wooden box on the table.
    "Go ahead," he said. "Look at it. See if it wasn't worth the cost."
    Cydric stared hesitantly at the box, mentally sorting out what
Sarkos was saying. Apparently, someone named Tullis had violated one of
the captain's rules, and it had something to do with the contents of the
box.
    "LOOK AT IT!" Sarkos roared. He pounded the table, causing the box
to jump.
    Cydric approached, paused, then lifted the lid of the box. What he
saw inside made him gasp. Resting on a bed of red velvet was a huge
oval-shaped emerald, about the size of a clenched fist. Forgetting
himself, Cydric reached out to touch the emerald, but Sarkos slammed the
lid shut.
    "Now get away," he said with a low snarl. Cydric put his arms to
his sides and backed off. He suddenly remembered his dagger, but decided
that trying to fight his way out of the situation would do no good.
    For a moment Sarkos said nothing, then cracked Cydric across the
face with the back of his hand. Cydric staggered from the blow. Sarkos
gripped the front of Cydric's tunic and yanked him close. In a sullen
whisper he said, "And to think that me, of all people, trusted you."
    The captain's eyes now seemed full of a dark, concentrated fury.
Fear clenched Cydric's gut, and he knew that Sarkos intended to kill
him.
    But before either of them could make another move, the door burst
open and a dark-skinned crewman stuck his head into the room. "Captain!
The Duke's ships -- they're attacking!"
    Sarkos's anger suddenly seemed to drain away. He released Cydric
and sagged back against the table. "Gods damn," he muttered listlessly.
A moment later he looked up, his face a mask of resignation. "Prepare
for battle," he said. "And--" he glanced at Cydric--"lock him in the
hold."
    The dark-skinned man nodded and entered the room. He drew the
cutlass that he wore at his side and used it to motion for Cydric to
walk ahead of him.

    A short time later, Cydric watched as the door to the damp ship's
hold slammed shut, leaving him alone. Thin beams of light filtering down
through cracks in the cargo hatch above provided barely enough
illumination for him to see dusty crates, barrels, and coils of rope
strewn about. He waited a few moments, then tried to force the door open
with his dagger. It firmly resisted, so he went over and sat down on a
crate to consider his situation. If this was a dream, he thought, it was
certainly the most realistic one he had ever experienced.
    A scuffling sound interrupted his thoughts. He leaped up and spun
around, dagger in hand. Staring into the shadows for a breathless
moment, he detected no one. Then a small furry shape skittered across
the top of a barrel. Cydric relaxed -- it was only a rat.
    Sheathing the dagger and sitting down again, he mused about what
the dark-skinned crewman had said to Sarkos. Duke's ships attacking?
"Which Duke?" he wondered aloud.
    "A Duke of Pyridain," came a reply. Cydric drew his dagger again
and looked around for the speaker. From the gloom at the other end of
the hold a figure gradually emerged. It was the youth who had appeared
before and urged him to leave the ship.
    "Who are you?" Cydric demanded, rising to his feet and taking a
defensive stance.
    "My name," the youth said wearily, "is Tullis."
    At the sound of the name, Cydric lowered his blade. "So *you're*
Tullis," he said. The youth nodded sadly. "Why does everyone on this
ship think that I'm you?"
    "I tried to warn you. You should have escaped when you had the
chance."
    "What ship is this?" Cydric demanded.
    Tullis sighed. "You are on the _Rampant Dragon_. Her captain is
Jaren Sarkos, whom I believe you've already met."
    The name of the ship stirred something in Cydric's memory. His brow
furrowed as the image of the black dragon figurehead, illuminated by
green flames, came to him. The _Rampant Dragon_. He had heard the name
mentioned somewhere before. The _Rampant Dragon_ ...
    Suddenly, it all returned to him.

    He had been on lookout in the _Vanguard Voyager's_ crow's nest,
high atop the main mast, when he first glimpsed the strange green
lightning. At first he dismissed it as a random imagining produced by
his cold and tired mind. But a little while later he saw another flash,
clearly this time, on the darkening horizon. Curious now, he remained
alert and carefully watched the sky and sea around him, hoping to catch
another glimpse of the unnatural lightning.
    His watch ended without another sighting. In his report to the
officer of the watch he mentioned only that he had seen lightning,
omitting any mention of it having been green. But as he made his way
below, he caught sight of a third stroke of green lightning, far out
over the water.
    In the _Voyager's_ galley he encountered Captain Brynna Thorne,
enjoying her customary early-evening bowl of dried figs. With her was a
white-haired seaman by the name of Avron, who was the oldest member of
the crew and known to have a vast knowledge of ocean lore. Cydric was
hesitant to ask Avron about the green lightning with the Captain
present, not wanting her to think that he was prone to irrational
imaginings; but his desire to know if he had in fact seen some kind of
natural occurrence won out, and he told the old sailor about what he had
seen.
    Avron frowned and pursed his lips when Cydric mentioned that he had
seen the green lightning three times. "Not a good sign," the old seaman
muttered ominously. He then told the young man that there was an old
belief that anyone who saw green lightning three times in one day was
fated to join the crew of a wandering ghost ship called the _Rampant
Dragon_, a pirate vessel cursed to sail the seas forever.
    Captain Thorne shook her head skeptically. "Old seadog talk,
nothing more," she said with a tone of dismissal. "My father told me the
same stories when I was his cabin girl. And I've also heard it said that
one can see a flash of green at sunset, if the sky is right."
    "Believe -- or disbelieve -- what you will, Captain," Avron
replied. "The sea holds many mysteries."
    Cydric asked the old sailor to continue, but he refused to say
anything more about it. Cydric came away believing that the story was
indeed an old sea tale ...

    ... until the storm the following night that washed him up on the
ghost ship. Cydric stared at Tullis, whose form seemed somehow
indistinct. "This ship is cursed," Cydric said, and repeated to Tullis
what he had just recalled.
    "That is the story," Tullis affirmed with a solemn nod.
    "But why was the ship cursed?"
    Tullis gave another sigh and related the story of how, many years
ago, Captain Sarkos -- a cold-hearted pirate who regularly raided the
southern coast of Baranur -- disguised himself as a nobleman and tricked
the only daughter of a powerful duke of Pyridain into giving him the Eye
of Cirrangill, a huge perfectly-cut emerald the size of a man's fist. It
was one of the family's treasures, and the duke was furious at the Eye's
loss. He sent out his three fastest ships in search of the _Rampant
Dragon_, and after three days they caught up with the pirate on the open
sea.
    The _Dragon_ was larger than the duke's ships but surprisingly fast
for a vessel her size. She was able to keep just ahead of the pursuing
ships, until one of them managed to get close enough for several
ballista-launched flaming spears to set fire to her sails and bring her
to a stop. The three ships maintained a flaming-spear attack, while the
crew of the pirate vessel returned fire with catapult-launched stones
and burning coals.
    The battle soon turned in favor of the duke's fleet. Sarkos, seeing
the heavy damage to his ship and fearing capture, came to a drastic
decision: he called upon Cirrangill, god of the seas, and offered up the
namesake jewel in return for help. The sea god manifested himself as an
immense waterspout and agreed to aid Sarkos. The duke's fleet was caught
up in the vast watery vortex and sent to the bottom, but the _Rampant
Dragon_ remained unharmed.
    Cirrangill then demanded the emerald, but Sarkos knew the mythical
history of the jewel: it had originally been a gift to a poor fisherman
from the sea god himself, as a reward for the man's honesty. Over the
years the emerald changed hands many times, but it had always been a
gift -- never once had it been bought or sold. Sarkos knew that unless
he willingly gave it up, the sea god could not reclaim the jewel.
Knowing this, the pirate captain greedily refused to part with it.
    And so, angered by the pirate's ingratitude, Cirrangill laid a
curse upon the ship and crew; they would be doomed to roam the seas for
all time and relive the battle with the duke's fleet, which now ended
with the _Rampant Dragon's_ destruction.

    "... and that is what is happening now," Tullis concluded, casting
a glance up at the roof of the hold.
    "But why aren't you with them?" Cydric asked. "Aren't you affected
by the curse?"
    A grim look came over the youth's face, as if he was recalling a
painful event. "This is a ship of ghosts, but I ... I am a different
ghost." He paused, as if to compose himself. Then he continued.
    "During the chase, the Captain was always on deck and rarely came
back to his cabin. I had heard about the jewel and knew where he kept
it. One day, I couldn't resist -- I took the box out of its hiding place
and looked at the jewel. I don't know for how long I stared at it, but
the next thing I knew, the Captain was in the room, shouting at me --
hitting me. He took me down here, to the hold and ... " Tullis stopped
and gazed into the shadows.
    Cydric read his look and knew what had happened next. In a whisper
he said, "Sarkos killed you."
    Tullis nodded, unable to speak.
    "So you're a true ghost."
    Again Tullis nodded. "Yes -- and doubly cursed for it. Everyone
else has only the faintest notion that they've been repeating the same
events, but I seem to be only one who truly remembers."
    "But why *does* Sarkos and the crew think that I'm you?"
    "You are not the first man to be taken aboard this ship. Each one
before you was mistaken for one of our men who'd been killed in some way
or another in the past. And the only way any of them left this ship was
by bailing overboard."
    Cydric now understood Sarkos's behavior toward him. The pirate
captain no doubt believed that Tullis had come back, and had tried to
justify his actions to relieve his guilt. But knowing that was little
comfort -- what he needed was a way off this ship of doom.
    Stepping over to stand directly in front of Tullis, Cydric drew a
breath and asked, "Will you help me escape?"
    The ghostly youth nodded his agreement. "But I first have to ask
you this: will you help me to end this curse upon our ship, so that we
may finally know rest?"
    Cydric paused before replying. "Will you still help me if I don't?"
    "Yes. I said that I would."
    Stepping back a pace, Cydric frowned slightly as he considered
Tullis's request. It would be easy to simply leave him and the others on
board the ship to their fate. He was certain that Sarkos deserved his,
but what of the rest of the crew? And what of Tullis -- was his
transgression so great that he deserved to spend forever in this waking
nightmare?
    Cydric gave a mental shake of his head. Who was he to judge any of
them? But if people like himself were unwillingly drawn into the
punishment reserved for the _Dragon's_ crew, didn't he have a
responsibility to try and ensure that it happened to no one else?
    A long moment passed. Finally, Cydric spoke. "Then I'll help you."

    Tullis showed Cydric the location of a rusted axe, lost behind a
row of crates. Cydric used it to hack away at the door after being
assured by Tullis that no one was nearby. After escaping the hold,
Cydric followed Tullis to the Captain's cabin. The spectral youth
directed Cydric to a loose plank underneath Sarkos' bunk that was the
hiding place for the box containing the Eye of Cirrangill. Cydric
removed the emerald and turned it over in his hand. He cast a dubious
glance at Tullis and said, "Are you sure this is the only way to end the
curse?"
    "Yes. And at the right moment you must do what I told you,
otherwise the curse will continue."

    A short time after leaving Sarkos's cabin, Cydric emerged from an
aft hatch onto the deck of the _Rampant Dragon_. The air was thick with
smoke and the shouts of the crew. Huddling near the steps leading up to
the aft deck, Cydric looked to port and saw three ships in a loose line
a short distance away. The starboard-side hull of the middle ship was
ablaze, but the other two were undamaged. Suddenly, a great spear of
fire leaped from the foredeck of the lead ship. It soared in a graceful
arc toward the _Rampant Dragon_ and buried itself in the portside hull
just above the waterline, sending a shudder through the vessel.
    Cydric staggered and fell to the deck, coughing. A moment later, a
gust of wind cleared the smoke from the deck, allowing him to observe
crewmen with buckets racing toward the port side to dump water on the
flaming spear. Looking up, he saw other crewmen in the rigging
struggling to put out fires in the mainsails.
    Two more flaming spears flew from the attacking ships. One fell
short of the _Dragon_, but the other grazed the mizzen sail and set it
afire. Cydric leaped up and scrambled out of the way as crewmen rushed
astern to combat the flames. He made his way forward and crouched
against the starboard rail, not far from the steps to the foredeck. He
watched as Captain Sarkos bellowed to the men manning the catapult to
winch the arm back to firing position. When it was ready, one man dumped
a bucketful of large dark rocks into the bowl and another man set them
ablaze with the torch he held. They stood back, and a moment later
Sarkos gave the order to fire. The catapult arm slammed upright and
flung the rocks toward the lead ship. Most of them missed, but a few
landed on the deck where a crewman quickly extinguished them.
    Tullis materialized beside Cydric, who looked up at him and said,
"It's not going well for Sarkos, is it?"
    Shaking his head, Tullis replied, "It will become worse. The Duke's
ships will start to draw closer; two will continue the attack, while the
third will attempt to ram."
    Cydric felt a twinge of fear. "And then?"
    "The attempt will succeed. This ship will sink, and all hands will
go down."
    "But you'll all be brought back to go through this all over again."
    "Yes, unless you are able to put an end to it. Be ready."

    The battle soon began to unfold as Tullis described. All three
ships ceased firing, then pointed their bows toward the _Rampant
Dragon_. Sarkos screamed for the crew to finish repairs to the sails and
ordered the catapult attacks to continue.
    As the Duke's ships approached, the first and last ship in line
altered course slightly so that they would pass directly fore and aft of
the _Dragon_; the middle ship seemed to hang back, but was on a course
for the pirate vessel's midsection. Sarkos directed the catapult crew to
concentrate fire on the first ship, but a well-placed flaming spear
smashed into the catapult frame and set fire to one of the men.
    Cydric stood up to see if Captain Sarkos had been hit. A few
moments later he quickly crouched down again as an arrow sped past his
face. The flanking ships had closed to within arrow range and their
archers were raining death down on the _Dragon's_ deck. Cydric covered
his head as crewmen all around him sharply cried out in pain. A few
screams seemed to rise in volume and then abruptly end with a muffled
"thump".
    After what seemed like years, Cydric heard Tullis whisper that the
ships had passed. He lowered his arms, stood up, and was struck with
horror to see arrow-pierced bodies littering the deck of the _Rampant
Dragon_. Turning to face port, Cydric saw the middle ship rapidly
bearing down on the pirate vessel.
    Tullis appeared, his face stricken with anguish. "Now, Cydric!" he
shouted urgently. "The jewel! Do it now!"
    Pulling the emerald from his tobacco pouch and holding it aloft,
Cydric faced starboard and said in a loud voice, "Great Cirrangill! God
of the Seas! I offer to you your sacred Eye in return for the release of
the souls on board this ship!"
    There was no immediate response. Cydric quickly repeated the offer,
and was about to do so a third time when Tullis cried out a warning.
Shooting a glance over his shoulder, Cydric saw Sarkos staggering toward
him. The captain's clothing was blackened, his face was bloodied, and an
arrow protruded from his upper back.
    The young man from the _Voyager_ took a step forward just as Sarkos
gave a yell and leaped. He slammed into Cydric, and the two of them
collapsed to the deck. Cydric lost his grip on the jewel and saw it
skitter away; Sarkos pushed off of him and dived after the emerald.
Retrieving it, the pirate captain lurched to his feet. Just then, Tullis
materialized and confronted Sarkos.
    "You murdered me!" the ghostly youth cried. "You killed me with
your own hands!"
    Sarkos recoiled in shock. "No," he whispered hoarsely. "You
betrayed me. I had a right to kill. I had every right!" He gave a scream
of rage and flung the emerald at Tullis.
    At that moment, the _Rampant Dragon_ shook violently as the duke's
ship impacted the pirate vessel's side. Tullis vanished as the green
jewel passed through him.
    As the ramming ship pushed its way into the _Dragon's_ hull, a
shimmering translucent mass formed in the air over the water to the
starboard side. It assumed the vague shape of a bearded human face.
Cydric watched as the emerald flew in a leisurely arc toward the
shimmering mass. The jewel tumbled end over end until it appeared to
cover the left eye of the translucent shimmering. A green light exploded
outward from the emerald, filling the sky. The light blinded Cydric, and
he lost all consciousness.

    There was the sensation of falling a long way, stopping abruptly,
then slowly rising. A pale green curtain wavered in the distance, and
the feeling of rising quickened the closer the green curtain approached.
Suddenly the curtain was pierced --
    -- and Cydric found himself breaking the surface of the water and
being hoisted into the air. Hands grabbed him and gently set him down.
    Cydric opened his eyes and saw a group of people huddled over him.
Among them were Avron and Captain Thorne. I'm back on the _Voyager_, he
thought. He blinked his eyes several times and tried to speak, but
instead gagged and vomited the seawater that filled his throat.

    A little while later, Brynna and Avron visited Cydric as he
recovered in the crew quarters. Brynna told him that not long after he
went overboard, the storm had abated and they found him floating only a
short distance from the ship. He then told them, somewhat hesitantly, of
his experiences on the ghostly pirate vessel.
    "Actually, I'm sure it *was* just a drowning-dream," Cydric
admitted after he finished.
    "In true fact, though," said Avron, "there really was a duke of
Pyridain who ordered a certain pirate hunted down and captured. But all
the ships were lost in a storm, so it is said."
    "And there's the explanation," Brynna said with satisfaction. "A
simple story blown into a mysterious sea legend. That's how most of them
start."
    Avron opened his mouth as if to argue, but closed it and merely
nodded.
    Brynna patted Cydric's shoulder and said, "You should be better
tomorrow. Is there anything you need right now?"
    Cydric thought a moment. "No, but I do have one request."
    "Yes?"
    "I'd like to go back to galley duty, if I may."

    High up in the crow's nest, a crewman gazed out over the dark
water. His watch was almost over, and he thought about leaving his post
a little bit early. But just as he made up his mind to do so, his
attention was drawn by a tiny dot of green light at the limit of his
vision, seeming to be just under the surface. He brought the spyglass to
his eye, but was only able to catch a brief glimpse of the green light
dimming and going out, as if it had sunk into the depths of the cold,
mysterious sea.

========================================================================

                     "I am my Lord's Possession"
                          by Alan Lauderdale
                 
                        20 Firil-7 Naia, 1004

    [20 Firil, 1004.]
    Sir Ongis Fennic scrounged up a drumstick and strolled over to a
window. His sharp, commanding black eyes gazed out at the morning
shadows and mud of his courtyard. With wolfish ferocity, he tore into
the cold leg he held. His black hair and physical strength only added to
the lupine resemblance. (It was a pity that his oversized nose spoiled
any appearance of feral cunning.)
    "She still there?" he asked around his gnawing.
    "Yes," Cahill replied. Cahill partook of the servant's lot of
anonymity. Like the rest of them, he tugged his forelock, knew his place
and stayed out of the way. All that distinguished him was a modest
calligraphic skill and a scar on the left side of his face acquired
while learning to stay out of the way of Sir Ongis's horse.
    "Risser's teeth, she gets up early."
    Cahill refrained from commenting that the morning was in fact far
advanced. He knew too well that such a remark was dangerous to his
health.
    "Standing there every day ... she's just asking for a whipping. She
doing anything?"
    "No," Cahill replied.
    "No evil eye, no chanting, no spitting on my gateposts?"
    "No."
    "If she's a witch, she's a cowardly one."
    "She never said she was a witch, only the creature's mother,"
Cahill thought. He kept silent, though. There was nothing he could think
of to say that wasn't either lickspittlishly beneath his shreds of
dignity or unbecoming to a servant who wanted to survive. He gazed
uninformatively at his liege lord.
    Sir Ongis nodded over at the covered birdcage. "What about her?" he
asked.
    "No better."
    "Worse?"
    Cahill shrugged and nodded.
    Sir Ongis threw the drumstick at the fireplace and strode to the
cage. He tore the cover off and glared through the wickerwork at the
small figure within. The creature looked like a girl but her height was
only about three hands.
    "Say the words, dammit!" he shouted. "Just say the damned words."
    She raised her head and looked at him. "I will not." Her voice was
scarcely audible over his own breathing. "I want to go home."
    "You'll go where I send you!" Sir Ongis exclaimed. He replaced the
cover approximately and turned again to Cahill. "What about my wife?" he
asked.
    "Your wife, sir?" Cahill asked, surprised.
    "Yes, my wife." Sir Ongis stalked toward his servant. "Remember
her? She's sick too. Or had that slipped your mind? How. Is. My. Wife?"
    "She's much better," Cahill said quickly. "Much better! Memfis --
you know, the leech? -- he says she's improving. He says she's much
better."
    "He's been saying that for a week!" Sir Ongis roared. "If she's so
much better, why's she still in bed?"

    Sophie stood outside the gates of Sir Ongis's hall. Sophie knew Sir
Ongis had her daughter, her Mouse. Sophie knew Mouse was her daughter's
name, not Melisande. Sophie knew how her daughter had come to be given
her true name ...

    [Yule, 994.]
    She was always small, even at her birth. She slipped out of her
mother's womb quickly and with no fuss. For Sophie, the event was
routine; the baby was her seventh. She no longer bothered with a midwife
-- or even summoned her sister, whose house in the village she'd come to
visit for the birthing. Sophie knew what to do. She stood up from the
birthing stool and put the infant in the old basket -- the one that
would be burned. Then she dressed and, taking both the old basket (with
baby) and the Naming Basket, she went along to the other temple.
    Not the temple of Kurin -- the only god who ever seemed to answer
his worshipers these days -- but the older temple, the one dedicated to
the Stevene. The one whose only remaining purpose, it seemed, was
washing and naming infants. And burying the stubborn remainder who
insisted on worshipping the superseded god of everything. The temple
persisted only because of the continued patronage of the family Fennic.
Otherwise, "something" would surely have happened to it by now, the
Kurinish priests and leaders of the congregation were so hostile to it.
Even the Fennic's support wasn't enthusiastic; it was merely a family
tradition. The great-grandfather of the present Stafhold would have died
as an infant but for the wisdom of a Stevenic priest. The good will left
over from that event wasn't quite depleted yet.
    Since that time, every mother brought her infant to the stevenic
temple for naming -- though it was beginning to crumble these days.
Fanatically devoted worshipers of Kurin were beginning to bring their
infants to the new temple (a century or two old, but still "new") for
blessing. The one remaining priest of the Stevene, Bartleheim, was too
weak to protest this breach of tradition. He was old, he was tired, he
was blind. He was irrelevant.
    Sophie, though, wasn't fanatical about much, certainly not about
debates over whether to worship the sun or worship everything. She went
to the old temple because that was where she'd taken her six previous
babies. And three of those were still alive, so she was doing all right
doing it the traditional way. Two were old enough to help their father
already and the other would probably train in clerking in a few more
years. Sophie had done well by the Stevene. No reason to change.
    She rang the bell in front of Bartleheim's shack, then continued on
to the old temple itself. She went in and went to the chapel where the
naming font was. Fortunately, she'd birthed by day. Otherwise, she would
have had to bring her own candles. The temple used to have candles and
lamps burning all the time, then only at night, then just whenever
people came. Now people almost never came (except to name their babies)
and the temple had no candles. The last lamps had disappeared years ago.
    Sophie put the basket down and checked the water. At least the font
still worked. (She recalled that keeping the font functioning was mainly
what the Fennic patronage accomplished.) She skimmed dead insects and
scum off the surface of the water and sang quietly to her new daughter
while she waited for Bartleheim.
    Her ring gleamed slightly when it swept into the water under the
floating muck. Sophie smiled at it. Actually the thing was badly and
permanently tarnished and probably a cheap metal (tin? copper?) to begin
with. It wasn't a wedding ring. Gregor hadn't been able to afford
anything like that then. No, he'd found it in a field about a year ago
and brought it to her with much joking ceremony. She'd appreciated the
joke, accepted the belated token, and liked the ring itself even if it
was homely. It fit snugly and almost never called any attention to
itself. Gleaming was unusual, but this was supposed to be holy water.
    Bartleheim showed up finally, led by the only acolyte the stevenic
temple had. He was an idiot named Henri (who could hope to become priest
only by default when Bartleheim died). Henri positioned Bartleheim by
the font while Sophie unwrapped her baby. Then the acolyte wandered off,
touring the rest of the dark, dusty chamber. Bartleheim started blessing
the Stevene with comfortable, familiar words. Sophie immersed the tiny
girl in the water and cleaned her for the first time. The water was
cold, the girl displeased by the experience. She began to cry.
Bartleheim recited louder.
    He reached the point where the omniscience was supposed to advise
him of the baby's name and paused. Since a god of everything was
terribly busy -- too busy to reliably choose a name that would please
the baby's family -- custom allowed the mother to whisper a suggestion
to the priest at this point. Sophie, keeping a firm grip on the unhappy
infant, leaned over to recommend the name Merry to the divine principle.
    "M -- owww!" she exclaimed. There was a flash in the font and a
sharp pain in her fingers.
    "By the grace of God and in the love of her family, the child's
name shall be Mouse," the blind Bartleheim said with a mental shrug.
    "Praised be the name of Cephas," chimed in Henri from the shadows
elsewhere in the building. He knew his cues, but wasn't good at
perceiving when a ceremony had careened off its track. The acolyte came
back (empty-handed) from a survey of the temple's almsboxes.
    "You may now burn the basket," Bartleheim went on helpfully.
    "But that's not supposed to be her name," Sophie complained.
    "It's what you said," Bartleheim replied.
    "Yes, but -- where's my ring?" Sophie stared at her hand. (The
other hand was busy cradling an infant who'd suddenly decided to be at
peace with the entire situation.) Where the pain in her fingers was
worst was where her ring used to be. It was gone now. Sophie started
fishing around in the font. With only daylight available in the chapel,
the bottom of the basin couldn't be seen. And no ring could be felt
anywhere in it.
    Sophie felt tired. She'd lost her only piece of jewelry and gained
a daughter named for the vermin who helped keep her family hungry too
often. "Her name is Mouse?" she asked, continuing to feel around the
basin.
    "Praise Cephas," Henri affirmed, taking it upon himself to attempt
to burn the old basket. Recognizing the potential for catastrophe in
this plan, Sophie abandoned her search and relieved the acolyte of the
basket.
    "Can we change it?" she asked.
    "And offend God?" Bartleheim responded. "I'd rather not."
    Sophie started to ask about her missing ring. Then she considered
Bartleheim's clouded eyes and Henri's vacuous grin and thought better of
it. Perhaps Gregor could find her another. Perhaps she was just never
meant to wear jewelry. Silently, she burned the basket while Bartleheim
said a little basket-burning prayer and Henri gazed raptly at the flame.
Then, she dropped a couple of coins into Henri's hand. ("Because it's
customary, that's why!" she thought to herself in annoyance over why she
should make an offering for a botched ceremony.) Finally, she gathered
up her contented little Mouse in her new basket and went home.
    Gregor held Mouse and listened to Sophie's account. He gazed
thoughtfully at his first daughter. She gazed thoughtfully at her first
father. "Well," he said at last, "it makes a better story than if you'd
succeeded in naming her Merry."
    "I just hope you won't regret that opinion," his wife told him.

    [20 Firil, 1004.]
    Gregor paused at the end of the row. Morgan, his ox, was content to
stop pulling the plow also. Both stared out across the fields
thoughtfully.
    Gregor was farming. That was what he did. He got up and worked;
later, he might rest. Sophie might go and stand outside Sir Ongis's hall
for hours hoping that he might relent and give her back her child. He
still had work to do and many mouths to feed. Mouse, though, had never
been much of an eater.

    [Summer, 994]
    The infant Mouse declined to eat. To say that she "refused" to eat
would be putting it too strongly. She simply declined it almost all the
time when Sophie offered her breast for suckling. She slept and she woke
and she greeted the world with great interest, but tears were rare and
eating was rarer. Sophie worried (first of all, it was uncomfortable)
and Gregor heard about it every evening.
    Sophie asked her friends for advice and Gregor heard a report about
every suggestion. She got 27 different sure-fire ways to persuade a baby
to eat from 11 different friends. Two thirds of these really only
applied to solid food; the others didn't work.
    Gregor advised her to take Mouse to Merton, the most accessible of
the priests of Kurin. (He also advised her that Bartleheim was useless
and she agreed.) So she did, and reported to Gregor every detail: Merton
looked at Mouse. Mouse looked at him. Merton smiled at Mouse and Mouse
smiled back. Merton drank some milk and ate a biscuit. Mouse stared at
the window of his office. Merton put his hand gently on Mouse's forehead
and prayed to the sun for guidance. Mouse put up with it. Merton
received no clear guidance from Kurin. Mouse and Sophie went home.
    So Gregor had resigned himself. Sophie had given him Cedric and Con
(Gregor the Younger) and Follano and Petrin and Dorian and Tobric. (And
she would follow the Mouse with Armonk and Quinn and Widric and
Barberry.) Cedric and Con were strong, healthy boys who already were
helping their father work the land. Dorian was growing up fine. If poor
Mouse went the way of Follano, Petrin and Tobric, that would be sad, but
life would go on. Sophie would go on.
    But Mouse flouted the alternatives -- eat or die. She continued to
sleep and play with the world. She also continued to avoid eating and
crying. She stayed small, but she stayed alive and contented. For
Gregor, who started off waiting sadly to see how long the Mouse would
take to waste away and die, the vigil shifted gradually to appreciating
this strange, small blessing. His daughter continued to be1 another joy
around the house but not another mouth to feed (though Sophie never
stopped trying).
    Mouse loved sunlight. Left to her own devices inside the cottage,
she would eventually maneuver herself into any illuminated patch of the
floor. Outside, she lay on her back and laughed at the light. Since she
seemed to treat Gregor and Sophie with equal love, Gregor sometimes took
her along when he went out to his fields. (Especially after Sophie
became pregnant yet again.)
    The hawk reminded Gregor that it was dangerous for his daughter to
be small.
    Gregor was pulling weeds; Mouse was gurgling in a basket. Gregor
was in a struggle with an especially deep root when the baby's scream
jolted him out of it. He looked up and saw the bird swerve past Mouse's
basket and lurch upward into the sky again. For want of anything more
effective to do, Gregor threw a stone or two at the retreating hawk, but
Mouse continued to scream. Gregor went over to her and made sure that
she'd come to no harm. The baby clung to her father the rest of the day,
crying (very uncharacteristically) if put down. After that, Gregor made
sure that his tiny girl was not quite so exposed when sitting outside.

    (Gregor grimaced and urged the ox into starting another row. He
hadn't been there when she was taken.)

    He remembered that Mouse took up crawling before anyone except her
mother thought it appropriate. (Gregor regretted her precocity. Once she
started crawling amongst his crops, the pleasure of her company was
overbalanced by the trouble of looking after her. He had to leave her at
home most of the time.) Everyone else reminded Sophie that now she'd
have to make sure that Mouse stayed away from dangerous things like
cooking fires, but Gregor knew that there was no worry. Sophie was an
experienced mother and a wise one, who knew how to do that
automatically. She told him that she was just glad that something about
Mouse was normal. She was equally pleased when Mouse began walking and
talking; she only worried because her daughter was still so small.

    [20 Firil, 1004.]
    Gregor stopped. The furrow was going wayward, as was his mind. He
brought Morgan back into line and resumed the plowing. Mouse was never
wayward, he thought. Almost never.
    Sophie stood nursing Barberry and still remembering her other
daughter, the one Sir Ongis was holding prisoner. Mouse was always a
good little girl. She almost never made trouble for her mother or anyone
else in the family. For example, there was the day that Sophie left her
knitting out. There were the needles and the orderly knots and all that
yarn that any kitten would have known to make a mess of. When Sophie
realized that the house had been quiet for too long and went on patrol,
she found Mouse sitting next to the needles and yarn, staring at them.
Remarking "When you're older, we'll make some socks together," Sophie
gathered up the knitting and put it away where it belonged. (Mouse
watched her in solemn silence.) It was so much later when Sophie
discovered the extra row that she decided she must have knitted it in
herself by mistake.
    Now, though, Sophie felt a twinge of doubt. Why else would she
remember the matter (except that she never erred in her knitting besides
that one time)? Was Sir Ongis right in declaring that Mouse was a faerie
princess who should be presented to the Duke of Dargon himself? Sophie
didn't think so. For ten years, Mouse had been Mouse, daughter (tiny
daughter -- smaller than the brand new Barberry) of Sophie and Gregor.
How could she be changeling or faerie? Wasn't that what the naming at
the stevenic temple was supposed to prevent?

    Mouse knew what her mistake had been. She should never have let
Dorian get her to come with him into the woods. Mommy Sophie had told
her always to stay close to home. She'd warned her that so many things
were bad when you were small. Mouse hadn't known that that included
people. Now she knew.
    But Dorian needed her. He'd explained to her that Farnace had
loaned him a book. He'd been looking in the woods for a safe place to
keep it because Con and Cedric sometimes abused the books he had at
home. He'd found a safe-looking spot in a shallow cave but the cave
turned out to have a false floor which fell through under the book and
the opening was too small to get through unless you were Mouse and would
she help?
    Of course she'd help.
    So she went with Dorian out to the woods with some twine to fetch
back a book from the bottom of a mysterious cave. It was an adventure;
it sounded like fun. At the cave, Mouse tied the twine around herself
and Dorian lowered her through the hole in the floor. Down she went in
the darkness until the downing ended with ground. She started feeling
around for the book and, just as she felt something that was probably
the book, she realized that she was looking in the darkness at two
glowing eyes. She jerked on the twine the signal to get her out of
there. The eyes didn't move, but neither did the twine -- at least not
right away. So she jerked again -- and flew upward.
    She was just lucky she didn't crash into anything on her way up.
She got back to the surface all right and argued with Dorian about his
paying attention to her signals and being more careful bringing her back
up. Then, she went back down -- only this time with a makeshift lit
torch.
    (Dorian's very smart, actually, and almost always had with him the
flint and stuff for starting a fire. Mommy Sophie didn't like Mouse
playing with that stuff, but Dorian was just enough older and bigger
that it was all right for him.)
    Nothing bothered Mouse while she and her light dropped again
through the dark. With the torch, she found the book easily. It was
broken and some loose pages had scattered. She ignored that at first,
though, looking around for the thing with the glowing eyes. Not finding
anything, she next set about reassembling the book. Then she untied the
twine, wrapped it around the book and re-tied it. She hopped onto the
book, signalled Dorian to lift her out and, as the book was beginning to
lift off the ground, she saw the glint.
    She made another mistake. She jumped off the book and went to see
what the sparkle was. It was a small, dirty disk, only as wide across as
her hand. There were two of them, lying on the ground, and they glowed
slightly. She'd found the eyes! She picked one up -- and it burned her
hands so she dropped it.
    "What happened?" Dorian called down.
    "Found something," Mouse shouted back.
    "What? Mouse, are you all right?" Dorian called again.
    Mouse sighed. He hadn't heard her or understood her. People almost
never did unless she was sitting on their shoulder. She glanced behind
at her landing spot. The twine dropped down to the ground again. Dorian
had removed the book and put a pine cone in its place.
    "Mouse? Come on, we've got to go."
    Mouse made another mistake. She decided she didn't want to leave
without the disks she'd found. She ignored her brother. She wrapped her
hands in the folds of her dress and picked up one of the disks. It
wasn't easy, but she managed to get both disks over to the pine cone,
one at a time. After a while longer, she'd wedged the disks in between
the pine cone and the twine. She signalled to Dorian to bring her up.
    Nothing happened. She signalled several more times and still
nothing happened.
    Mouse sighed and began to climb the twine. Climbing up and down
things around her home was something she was used to. Climbing back up
this twine wouldn't be that hard. She'd have some things to say to
Dorian when she got to the top, though.
    She pulled herself up through the hole in the cave floor and was
immediately picked up by hands the size of her Daddy's. Surprised, she
screamed.
    "A faerie princess!" an unfamiliar voice announced. "In Sir Ongis's
forest." Mouse looked at the strange, bearded face; the face was staring
at her in amazement. A hand was still wrapped around her middle.
    "Let me go!" she shouted, grabbing and trying to pry loose the top
finger. She always did that at home when picked up and it never worked
there either.
    "That's my sister!" Mouse heard Dorian shout. "Let her go!" He was
running toward them. Other voices joined his: Cedric's and Con's. He'd
gone for help. But others were also with her captor. Though Cedric and
Con and Dorian argued long and loudly (and Mouse joined them and was
ignored by all), Sir Ongis's men -- for that was who they were --
brought her to Sir Ongis.
    Sir Ongis found the faerie princess fascinating and would not let
her go. He dubbed her Melisande, the daughter of Queen Braia, the Great
Lady of the Forest. She explained that she was Mouse, daughter of Sophie
and should be allowed to go home. He told her that that was a most
unimpressive pedigree to be presenting to the Lord of these lands. She
told him impressiveness didn't matter if it was the truth. He told her
that as Lord of these lands, it was up to him to decide what was true.
She stamped her foot and said no. He laughed at her outburst since it
took place on his trestle table.
    Then he told her that if she was indeed a mouse and not a
melisande, then he was her lord and master and therefore could do with
her what he pleased, including ordering her to play the part of a faerie
princess named Melisande. She disagreed, but was ignored yet again. Sir
Ongis went on to say that he didn't much care if she was really a faerie
princess or only a freakish peasant. Faeries and faerie princesses were
just stories anyway. What Sir Ongis intended to do was dress Mouse as a
faerie princess and present her at Dargon for the amusement of Duke
Clifton. Mouse again said she'd rather not; she wanted to go home.
    Sir Ongis became annoyed and ordered Mouse to swear allegiance to
him and promise to obey his commands. He said that she had to do this
because she had been living on his lands. She said no again.
    "You are my possession, little mouse," he warned. "Now say it. Say
'I am my lord Sir Ongis's possession'."
    "No."
    "Very well," Sir Ongis said. "I can be patient."
    This Mouse doubted.
    He put her in this covered cage and here she still was, wasting
away. She hated Sir Ongis.

    The cover flew off the cage again. "Well?" demanded the bad lord
himself.
    Mouse had little to say to him. Everything she could think of to
say had been said before and denied. She took a deep breath and
attempted to bellow "May I ... please ... sit ... outside?"
    "Not until you -- " Sir Ongis began yet again, then stopped,
apparently changing his mind. "Will you give me your parole?" he asked.
    "What's that?" Mouse belted out.
    "It's a promise that honorable prisoners make to their captors in
exchange for certain liberties during their confinement. You're an
honorable faerie princess, aren't you?"
    "Honorable," Mouse shouted, nodding. It was too much effort to
debate the question of whether she was faerie.
    "All right -- "
    "This," Mouse continued, gesturing to the cage, "honorable?"
    "Yes it is!" Sir Ongis shouted at the tiny creature's impertinence.
"How dare you impugn -- ?" He broke off, paced across the room and back
and tried again. "I am an honorable vassal of Lord Fionn Connall who
owes service to the Duke Clifton himself. I am honorable and I believe
you to be an honorable faerie -- or whatever you actually are. I think
we might arrange a parole. Will you promise not to attempt to escape if
I let you sit outside?"
    Mouse thought about that. "Yes," she agreed.
    "No crossed fingers or anything like that."
    "Yes," Mouse repeated her promise, holding up her hands in plain
view.
    "And if anyone else tries to help you escape or kidnaps you, you'll
do whatever you can to stop them and failing that, return here as soon
as you are able?"
    Mouse thought longer about that. "Yes," she finally agreed.
    "Good," Sir Ongis said. He picked up her cage, carried it out onto
the terrace and put it on a table. Mouse waited for him to open the cage
door. He didn't. She stared at him from within the cross- hatching of
sunlight and shadow. He watched her.
    "Outside," she finally bellowed.
    His eyes narrowed. Finally, deciding agreement, he opened the cage
door. "Leaving the table would be attempting to escape," he remarked as
she crawled across the cage and out through the opening. If she said
anything in response, it wasn't to him.
    Mouse fell out through the cage door and sprawled on the table. She
lay still in the sunlight. Except for her size -- perhaps three hands
long -- and pretty face she scarcely looked like a faerie. Her dress was
still filthy from her sojourn underground. Her light-brown hair was
matted and disheveled -- but her mother was none too clean-looking
either. Her exposed skin was deathly pale and hanging loosely on her
bones.
    "You should eat something," Sir Ongis said, appraising her
condition and worrying about making her presentable to the Duke.
    She ignored him.
    "Why won't you eat any of the food I offer you?" he asked. "What do
you want to eat, choice nectar?"
    She shrugged. "All right," she breathed into the table.
    Sir Ongis stared at his sick prize. Then he went to see if anyone
besides bees knew how to collect nectar. Thank goodness it was spring,
he decided.

    Sir Ongis was a busy man, what with his own keep and household to
supervise (while his wife was sick) as well as his extensive lands. (His
servants, on the other hand, wished that he had a war or something
somewhere else to keep him amused instead of spending all day hectoring
them.) Nonetheless, he managed to visit his terrace from time to time
that day. On each visit, he found Mouse the same: She was lying
motionless in the sun, asleep, as far as he could tell, since she
ignored everything he said to her.
    Late in the afternoon, he stepped out onto the terrace just as a
shadow was finally creeping across the table.
    "Wake up!" he shouted. This time, she stirred, rolled over on her
back, and looked up at him. "Time to go back to your cage," Sir Ongis
announced. "I could let you stay out," he offered, "if you swear that
oath of allegiance."
    Mouse said nothing. She went over to the wicker cage and climbed
in. Sir Ongis spat a curse over the balustrade of his terrace and
carried the cage back inside.
    The next day, Mouse and Sir Ongis repeated themselves almost
exactly. Sir Ongis allowed Mouse to sit out on the terrace and Mouse
gave the same parole she had the day before. The only differences were
that Mouse looked healthier when she scrambled out of the cage in the
morning and Ongis chose slightly different words in the evening when he
reminded Mouse that she could end her imprisonment in the cage with a
few simple words. He said
    "Unless, of course, you've enjoyed this freedom and are willing to
swear that oath."
    Mouse looked at Sir Ongis and shouted (simply so that he could hear
her) "Not freedom. Just sunlight."
    Sir Ongis exploded. "Then you can rot in darkness!" he shouted. He
shoved Mouse into the cage and then carried the cage inside. He grabbed
the cage's cloth cover and carried both down to the keep's cellars where
his small, but adequate dungeon was. Going in, he slammed the cage down
on the ground and settled the cover over it. "There are rats down here,"
he remarked, savoring the thought. "Hope you don't get into a wrestling
match with any of them." He went out, securing the door behind him.
    Walking back up the stairs, he muttered to himself "Damn her! I
will have her play the toy for that Duke! It would be such a shame to
damage her though."

    The next morning, Sophie failed to show up outside Sir Ongis's
gate. Ongis nodded at Cahill's reporting this, the first time she'd
missed an appearance since the princess had been brought in. He imagined
all the explanations: Sick brat at home, too much work at home,
neighbors needing help, husband needing help, husband talking sense into
her, giving up hope. He considered going and breaking the news to the
mouse, but then remembered that he'd never told her about Sophie's vigil
to begin with. And right now, he wanted her left alone down there with
the imagined rats.
    No, better to tell her that she'd even been abandoned by her
mother. Sir Ongis smiled, lit a torch, and strolled down to the cellar.
Nice touch that: He'd bring the light of companionship and then carry it
away again after telling the mouse the news. He unbolted the door of the
dungeon, entered, walked to the cage, pulled the cover off --
    and stared at the empty cage.
    He crouched down, incredulous. He stared at the new hole in the
side of the cage, the one made both by pushing the wooden slats aside
and by gnawing at them. He jumped to his feet and prowled around the
chamber, looking for some evidence of a dead Mouse or how she escaped.
He found some. The door wasn't a perfect fit; there was a small hole in
it. Likewise, there were one or two small holes at the base of the walls
of the room, suitable only for a mouse -- or Mouse, perhaps. It was
difficult to guess how small a hole that creature could wriggle through.
    Sir Ongis stood up, thinking. The teeth-marks were evidence and
there almost certainly were rats down here, but he simply didn't believe
that his faerie princess had been carried off by any vermin. No, the
more telling clue was the absence of the girl's mother. She wasn't there
today because she knew the Mouse would be gone. She knew the Mouse was
gone because she helped her escape in the night -- or at least was
outside to meet her daughter when she emerged.
    Sir Ongis ran for his stable, shouting for men to join him. Soon a
party was riding out to the remote part of his lands where the farmer
Gregor had his house. He returned that evening empty-handed.

    [7 Naia, 1004.]
    Lady Kathryn Fennic awoke in the darkness. She felt different --
she felt better. She could feel! She felt the way that her willowy (and
emaciated, right now) body was too long for this sickbed. She felt
itching in her scalp from long, straight, dark brown hair that had been
confined too long under that cap. She felt weak and fatigued still, but
it was a good fatigue, a tiredness as though she'd finished a job right.
The lump in her belly wasn't weighing on her, sucking away her strength,
as it had for the past month or more. There was a weight on her chest,
though, and that was new too. She opened her eyes and beheld the faerie
princess for the second time in her life.
    (Sir Ongis had once shown his melisande to his wife immediately
upon acquiring her.)
    "You ran away," Kathryn said. "Many days ago." She'd heard the news
but hadn't cared much about it.
    The princess dropped onto her hands and knees; she was close to
Kathryn's ear. "I came back," she said.
    "Why?"
    There was a pause before the princess said anything. "Your Ongis
came after me," she began at last.
    "I know. He couldn't find you. He told me."
    "He found my family. Did he tell you that?"
    "You have a family? He found other faeries?"
    The princess's tiny face moued disgust. "Faeries! My father's a
farmer. Was. My mother's name's Sophie. She came here looking for me.
Did you know that?"
    "No."
    "I didn't either. Not until Dorian told me. He's my brother. I went
home and talked to him after I ran away from here. He told me that my
mother came here to try to get me back from your Ongis. She waited and
waited and then she went home. I never got to see her --"
    "Didn't you see her when you got home?"
    The princess made another face. "Are you stupid?" she asked. "It
took me days to get home. I didn't know the way exactly, I don't walk
very fast, and I was trying to keep away from foxes and people both. By
the time I'd gotten home, they'd already buried her. Besides, why would
I want to look at her body?"
    "She's dead?"
    "Yes, she's dead!" the princess hissed. "Your Ongis killed her."
    "How -- how do you know?" Kathryn asked.
    "He did it with my brothers watching, didn't he? He marched into
the house where my mommy and daddy and brothers and Barberry all were.
He marched in just after my mommy finally got home after walking all
night. He marched in with a bunch of his men and ordered my family to
give me back. And when my mother smiled at him and said they didn't know
where I was but anywhere else was better than his keeping, he got mad
and killed her. And that made daddy mad and he picked up a kitchen knife
and Ongis and his men killed him."
    "Oh, Kurin ... "
    "So that left Cedric and Con, because Dorian wasn't there and
Widric and Barberry were both crying. They looked at each other and then
at Ongis, but they didn't move. Ongis glared at them and then at the
carnage in that kitchen. Then he left. So he didn't tell you about
that?"
    "No."
    "So when Dorian told me, I had to leave again right away. I didn't
even see any of the others and I didn't tell them where I'm going or
what I'm doing. Do you understand that? It's no good going there again.
They don't know anything."
    "Yes, I understand that," Kathryn said. "So what are you going to
do?"
    "I decided to come back here. It's your Ongis's fault and mine my
parents got killed, isn't it?"
    Kathryn preferred to avoid any answer to that question. "But now
what are you going to do?" she asked.
    "Well, the way I see it, I have to do something to your Ongis -- "
    "I wish you'd stop calling him *my* Ongis," Kathryn exclaimed. She
tried to sit up, but was reminded how weak she still was. "He's Sir
Ongis, and you should refer to him that way."
    "No."
    "Well, what do you think you're going to do to Sir Ongis? Are you
going to murder him for killing your parents?"
    "You *are* stupid, aren't you?"
    "I prefer not to think so," Kathryn said. "What's stupid about it?"
    "If I just kill him because he killed them, that would make me no
better than him. And I think he's bad. I don't want to do anything like
him. So I'm going to do something else."
    "What?" Kathryn asked. Then her eyes widened. "Do you think you're
going to kill me?"
    The princess sat back and folded her arms. "That's stupid too. You
were dying already and besides, that's still too much like your Ongis.
Nope. I've cured you -- "
    "You cured me?" Kathryn laughed.
    "Well, me and God together."
    "You and -- " Kathryn was about to say "that useless, gutless,
rattling old voice", but one chooses very carefully the occasions to
blaspheme. Instead, she said "And how did you do that?"
    "I prayed to God and told her that you had a lump in you that was
killing you. And that it needed to go away."
    "Yes, and I also had Brother Cwynydd visiting me daily and praying
-- "
    "To Kurin. I know. And also that leech. Memfis. Sucking out your
blood. That's stupid."
    "How do you know they didn't cure me?"
    "They've been visiting you more than a month, haven't they?" The
princess grinned. "You didn't get better until I started praying for
you. Now you're cured."
    Lady Kathryn Fennic frowned. She had no intention of ever ascribing
her healing to Cephas Stevene; the Fennics had made that mistake before
and only the early death of Henri the idiot priest had finally repaired
that error. "All right," she said. "I'm cured. What do you expect to
gain from that? If you expect me to kill Sir Ongis for you -- "
    "No," the faerie princess waved away the idea. "That's still too
much like him. No. You're his wife. You're the mommy for his children --
if he has any children."
    "One. A boy. Also named Ongis."
    "Huh. I don't like that much. Anyway, he murdered my mommy and
daddy and now you're all better because I prayed to God for you to get
better. I want you to stay with your Ongis -- "
    "Sir Ongis!"
    "and hate him for me."
    "Hate him?" Kathryn asked.
    "Uh huh. He's a bad man. I've told you that, haven't I? It'll be
easy. All I want you to do is stay close beside him, right next to him
-- " the faerie bent close to Kathryn's ear, " -- and hate him for the
rest of his life." Then she crept away from the sickbed, leaving Lady
Kathryn staring upward at the invisible ceiling.
    She sighed. "I already did," she murmured.

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