Interlude III – Erol

After Vulk and Mariala had met with Master Vetaris, a fairly long and grueling afternoon by their own account, Erol had expected to be called to meet with the man himself. Although he had never had much to do with the T’ara Kul in the earlier parts of his life, and frankly had only half believed in their magics (beyond the day-to-day kinds everyone knew), he understood they were very jealous of their powers and perogitives.

Practicing magic without the stamp of approval of their organizations could be a fatal mistake, if all the old stories were to be believed. Yet here he was, able to cast actual Vularun spells, and his mind was bubbling with ideas for new spells…

“Well, not my mind, exactly,” Erol said aloud.

“Indeed not,” he agreed in a deeper, more cultured voice. “It is I who possesses the knowledge of the T’ara, and I will feed it to you as seems best to me, my young friend. You are not yet ready for all that I can teach you!”

“I suppose not, AsakoraErol sighed in his usual voice. “But I still wonder what the other mages will do when they find out I can cast spells…”

“When I was Kinen, before I merged my soul with my element to become Asakora, I had some dealing with the Umantari schools of magic… it’s true, they can be quite unreasonable with fellow Umantari practicing the Arts without training and official sanctioning.

“But those rules, and the Strictures of Yana, never applied to my people – the Telnori stand outside, and above, the Umantari Convocations, as well as those sad little schools of Khundari magics. Were we both still in your original body, it might be hard to argue an exemption for you, true. But since we now abide in this Telnori form, they have no standing to say yea or nay to us!”

“You don’t think there’ll be trouble with us… um… possessing Farendol’s body?” Erol asked hesitantly. He was still getting used to this new body, as superior as it was to his old one… it still felt odd, and not quite him… he felt no desire to give it up, however, even if he could.

“Hmmm, that remains to be seen,” Asakora replied, equally hesitantly. “Which is why I want you to practice that spell we’ve been working on. You must have it down perfectly, so that we may project the seeming of your old form around us whenever we need to. At least until some permanent accommodation can be made… probably with his Druidical superiors, but perhaps with his family, if –”

“And speaking of family,” Erol interrupted. “It will be easier to explain all this to my own if I can still look like myself. I had planned to visit soon, to see my mother in particular, before – before –”

His mind stuttered to a halt as a sudden searing vision of that last moment engulfed him… the swirling, malevolent, evil chaos of that alien mind as it touched his… the hideous probing… throwing up his mental shields and feeling them crumble… the rage and fury, his own, the other’s… then being hurled away

“That’s in the past, Erol,” Asakora said, taking full control of their body and seating them in a comfortable chair in what they planned to make their sanctum. “I saved you then, my friend, and I’ll see that no such harm comes to you ever again,” he soothed.

Slowly the terror and horror faded from Erol’s mind, and he returned to himself. Asakora reluctantly released control back to him, as he reached for a flagon of wine and poured them a glass.

“Yes, you saved me, and yourself, too,” he said after taking a deep drink. “But I guess you couldn’t do the one without doing the other, right? Like you said when we first met, you don’t want your knowledge to die out…”

“True enough, I suppose,” Asakora replied with a sigh. “I said then that I was rolling the dice with you, being out of other options. But to be fair, I came to see your potential during the fight with the Corruptor… it was then that I decided to stay around. Why trust to the dice, when I can train and guide you myself? And a a lucky thing I did, too, as it turned out!”

Erol couldn’t argue with that, and at his internal mentor’s prodding he began once again the mental exercises that would allow him to shape a Form that would hold the Principle that would create the illusion of who he had been…

♦ ♦ ♦

It was a full tenday before any word came from Master Vetaris, and in that time Erol was not idle. He had very quickly mastered the Seeming of Erol, the spell that allowed him to appear as his old self. This had allowed him to ease Jeb into the truth about what had happened… frankly, he had been afraid that he would have to let the lad go, as there was no way to constantly maintain the illusion with someone so close, and he hadn’t been sure that the former farm boy could handle the truth.

But he had surprised Erol, once the initial shock and dismay had passed, by enthusiastically embracing the idea of a dual identity. He quickly became a past master at diverting non-Hand visitors and coming up with explanations as to why his employer and their honored house guest were never seen at the same time. Of course Erol didn’t really do any entertaining, beyond having his friends in the Hand over occasionally, so the deception was easily maintained with the neighbors and local tradesmen.

It was given about generally that Azkor (as they decided to call Farenderol publically) was a friend and mentor to Erol, and had volunteered to spend some time at Ironstone tutoring the former gladiator in maters both scholarly and social, as befitted his new rank as a knight of the realm. And they were known to keep rather a busy schedule.

Almost as soon as he had returned to Shalara Erol had begun working at turning the room next to his bedroom into a proper sanctum for his T’ara Kul studies, designing the plans himself, but with considerable help from Asakora. The day after the coronation of Queen Miralda, which Erol had attended with the others but not, of course, the visiting Azkor, workers arrived at Ironstone to begin the rennovations.

He also hired a young woman to come in twice a tenday to clean the place, and gave long thought to the hiring of a decent cook. But most such expected to live in, and he certainly didn’t need uninformed eyes prying about all day and night. So, he continued to simply send Jeb out to Belos’ Cook Shack for meals. It was right across the street, very tasty, and not terribly expensive.

Not that he was hurting for money, of course, after they’d split the plunder from the ruins of Yalura. Plus, his revenues from his rental properties had begun to come in, and those were not insubstantial. One of those properties turned out to be a brothel, Veruth House, located only a few blocks from Ironstone at the west end of Helkar Avenue. It was an upper-middle class establishment, with a pleasant range of courtesans of both genders, and reasonable prices for persons of reasonable means.

The madame, Alina Veruth, was more than happy to provide a solution to her new landlord’s desire for female company – or more accurately, for his long-term guest’s desires. Ser Erol was not known to ever use any of the girls that were discreetly sent over several times a week, but Scholar Azkor soon gained quite a favorable reputation in certain circles of the city.

While the construction was going on in his sanctum-to-be Erol began searching for a glass maker who could provide him with very specifically designed glass spheres. These were needed for a spell Asakor had been working on for him, one that promised quite a nasty surprise to future enemies of the Hand during combat. In the end he decided on a local artisan, Irkon Vulse, whose shop was not only close by, at the corner of Stonefoot Street and Catspaw Road, but who was both talented and open to challenges.

Azkor and Irkon hit it off so well, and the first order of spheres were so well done, that when Ser Erol came to the shop to pay his “guest’s” bill, Irkon offered to make three large mirrors for the knight, recalling from his conversations with the scholar that his “host” desired such – at cost plus 5%. It was such a good deal that Erol scrapped his plans for highly polished copper sheeted walls in his sanctum at the last minute, much to the annoyance of his contractor.

It was shortly after the disgruntled carpenter and his men had left one afternoon the Jeb came into the half-finished study to announce that “some old dude” was here to see Ser Erol. This turned out to be Master Vetaris, whom the lad had left sitting in the sparsely furnished front parlor. Having already cast the Seeming of Erol to deal with the contractor, he wasted no time in going down to greet his visitor.

On seeing Erol the Gray Mage frowned momentarily, then smiled, somewhat grimly, in sudden understanding.

“I hadn’t heard that you had acquired the ability to restore your old appearance, ser,” he said as Erol seated himself across from him in the only other chair in the room. “An illusion, I sense, but… is it an artifact that produces such a strong seeming?”

“No, Magister, it’s a spell of my own devising,” Erol said, perhaps a bit smugly. He was gratified to see the old man’s eyes widen slightly. Asakora spoke silently, warning him not to get cocky.

“Well, I’m impressed, indeed I am,” Vetaris said, settling back and staring intently at his host. “Ser Vulk and Lady Mariala have filled me in on what happened out there, in the Blasted March, of course… but I had not expected someone so, er, previously untrained, to master so complex a spell so quickly.”

“Well, really I guess I have to give the credit to Asakora, the spirit who shared my mind for a short time, and passed on his powers… he, um, left it behind, the spell that is… along with some others…”

Vetaris leaned forward and waved a hand toward Erol. Suddenly the illusion was gone, leaving Farendol’s form facing the mage, a surprised look on his beautiful Telnori features.

“Really, ser!” Asakora huffed indignantly. “That is most rude, dispelling another mage’s work without so much as a by-your-leave. And in his own home, to boot!”

“My apologies,” the older man shrugged. “But I prefer to deal with things as they are, not as others might prefer I see them. To whom am I speaking?”

For a moment the man across from him seemed paralyzed, his body rigid with tension. But then he shook himself, like a man coming out of a doze, and relaxed. A brief smile flitted across his face.

“I suppose it was foolish of us to think we could deceive a Sur Vendaz of your reputation,” Asakora sighed. “Even an Umantari one. But it seemed politic that we should make the effort. I am Kiren Frostwind of Xaranda, latterly known as Asakora, the Elemental Great Beast of Air. Pleased to make your acquaintance, Magister VetarisErol has told me somewhat of you, of course.”

“Of course,” Vetaris replied slowly, more than a little unsettled. “And is Erol still in there with you, Kiren?”

‘Of course he is, I haven’t possessed him or evicted his soul as that demon attempted, if that is what you’re implying!” The Telnori seemed slightly miffed at the suggestion. “And I prefer to go by my nom de elementium, ser, which as I’m sure you know is Asakora.”

For the next three hours the Gray Mage talked with, listened to and studied intently the man across from him. At one point Jeb brought refreshments, but aside from that they were undisturbed. By the time he rose to take his leave, Vetaris had come to the conclusion that Erol Doritar was almost certainly mad…

And yet it seemed to be a madness that was working for him, one that had kept him from going actually insane in the face of almost unthinkable horrors. He was morally certain that the spirit of Kiren Frostwind had departed this plane, like the others after the Corruptor was again contained, leaving only his mastery of his element and certain memories behind.

Of course there was always a possibility… but no, while Erol spoke differently when “Asakora” was ascendant, it wasn’t really the way a Telnori would speak, but more like how a moderately educated fighter might imagine a Telnori mage would speak…. on the third hand, he certainly seemed to know words and concepts that a former gladiator and soldier shouldn’t… of course the man’s father was a noted scholar, so who knows what he’d picked up as a boy… and there was no doubt Kiren had left specific knowledge buried in that mind… who knew how it might pop up… and Erol was well on his way to deciphering, and understanding, the text of that book the Hand had recovered, Reaping the Whirlwind – Profiles in Vularun Magery… and he had developed, apparently on his own, a very effective illusion spell… the combat spells he had described seemed equally sound…

Vetaris sighed and rubbed his temples. He was getting a headache, and it probably wouldn’t be the last before this matter was settled. But whatever his doubts about what was really going on in the Kildoran’s head, Vetaris had a strong sense that he had it under control, at least for now.

There remained the problem of the body he currently wore, however…

“Your wearing of Druid Farendol’s physical form is… problematic,” he admitted to Erol as they walked towards the front doors. “But I think that it is not insoluable. For now I think your solution of maintaining your appearance as you were is wise, although it would be best if you limited “Azkor’s” public appearances as much as possible, please.”

“I understand,” Erol replied, shrugging. “It can be a bit of a strain maintaining the illusion, anyway. Although it does seem to be getting easier…”

“Yes, it will continue to do so as you get stronger in your mastery of Vularu. And if we find it necessary to permanently keep up the illusion, I’m sure an artifact of some kind can be crafted…”

“And about my continuing mastery of Vularu” Erol asked diffidently. “Will there be complications from the T’ara Kul?”

That, at least, I can assuredly fix,” Vetaris said with a wry smile. “Yours is far from the first case of psychic transfer of mastery, although we don’t like to advertise it. There have been rules in place for centuries to handle this sort of thing.

“It will require an examination by a panel of Ko Vendari, but I foresee no  problem there, since I will assemble them myself… and your mastery does seem quite strong. But until then, please be discreet in your use of the power, either as Erol or as, um, Asakora.”

Erol nodded gravely, and Master Vetaris took his leave.

♦ ♦ ♦

It was toward the end of the month when Erol again heard from Master Vetaris, and in the interval he had continued to study and advance in his understanding of Vularun priciples. But despite his determination to master this new knowledge under the guidance of Asakora, he was unwilling to let his physical skills atrophy. It took a tenday or better, but after regular bouts in Rekka’s Arena (now back in business after that fight with the Zalik Mal and the giant, hideous worm-thing), with a variety of sparring partners, he was finally getting the hang of this new body.

He was also getting more comfortable going out in public as Erol for more extended periods – the first time he spent an entire day and night out was on Draik’s 27th birthday. And even given how much he drank that night, he’d been surprised that the illusion held. Surprised, but grateful – it was a spectacular party, and the Demon’s Rain meteor shower that night had been even more spectacular.

He’d made real progress with several of the spells Arakora had felt he should learn, and he looked forward to trying them out in the field. He was also looking forward to testing his new armor, the special stuff Toran, Korwin and Draik had come up with using that disgusting worm acid… lighter and stronger they claimed, and it certainly seemed to live up to the promise.

By the time Kiril Vetaris showed up on his doorstep once again, Erol had almost forgotten about the various problems he faced – although Asakora had not. It was with some trepidation that he again faced the old Gray Mage, this time in his new sanctum cum study. But the concern soon gave way to relief when he heard what the Hand’s mentor had to say.

“The Council has informed me that they have decided, with some reservations, that the best thing to do at this point is simply acknowledge Farendol’s death in last month’s events, and let it be assumed his body was destroyed at the same time. To avoid the problem of someone recognizing his face, I have acquired a potion from another – from one of the members of the Council.”

He pulled a small flask from his vest cloak and handed it to Erol, who was not maintaining his illusion spell, knowing how the old man felt about it, at least in formal meetings such as this.

“Drink this, and within a few hours changes will begin in the body you wear… nothing major, for this is a subtle magic. But within five days your face will have changed enough that no one who knew Farendol will mistake you for him, close up. The vocal chords will also be slightly altered, to change your voice as well.

“It is a slow magic, so it would be advisable that you go out each day, meet the people who know “Azkor,” and interact with them as you normally would. People see what they expect, and if they notice something odd, they’ll simply put if off to imagination, or a bad memory.

“By the time the five days have passed they will have experienced the changes in your appearance incrementally, and will assume what they see now is what they have always seen… as I said, the changes will be subtle. But the process may be mildly uncomfortable for you, so be forewarned.

“On the sixth day, you will face your examination by three Ko Vendari. Do not wear your seeming, the Masters will wish to see you as you are, and they have been informed of the circumstances of your… translation. At least in broad terms – none of your examiners are associated with the Star Council in any way.”

Erol did as Master Vetaris instructed, after a brief internal debate, and the process was considerably more than just “uncomfortable.” He ached constantly for the five days, and half the time he felt as if tiny ants were crawling under his skin. But he was a warrior and a gladiator and stoic by nature, so he showed his discomfort not in the slightest. He went about the city as instructed, and while he did get the occasional double-take, for the most part people seemed not to notice the changes.

On the morning of the sixth day, as he prepared to ride out with Master Vetaris to the Vularun chantry outside of the city, he gazed into one of the mirrors in his sanctum, examining his new new face. He rather hoped that this was the last time he’d have to get used to seeing a stranger’s face staring back at him.

As promised, the changes were subtle… the cheek bones a little broader, not quite so prominent, the brow a little thicker, the lips thiner and the shape of mouth altered… even his eyes were slightly different in cast and color, more gray than blue now… he was slightly shorter, maybe a tad thicker… Taken indivdually, the changes didn’t amount to much, but in the aggregate… he had already carried his body very differently than the real Farendol had, and with this last transformation… Someone who’d known Farendol might think they’d recognized him across a crowded street, but on closer inspection would realize they’d been mistaken.

“Not bad,” Erol said to his reflection, with a sudden grin. He rather thought he caught little glimpses of his own, natural features in the mix….

“Indeed not, my young apprentice,” Asakora replied with a more sardonic smile. “But we should probably have new girls from Madame Veruth for awhile… to avoid any possible… confusion.”

♦ ♦ ♦

The examination at the Skyrim Chantry, located on a bluff overlooking the sea half a days ride south of the city, proved to be as smooth as Master Vetaris had promised. The examiners, two men and a woman, were Ko Vendari, representing all six Convocations between them. Erol had stayed in the background and let Asakora run things, but in his name, of course… Vetaris had agreed they didn’t need to know about his “passenger.”

He’d demonstrated not only his practical grasp of Vularun magics, but his intellectual understanding of the underlaying principles of the Convocation as well. His study of that looted book had been well worth the late nights and occasional headaches, he decided, to Asakora’s dry internal chuckle.

The last thing his examiners had him do was cast his Seeming of Erol, after which they had used their own powers to try and pierce the illusion. They had done so, but not quickly, and not, he rather fancied, easily. Indeed, they seemed slightly taken aback at the mastery of the Art he had displayed that afternoon.

“Well I should hope they’d be impressed,” Asakora had sniffed to Erol in silent affront as they retired to their guest quarters for the night. “I’ve been at this a thousand years longer than they’ve been alive, after all.”

The ride back to Shalara the next morning was pleasant, despite the overcast and the chill wind blowing in from the Sea of Ukal. It was the second day of Turniki, and fall was definitely in the air. The summer had been cooler and cloudier, no doubt due to the spring eruption of Mt. Katai, and the autumn promised to come early this year.

He was now officially a Kolori of the the Vularu Convocation, and had a year and a day, at minimum, to do the things he needed to if he wanted to advance in rank. The Skyrim Chantry had taken him on as a retroactively enrolled apprentice, and the lady Elira Coztormani, one of his examiners, had agreed to be his informal “advisor.”

“But,” Master Vetaris had said when they were well on their way home, “I trust that should you have questions or difficulties that you will seek out my help first, if possible. Should, um, Asakora  be unable to help you, of course…”

Erol grinned as they rode north, a strange new future stretching out before him – not one a war-hungry boy, eager to avenge his countries hurts at the hands of foreigners, could possibly have imagined, to be sure, but wonderful nonetheless…

Interlude II – Devrik

On the morning of the second day after their return to Dor Dür Devrik left the keep just as the sun was beginning to lighten the eastern sky. Raven alone saw him off in that pale gray light – he’d said his good-byes to his friends the night before, and kissed his sleeping son in the pre-dawn darkness. Of them all, only Raven really understood this need of his to get away, to find his center again.

Actually, she seemed to understand it better than he did. He’d expected some resistance to his leaving again so soon, and alone – honestly, he’d expected fireworks. But she had been quietly understanding of his need to pursue what she called his “vision-quest.” Young men, and sometimes young women, of her tribe went off alone into the trackless marshland when they came of age, to find their spirit animal, the guiding spirit of their destiny, and gain their true name. She had done it herself at age 16, as had her brother, Black Hawk. Bird guides were strong in her tribe of the Rethmani, and most particularly in her family…

“You are old for a vision-quest, my love,” she had said the night before, after they had finished making love for the second time, half teasing and half serious. “I know your people’s ways are different than mine, but I think that your kind need a guiding spirit no less.

“I’m not sure how your people find it… in these schools you’ve told me of? Or in the wisdom of your elders? But whatever the method, I think you have not found yours… and it is time you did. Not just for your sake, but for our son’s. Solitude is the best way to hear the inner voice, my heart, to let the spirits reveal what makes your soul resonate in harmony with the All, rather than in opposition to it.”

Not how he would have said it perhaps, but her words had struck a chord within him. They had matched his own inchoate sense that he needed to get away, to free himself of all distractions so that he could find his balance again, discover the core of who he was, and finally seize control of his own destiny.

So it was with his wife’s blessing that he now climbed the gentle slope of the Elf’s Mound to the Gate that would take him… where? In his talks with Raven he had found that what his heart most wanted was to see the lands of his mother’s people. He had grown up on the tales she and his aunt had told of the wild, cold northlands, of viking raids and mysterious fjords, of waterfalls and glaciers… but as vividly as these pictures lived in his mind, he had never actually seen them with his own eyes.

“Perhaps that is at the heart of your troubles,” Raven had said, frowning thoughtfully, when he spoke of his desire. “You were born of two worlds, but you have ever only truly known your father’s world. It may be that whatever spirit is meant to guide you lays waiting in your mother’s homeland.”

But it seemed cheating somehow, using the Nitaran Gates for this journey… this vision-quest. Even if he knew for sure how to reach the northlands, which he didn’t. No, he would travel the long way, for was not the journey equally as important as the destination? Especially when you weren’t really sure what the destination was, precisely… beyond peace of mind.

With a wry grin, he summoned the energies required and opened the Gate to Shalara

•••

From Shalara he had immediately booked passage on the next ship leaving for Olvânaal, a fast merchantman named Swiftwing. He had considered trying to commandeer the Fortune’s Favor, which was in port and preparing for a run to Fordym, in Valtira, but decided against it. Aside from having given up any right to do such a thing when he opted not to buy into ownership of the vessel with his friends, the whole point of this exercise was to get away from all he knew… and while Captain Levtor and the crew were not close friends, he knew them, and they him, all too well.

The Swiftwing left Shalara on the morning of 29 Emblio, sailing upstream on the wide waters of the Silvereye River, as Devrik stood at the rail and watched the city he now called home recede into the distance. As the last tower slipped into the summer haze, he felt a weight he had hardly been aware of lift from his shoulders. A least a little bit…

With a fair wind behind her, it took three days for the Swiftwing to reach the Western Locks of the Arakez Canal, three days spent in blissful silence except for the calming sounds of wind and water. Even the calls and chatter of the crew were no more than a meaningless background noise, like the babbling of a brook.

He had made it clear to Captain Alina Boreg, a tough, gray-haired, square-faced woman in her mid-fifties, that he wished to be left alone, and she had made sure her crew respected that. She had also invited him to dine with her each evening, a courtesy he had reluctantly accepted. Thankfully, he discovered that her own taciturn nature and disdain for small talk made the meals a quiet pleasure in their own right.

But now, as he stood at the starboard rail, he felt his carefully cultivated calm begin to slip away. The locks stood on the edge of the ruined city of Xaranda, and as the vessel rose, so too did his suppressed roil of memories, fears and suffocating rage. It was only a few kilometers from here that things had begun to fall apart, it seemed to him, and barely half a month ago. Where he had first met Farendol… and an Elemental Great Beast… a Beast of Fire

It came to him then, suddenly, that it was his power over fire that was at the heart of this inner turmoil, whatever Raven thought about his heritage, his parents. He had been born with the power, it was a part of him, but it had brought him more trouble than joy so far. And worse, it seemed to be the focus of these damn prophecies about his destiny, and his son’s. Perhaps life would be better if he could snuff out the flame…

Kalos knew, he was more conflicted than ever after his brief but intense possession by the ancient Telnori mage Yimara Goldentouch, the soul of Zhezekar, the Great Elemental Beast of Fire. He had accepted her gift of knowledge, in the hope that it would help guide him to the right path, the Path of Light that everyone spoke of as one of his possible destinies.

He wondered now if that had been a mistake. All it had done so far was cloud and confuse his mind with memories and knowledge not his own… and he was certain that it was this very confusion that had allowed his mind to be so easily deceived by the Demon Lord Haranol. The reason he had been tricked into murdering a good man… one who had lived more than 600 years and might have lived two or three hundred more… cut down by Devrik’s own treacherous hand…

He cut off the thought, the same circling möbius strip of recrimination that had been playing in his mind since the event, and sought to regain his recent calm. And in that moment he made a fierce vow to himself that he would not to use his Yalvan powers on this journey, no matter the provocation. He would live or die by his sword alone on this “vision quest!”

•••

The transit of the canal took two days and two more sets of locks, days Devrik spent mostly in his small berth below decks. The edges of the Blasted March rolled by to the south, and he had no desire to spend any more time looking at that desolation. Nor wondering what the thrice-cursed Demon Lord might be getting up to out there…

Once the ship had cleared the Eastern Locks, however, he again spent most of his time above decks, enjoying the late summer sun on Lake Benil, and the rushing trip downstream on the River Ansil. By sunset on 5 Kilta, as the Swiftwing tied up at a dock in the city of Lairial, he had once again recovered a measure of peace and inner balance.

Devrik spent that night ashore, and all the next day, enjoying the sights and sounds of the historic and tragical city. He had always heard that the monument to Talorin Silvereye was beautiful, if not as massively impressive as the one in Azdantür, and seeing it he had to agree.

A serene pavilion of white marble and silver filagree, set in the center of an artificial lake and reached by a single low bridge, the monument referenced the the Rape of Lairial not at all, not even the Lairialan Odyssey. Instead it held a simple statue at its heart, of the famous Gray Mage surrounded by a score of children, water flowing from his hands to cascade among the smaller figures and surround them all in a circle of protection. Devrik was unexpectedly moved.

The Swiftwing sailed on the evening tide, and Devrik stood at the rail watching the lesser moon rise in the east and cast its pale violet light over the white walls of the receding city. Five hundred years ago a handful of boats had fled the burning, dying city, and the hundreds of children aboard them must have looked back much as he did now… if with very different emotions… while Talorin raised both the fog that shielded them and the winds that bore them away from all they had known. And on to safety…

Over the next five days Devrik found himself beginning to relax more, and by the time the ship sailed into the harbor of Poldarik on the afternoon of 11 Kilta he had become quite friendly with some of the crew, to the point of exchanging fighting tips, land vs. sea fighting. Erol had taught him a trick or two about ship fighting too, of course, but his mind quickly shied from thinking of his friend and his… current condition…

As soon as the vessel was warped in and tied off, Devrik took his leave of Captain Boreg and her men. Hoisting his light pack, settling his battlesword firmly in its sheath on his back, he strode up the hill toward the walled town of dark gray stone and black shingled roofs, the wooden beams of their peaks carved in the likenesses of dragons, wolves and ravens…

•••

A tenday later, Devrik stood in a clearing in the Forest of Herka Thûm, near the northern shore of the Long Lake, and heaved a sigh of weary resignation. When it was time to return home, he wouldn’t be going by way of Poldarik… killing one of the ruling lords of the land, however minor, however deserving of death, and however fair the fight, would not sit well with the other Olvânaali overlords, since it had been done in defense of the oppressed local Tarim folk.

He couldn’t really regret his actions, however… Gerik Hardalsig had been a brutal pig of a man, and his attempt to enslave the free Tarim clan of Rälum had been illegal even by the loose standards of his own conquering people. It was just a pity that, given how the always-restive relationship between the oppressed Tarim natives and their Skavarian-descended overlords had recently flared into open rebellion in some areas, Valkir Hardalsig’s peers were unlikely to be very understanding. Almost two hundred years had done little to truly integrate the two peoples, and it didn’t look to be starting now.

On his journey north to visit the thrandor of his mother’s family Devrik had guested at the small thrandor of Clan Hardalsig near the southern shore of the Long Lake, and been singularly unimpressed by his host and his fierce contempt for the local people. The man’s attitude certainly fit the pattern Devrik had noted soon after his arrival in Olvânaal, but seemed taken to an absurd extreme. Thus he’d been surprised when the Valkir had suggested that he should guest the next night at the steading of a Tarim neighbor across the lake, Clan Rälum.

The Rälum Chiefman, Hemsel, had been wary when the stranger arrived towards dusk, requesting shelter for the night, but the custom of guesting was strong and he would not lightly turn away a traveler, even a Skavarian such as Devrik obviously was. But during dinner Devrik won over his hosts with his tales of being raised in the western Lowlands, and had in turn been been deeply impressed by their kindness. As everyone relaxed and began to talk more freely, and he learned of the recent attempts by Clan Hardalsig to claim the Rälum as serfs, a claim rejected in the Clan Courts, he became increasingly uneasy.

Before retiring to his guest’s bed in the loft Devrik, after a brief internal debate over whether or not this constituted “using his powers,” had taken out his cards and laid down a reading… As a result, he and his hosts were able to ambush the attackers before they reached the steading in the dark hour before dawn.

Valkir Hardalsig had been shocked to find his plan apparently revealed, and outraged as only one who knows he is in the wrong can be. His fury at Devrik, to his mind a fellow Olvânaali who had betrayed him, was unbounded. He was practically frothing at the mouth when he’d accepted the traveler’s offer to settle the matter champion-to-champion in single combat.

The Valkir’s chief lieutenant seemed to think this was a bad idea, but a few fiercely whispered words from his lord silenced him. And a few minutes later, after Devrik had sent Hardalsig’s head flying from his shoulders, the man had obeyed his master’s final instructions and ordered his men to attack. But both Devrik and Chiefman Hemsel had been expecting treachery…

After the brief, bitter, fight, Devrik questioned the surviving lieutenant and discovered that Hardalsig had intended his former guest to be the perfect excuse to attack the hated Tarim steading – after the fact he would claim this foreign traveler had gone berserk and killed the household in their sleep, with the Valkir playing hero to ride in and succor the survivors. And not incidentally kill the berserk foreigner, of course. There might be suspicions, naturally, but with a fait accompli and none living to gainsay the tale, the result was unlikely to be challenged.

Now, as his hosts led off their prisoners and began discussing their next move, Devrik prepared to move on himself. He had been surprised at how much more he liked the Tarim folk of this land than his own supposed blood-kin; but as much as he hated the situation here, there was little he could do to change it. And the presence of a foreigner, maybe especially one with blood-ties here, could only complicate things.

As he hefted his pack and strode off into the dark tangle of the surrounding forest he began to wonder if he should continue on with his plan to seek out his relatives after all. He’d given his clan name (in retrospect a mistake, but who could have known?) and he didn’t want to involve his unknown family in a blood feud. Vendetta Law! By Kalos, what a mess that was – for all its flaws, the Republic was at least a land of proper laws. Even if they could sometimes be twisted by the rich and powerful, but when and where was that not true, in any system of Men?

His mind occupied with these dark thoughts, he followed the narrow forest track northwestward all that day, avoiding the few scattered thrandors he passed. He had decided he would camp from now on, rather than risk further local complications, at least until he neared the lands of Clan Askalan. As dusk began to fall, earlier than usual thanks to the dense canopy of the forest, he began to look for a suitable spot to make camp.

As he cast about he suddenly spied a fire flickering through the undergrowth, apparently in a small clearing some way off the trail. Warily he approached, sword loosened in its sheath but not drawn. If this fellow traveler appeared benign, well and good, but if not…

“Well don’t just stand there skulking in the shadows, Devrik,” the woman on the far side of the campfire called out dryly. “Come join me… the fire keeps the damn mosquitos off. And I think we have much to talk about, sister-son.”

With a start of recognition, Devrik stepped out of the trees and into the clearing. It had been almost 15 years, but he knew that voice as well as any other in the world, save perhaps his mother’s.

Aunt Kathela? Is that really you..?” For a moment suspicion and renewed fear of deceiving illusions darkened his mind. With a laugh his aunt quickly dispelled both suspicion and fear – the story she told, about his 11th birthday and the scene she’d come upon behind the drying shed – well, he knew she’d never shared that tale, and he hastily acknowledged the fact before she reached its embarrassing conclusion.

“But Aunt, how came you to be here?” he asked, seating himself on a rock conveniently placed across the fire from the small dark haired woman. Dark hair now heavily streaked with gray he saw with a shock. “This is no chance meeting, I think.”

“We skalds seldom have chance meetings,” she laughed. “Indeed, some would argue that no meeting is ever by chance… as we are all ruled by Fate.”

Fate! Feh! I’ve had enough of Fate, thank you,” Devrik barked a harsh, unsmiling laugh. “ I will be the master of my own destiny, not the plaything of others, not even the Immortals!”

“So say we all, at some point in our lives,” Kathela replied cooly, her own smile fading away. “So what brings you to that point, my sister-son? Tell me what the years have brought you, since last we met.”

Reluctantly at first, and then with growing abandonment as he lost himself in the telling, he recounted the last 15 years of his life since leaving his mother and aunt in Thurnok… the two years in his father’s home, the disdainful wife and the half-brother she eventually bore… the fires, the near deaths, the rescue and the scarring of his voice… the banishment to the decade of hell in the Chantry of Kerig… the few highlights of those years, the teachers Wendeth and Kelskon, fellow student Sarno Janir, and the ancient wise-woman Mataya… the time with the mercenaries…

His story grew more detailed as he spoke of the last year and a half… his friends in the Hand of Fortune… his wife Raven and his son Aldari… the dangers they faced, not least from those who sought to use his powers… the meeting with the Mad God, and the gift He gave… possession by an ancient spirit of Fire… and at last, his delusional murder of a friend, and the wall he seemed to have hit…

As he wound down there was silence in the little circle of light – night had fallen fully while he spoke. His aunt picked up a stick and stirred the fire to greater life before she spoke.

“So,” she said at last, gazing intently at him over the flames. “You blame yourself for being unable to resist the manipulations of one of the most powerful of the ancient enemies of our world, one even the Immortals themselves cannot destroy, but only contain?”

“Yes!” Devrik growled fiercely. “Everyone – you, the priests of Korön, Mataya, even the god Kalos – speaks of my great destiny, for either good or evil. And now my son is dragged into it as well, and yet no one is willing or able to tell me what exactly it all means, how I should choose one path over another!

“I have no desire to bring the world down in fire and flame, but if I can’t control my own mind, if I can be so easily manipulated, how can I hope to be its savior? No, it’s better that I remove myself from it all, retire with Raven and our son away from the world, and take control of my own destiny, Fate be damed!”

“And that, my beloved sister-son, is at the heart of your turmoil,” Kathela smiled sadly. “You believe that control is truly possible, that with enough will and determination a man can seize his future and bend it to his own will alone.

“But Devrik, I tell you that that is a fantasy, and a dangerous one. For we are all – men, women, Immortals, and even the demons – embedded in the World together and enmeshed in the Web of Fate, whether we will or nil. We are bound inextricably to one another, and there is no escaping that.

“You say you desire a simple life, removed from the larger concerns of the world… consider it, then, in smaller wise. Say it is your desire of a day simply to sit in a tavern and drink quietly… but another man takes offense at your presence for he hates red haired men, so he seeks to fight you. You have no control over his actions – you may choose to fight him, or not, but that choice is forced upon you. And whichever you choose, or even if you choose not to choose, there will be ramifications moving out like ripples in a pond. Ripples of consequence, as great for each non-decision as for each decision, and no man can see them all, nor even the Immortals themselves.

“That is the reality of the World, for we are merely parts in a greater whole, and the other parts will interact with us no matter our desires in the thing. The only choice we are given is how we react to what the World throws at us; no matter how constrained we may feel, there is always a choice, and it is ours to make alone.

“Even suicide does not remove us from the Web of Fate, for that too is a choice, and the consequences ripple out to impact others, and we may never fully know where or when or how. You worry that you will be used as a force for evil, for destruction, or that your son will be so used. But Devrik, I have known you most of your life, and I tell you, you need not fear your destiny, for your feet have long been on the Path of Light.”

“You knew me for the first twelve years of my life, Aunt,” Devrik said bluntly, but without rancor. “I was an unformed boy when last you saw me, and much has happened since then to form the man I am now.”

“Ah, my sister-son, I hesitate to tell you this,” his aunt said with a wry smile. “And yet… perhaps it’s best you see that not all illusions are evil.”

As he looked across the flames at her, Kathela’s face began to change, aging before his eyes, becoming a mass of wrinkles in which were embedded two bright green eyes and an almost toothless smile. Her hair lengthened and coarsened, turn white and flying out in a rats nest of tangles. In an instant she had become Mataya, the old crone who had lived in a crude hut in the woods outside Kerig and been his unofficial teacher of wisdom not offered in the chantry.

‘You were Mataya all along?!” he growled, torn between anger and a strange excitement. “Why did you… why didn’t you tell me–”

“I did it because I was concerned, after we heard of the fires and your exile to the chantry, of what path your feet might be set upon. I had laid a firm foundation, but only a foundation, in your youth. I wished to see that the work of building your house was well started, and I felt that was best done in disguise.

“And I left when I did, before your final year, because you were beginning to see through the illusion. Not fully, not then, but I could see it would not be long, and it were best you not do so, then. But now..”

And suddenly Devrik found that he could see through the illusion to the woman beneath. He narrowed his eyes suspiciously. “You’re just letting me see through it –”

“No! Truly, I am not. You have a mind at least as strong as your body, Devrik, and such minds can build immunity to illusion and phantasms, once exposed to them. You had a powerful dose with that Demon Lord, and it has honed your native resistence. It will take work, and time, but you can strengthen your mind against false images… and take other steps as well.

“But it is not illusion or deception that is your problem now – it is your distrust of the Flame. Kalos has removed the phobia, true, and you have striven to suppress the ingrained, residual fear. But to fully become who you can be – I will not say who you should be – you must actively embrace the Flame! And I think I can help…”

She reached into the scrip at her side and pulled out a small vial, stoppered with a blue wax seal. Breaking the seal, she handed the vial across the flames to her nephew, who reluctantly took it. He stared dubiously at it, then at her.

“Trust me, Devrik. It will not hurt you, and it may well help you.”

Devrik considered for a moment, then with a quick motion he downed the contents. It tasted like bitter plum, with a smokey aftertaste. He waited expectantly, staring across at his aunt. He felt nothing.

“I don’t think-”

“Look into the flames!”

Kathela’s voice had taken on a deep, commanding resonance, and he automatically gazed down into the heart of the small fire – and suddenly it wasn’t a small campfire anymore, it was a bonfire, a blaze, a conflagration! And he was falling, falling into the flames, though he did not burn… he felt only a pleasant heat that beat upon him in rolling waves… and then he was standing in a place he’d been before, a vast cavern where flames rose from a great fissure… the place where he had met Yimara, in his possession by that ancient soul, the Flame at the Heart of the World

She was not there now, but he felt the echo of her presence in his mind, and he looked again into the Flame… he saw the Chaos that was there, and it frightened him… but he continued to look, deeper, and suddenly he could see the patterns within the chaos… and going deeper still, chaos again seemed to be in ascendance… but within that chaos he again found structure and order… Chaos and Order, inextricably linked in an eternal dance, going deeper than any human mind could grasp…

He never fully remembered the totality of that vision, but when, after some timeless time he had returned to himself, and the small campfire in the heart of a dark forest, he knew that he had touched something Real. The fear was well and truly gone, and he knew that the Flame was his destiny after all, and that it would be on his terms and no one elses.

There was a reason there were two gods of fire, he thought, still gazing into the flames. Fire represented both destruction and creation, and both were equally true and eternally linked. Kalos was the Fire Creative, and Korön personified the Fire Destructive, and Devrik knew where his allegiance lay. He had long worshipped Cael, a fighting god and god of honor, but perhaps his true faith belonged with the Mad God after all… he had sought a spirit guide, and found that he’d already been given one in the form of Yimara.

He looked up then, half expecting his aunt to have vanished, but she was there, watching him intently. He didn’t try to explain what he’d seen, what he now knew, and she didn’t ask. She simply smiled when she saw the certainty in his eyes.

They made camp then, ate a quick meal, and retired to their bedrolls. They spoke no more of weighty matters, only of the small matters of family and daily life. Kathela was anxious to hear all he could tell her of his son, and of his wife, and he in turn was pleased to hear more of his mother than her terse letters usually revealed.

The next morning on arising, his aunt announced that she planned to accompany him to the Askalan thrandor, to make sure he got into no more trouble and that he received the proper welcome. When he expressed concern over the possibility of a feud with the Clan Hardalsig after his recent actions, she just smiled and said she’d see to it… by the time she was done, his own relatives would be willing to hang the deceased Valkir themselves!

Two days travel brought them to the ancestral lands of the Clan Askalan, and Devrik at long last met his northern family. With his aunt to guide him, a respected (and, he soon realized, somewhat feared) skald of wide repute, it all went fairly smoothly.

He met the uncle for whom he’d been named, and his three cousins, all of a similar age to himself, and visited the grave of Kathela’s twin brother Stavin, who had died the day after they were born. The younger of his uncles, Tynal, lived with his wife and three children on the coast four days hard riding north, so he only heard tales of them.

His grandfather Ronalt had died almost 30 years ago, but his grandmother Akio was still alive at 75 and ruling over her family with an iron will. She accepted this new grandson, whom she had only known of theoretically, with provisional wariness, but by the end of his visit had fully embraced him as a lost sheep of her flock.

“When you and your barbarian wife get tired of those crowded cities of the southern lowlands,” she told him as he took his leave of her on his final day, “you bring that great-grandson of mine back here – you’ll always have a place at your clan’s hearths.”

After all the goodbyes were said and gifts exchanged Kathela guided Devrik to a spot she knew of half a days ride east of the thrandor. There, in an open glen a waterfall tumbled over a short cliff into a small pool. Rough steps had long ago been carved into the stone wall, leading to a circle of partially tumbled standing stones near the edge of the stream.

“The closest Gate to the old homestead,” she said. “Memorize its pattern, sister-son, if you wish to more easily return here someday. And now, I leave you to find your way back to your wife, son and friends, while I go about the land and make sure your heroic muddling about with the Tarim and their troubles comes out properly…”

She hugged him then, and without another word strode off into the dappled shade of the forest. When she and vanished from sight Devrik turned reached out with the Sight to find the Nitaran hole in the fabric of space-time, and give it a certain, specific, wrench…

He stepped between the standing stones and vanished.

Interlude I – Homecoming

Black Hawk sent a runner to inform Draik that the Hand was returned, and request that he wait upon them in Ser Alakor’s solar in the keep. He joined them on the short walk to the town and up the hill to the fortress, filling them in on the recent local happenings, which were few enough.

Though they remained on constant alert, no enemy forces had yet tried the defenses of Dor Dür. The summer had been cooler and rainier than usual, no doubt due to the eruption of Mt. Katai back in the spring. There was some concern that the harvest would be poor this fall, but stores were good… barring a complete disaster at harvest, they should be good through the winter.

Raven and the wee baby Aldari met the group at the gate of the keep, and everyone smiled at the passionate greeting she gave her husband. His son seemed thrilled to see his papa again, reaching chubby hands out to be held and cooing baby garble enthuiastically. Devrik returned his family’s greetings with smiles, hugs and whirling spins around to the sound of infant shrieks of delight, but Mariala thought that he seemed distracted, even so.

Raven also noticed her husbands half-hearted attempts at gaiety, and as the others made their way up to the solar to tell Alakor and his brother all the latest news, she drew Devrik to her own rooms. She had no doubt that she would learn soon enough what was bothering her beloved…

So it was that only Devrik was missing when Draik arrived and the Hand began the long tale the past tenday. With these close friends they spared no detail, including their being tricked into releasing one of the Four Lords of Chaos and the death of Erol. Explaining his resurrection in a Telnori body was the most difficult part of the story… in the end both Alakor and Draik agreed that this part of the tale would best be kept as quiet as possible.

Of course rumors were already flying around the small town and keep, but the return of the Hand of Fortune to Dor Dür was not the biggest news feeding the gossips. That honor went to the exciting events of the recent Battle of Bankir Bridge. Ser Alakor related the tale to the Hand that night during the modest welcoming feast he threw in their honor – a mostly family affair, with only himself, his brother Draik, Raven and her brother Black Hawk, and Marik Canatori, the current captain of the Hand of Vengeance, invited.

“The main Tharkian army, under the command of the usurper “King” Laravad himself,” he began, “made a massive push forward from Dor Fensir on the 17th, taking Tocharn Abbey easily and investing Dor Sholan.

Tocharn is the seat of the Kleros of Feradis,” Mariala interjected, frowning. “They didn’t capture the Kleros did they?”

“No, fortunately,” Ser Alakor replied with a wry grin. “Kleros Artelkes is a crafty political beast, like most of his clan. His cousin, the Earl of Burnan, keeps him apprised of events, of course, and he knew he was on the front line – he had his escape contingencies well in hand.

“Even so, it was a close thing. Laravad moved surprisingly swiftly, and the Klersos and his entourage barely kept ahead of the Tharkians. They made it to the relative safety of Dor Sholan and the protection of the Sheriff of Buran, but were then trapped there when the Tharkians besieged the keep. Ser Eris Karondal is a good man, though, and his defenses were well prepared. Without treachery and surprise on his side, Laravad couldn’t take Sholan easily.

“Indeed, the Tharkians barely stopped to invest the keep. The bulk of the army moved on south after only a day or so, to force the crossing of the Sürkil River at Bankir Bridge. The majority of the siege equipment went with him, so it seems obvious that Laravad intended to do his best to take Kar Bankir.

“But the Crown Princess surprised everyone by taking a major part of the Army of the East under her own command, and racing north to bolster the levies of Lord Torad. The Earl’s forces had marched out from Kar Bankir and held the Bridge against the Tharkians all day on the 20th. But they were badly outnumbered, and with boats landing on either side, they were forced to retreat by the early morning of the 21st.

“That is when Princess Miralda and her army arrived, having marched through the night from Dor Norasol. You want your troops as fresh as possible before a battle, or course, but the Princess had realized time was the critical element here – a day later and they’d have been dealing with an entrenched army, a siege, and an enemy with a beachhead on the wrong side of the river!

“Thanks to that foresight her men charged in from either side of the Earl of Burnan’s force, taking the Tharkians by surprise. Miralda led the main charge, with her father’s cadre of Royal Knights around her, and she inspired not only her own tired troops but the exhausted levies of Bankir as well. The sides were more evenly matched now, and the tide turned very quickly – in the space of two hours it turned into a semi-route of the Tharkian army!

Laravad and perhaps half his army escaped back over the Bankir Bridge, in an unfortunately well done fighting retreat… the Princess and the Earl followed and secured the eastern bridgehead, but they decided their troops were so exhausted that to pursue would be to invite another reversal of fortunes, and this time one not in their favor.

“Instead they rested the army and the levies overnight, and the next morning set out after Laravad, leaving only enough men to secure the bridge. They expected to find the Tharkians thoroughly entrenched around Dor Sholan, but instead that afternoon found them in considerable disarray.

“It seems that Ser Eris had led a sortie out from his keep in the middle of the previous night, destroying most of the siege engines the enemy had been assembling and sowing confusion in their ranks by killing the commanding officer. When Laravad and the remains of the army had arrived a few hours later, he apparently had his hands full trying to stop a full-scale route!”

Alakor laughed at the thought, drained his goblet and motioned for more wine before going on.

“When the Crown Princess and Lord Torad arrived with their army they found the Tharkians barely organized… but not for battle! Apparently Laravad had decided discretion was the better part valor, and was preparing to retreat… I myself think he realized how tenuous his control of his forces was, and knew he could lose it all, then and there, if he allowed it to come to a battle.

“So, despite a numerical superiority, he fought another “tactical advance to the rear,” as they say. Princess Miralda and Lord Torad pressed them hard, but could never bring them to a stand-up fight. By the 23rd the Tharkians had retreated beyond Tocharn Abbey, which was recovered mostly intact, to the great relief of the Kleros, whom they had in tow, and the pursuit was called off.”

The warriors around the table nodded their heads in approval. They all knew the temptation to pursue an enemy just a little further – and how often that could lead to stretching your forces too thin and to your own defeat. It was a wise commander who knew when to stop and consolidate their gains.

“The people have been enthralled by Crown Princess Miralda’s bravery and skill,” Alakor continued. “She’s certainly put to rest any grumblings among the nobles about her being named the Heir. And she really is both strategically and tactically quite brilliant… perhaps more so than even her father, honestly.

“She not only had the foresight to stop the Tharkians at Bankir Bridge, but also to realize that they might be just one prong of an attack. Before she set out from Shalara she ordered a smaller contingent of the army and some of her father’s own Royal Levies to move north to bolster the defense of Dor Belthin and the Belthin Bridge… a move that proved very wise indeed.

“A smaller but stealthier army of Tharkian mercenaries, Urkonis rebels and northern barbarians tried to take the bridge and invest the keep… and were repelled by the royally-reinforced troops of Baron Korathin. Actually, it was the Baron’s twin sons, Ser Corwyn and Ser Merwyn, who led the defense… and in the end they were forced to throw down the bridge. But that might not be so bad in the end, with the rebel forces of Urkonis so close…

In any case, the enemy was defeated, if not quite so decisively as at Bankir. Had both attacks succeeded, Laravad would’ve had twin beachheads on the west side of the river, leaving Shalara open to attack by both land and water. Even one beachhead would have been a disaster, but thanks to our Princess the Sürkil line remains secure.”

“She is a formidable woman,” Vulk agreed, sipping at his own wine. “The Hand got credit for rescuing her, and the other noble ladies, from the clutches of the false Earl of Yorma at Urkonis, but really she rescued herself.

“With your help, of course, Raven,” he added hastily, nodding to Devrik’s wife. She just smiled and switched the wee baby Aldari from her left breast to her right.

“But as impressive as she is, why is she leading troops in the field?” asked Devrik, pulling himself briefly out of the brown study he had been in since their return, and that his hours closeted with his wife had done little to relieve. “What of the King?”

Ser Alakor grimaced and set down his goblet. “That is a more worrisome question. My sources at court tell me he has never been really well since the assassination attempt… as I think you know. For a time he seemed to be recovering, then he seemed to grow weaker and more frail day-by-day.

“He has done his best to hide the worst of it from all but those closest to him, but I fear he expended himself too freely in the struggle to get his daughter named Heir. The physicians and arcanists at court seemed unable to do anything for him, until your friend Master Vetaris came up with a treatment.

“I believe he consulted with you, Draik, yes?” Alakor asked, glancing at his brother.

Draik nodded and took up the story.

“Yes, as I know he told you before he sent you all off into the Blasted March, he had a sudden notion that the King’s malady might be some form of the Corruption itself, something that the Vortex was working on. At his request I provided him with raw Baylorium, and he consulted me occasionally as he worked to craft some new cure.

“Several days ago he started the King on a regimen of treatment involving his altered version of Baylorium, and the initial reports I’ve had from my own sources at court are that it seems to be working. King Maldan is reported to have more energy and looks much less wan and haggard. Some of his old force of personality seems to be returning, though his body is still too weak to take to the field. But there does seem to be hope now.”

“To the King’s health,” Ser Alakor cried, raising his goblet. “And to his quick recovery and return to full health!”

“Hear, hear!” the company replied enthusiastically, raising their own goblets and drinking deeply.

Two days later a breathless messenger from Shalara arrived via Gate bearing the news of the death of King Maldan I.

•••

Along with the tragic news of the sudden passing of the King, the messenger bore a Royal Summons for Ser Cantor Vulk Elida and the Lady Mariala Teryn, Margrave of Green Tower to attend at once upon the Queen-elect in Kar Landsar. The rest of the Hand might attend on the Court with them or not, as they pleased, but were in any case invited to the Coronation, which would take place on 6 Kilta, a tenday hence.

Ten days was the minimum time custom permitted between the death of a monarch and the accession of the next. And with the Landsar Succession Council having already affirmed Miralda as the Heir, there was no need to delay further and every reason not to. The war pressed, and there was little time for pomp and ceremony.

The Hand chose to travel as a group back to the capital, taking Raven and the wee baby Aldari with them. Unfortunately, Devrik had departed Dor Dür the day before the royal messenger had arrived, and so knew nothing of recent events.

He had said little to his friends, only that he had to sort things out on his own after recent events, and that he would return.

Raven, of course, knew where he was going and why, and they had argued about her staying in Dür while he was gone. Devrik had pushed for her and their son’s removal to the capital when he had learned that Dame Erila Kalafon, the late King Garinalt’s long-time mistress and mother of his youngest bastard, had joined her son at Dor Lorethal.

The former Lord of the Privy Seal had left Shalara quietly, some said even secretly, and rumors blazed up – she was a knight of Tharkia, however long she had lived and held power in Nolkior… with her hopes for her son’s elevation to the throne now dashed for good, would she seek to influence him to turn traitor and ally with Tharkia?

Ser Tulath Kalafon, Sherfiff of Kinen, was not particularly popular, nor very bright in Devrik’s opinion. The Hand had encountered him briefly during the affair of the false Earl of Yorma, and no one had been impressed. If his mother did suborn him to her nominal ancestral allegiance, would he turn over Dor Lorethal to the Tharkians? If he did, that would place Dor Dür directly on the front line of this shifting war. Devrik was not certain that the man would betray his half-niece the Queen-elect but didn’t intend to risk his family on it.

Knowing that he would never leave them if he thought they were in danger, and also knowing that he desperately needed this vision-quest, Raven eventually agreed to return to their home in Shalara when the Hand left. Neither had expected it to be so soon, however.

Draik decided to leave his apothecary shop in the hands of his cousin/assistant and accompany his old friends to the capital, having received his own invitation to the Coronation. He would also act as his brother’s representative, since the Constable Ser Alakor didn’t feel he could leave his responsibilities at Dor Dür even for a short time.

Early on the morning of 29 Emblio the Hand, minus Devrik but including Draik, Raven and the wee baby Aldari, two saddlebags stuffed full of treasure, and the stais-shrouded corpse of Tarbol, climbed the Elf’s Mound once more and entered the Gate

•••

On arriving at the Gate in Kar Landsar most of the Hand immediately departed for for their homes in the New District of the city. Only Vulk and Mariala remained behind, with the body of Tarbol, to meet with the Queen-elect and then seek out Master Vetaris. The servant sent to greet them and guide them to Miralda’s presence was slightly taken aback by the sight of the faintly glowing body on the stretcher, but recovered his composure quickly and managed to find both a quite chamber to stash it and two strong footmen to carry it there.

Once they’d seen Tarbol’s body carted off the two friends were guided to a small parlor overlooking the Royal Park, where they waited for over an hour for the Queen-elect. Refreshments were served, naturally, but by the time Miralda finally strode through the door unannounced, they were beginning to nod off in their chairs.

Coming instantly alert, they jumped up and bowed / curtseyed to Her Majesty, who smiled and waved them back to their seats, taking one herself and pouring herself a cup of hot chocolate. No servants attended on her, which greatly surprised them. Obviously this was to be a very private conversation.

“Thank you so much for getting her so quickly,” she began, after graciously accepting the two friends’ condolences on the death of her father. “I have a decision to make, and you two have the last pieces of information I need before I commit to… well, to my proposed course of action.”

“Tell me, what was your impression of King Dorikon of Arushal, when you met him earlier this year at the treaty negotiations? As a man, not as a king, that is.”

“Well, er, um… that is… well, he is the king, so…” Vulk looked to Mariala for help, but she seemed equally nonplused.

“I know you are a subject of his, Ser Vulk, but I pray you will be honest with your thoughts. It is important to me. And Lady Mariala, I especially want your opinion of the man, as a woman.”

A sudden light went off then in Mariala’s head, and she smiled. Vulk just looked confused.

“Well, Your Majesty, he is certainly well found in the looks department,” she said carefully. “He is still a young man, of course – just past 30 I believe – and physically quite fit, but not in that over-done way of some fighting men. He had a certain quiet charisma that I think went beyond simply being a king… he did seem to me to be rather grave, but of course that might have been the circumstances…”

“Yes,” Vulk interjected, drawn in despite his reservations. “My father has known the king since he was a boy – since the king was a boy, not my father – and says that even as a youth Dorikon had quite a dry sense of humor. He’s very intelligent, everyone agrees on that, and I’d have to concur after watching him in action.”

“They say he is too quick to appease an enemy, and worse, that he is a passive tool of his father, the Earl of Savartim,” Miralda said diffidently, but watching Vulk’s reaction closely.

“No,” the cantor shook his head decisively. “I’ve heard those accusations, of course, but my father says there is little merit in the one, and none at all in the latter.

“It’s true that some, particularly in my part of the country, bordering Darikaz, worry that he settled the Somkari War with the Republic badly, that he gave up too much too quickly, and unnecessarily. Which might be true, who can know for sure?

“But if so, he has certainly learned from it… and, after all, it was a decision made when he was younger and not long come to the throne. In fact, a year younger than you are now, Your Majesty, if I recall correctly.

“Besides, much of that complaint comes from the Baron of Ultorim, the former Earl of Somkari who started the stupid war with Kildora in the first place and lost two-thirds of his holdings as a result – he thinks the king should have plunged the country into a major war, of uncertain outcome, to cover his own sorry ass. Er, excuse my Darikazi, Your Majesty –”

Miralda smilled and waved her hand dismissively. “I have spent some time in the field with the troops, Ser Vulk, I am not easily shocked or offended. Please, go on.”

“Well, as to the suggestion that the king is a puppet of his father,” Vulk continued. “I can myself attest to that being unlikely. Lord Naldaro certainly is an important advisor to his son – how not, being an Earl and former sovereign himself, prior to Zarik’s War? But he wields little more influence than the other Earls, as I witnessed at the recent treaty talks – he rejected more than one of his father’s suggestions, as he did others’. He also accepted some, when they seemed good to him – he seemed to me very much his own man, Your Majesty.”

Miralda nodded thoughtfully, and for the next half hour intently posed various insightful questions to the two friends to complete her picture of Dorikon IV of Arushal through their eyes. At last she sat back with a sigh and a smile.

“Thank you , my friends,” she said, picking up her chocolate then wrinkling her nose when she realized it had gone cold. Setting the cup back down, she looked each of her guests in the eyes, her expression growing serious.

“What I am about to tell you is a state secret, and must not leave this room. You may not tell even your comrades in the Hand of Fortune – do I have your solemn oath on your absolute discretion in this?”

The two friends both swore an official oath, and waited expaectantly. Taking a deep breath Miralda slipped into formal monarch mode.

“We have determined that, in the face of the increasing threats Our realm faces, both from within and from without, that it were best done that We should propose marriage to Dorikon of Arushal, that We might unite our two realms into a greater whole, the better to confound our mutual enemies.”

At Vulk’s shocked look, and Mariala’s knowing nod, the Queen-elect suddenly grinned, and dropped back to her more normal cadences.

“I’ve been thinking about this for awhile… ever since my father first proposed the idea, shortly after his own coronation. At that time, of course, he simply sought to bind the alliance more tightly, not foreseeing his own death so soon.

“But with a war going on, and him the kind of ruler who would not lead from behind, he had no illusions about the possibility of his early death. He was not adverse to the uniting of the two realms that would result, as long as it was done on a basis of equality.

“And joint rulership will be required, if Dorikon and his advisors accept my proposal – each monarch to remain sovereign within their own realm, and consort in the realm of the other. But our eldest child, boy or girl, would inherit a united kingdom!”

Her eyes were bright with the vision of the future she saw, and Vulk and Mariala were infected with that tantalizing dream too.

“But as sound as I think this idea is, I wanted a more personal perspective on my proposed mate before committing to it… not that a Queen,or a King for that matter, has much choice in these things. I would go through with it even if Dorikon was fat, ugly and an imbecile, it is my duty… but I’ll be damned if I’ll go into it blind!”

“Well, I don’t think you’ll find you’re making too great a personal sacrifice, Your Majesty,” Mariala said, laughing. “He really is quite handsome, and far from an imbecile.”

Vulk nodded enthusiastically, grinning himself.

“My father and I had been over this with our very closest advisors and the greater nobles of the Realm,” Miralda went on after a moment, turning serious once more. “There will be some struggle to get all the nobility to swallow this, especially now that I am Queen, but the key Earls and the Archkleros are behind it, more or less. We plan to send an embassy immediately after my coronation.

“But how the nobles of Aruhsal will react to this proposal is more of a mystery. That is the other reason I wanted to speak to you, Ser Vulk – tell me what you think the reaction will be in your homeland, please.”

Taking a deep breath and gathering his wits, Vulk leaned forward and began to talk…

•••

Two hours later the exhilaration the two friends had felt during their conversation with the Queen-elect began to fade as they stepped into the room where Tarbol’s body lay. Master Vetaris had send word that he would attend on them shortly, and they weren’t looking forward to this interview at all.

When the silver haired man entered the small chamber a few minutes later, Mariala thought he looked older and a bit haggard. How much of this was due to the news of his nephew’s death or to the recent strain, and failure, of keeping the late king alive, she wasn’t sure.

“My great-nephew, actually,” he said with a sigh in response to their condolences. “My niece’s son. And not all that great, to be honest. How he came to be with you all, I’ve only begun to piece together, but before we get into that, tell me what happened, from your point of view.”

Haltingly, but leaving out no detail, Mariala and Vulk recounted their brief acquaintanceship with Tarbol Arbitar, and the manner of his sudden death. When they were done the Gray Mage sighed again, looking down at his idiot relative’s glowing body.

“Thank you, Cantor Vulk, for preserving the boy’s body,” he said after a moment. “I don’t know if I will be able to revive him, but for my sister and my niece’s sake, I suppose I have to try…

“And I apologize for putting you in this no doubt uncomfortable position. It seems the boy intercepted, not the note you sent me, Mariala, requesting aid for the Telnori druid, but my instructions directing a skilled healer to attend upon you. Cantor Hervador had been called away on an urgent medical matter, unfortunately, and this seems to be what gave Tarbol the idea, and the opportunity, to take his place.

“Over the last couple of years it seems he had learned more that he should have about my association with the Star Council – reading his hidden journals, discovered when he went missing, it seems he was more devious than I’d ever have given him credit for. And, even more surprising, rather intelligent, too – he pieced together hints, clues, obscure references, to come to the correct conclusion that not only did the Star Council exist, but that I was associated with it.”

He smiled then, a wan and regretful smile. “Actually, he seemed to believe that I was a member of the Council, perhaps even its head… the boy was a born romantic, eh?

“In any case, he seemed to think that by absconding with this mission he could gain my respect and trust, and become himself an agent of the Council. He really didn’t seem to understand that what it would really do, had he survived, was get him mind-wiped and relegated to some backwater manor on the edge of the wilds. Indeed, if he is revived, his mind will certainly be relieved of any knowledge of the Council… but perhaps I can find him some better post… although it will be have to be far from his old haunts, lest his memories be reawakened…”

“If it’s any consolation, sir,” Vulk offered after a moment, “his heart really did seem to be in the right place, even if his skills weren’t up to it. He was truly incensed at the idea of Farendol’s body being usurped by another…”

“Thank you, Vulk, yes, it is some consolation,” the older man replied. “Which brings us to the next issue… the possession of this Farendol’s body by our friend Erol. I think this is a more complicated issue than you perhaps realize… and then there is the matter of an Elemental Demon Lord loose in the world again…”

“Er, yes, sir,” Mariala said, grimacing. “But I would like to point out that we managed to keep the Corruptor imprisoned, surely the more dangerous of the two demons…”

With a sardonically raised eyebrow, and a last look at his great-nephew, Vetaris motioned the pair out the door and towards his private rooms, for what promised to be another long meeting… and one less happy than the one with the Queen-elect had been…

Interlude at the House of Mystery

Glad to have some expert advice from the Star Council, if somewhat uncertain about their new associate’s actual field experience, Vulk led Tarbol Arbitar to where Farendol lay, expalining how the Telnori had come to be killed and resurrected.

“I think he may be in some sort of healing trance,” the Kasiran cantor concluded. “I was working in the middle of a combat crisis, his injuries were significant, and the fight interrupted my treatment… it’s possible there remains some internal damage to his heart or lungs.”

Tarbol nodded and pursed his lips judiciously. “I’m sure you did the best you could, given your skills. Of course we in the Order of the Vigilant Shepherd are more well versed in combat healing than most others.”

Before Vulk could formulate a response to that, beyond raised eyebrows, the Alean cantor went on.

“Before I begin my examination, let me say a few words to you all on the virtues of healing through the great goddess Alea.”

He then launched into a half-hour sermon that left his audience variously glazed, dazed and/or annoyed. Just when Mariala thought she could bear no more, and was wondering if she could Fire Nerve him without revealing herself as the source of his sudden agony (and would it still be a sin if he didn’t know?), he wrapped it up and knelt down next to Farendol’s body.

He then made a great show of examining “his patient,” as he kept referring to the Druid. After several minutes he rose and turned to once again address the dubiously watching group.

“I’m fairly certain that what we have here is a Telnori healing trance,” he pronounced in a lecturing tone, “no doubt due to some missed tissue damage near the heart. Or perhaps the lungs.”

Vulk and Mariala exchanged incredulous glances… wasn’t that what Vulk had said just prior to the sermon?

“My recommendation,” he went on, standing up and adjusting his tunic, “is that he be moved somewhere safe, cool and quiet, where he will no doubt awaken in his own good time. The Telnori are a resilient folk, after all.”

After a moment of disbelieving silence, Vulk just shook his head and thanked the man for his opinion… and didn’t particularly try to muffle his added “twit!” as he turned away. It was obvious the fellow was too young and too inexperienced, and all-in-all an unlikely agent of the Star Council.

As the others prepared to break camp Mariala and Vulk further questioned Tarbol, but he certainly knew about the message to Master Vetaris, and details of the Star Council that indicated a close connection to that very secret organization. When pressed for why he didn’t have a Star Council signet ring, he was forced to admit that this was his first “away mission,” and there just hadn’t been time to issue him a ring, given the matter’s urgency.

“But my great-uncle Kiril is greatly concerned about the Hand’s penchant for releasing demons,” the young man huffed, getting a bit defensive as he finally sensed the tone of the questioning. “He felt that with my training in demonology and possession – my Order, the Vigilant Shepherd, specializes in these things – I would be the right choice to guide you through these perilous waters!”

Dropping the name of Master Vetaris as a relative, along with his other admittedly difficult-to-refute proofs, eventually forced the pair to accept Tarbol as a true representative of the Council, or at least of Master Vetaris, however unlikely that seemed.

“Vetaris must really be angry with us,” Mariala muttered to Vulk as they turned away, “to saddle us with this nitwit.”

Vulk could only agree.

♦ ♦ ♦

They had their camp struck in short order, despite Tarbol’s stumbling about trying, and failing, to stay out of the way. At one point he exclaimed over the dubious wisdom of the Hand in bringing a child along on such a perilous quest, before realizing that Toran was a grown-assed Khundari.

“How many children does he know with full beards?” the dwarf growled to Devrik as he stalked away to check the straps of the travois one more time.

After some debate as to where they should go, it was decided that they should head for Dor Dür and Draik’s expertise (and supply of Baylorium). As far as they knew it still held out as one of the frontline fortresses of the war against Tharkia and the rebel/impostor Earl of Yorma. Also, Devrik’s wife and child were there, at Raven’s insistence, as she disliked the “big city” when her husband was absent.

Tarbol offered to summon the Gate, but the group hastily assured him that it would be unnecessary, thanks very much. Instead Devrik called up the Sight and the energies to open the Nitaran Gate, and two-by-two the Hand of Fortune (and guests) stepped through the invisible portal –

– into sudden darkness and a humid heat that hit them like a solid wall. The mules brayed plaintively in surprised discomfort, and in seconds everyone was soaked in sweat. Devrik, bringing up the rear, groaned in dismay and muttered “Oh, not again!”

It took a few minutes for their eyes to adjust and for the group to realize they were not in total darkness. They were, in fact, outside under a night sky that blazed with stars. They seemed to be on a wide shelf of relatively flat land that dropped sharply away in front of them, while the dark shape of a mountain loomed up behind them. A slight breeze did nothing to relieve the heat, but did carry a plethora of scents, from the perfume of mysterious flowers to the stink of fetid plant life, and the susurration of rustling leaves. The scream of some unknown animal in the dark below them broke the silence and made the mules start in fear.

Just at the moment that both Mariala and Korwin realized that they couldn’t recognize a single constellation in the sky, moonlight broke over the shoulder of the mountain behind them and they breathed a sigh of relief – it was the blue light of Aranda, the Greater Moon, and it was just past full, as it should be.

”Well, at least we haven’t traveled to another world,”Mariala sighed after pointing out the arrangement of the sky to the others.

”Or another time,” Korwin added, morosely. “Probably.”

The silver-blue moonlight revealed the valley below them to be covered in a thick jungle of broad-leafed trees in a variety of species, none of which any of the Hand had ever seen before. Across from them tall peaks rose up, and stretched away to either side, enclosing a bowl perhaps five kilometers wide by 15 kilometers long. To their right, which must be north, the silvery plumes of three tall waterfalls could be seen plunging from a mountain cliff into the darkness, and occasional glints of silver showed where a river must wind through the valley.

“Ok, this is really beautiful,” Vulk said after a minute. “But I think we’d better try again, yes?” He looked at Devrik with a raised eyebrow.

“Opening these damn Gates takes it out you, you know that,” he grumbled. “I don’t think I could do it again right now, but you’re welcome to try.”

So Vulk began his own ritual to Kasira, summoning up the Second Sight which allowed him to perceive the otherwise imperceptible warping of space-time that marked a Nitaran Gate. He found nothing.

“Um, there doesn’t seem to be a Gate here,” he said, reluctantly, after several minutes. “This could be a problem.”

Devrik frowned and despite his exhaustion summoned up enough energy to renew his own Second Sight… he too could find no hint of a Gate.

At that point Vulk called up Kasira’s Holy Light, bestowing it on his companions, allowing them all to see without risking a more mundane light source that would announce their presence to any watching eyes. As they began discussing what to do next Toran pointed out a surprisingly wide path that seemed to lead from their plateau down into the jungle.

“If you can’t open a Gate,” he said to Vulk and Devrik, ignoring Tarbol’s assertion that he was sure he could open one, “then I guess going down is our only real option.”

This led to some debate, and Mariala drew out her deck of cards. She laid seven cards out on the ground before her as the others watched quietly. Frowning in concentration, slipping into the oracular trance, she examined the cards, touching each in turn. After a few minutes she seemed to come up from some great depth, swaying for a moment before gathering up the cards.

“I see some danger ahead, to be sure, but opportunity as well. It’s not clear to me if the two are one and the same, or two possible paths. But what is unmistakably clear is that going back is not an option – that way is blocked… as if by a mountain.” She smiled, looking up at the massive wall of stone looming behind them.

“We must’ve been shunted to a Gate that is one-way only,” Devrik concluded. “They are rare, but hardly unheard of. We’ll just have to hope that we can find another, normal one somewhere nearby.”

“But where are we?” Tarbol suddenly wailed, breaking his long, and blessed, silence.

“Given that I do not recognize any of these stars, somewhere in the southern hemisphere, I should think,” Korwin replied diffidently. “And on the other side of the world, too… by the moon I’d estimate it’s not much before midnight here, so… say, 10 or 12 hours ahead, or behind, of where we were?”

Tarbol’s eyes grew wide, but he didn’t say anything else.

It was decided that they wouldn’t risk taking the mules down the trail in the dark, given the need to leave Farendol slung between them — the trail might be deceptively wide here at the clearing, but become narrower or more treacherous further along. The group set about making camp for the night.

Tarbol, being new and in any case not having any gear aside from his medical satchel, was left standing near “his patient,” whining quietly to himself, “But I don’t want to sleep outside!”

Mariala and Vulk had the first watch, and they spoke quietly to one another after the others had settle down to try and sleep.

“I wish I had an explanation for that idiot,” Vulk groused. “He seems so ill-suited to this, yet he knows too much to be an impostor.”

Korwin had a disturbing idea,” Mariala replied. “ He thinks that Master Vetaris had the Nitaran pattern for this one-way gate subconsciously planted in Tarbol’s mind, to be triggered when we tried to travel anywhere.”

“What?! Why does he think Vetaris would do that?”

“To exile us where we could free no more demons, of course. And he gets rid of an embarrassing, dimwitted relative to boot, I imagine.”

“That’s a depressingly plausible scenario, actully,” Vulk said after a moment of horrified thought, and shuddered.

They were quiet for the rest of their watch, each lost in contemplation of other possible expressions of wrath the Star Council might be capable of.

Tarbol was left out of the watch rotation, of course, an insult which he completely failed to notice.

♦ ♦ ♦

When the sky was brightening in the morning, though the sun itself remained hidden behind the mountain, the Hand broke camp and headed down the path into the mysterious jungle below, now alive with the songs of exotic birds and the howls, chirps and calls of who-knew-what other sorts of creatures.

No one had slept well, except Tarbol, having gone to bed at what their bodies thought to be early evening. Despite their exhaustion from the last five days, it was only shortly before the creeping dawn that most of them had really begun to sleep… so it was a grumpy bunch that man-handled the mules and their precious cargo down the mountain. Tarbol proved to be surprisingly good at the task, Toran noted. The mules seemed to like him.

In the clear morning light they had spied smoke rising from what looked to be a smallish settlement on the banks of the river to the south, near the center of the valley, and the trail seemed to head in that direction. It took two hot, sticky hours, but they eventually came out from the canopy of the jungle into a wide clearing. Crops were planted there, and on the far side of the river a bend in the flow partially enclosed a small village of maybe 30 huts of wood, wicker and thatch, raised 1-2 meters above the ground. A wooden palisade formed an arc from bank to bank, guarding the landward approaches, although its gates stood open to the warm morning breezes. As the group approached no one seemed alarmed, or even terribly surprised, to see such strange travelers.

And they were strange, in comparison to the local people. These were shorter, on average, with medium to dark brown skin and thick black hair, which seemed to run from straight to wavy. Most of them seemed to possess brown or black eyes, although Devrik noted a few startlingly green eyes, and they all had a very slight epicanthic fold. They were dressed in simple, lightweight clothes in blues, grays and browns, with sandals on their feet, and both men and women wore conical hats of some woven fibre. The children went naked and seemed excited rather than frightened by the strangers.

As they arrived at the gate a party of older men and women gathered to greet them. Unfortunately, the language was completely foreign to the Ysgarethi travelers. The outpouring of melodious, almost liquid, sounds was beautiful to their ears, but utterly incomprehsible. After a few attempts at mutual communication, a particularly old man shuffled forward and began to speak in halting, heavily accented, very broken Yashparic.

Fortunately Vulk had begun chanting the Ritual of Tongues as soon as he’d recognized the language barrier, and he soon felt the strange pressure in his head that indicated the sudden presence of new knowledge as Kasira imparted to him a basic knowledge of the local language. He knew he’d only retain about half of what he now knew when the ritual ended, but for the duration he could speak moderately fluent… Varui, he realized the language was called.

Between the old man’s broken Yashparic and Vulk’s newly acquired Varui, the group was soon able to learn that they were in the Valley of the Golden Orchid, on the island of Kensuai, in the nation of Couri. Which meant absolutely nothing to any of them, no one having ever heard of any of them.

Vulk tried to explain where they had come from in terms the obvious peasant might understand, but the old man, whose name was Usolu, interrupted his increasingly byzantine tale with a gesture toward the eastern mountains.

“Yes, yes, m’sahiri, you came through the Mountain Gate, of course. It delivers strange visitors several times each year, although it cannot take them away again.”

Excited that the man seemed to a least grasp the nature of Gate travel, Vulk asked if there was another such Gate anywhere nearby, or indeed anywhere on the island. The old man looked down at his feet and emphatically shook his head. There were no other gates anywhere that the villagers knew of. No matter how he phrased the question Vulk could get no other answer, and had to conclude that there really was no other Gate, at least not nearby.

“But if other visitors come through here, they must leave your valley somehow, yes?” Vulk took a different tack. “This is an island, there must be a port…?”

Usolu looked up then and smiled, agreeing eagerly that there must. It was the great city of Tegari-hon, which lay on the coast seven days journey south of the valley. How great a city? Oh very great, perhaps as many as one thousand people lived there, or so rumor said. Usolu himself was dubious that so many could live all in one place, but his grandson had been there once, and he was an honest boy, so perhaps it was true. Although of course the young do tend to exaggerate…

In response to further queries he agreed that, yes, ships came to Tegari-hon, very frequently. How frequently? Oh, perhaps as many as once a month or so, mostly from the great islands of Vavau, Yaro and Tongari… but occasionally they came from as far away as Orkora and even semi-legendary Shoidan in the north. Although, this is the beginning of the rainy season… traders may be more sporadic for the next three months or so…

This news was rather disheartening, and Devrik was the least pleased among the group when Vulk relayed it. “I’ll be void-cursed if I’m going to take six months or a year to make my way home to Raven and Aldari!” he growled furiously. His words might have been unintelligible to the crowd, but his mien, and the grating tenor of his damaged voice, caused more than a few of them step back.

“Well, there has to be Nitaran Gates somewhere in the region, statistically speaking,” Mariala pointed out calmly. “No doubt a larger town or city will point us in the right direction. It’s unlikely well have to take the long route all the way home, Devrik.  He grudgingly acknowledged her logic, but remained unhappy.

When it became clear to the villagers that the strangers understood the need to travel to the coast, they became quite eager to help them on their way, smiling and encouraging them to get started right away. Yes, this very day, m’sahiri, no point in lingering, the rains could start at any time, making the journey twice as long! They offered to trade them local foodstuffs for what seemed criminally low prices, not even haggling. But perhaps that was the way of things in this part of the world… who knew?

As the others were pantomiming the exchange of goods and beginning to pack the food for the trip, Vulk and Tarbol brought Farendol to the village shaman, a bent old crone who walked with the aid of a beautiful ebony staff, to get, as Vulk put it, “a second opinion.” The insult flew straight over Tarbol’s head he noted in exasperation.

A crowd of villagers gathered to watch the old woman carry out her examination of the comatose man. As she peered, prodded and shook a few carved and feathered objects over him, Tarbol took the opportunity to give a sermon to the locals, apparently unconcerned that they couldn’t understand a single word he said. And since they couldn’t, Vulk didn’t object – at least it kept the little git occupied.

The old woman eventually finished her exam and stood, shrugging. She fired off a rapid string of words at Vulk before turning to mount the stairs into her hut. His grasp of the language was beginning to fade a bit, but he thought he understood her to have said there was “no help for that one,” an odd way to phrase it, if he was still grasping the subtleties of the tongue. But, Tarbol’s absurd diagnosis not withstanding, it was about what he’d expected.

Nonetheless, he was grateful for her attempt and called out to her before she disappeared into her home. She turned and he pulled a silver ring from his finger and handed it up to her. She took it with a nod and another shrug, then vanished within. Vulk returned with his charge, and Tarbol (sermon cut short), to the others.

There he tried one more time to ask Usolu if there was any rumor, a hint even, of another Gate somewhere on the island, and the old man was emphatically denying it when he went suddenly quiet, his eyes growing wide before lowering to stare at the dirt near his feet. The whole village had gone quiet and the group turned to find another old man, even more wrinkled and wizened than Usolu, walking through the gates.

“Nonsense, m’sahiru, m’sahara,” he said in excellent Yashparic, strangely accented but pleasantly melodious. “These are mere peasants, and too superstitious and fearful about things they do not fully understand.”

They hadn’t seemed particularly fearful to Vulk, quite the opposite, actually…

The man was noticeably taller than most of the villagers, if still shorter than Vulk, and he was dressed in more colorful clothes of a clearly superior cut, decorated with fanciful stitching. A wide sash of white silk belted his saffron silk tunic, and the feet below his red linen trousers were clad in leather half-boots. He wore a white head wrapping of some sort and carried an intricately carved staff of a beautiful dark red tropical hardwood. He stopped before the group, smiling warmly at them all, then eyeing the villagers behind them more cooly.

“One must forgive them, m’sahiri,” he said, addressing Vulk. “By their own uneducated lights these ones were simply trying to protect you, believing the long overland trail to the coast would be safer for you than to vanish into nothingness, as they think of it. This one is afraid that such as these have no concept of such travel.

“But there is, in fact, another Gothaka-zhuhan, a – how do you say it? A Nitaran Gate – in this valley. This one’s Master, the Learned Thuron Yan, has built his home near it, so that he may study it. This also affords him the grace to meet and provide respite and safe haven to m’sahiru, noble travelers, such as yourselves, waylaid by the so-infamous Mountain Gate.”

By the time he finished speaking almost all of the villagers had disappeared, either back to the fields or into their homes. A few of the elders remained to watch the interchange, but from a distance. Only Usolu remained with the group, continuing to stare at his feet and saying nothing.

“This one has the honor to be the Learned’s… hmmm, major domo in your tongue? This one is known as Olbu,” the newcomer continued. “Might this one be graced with such knowledge of the honored m’sahiru as may seem good to them to share?”

After a quick glance at the others, Vulk introduced himself and the party, skipping the fact of Farendol’s Telnori identity, saying only that he was a sick friend. Olbu expressed concern over the welfare of one who was so obviously dear to them, and immediately proposed they accompany him home.

“My Master is currently away on one of his journeys, but he is expected back in only a day or two… it is his custom to invite all travelers arriving via the Mountain Gate to partake of the comforts of his villa, modest as they may seem to such obviously noble folk as yourselves. He would be most upset were this one not to extend that invitation in his name.”

“We are honored by your invitation, good Olbu,” Vulk replied smoothly, slipping into Herald Mode, “and would love nothing more than to meet the Learned Thuron Yan. But out friend needs special medical care, and his urgent need requires us to decline your gracious offer… if you could but direct us to the Gate you spoke of, we would be eternally in your debt.”

An expression of such abject sorrow fell across the wrinkled visage of the old major domo, that for a moment Vulk suspected parody. But the man bowed deeply in regret, and his words seemed sincere. The herald reminded himself that cultural cues could be hard to judge accurately.

“It saddens this one, m’sahiri, that he is unable to do as you so graciously and reasonably request, for the precise location of the Valley Gate is not within this one’s knowledge. And even if it were, it saddens this one further to report that the Valley Gate is of a periodic nature, opening and closing, he is given to understand, in a cycle that even the Master has not yet fully fathomed, in twenty years of study.

“But the Learned Thuron Yan is a master of many arts, not the least of which are those of healing. It may be that he can provide the succor you desire for your friend when he returns. And the Valley Gate is seldom closed for more than a tenday.”

It was hard to argue that Farendol would be more comfortable in either this poor village or bouncing along between two mules for seven days or more, rather than in the no-doubt-luxurious villa of a wealthy and apparently noble scholar. Both Mariala and Vulk had surreptitiously used their arcane abilities to sense emotions and truth, and neither had discovered anything overtly suspicious. Olbu seemed to be just what he seemed, and his offer a legitimate one.

While taking leave of Usolu and the others, thanking them for their assistance, some of the Hand noticed that the villagers refused to meet their eyes… and no one looked directly at their new guide. But they were peasants, after all, and no doubt intimidated by the chief servant of the local lord – not an unusual occurrence even in Ysgareth, to be sure. They shrugged the matter off.

The journey to Halani-var, as the Learned Thuron Yan’s villa was called, took a little over an hour, on a road somewhat better than the one they had followed down the mountainside. The jungle rose thick and tangled on either side, arching over into a canopy of green through which the late morning sunlight flickered mysteriously. The sounds and smells of this fetid and fecund world seemed very alien to the companions, and the humidity sapped their strength unmercifully — they were all overdressed, and shed as much of their attire as they reasonably could.

It was a relief to leave the sweltering hot-house of the forest for the large hilltop clearing wherein sat Halani-var, and a mildly cooling breeze. The villa itself was a large, single-story complex of pale yellow stone and dark, almost black, beams of rough-hewn tropical hardwood. A roof of dark red tiles curved up into a maze of peaks and gables, with ridge-lines of the dark wood carved into the shapes of snakes and fantastic birds with dragon heads at the ends. Directly under the deep eaves long, narrow, glassless  windows let in air and light via beautiful grillwork of black iron, intricately wrought in the shapes of twisting vines, leaves and flowers.

Wide, shallow steps of the yellow stone led up to a long porch at the front, where two tall bronze doors stood closed. They were etched in deep bas relief, showing various scenes of people, animals and plants apparently acting out stories of religious, mythological or historical import… none of which any of the Hand remotely recognized.

But it was not to these doors that Olbu led the group. Instead, he directed them along a track that turned left and then curved around the building to the north. There they found a small stable and some storehouses jutting out from the main edifice, where Olbu saw to the comfort of the mules.

“This one apologizes for making honored guests wait on such mundanities,” the old man said as he quickly and efficiently went about his task. “But the Master retains no staff beyond this one’s humble self, in the general course of things.”

At their expressions of surprise, he elaborated.

“There were originally several other servants, when the villa was first built. But the Master is both particular in his habits, and modest in his needs… he eventually found the presence of so many k’hiniru, unenlightened ones, more bothersome than helpful. One by one he dismissed them, until only this one remained, who has been with him since youth. Now we simply hire from the village if more hands are needed… perhaps once or twice a year, no more.

“Your own servant,” he indicated the barbarian Therok (the broad brush strokes of the red-painted “55” on his chest were finally beginning to fade), “may make his bed here in the stables, there is a loft for just such purpose there, above the stalls.”

Once the mules were fed and watered and the saddle bags distributed Olbu lead the group into the villa by a small door between the stable and the jakes. With their “servant” and Devrik carrying the stretcher on which lay the still form of Farendol, he showed them to two long, narrow interior rooms just a few paces away.

Both rooms, which formed an “L” but shared no connecting door, appeared to be dormitories, with multiple beds in each, as well as large communal tables, low, stool-like chairs of bamboo and wicker, and slim, elegant armoires. Silk wall hangings  were the only decorations, but these were of such beauty that they took the breath away and caused the eye to linger.

Farendol was laid on a bed in the first room, the one running east to west, and Vulk and Devrik took the other two beds there. A large hexagonal window of carved wood, filled with a black iron filigree of geometric shapes, looked out into a small green courtyard. Mariala, Korwin, Toran and Tarbol took the four beds in the larger room around the corner, oriented north to south, which lacked a matching window, but had two of the long, narrow grilled openings running its length near the ceiling, to the first room’s single such.

Once Olbu had seen that the quests were settled comfortably, he suggested that they should rest and refresh themselves before the midday meal. When he mentioned that a sauna and hot pools were available, they shuddered at the idea, but on learning that there were cool plunging pools as well, Vulk, Mariala and Korwin decided to partake. Torbol volunteered to stay with Farendol, while Devrik and Toran came along for the tour, if not the waters.

As the old major domo guided them, with a certain quiet pride, through the joys of his master’s splendid creation, it occurred to Mariala that the villa was almost more museum than home. It was decorated in a very spare yet elegant style, simplicity of form emphasizing function… and everywhere there was art. From wall hangings and paintings to gorgeous inlaid tables of exotic woods to porcelain bowls and carved jade statues, the hallways and rooms boasted a seemingly endless array of artifacts and object d’art.

Yet in no way was there any sense of overcrowding or excess – there seemed to be only ever just the right number of objects, in just the correct juxtaposition, in just the right place. Thick, richly woven carpets covered many of the floors, themselves polished black wood inlaid with designs in matte black woods, and red silk panels hung from the ceilings.

The interior, despite being open to the outdoors by the narrow eaves-windows and a few larger ones looking out into various courtyards, was significantly cooler than might be expected. Toran noted with approval that the stonework was excellent, and was put together without mortar or cement.

After refreshing themselves in the sybaritic luxury of the spa suite, located in the southern wing of the villa, and enjoying the art along the way, the group reconvened in the large dining room for a three course meal, served by Olbu. This seemed to be the only room furnished with Ysgarethi-style chairs, for which the group was grateful.

After the meal Olbu reappeared and invited them to enjoy the public rooms of the villa, but emphasized that they must avoid the Master’s private chambers, his arboritum/greenhouse and the large central courtyard, which they had glimpsed through grill-covered windows on the earlier tour.

“The great courtyard is the Master’s sanctum for his private meditations and spiritual renewal,” he explained regretfully. “But the smaller courtyard near your own chambers is certainly free for the enjoyment of the m’sahiru.

“This one must now attend to his delayed chores, and so leave you to your own devices until the light repast that is customary in this part of the world after sundown. The grounds are open to you, of course, but only until sunset – it is not safe to be outside after dark, and this one begs of you not to stray outside again until after sunrise.”

The rest of the day was spent relaxing, discussing the events of the past tenday, and theorizing about the nature of their absent host. Tarbol took advantage of the afternoon light to walk the perimeter to lay a Ritual of Protection of the Innocents around the building, which should give them an advantage should things prove to be less innocent than they seemed. At the same time Vulk attempted to locate the promised Nitaran Gate, but could find no hint of it before he was driven indoors by a sudden late-afternoon downpour.

The evening meal was, as promised, a lighter affair, again served by Olbu in the dinning room. Afterward the still very tired companions retired to their rooms, calling it an early night. Mariala tried to coax Grover to come sleep with her, but the ferret refused to be budged from his perch on top of her backpack. With a shrug she gave up the effort and prepared for sleep.

Wards were set, and not only by Mariala, but nothing external disturbed their rest during the night, to everyone’s relief. Tarbol was especially grateful to have a bed to sleep in, even if it was of an odd construction called a “tofu” or maybe it was a “futon.” Something foreign-sounding, anyway…

Nothing external disturbed the Hand’s slumber…but Mariala again dreamed of Erol, on the same vast dark plane. Although this time she felt she could almost make out his words before he again vanished into the darkness. And that night Vulk dreamed of Erol as well… also on a dark, endless plane; but he was no more able to communicate with his dead friend than Mariala had been.

♦ ♦ ♦

The whole of the next day the Hand spent in blessed idleness and rest, with Olbu appearing only to serve meals in the dining room. Finally beginning to feel like themselves again, they took the time to more closely examine the treasures recovered form the ruins of Yalura. Between their various arcane skills they managed to figure out which items were magic and which mundane.

Further divination and study revealed the nature of the four magical artifacts, as well: the small key of tarnished silver proved to be an Amulet of Defeating Locks, able to open locked doors or containers; the pale blue robe was a Robe of Kesadarin, which would shield its wearer from the effects of natural cold and, to a lesser extent, magical cold; the silvery silken rope turned out to be a Cord of Querelia-Sim, able to knot and unknot itself when invoked… it was Toran who discovered its command word, Ünkonai, woven into the threads at each end.

The last item, a polished amber bowl some 30 cm across, proved to be the most interesting… and the most difficult to pry free from its secrets. By the time Olbu summoned them for the evening meal they had only determined that it was seriously magical and seemingly of the X’avarna convocation. Mariala reluctantly set the bowl back into her pack, and noticed Grover leaping to curl up in his usual place atop it as she left the room.

They had just begun the first course, and Obul had left them to return to the kithchen, when the doors to the entry foyer opened to reveal a most striking figure – a tall man with stark white skin (a form of makeup, they learned later, affected by the nobles classes in this land), dressed in elaborate robes of green and black. A yolk of black leather rested on his shoulders from which a black silk collar rose up into a tight skull cap that enclosed his head, leaving only his white face exposed. It was impossible to guess his age, which could have been anywhere from 30 to 70.

“Good evening, my most honored guests,” the man said in a strong tenor voice, only lightly accented by the musical cadences of the local tongue. “I am Thuron Yan. Please forgive that I was not here to greet you myself. But visitors from the Mountain Gate arrive all too seldom, and my studies took me away on a matter that would not wait.”

Stepping into the room and moving to the empty chair at the head of the table, he held up a burlap sack of earth out of which protruded a delicate looking flowering plant of dark green leaves and pale blue flowers. Some species of orchid by the look of it, Vulk thought, and was reminded of Draik.

“I recently, finally, had word of a very rare plant which I have long sought… one that only flowers under the light of the full blue moon and the dark of the violet moon. The way was long and arduous, but the results most worthy of the effort expended.”

Offering the bloom for his guests’ examination, he studied them as they admired his trophy. He seemed to approve of their interest, and he quickly fell into a brief treatise on botany. Flowers were clearly his passion and his main area of study, although he made it plain that medicine was a close, and related, secondary field of interest.

“I will be pleased to show you my collection of rare and exotic plants – especially exotic, I imagine, to visitors from your distant, chilly part of the world – but first I would be pleased to look in on your injured companion, whom Olbu has told me of, if you think my humble knowledge might be of some use.”

At this point Vulk suddenly had an instant, and fully formed, suspicion that this Thuron Yan was in fact Olbu in his true form. He was frantically trying to communicate this idea to Mariala on the sly when Olbu entered the room from the other door, bearing a tray with the second course. Vulk shut his mouth and sat back abruptly, hoping the sudden flush of his cheeks would be attributed to the heat.

After the final course, with cordials of a delicate pink liquor in hand, the group took their host to examine the comatose Telnori; although they still failed to mention his race. But such discretion, or deception, proved both futile and unnecessary. It took only a few minutes for the scholar to determine that the sick man was not Umantari.

“Ah, your friend is one of the Star Children… yes, I can understand your caution. They are not unknown in these lands, but they are not as prevalent, I think, as in the North and West… and are too often feared by our unenlightened peasantry, sadly. Fortunately, I have known a few in my day, and so am not unfamiliar with their biology…”

Another few minutes of examination, and Thuron Yan stood back and frowned. He seemed lost in thought, oblivious to his waiting guests. With an effort he pulled his intense gaze from Farendol, and bowed in apology.

“Forgive me, my guests, I was pondering… the possibilities. It seems to me that your friend has suffered some great injury, yes?”

Vulk nodded, but offered no particulars. He’d learned his lesson with Tarbol, and kicked the Alean when he started to open his mouth. Thuron Yan either didn’t notice the byplay, or simply chose not to acknowledge it.

“I am certain that he is in the Telnori healing trance… it is impossible to say how long he will remain in this state, but in my (admittedly limited) experience it seems certain that he will eventually come out of it.

“I would not recommend moving him until he does, however – he needs all of his physical and mental resources focused on his own healing. An arduous journey is contraindicated, unless it were absolutely critical. And I’m even less sure what effect Gate travel might have –”

“Yes,” Vulk interjected. “About the Gate we’ve been told is nearby. If you could –”

Thuron Yan waved his hand languidly and shook his head, interrupting ever-so-graciously in turn.

“No, honored guest, I can offer no firm advice in that area… even if I knew that such travel was safe for a Telnori in this condition, my Gate is not open just now. It is of the periodic type, and I have not yet discerned a reliable pattern to predict its fluctuations.”

At the friends’ frowns, he smiled and gestured placatingly.

“I understand your concern, but it is unfounded. Although I cannot tell precisely when the Valley Gate will be active again, I can assure you with confidence that it will be no more than two or three days. Surely you can endure the hospitality of my home for that much longer, yes? And it can do your friend no harm to rest here for that long. Once the Gate is active, if he has not recovered, we can further discuss the advisability of  taking him through it.”

There seemed to be no polite answer to this perfectly reasonable argument, and so the friends prepared to retire once again, after their host had departed. But suspicion still smoldered in some…

“I suppose it is possible that we’re over-thinking all this,” Vulk admitted as the group discussed their options. “We’re so used to conflict and chaos, perhaps we’re seeing everything as a nail that needs to be hammered – and maybe this time it’s not.”

“We’ve certainly tried to find the hidden motives, the lies, the danger,” Korwin agreed. “But it all seems perfectly benign. It’s a different culture, so maybe that’s where the vague, um… creepiness… comes from?”

The debate went on for awhile, without coming to any solid conclusions. In the end everyone drifted off to bed and sleep. But wards were again set, other precautions taken as well. And again came the dreams of Erol on a vast, dark plain – to Mariala, Vulk, and this time to Devrik, too.

♦ ♦ ♦

The next day Thuron Yan took the companions to see his beloved arboretum/hot house wherein he kept his most prized botanical treasures. The immense room occupied the entire east wing of the villa, almost 50 meters long north-to-south and 13 meters wide east-to-west. Two iron-grilled windows, set in alcoves, and a bronze-gated doorway pierced the western wall, giving out onto the large sunken central courtyard. Matching alcoved windows were set into the eastern wall, and opposite the courtyard gate was a large, intricately carved teak door. Set in the wooden ceiling were glass skylights, running the length of the room on either side of the massive central beam.

Unlike the rest of the villa, which was marginally cooler than the outdoors, the arboretum was somewhat warmer and much more humid. A riotous profusion of plants filled the space, from large potted trees to small, delicate ferns and flowering shrubs. From the central beam hung a series of lattices over which grew vines and other creeping or hanging plants, many with flowers of gorgeous colors, some of immense size. In the center of the room stood a large oval work table of yellow sandstone, on which lay a confusion of gardening tools (as well as implements of more mysterious purpose), empty pots, and piles of rich, dark soil.

It took over an hour for the most cursory tour of the many plants the Eastern scholar had amassed, and even the most uninterested in the party couldn’t help but be impressed. Not only were there an incredible number of plants they’d never heard of, much less seen, Thuron Yan’s knowledge of them, of their uses either medicinal, practical or culinary, was immense.

“But I have saved the best for last, my dear guests,” he said at length as they paused near the work table. “My most beloved and valuable treasures… my orchids!”

With that he threw open the carved teak door behind him, revealing a small chamber some 6 meters square. Work benches lined the north and south walls, with several racks on each reaching up to the ceiling, and a desk-cum-work bench filled a small niche in the east wall, beneath an iron-grilled window.

Orchids of every imaginable size, shape and color occupied the racks and benches, and on the desk lay scrolls, parchment, pens, brushes and inks. Several of the papers could be seen to contain exquisite renderings of various orchids, with notes in a flowing, alien alphabet beneath them. The beautiful blue orchid their host had shown them the night he’d returned sat on the desk, and a partially finished sketch of it held the central place of honor.

Almost another hour was spent learning about the manifold virtues and wonders of the orchid in all its wild variety of species. It became clear their host had spent decades learning and writing about his tropical speciality. But eventually the scholar ran down, perhaps sensing the slightly glazed looks which even the most interested of his guests were beginning to sport.

“Well, I must return to my work,” he said, gesturing toward the door back into the arboretum. “And I understand some of you have expressed curiosity about my private library. Olbu could not grant you access, of course, but having seen your enthusiasm over my small public collection, it would be my pleasure share the larger collection with you.”

He then led the party out the southern door of the arboretum, through several short winding corridors to a set of carved double doors. Pulling a key from his belt, their host unlocked the doors and ushered them into his private library. It was a large room, 15 x 10 meters, and a double row of tall bookshelves ran down the center of the room, crammed with books, scrolls and loose-leaf folios. Being an interior room there were no windows, but four square skylights of frosted glass let in the day light; glowstones set about the room would provide illumination at night.

“I allow no open flames in here,” Thuron Yan said as he prepared to leave them. “And I expect you will treat the volumes here as befits their age and value… but I know that you are scholars yourselves, and need no instruction in this arena. I do ask that you not remove anything from this chamber, however.”

With a gracious bow he turned and left the group to their own devices, returning to the study of his new orchid. The Hand went wild in this treasure trove of exotic documents – each one of them found at least one volume of intense interest, and some more than one.

Toran found a volume on rare fungi cultivation written in an odd form of Kundaic, by the Dwarves of Svarlün, in central Ishkala; Tarbol was able to decipher an ancient treatise of the use of various plants in successful exorcisms; Mariala and Devrik kept calling one another over to see some new find, wandering from shelf to shelf, while Korwin browsed, and fingered the small gardening implement in his pocket that he had stolen from Thuran Yan’s workshop. He had been successfully containing his kleptomania with all the lovely object d’art laying about this place, but he just couldn’t resist this odd little tool…

Vulk was especially taken with a large illustrated volume, quite old, but from their own part of the world, that extensively covered the flora of Ysgareth and its subcontinent Xenoca, as well as that of the Shattered Sea. He had heard Draik speak of it on occasion, Merasid’s Illuminated Botanica, as a very rare and extraordinarily thorough encyclopedia that any herbalist would give his left nut for. He wondered how much he could copy during their stay here… and which were the best bits…

It was hours later that they reluctantly broke off their studies for the midday meal, after Olbu’s second, slightly testy announcement that it was ready. Thuron Yan did not join them, sending his apologies via his servant, but did promise to join them for the evening meal. As usual, the food was mostly excellent, if occasionally too alien – for instance, no one was inclined to try the chilled monkey brains…

Afterward, several of the group were inclined to return to the library, but Mariala insisted that they should finish trying to figure out what that last magic item was, the mysterious amber bowl. Retiring to the room she shared with Korwin, Toran and Tarbol, after checking on Farendol, she booted Grover off her pack and carefully removed the artifact. The ferret nipped at her hand, but quickly settled near her feet as she sat down, the bowl in her lap.

It took a combination of her own divination skills, Korwin’s psychometry talent, and Vulk’s prayers to finally uncover the nature of the item – a soul catcher created by the Telnori mage Barsol, over a thousand years ago. It was designed to capture either ethereal beings or the souls of the recently departed within a certain proximity. When properly invoked the captured soul could be transferred to another living or properly prepared artificial body… it took some more divination to discover the operant word to be lila’tometh. It didn’t take the group long, however, to realize what this might mean…

“This was less than a hundred meters away when Erol was killed,” Vulk exclaimed in sudden excitement. “That’s well within its range, yes Mariala?”

“Yes,” she said slowly, frowning thoughtfully. “I think a kilometer is the approximate, um, capture zone of the device… but it can only hold one soul, I’m positive of that! And Farendol was… um, died… before Erol did. Wouldn’t his soul have been the one to be captured?”

This gave them all pause for a moment. It certainly would explain why the Telnori’s body remained alive after Vulk’s healing, but seemingly unoccupied, if his soul was captive within the bowl. On the other hand…

Telnori souls, like their minds, are stronger than ours,” Vulk pointed out. “Farendol may have been immune to the artifact’s power, or able to resist it… it is also possible that he wasn’t completely dead dead before I healed him. Maybe his should never left his body, and he really is in a healing trance?

“Also, why has Grover been so attached to this thing? Looking back, don’t you see it? He’s stayed as close to the bowl as he could, whether it was in a saddle bag or your pack – or on your lap right now?”

Indeed, the little animal was currently staring up intently at the bowl, never taking his eyes off of it. A sudden thought struck Vulk

“Or maybe Erol’s soul ended up in Grover, somehow!” he blurted out.

“Well, I don’t see how that would have worked,” Mariala frowned. “No, I think there’s a soul in this bowl, and while I’m uncertain whose soul it is, I’d have to agree Grover’s behavior makes me lean toward it being Erol’s. That, and the dreams I’ve been having lately… if it’s not just wishful thinking…”

Devrik seemed more divided in thought, and said nothing. He really would like it to be Farendol’s soul in that bowl, making his murder, as he thought of it, of the Druid suddenly reversable. On the other hand, he knew Erol well and would like to see his comrade returned to life. Although, come to think of it, how would they even accomplish that? The man’s own body was no longer a viable option, certainly!

The same thought seemed to occur to the others just then, and a discussion began about how to figure out if it was really Erol in the bowl, and if so, what to do about it. Mariala could divine no way of communicating with the en-bowled soul, although she claimed it should be theoretically possible. She was extremely reluctant to invoke the control word without a suitable vessel nearby for the soul to enter into.

Vulk eyed Grover speculatively at that point, but when the ferret briefly pulled its attention away from the bowl to growl in his direction, he shrugged off the idea. He doubted Erol would be much enthused by being a ferret in any case.

“It occurs to me,” he said after a few minutes of intropsection, “that I have within my mind, the knowledge of how to grow a new body for Erol… a gift of my recent possession, er, symbioses with the Elemental Beast of Earth. But it would take many months, I think, to do this…”

“Or, I could fashion him an artificial body” Toran offered. “With the help of my people I’m sure we could create him a most wonderful, powerful form. As a fighter he might like that!”

“I’m not really sure he’d appreciate giving up the sex, though,” Devrik growled. “Although it might do as an interim measure, while Vulk grows this new body…”

“We could always dump him into Tarbol’s body, I suppose,” Korwin suggsted with a laugh. This brought a squeak of rage from the plump cantor, who had heretofore been following the discussion in wide-eyed, horrified fascination.

“You can’t allow him to possess another living, conscious being,” he shrilled in anger, leaping to his feet. “Not mine and not anyone elses! It would be blasphemy, and a secular crime as well, and–”

“It was a joke, Tarbol,” Mariala soothed gently, giving Korwin a quelling frown. But he saw the glint of laughter in her eye nonetheless, if Tarbol did not. Devrik snorted and shook his head, while Vulk and Toran couldn’t look at each other for fear of bursting into laughter. Tarbol grudginly sat back down, mumbling about people who jested about possession, and the bad ends they would no doubt come to.

The brief humor had broken the tension of the moment, and with a collective sigh the Hand realized there was nothing more to be done just then. But getting back to Shalara, and the resources of the Star Council, was suddenly even more urgent in all their minds. Vulk determined to press their host once more over dinner for the location of the Gate, something the man had deftly sidestepped up until now.

“And maybe we will find a way to communicate with Erol in our dreams tonight,” Mariala said as they rose to go about their separate concerns. “If so, maybe he’ll have an idea about what we should do…”

•••

Under Vulk’s persistent questioning, which began to border on the rude, Thuron Yan finally revealed that the Valley Gate was located in the Great Courtyard at the heart of the villa, as they had suspected all along. He went further, and said that he fully expected it to become active within the next 25 to 35 hours, at which point he would, with regret but full understanding, see them all on their way.

Having got the information he wanted Vulk attempted to repair his breach of manners by enthusing about the volume he had been studying in the library that morning. He explained about Draik, and soon found himself describing the discovery/invention of Baylorium, and it’s amazing healing powers. Their host’s slight coolness dropped away as he came to fully understand what the cantor was saying.

“By the Seven,” he exclaimed when Vulk had finished, his usual dignified reserve abandoned for the moment. “This is quite amazing! I have, of course, heard of Baylora and her frightening, brilliant skills in the Torazin arts… and of her tragic fate. But this… have you a sample of this wondrous elixir with you?”

“Sadly, no,” Vulk lied, without hesitation, although he wasn’t sure why he did so. “We used the last of our reserves after our last battle, to heal ourselves and to attempt to do the same for our Telnori friend. It is another reason why we are so anxious to return home, to restock our supply of the elixir.”

Thuron Yan seemed briefly disappointed to hear this news, before his usual cloak of distant, amused detachment fell back into place. But he was aroused to sharp-eyed interest once more when Vulk continued.

“But we plan to travel straight to Draik once your Valley Gate is open, sir. You should accompany us – I know my friend would be pleased to exchange ideas and knowledge with one so learned in the field that he himself loves so much. Who knows what a fusion of your talents and wisdom might produce? The possibilities, sir! And if you were to join us, perhaps you could bring Merasid’s Illuminated Botanica along, so that he might have it copied while you conferred…”

Thuron Yan seemed much taken with this idea, and promised to think upon it that night. As the meal wound down he motioned to Olbu, who came and bowed down to hear his master’s whispered instructions. The servant withdrew, to return several minutes later with a tray containing glasses of a pale blue cordial. Passing them out to the guests, he served his master last.

“To new friends,” the Eastern scholar said, raising his glass. “And to new beginnings, which may bring much good into the world.”

While the others drank without hesitation, Vulk and Devrik shared a glance across the table, and only touched their glasses to their lips. The subterfuge did not go unnoticed by their host.

“You do not care for the ub’arasl,” he inquired cooly, setting down his own empty glass. “Perhaps some other beverage…?”

“No,” Vulk replied, smiling tightly. “Thank you. I’m afraid something in that last course has upset my digestion… I fear further alcohol might exacerbate the problem.”

“And I do not drink distilled spirits,” Devrik rumbled blandly, setting his own untouched glass down. It was a believable enough assetion, certainly, as he had drunk nothing but watered wine during their stay at Halani-var. “But we both salute the toast, and the sentiment behind it.”

Mollified, Thuron Yan rose and graciously bid his guests a good night, reminding them once again not to leave the safety of the villa during the night. As Olbu began to clear away the dishes the Hand likewise rose, bowed to their host, and departed to their own chambers.

•••

Despite all evidence of his good will, both Devrik and Vulk had been suspicious of their host and of his special blue cordial. But in the event at least one of their suspicions was totally unfounded – the cordial had not been drugged or poisoned, had indeed been nothing more than a delicate, delicious, and very expensive liquor, distilled from a rare mountain fruit. It was a singular honor to have had it offered to them.

It was the food that had been drugged.

Retiring to their respective rooms, each of the companions found their eyes drooping even as they undressed. They were all asleep as soon as their heads hit their pillows — a deep and dreamless sleep.

Dreamless, except for Vulk. He slowly became aware of himself, though all around him was dark, and he could not move. There was a sense of concern, but not of panic, as he tried to move even a finger. Failing, he became aware of… not a presence, exactly… but maybe an echo of a presence. Following his sense of this not-presence, Vulk suddenly found himself aware of his body in its totality. It was something like what he sensed when he healed someone psionically, but much stronger – an awareness of every cell, every atom, of his biology.

With this awareness came a sense that all was not right… yes, there, he could… see/hear/taste/feel/smell… the alien pattern. He’d been poisoned! No, not poison he realized… drugged. A soporific of some kind… and very stong!

He could see how it flowed through his blood, how it interacted with his brain… and yes, he could suddenly see how to neutralize it… to turn it into something inert and harmless… all at once.

He did that thing.

♦ ♦ ♦

Vulk’s eyes opened as he came fully, instantly, awake; but no other part of his body moved to give away his sudden return to consciousness. Which proved a good thing, for across the room he could see two shadowy figures bent over the still form of Farendol, silhouetted by the dim red light one of them held. A deep red glow stone, he realized, perfect for seeing in darkness without ruining one’s night vision.

It was Thuron Yan and Olbu, of course. Vulk tensed, prepared to leap up if they made a threatening move… but Thuron Yan reached down and lifted the Telnori into his arms as if he weighed no more than a child. He said something to Olbu, too low for Vulk to hear, and the servant nodded, moving toward the open door. Thuron Yan followed, Farendol’s body cradled almost tenderly in his arms, and they passed out of the room.

Vulk was off of his futon instantly, and kneeling beside Devrik, who snored gently. No amount of shaking could rouse the drugged warrior-mage, however, and after a moment the cantor realized he would need to do for his friend what he had somehow done for himself. But how? He wasn’t even sure what he’d done, exactly. He closed his eyes and reached within…

And it was there. The knowledge of how to see the foreign substance, and how to alter it, make it harmless and inert. He reached out with his native psionic healing ability into Devrik’s body… and did the thing.

Devrik’s eyes flew open and he had his hand around Vulk’s throat before the latter could react. Fortunately Devrik didn’t seem confused or groggy, and he quickly recognized his friend.

“Sorry,” he grated quietly, releasing his grip. “Not a good idea to wake me that way.”

“No choice,” Vulk gasped sotto voce, rubbing his bruised neck. “We were all drugged. I’ve thrown it off, and neutralized it in you. But our host and his servant have just taken Farendol, and I think we need to stop whatever it is they have planned!”

Instantly Devrik was on his feet and buckling on his armor.

“Wake the others and follow after me,” he order Vulk. “I’m certain they’ve gone either to the arboretum or to the central courtyard.”

“That would be my guess too,” Vulk agreed, and dashed out the door, turning left. Devrik was only a few paces behind him, and turned right as he pulled his battlesword from its sheath on his back.

In the other room Korwin, being closest to the door, was the next person Vulk woke. Like Devrik, he came instantly awake, but with a less immediately aggressive response. When his friend had explained the situation to him the water mage grabbed his own weapons and armor, and dashed out the door to follow Devrik.

Tarbol was next, but Vulk felt they could do without the little nitwit’s “help,” and skipped over him to awaken Toran. The Khundari seemed to have been naturally fighting off the effects of the drug, and Vulk was able to dispel the soporific more easily than in the others. Toran too, on learning the way of things, donned his armor and grabbed his weapons to follow Korwin.

Mariala proved more difficult to awaken. Vulk knew he was getting tired, using his abilities so quickly in succession and at such strength, but there was something beyond mere exhaustion at work here. He could sense the toxin, yes, but there was something else, something that seemed to pervade the structure of her blood and brain… it was subtle, difficult to make out, and it seemed to be interacting with the drug in unexpected ways.

Twice he tried to neutralize the foreign agents in Mariala’s blood, and twice he failed. After the last attempt, he knew he only had one more go-round left before his psionic ability gave out completely. Reluctantly, he turned to Tarbol.

It was the most exhausting effort yet, but he managed to eliminate the drug from his fellow cantor’s body, and the young man woke with a start. Vulk grudgingly explained the situation, and asked if the Alean knew of any ritual that might work. Tarbol said he just might, and immediately knelt down beside Mariala and took her hands in his, bending his head to pray. In just a few seconds the woman before him began to  groan, and her eyes flickered open. She was groggy, and a bit confused at first, but she quickly grasped the urgency of the situation and rose to her feet, with Tarbol’s help.

Vulk had run back to his own room to grab his weapons, and now reappeared in the doorway to urge them on. They raced down the hallways toward the arboretum and the clashing of steel on steel, and he invoked the ritual of Virtue’s Armor, touching Mariala’s shoulder as he spoke. Kasira’s shimmering golden protection flowed over her…

♦ ♦ ♦

Leaving Vulk to rouse the others, Devrik had headed straight for the arboretum. He kicked in the northern door to Thuron Yan’s plant sanctum, splinters of wood flying as the lock twisted free of the frame, and blew through without even stopping.

In the center of the room, on the oval sandstone table, cleared now of all gardening detritus, lay Farendol’s empty but living body. At his head stood Thuron Yan, hands hovering near the Telnori’s temples, face twisted in intense concentration.

Between Devrik and the pale scholar was Olbu, who had whirled around at the sound of the shattered door, drawing a wicked looking sword with a curved tip. He advanced now toward Devrik, his sword lowered and making placating gestures with his free hand.

“Please, m’sahiri, let this one explain,” he said in a low, urgent voice. “The Master means no harm to your friend. If the m’shairi will just –”

“Get out of my way,” Devrik growled in his most nerve-grating voice, never breaking his stride. Red rage filled his vision as he saw his chance of redemption being pawed over by that ghost-faced… botanist!

Seeing that the Westerner would not be stopped by words, Olbu brought his own weapon up in a surprisingly fluid motion and attacked. Devrik was forced to stop then, barely managing to parry the slash toward his stomach. The strength of the blow shocked him out of his one-track focus on Farendol – the old man was about his own height, but must be 20 kilos lighter than him. How could he be so strong?

Devrik slashed his own blade two-handed at the old man’s stomach in return, only to have the blow turned deftly and the movement turned into a blinding counter attack. Devrik grinned then and blocked in turn.

When Korwin dashed into the room a few minutes later, he skidded to a stop at the sight of the frail-looking old mass of wrinkles holding his own, stroke for stroke, with Devrik! A moment later Toran skidded into the room, and was also impressed – although he didn’t recognize the style, he knew a master of the martial arts when he saw one. He started to crank his crossbow…

By the time the others arrived the old man made one last spinning attack to drive Devrik back, and then disengaged. He stood a dozen paces back, sword again lowered. Devrik was panting slightly, but Olbu seemed perfectly composed, his breathing regular and controlled.

M’sahiru, please listen to this one,” he called out to the group. “Things are not as they may seem.”

“You drugged us, stole our friend’s body, and seem to be preparing some sort of mystical shenanigans,” Vulk said in his best Herald’s voice, putting a restraining hand on Devrik’s shoulder. The fire mage glowered but didn’t resume the fight.

“If your intentions are benign,” Vulk continued, “why did you drug us into oblivion?”

“Merely to keep things simple, m’sahiri,” the old man said, grimacing. “Though that seems not to have worked… this one had suggested the Master should confide the truth to you, but his curse has haunted him so long… it is difficult for him to trust…

“But truly, he means no harm to the one you call Farendol… for that one is no longer in this world. You resurrected his body, m’sahiri, but his soul must have already sped to whatever comes after. You have created, most inadvertantly, a rare theological occurrence – and the answer to the Master’s dilema.

“Stop speaking in riddles,” Devrik growled. “And stop stalling. Explain yourself now, or prepare to fight us all!”

“The Master is afflicted with a rare… condition.. One he considers a curse and a great burden. He has spent three decades seeking a cure from the plants of these jungles. But while he has managed to… alter… some of the parameters of his condition, he has found no cure.

“Now you bring him a solution we never thought to employ, a healthy but spiritually empty body into which he can transfer his wonderful mind! And a Telnori one at that – his genius may go on for centuries more in such a form! He knows the plants that will induced the trance, he knows the mental discipline to achieve the tansfer… now he just needs the time to achieve it. Will you not give him this?”

“It’s not his body to dispose of,” Vulk said hotly. “Even if Farendol’s soul is gone… and it’s true, we’d begun to suspect it… it is not for your Master, or for us, to decide what becomes of his mortal form. We must take it back to his–”

“But can you not see the value?” Olbu countered passionately. “Thuron Yan is a great man, an enlightened man, and what better tribute to your deceased friend than that his abandoned shell should now house this great soul!

“You yourself believed that much good could come of a collaboration between the Master and your friend in the West… Draik, that one is named, yes? It was Thuron Yan’s intention, once the burden of his curse was lifted from him, to join you, as you suggested.”

Vulk paused, considering the old man’s words. It seemed certain now that Farendol really was gone… and if so, what difference could it make to him what use his body was put to now? Aside from the drugging, Thuron Yan had treated them well… and it’s not like he’d actually poisoned them, something a plant expert such as himself would certainly have been capable of…

“Well, I can see an argument for what you’re saying,” he said slowly. “But let your master make that argument himself. He has endured his burden, whatever it is, for this long… a little longer can hardly matter. If he’ll stop what he’s doing, we can sit down and–”

“Oh, to the Void with this!” Mariala cried out suddenly, and let go a blast of Fire Nerves at the elderly major domo, who staggered back. Her friends were momentarily shocked at this uncharacteristically unilateral action, except for Toran, who took it as a signal to loose a crossbow bolt at the still-seemingly-oblivious scholar working his ritual over Farendol’s inert form.

The bolt missed, but it forced Thuran Yan to sway back, and broke his concentration. He glared then in fury at the Khundari and the others, his elegant fingers crooking into claws of rage.

“You fools!” he hissed furiously. “This is no affair of yours, I would have let you leave here alive in the morning, with my gratitude and friendship… but since you seem determined to interfere in things you have not the slightest understanding of, so be it! Olbu!”

At his call the old man stood straighter, a feral grin on his face, seemingly no more than inconvenienced by Mariala’s spell. “This one bears a… related… condition to the Master’s. But this one does not consider it an affliction or a curse – this one embraces it!”

As he spoke his skin began to flow and the bones beneath seemed to heave and buckle… his face elongated and then flattened out, and he grew taller, as orange, black and white fur erupted from his skin. His clothes ripped apart and fell from him as his body expanded, muscles seeming to bubble up from nowhere. In a matter of seconds his transformation was complete, and he towered over the group, a roaring creature half man and half tiger.

With a snarl the were-tiger leapt at Devrik, mouth agape and claws extended. The warrior-mage backpedaled, barely avoiding a lethal slash across his belly. Toran fired his crossbow, then dropped it as the were-tiger twisted away from the bolt. The Khundari jumped into the fray then, with a fierce Dwarven battle cry, drawing his battleaxe.

With his were-creature servant engaging his uninvited guests, Thuron Yan dropped the fight from his attention and turned back to his attempt to transfer his mind and soul into the empty body on the slab before him.

But Tarbol was having none of this! He had been shocked that Cantor Vulk had seemed ready to even discuss the blasphemous suggestion of allowing the transfer, and he would be damned to the Void if he would let Alea down now! He dashed forward, past the snarling mass of fighting were-tiger, Umantari and Khundari, whirling his staff about his head and howling his outrage. Vulk grabbed at his sleeve, and missed, while Mariala cried out for him to stop.

“You shall not commit this abomination, you fiend!” he shrieked, closing on the apparently unconcerned scholar, and aiming for his head.

At the last moment, almost languidly, in a single fluid movement Thuron Yan pulled two long, razor-sharp blades from the sash at his waist. With one estoc he effortlessly parried the staff, and as the surprised youth staggered around, carried by his own momentum, the other estoc whipped up and across Tarbol’s throat.

With a gurgling, inarticulate cry, the Alean cantor collapsed to the floor, blood spurting from a severed artery to form a growing pool around him. He twitched once and was still. Vulk, Korwin and Mariala stood momentarily paralyzed by shock.

Ignoring the corpse he had just made Thuron Yan strode toward the group, loosening his robes and smiling grimly. As he came on, his body began to shift and flow as Olbu’s had, but with subtle differences. By the time he reached the group he was an enormous pale white snake, with a human torso and arms, but a face that was a disturbing mixture of man and reptile. A cobra-like hood flared from his shoulders and framed his malignant visage.

“See what you would condemn me too!” he raged in a sibilant hiss unlike his normal, urbane voice. He attacked, slashing out with razor sharp claws and a battering-ram-like tail. Vulk took a raking blow across his shoulder, and countered with his sword. Korwin drew his saber, slashing at the horror before him, and was rewarded with a line of blood oozing along the creatures flank.

Mariala blanched and drew her lucky Khundari dagger...

At that point the fight between Olbu and Devrik and Toran came to a sudden end, as the Khundari Shadow Warrior took advantage of a momentary distraction by Devrik to slide between the were-tiger’s legs, hamstringing the creature and bringing it to its knees. Whirling around he swung his battleaxe in a flashing arc that ended in the back of the tiger-man’s skull. As it collapsed in death the body began to flow and shift, and in a few seconds it was the naked corpse of the elderly Olbu that lay at their feet.

Meanwhile Vulk was trying desperately to disengage from the enraged were-snake so that he could tend to poor Tarbol. There was no hope of saving the idiot’s life, he knew, but if he could get to him quickly enough he could place him in Stasis for possible revival later on. Fortunately at that moment Devrik joined their fight, diverting Thuron Yan’s attention sufficiently for the cantor to disengage and make a dash to his fallen comrade. Even as he fell to his knees he began to perform the Ritual of Stasis

Thuron Yan appeared to be as ambidextrously agile with his claws as he had been with his blades, and while he fended off Devrik with one, and Korwin with his tail, he slashed viscously at Mariala, raking his claws across her chest and shoulder. Cloth shredded, and she staggered back, but the flare of golden light proved that Vulk’s blessing of Virtue’s Armor had done its job – her skin remained unbroken!

The momentary surprise at the failure of what should have been a killing stroke proved to be Thuron Yan’s undoing. In that brief instant Mariala, rather than retreating, leapt forward and drove her dagger into the were-snake’s belly, slashing up with all her strength. The finely-honed Khundari steel cut through muscle and viscera as though through cloth, and slid under the ribs to come to a stop, almost missing the heart. Almost, but not quite. The tip of the dagger pierced that organ, and Thuron Yan collapsed, clutching at his spilling guts, dead even as he hit the ground.

There was a stunned silence in the room as the Hand considered the sudden carnage before them. In death Thuron Yan, like his servant before him, returned to his human form, looking small and forlorn, curled around his sliced up guts in a spreading pool of blood.

Across the room, near the slab that held Farendol’s body, Vulk stood up from where he had been at work on Tarbol’s corpse. A faint bluish glow now surrounded the dead cantor’s form.

“I’ve managed to get him into Stasis,” Vulk called out. “With any luck his uncle – look out!!

At his warning the others whirled around as four large figures dropped from the skylights behind them. Four more were-tigers – no, these were were-tigresses they soon realized. After a brief grief-stricken keening towards the body of old Olbu, the creatures snarled at the group and prepared to leap.

“To the Void with this!” Devrik roared in exasperation. A Orb of Vorol appeared in his hand, and with a sharp gesture he hurled the fireball toward the creatures. They had balked momentarily at the sight of the sudden flame, and now they tried to scatter. But the brilliant fire-seed exploded into a tremendous ball of searing death, catching all four in its blast.

Shrieking in pain and fury as fur and skin burst into flame, two of the creatures collapsed almost at once, twitching into smoldering, stinking stillness. The other two attempted to escape, one toward the central courtyard and the other out the shattered northern door. The first collapsed clawing at the grillwork of the window; the other died atop the splintered ruins of the door.

Unfortunately, this allowed the flames to get a firm hold in the wooden parts of the structure in both places. In combination with all the burning plants, trellises, ceiling and support beams, the fire threatened to quickly grow into a conflagration.

“Well, shit,” Devrik said, as his first elation was replaced by chagrin. He reached out with his pyrokinetic ability and attempted to control and quell the flames. But it proved to be more than he could handle… the best he could do was slow the spread a bit.

Fortunately, Korwin was able to summon up a large quantity of ethereal water, made easier perhaps by the high humidity of the area, and doused all the burning bits in the arboretum. With relief Devrik loosed his control as most of the flames spluttered out with a steaming hiss.

“Now we need to find the Gate and get out of here,” he sighed. “Before some other cursed thing comes up!”

No one disagreed, and Korwin and Mariala dashed off to collect their things, including the mules and Therok. While Toran and Devrik searched the central courtyard Vulk made a bee-line for the library. At least now he wouldn’t have to try and copy bits of that book for Draik… he could just give him the real thing! And maybe they could come back for all the rest of this amazing collection of tomes…

In the courtyard Devrik could still not sense any Nitaran Gates, and he began to wonder if Thuron Yan had lied to them… about more than just his intentions for Farendol’s body. Did a Gate exist at all? And if so, where was it? It could take days, even months, to scour this thick rain forest trying to find it. They might be forced into an overland journey to the coast after all… Raven was going to be so pissed… he’d told her he would be home days ago…

“I think this might be it,” Toran said, pulling Devrik from his increasingly gloomy reverie. He stood next to the elaborately carved stone and metal fountain from which water gushed from a wide central pipe into the large square pool at the heart of the courtyard. At Devrik’s inquiring grunt he reached up and twisted a metal collar around the base of the water pipe.

Instantly the flow of water stopped, and a second later there was a rumbling from the pool. Another few seconds and it was obvious that the water level in the pool was dropping, and quickly. In less than three minutes the pool was entirely empty, save for a few puddles on its stone floor. Steep stone stairs on three sides of the square led down about three meters to a small open space.

“As  you know, Nitaran Gates don’t form in solid matter… nor underwater,” he said, shrugging at Devrik’s quizzical look. “Most people don’t think about that much, but we Khundari are a subterranean folk, and we take advantage of the fact to guard Gates into our realms. It seemed fairly obvious to me, what with this rather large fountain and pool right at the heart of this place, that Thuron Yan might do the same.”

By then the others had returned, and a discussion quickly began about how much of Halani-var they could realistically loot, with already loaded saddle bags and two bodies to carry. No one was quite sure who first suggested cutting the body count in half by placing Erol’s soul into Farendol’s body. Given that Tarbol’s Stasis-rigid form was slippery and tricky to handle, and would need to be securely strapped to the travois, a task Vulk, returned from the library, was just completing, it seemed like a good idea…

Farendol’s body was still in the arboretum, on the central work slab, and they all trooped in to gather around him, leaving Vulk’s barbarian lackey to watch the mules, packs and ex-Tarbol. Mariala lifted Barsol’s Bowl up, holding it directly over the still form, as Grover darted excitedly around her feet.

Lila’tometh!” she said in a commanding voice, and there was a purplish flare of light in the bowl, as a faint musical note rang in the humid air.

Erol opened his eyes to find his friends gathered around and staring down at him, eyes wide and faces variously concerned, anxious or worried. He realized he was lying down, and moved to sit up – whoa! He felt very odd. His body seemed to react differently… things seemed weirdly speeded up, but not in the way he was used to with his extratemporal sense… He swung his legs over the stone table he was on and stood up.

“By Cael’s balls,”he gasped. “You’ve all shrunk!”

It took awhile to get Erol to understand what had happened to him. He remembered the fight in the demon’s chamber, but not his grabbing the control artifact and being booted from his own body. His memory of his time in the bowl was hazy at best, although he did seem to remember dreaming of Mariala… and maybe Vulk and Devrik?

Unfortunately, they had to cut the explanations short at that point, as the northern portion of the arboretum collapsed in a shower of fiery sparks and burning wood.

“Shit!” Devrik cried. “The flames must’ve gotten into the attic rafters and spread above the ceiling!”

He reached out again with his power, but soon sensed the fire was much too big now for him to quell, too widespread for even Korwin’s ethereal water to do much good… and it was overhead as well as to the south…

Hand, we are leaving!” he roared, and headed for the gate out to the courtyard. Most of the others followed, “Farenderol” staggering about amidst the falling embers, simultaneously exultant and frustrated trying to learn to work this new body. Vulk and Mariala, however, headed for the library.

“We have to save as many books as possible,” Vulk called over his shoulder at Devrik’s angry shout. “We’ll be right there!”

Dodging falling embers from the quickly charring ceiling in the library the two friends grabbed as many books and scrolls as they could. But when they’d grabbed all they could carry, there were so very many books and scrolls still left…

Vulk, I know you must be exhausted,” Mariala cried out as bits of burning ceiling began to fall around them. “But if we chain our energies, could we cast a Stasis field around the bookshelves? We can’t let all this knowledge burn!”

It was insane, but there was no time to argue. Vulk invoked the ritual once more, this feeling the T’aran energies from his friend flow into and through him… and then a flickering blue haze enveloped the row of elegantly carved bookshelves running down the center of the room. Nothing they could do for the artwork along the walls, and Kasira only knew how long the Stasis would hold, but they’d done what they could…

The two staggered out of the library under their burdens of books and scrolls and raced down the hallways toward the arboretum and the relative safety of the courtyard. They had just made it out the gate when the rest of the arboretum’s roof collapsed, sending a shower of sparks and a blast of superheated air out the doorway and windows. The mossy floor of the courtyard began to smolder in places…

Stuffing books and scrolls into every available space in packs and saddlebags, Mariala found that Korwin had rushed back in to Thuron Yan’s workshop while she and Vulk had been in the library, and rescued as many of the scholar’s notebooks and papers as he could. And he had the delicate blue orchid, now planted in an equally delicate gray glazed pot, clutched in his hand.

As the smoke began to fill the courtyard and the heat became almost unbearable, Vulk summoned up Kasira’s Key, and opened the Valley Gate of the late Thuron Yan at last. Coughing and choking, the Hand passed through…

…and found themselves on the wooded slopes of the Elf Mound, just outside the town and keep of Dor Dür, with late afternoon sunlight bathing everything in summer gold. The air seemed blessedly cool and dry after the humid heat of the island of Kensuai, and they all breathed a sigh of relief.

“Halt and identify yourselves!” a commanding voice cried out, and a sudden rustling of leaves revealed they were surrounded by a dozen archers in brown and green, arrow nocked and bows taut, all aimed at the group. A man stepped forward then, tall, muscular, and black-haired, a grim expression on his face.

An expression that vanished and was replaced by a wide grin as he recognized the travelers. He motioned to his men, and they faded back into the woods.

“Brother!” Black Hawk laughed, coming up to Devrik and embracing him. “We have been expecting you this past pentnight, since you sent your message to my sister! Some were becoming worried, although not Raven – she said you’d be along in your own sweet time. And here you are!

“It is good to see you all… although it seems you have been recently in battle.” His smile faded then as he took in the smoke-blackened and blood-stained group, and scanned their faces. “And where is Erol? That is not his body at least, that I see there between the mules… is he –”

“Alive, brother,” Devrik said, slapping his brother-in-law on the back and turning toward the path to the keep. “But not quite himself. It’s a long story, and I’m very thirsty…