Aftermath of the Road to Oroth

The companions came into Oroth a somber and worried group, Tense with the strain of looking over their shoulders for pursuit from the fiasco in Ujen two nights prior, they quickly found a decent looking inn near the south gate of the town, the Sign of the Red Fox. Devrik and Drake both agreed it would make a quick get-away easier, should such a maneuver become necessary.

Cris was recovered enough from his injuries to take the horses and pack mule to the nearest stables, since the inn’s small stable was already full; Mariala went with him, just to be sure he wasn’t rooked. Devrik took Obras’ ashes to the undertaker recommended by the innkeeper, and laid out 50 silver pennies for a decent bronze urn, while Drake and Vulk began quiet inquiries into the whereabouts of The Hand of Vengeance company.

By the time they gathered back at the inn for an early supper, they had learned that Captain Colith and his company, along with a bookish looking young fellow, had set out at mid-day three days earlier, on foot. They had purchased food and supplies clearly meant for a foray into the trackless reaches of the Delta’s marshes and swamps. Everyone who knew anything of the party seemed quite sure that they were planning an expedition to Vindar, former capitol of the Necromancer’s empire, now a ruin of cursed and haunted rubble sinking slowly into the swamps. When pressed, no one could remember anyone of the company saying so specifically, but they all held the same very strong impression.

“Maybe I was wrong,” Mariala said when all the facts learned so far had been shared. “Perhaps Ardath isn’t seeking out Baylora’s sanctum afterall, but going for something else, something in the ruins of Vindar…”

“An even more dangerous adventure, if half the tales told about that cursed place are true,” replied Drake. “But I doubt that it’s true.”

“I agree,” Devrik nodded. “The captain is too canny to let every Thom, Dak and Harad in town know what his business really was. I’ve seen him lead them as was too curious about his affairs down the garden path before, with them none the wiser he’d done so.”

“So,” replied Vulk, “if everyone they came in contact with in Oroth thinks they’re headed for Vindar, then that’s probably the one place in the Delta they aren’t going!”

The others nodded agreement, then went silent as the serving wench bustled into the private dining nook they’d taken for their meal, laying out their hot chocolate and a selection of small pastries. She gave Devrik a wink and swing of her hips as she turned to go, but he was too sunk in his thoughts to pay much heed.

“But even if we leave in the morning, and we’re not ready for that, they’re two and a half days ahead of us now,” he rumbled. “Damn! So close!”

“We may be able to overtake them,” Vulk offered. “There’s twenty men in the Company, and Ardath is bound to slow them further, since I doubt he can match them physically on the march.”

“Plus, there’s no reason to believe they’re in any particular rush,” added Mariala. “There’s no deadline to find the Sanctum, after all – it’s been hidden for half a century, what’s another day or two?”

She undercut this a bit when she continued, “Of course, Ardath did strike me as the impatient sort… always looking for short cuts.”

“It’s true that Colith would want to husband the men’s strength on the journey, if he believed there might be fighting at the end,” mused Drake. “I don’t know how much this Ardath told him of the real dangers, but even if he down-played them, the captain would assume the worst.”

Devrik snorted. “True enough, but with the arcane involved I’m not sure he really could imagine the worst… that’s what drives me mad about all this, that they may walk blindly into dangers they don’t even know enough of to look for!”

After some more back-and-forth, when the chocolate and the pastries were gone, it was agreed that they would spend tomorrow preparing themselves for the journey into the Delta, and leave at dawn on the day following. This would put the Hand and their employer more than four days ahead of them, but they were determined to overtake them before they reached their mysterious goal.

“After all,” Mariala pointed out, “just because Ardath thinks he knows where he’s going, doesn’t mean it will be that simple to actually find the place. There’s bound to be some casting about, maybe even some backtracking, and who knows what other delays.”

“True,” agreed Devrik. “But unfortunately the same problems face us too, along with the need to track our quarry.”

With that the group retired to their rooms, to rest or pursue other pastimes, depending on mood and inclination. And everyone kept an ear cocked for the tread of official boots that might indicate the killings in Ujen had been traced to them…

————————————————————

The next day dawned clear and sunny, the first truly spring-like day since the season had changed. Each of the group, after a quick breakfast, headed out into the town to take care of their part of the preparations. It had been agreed they would let it be know that they were part of The Hand of Vengeance, previously on detached duty and now hurrying to catch up with their fellows. And they’d also agreed to perpetuate the idea that the ruins of Vindar were indeed their goal.

Drake’s first task was to see to the long-term stabling of the horses. Although they would be taking the mule into the marshes, there was no point in leading their steeds to almost certain foundering and death, when they’d be unable to make use of their speed in any case. Cris led him to the stable he’d hired the night before, before heading off on his own errands.

As Drake entered the building, his eyes slow to adjust to the fragrant dimness after the bright morning sun, he was surprised to feel a hand on his shoulder, wheeling him around.

“Drake?! Drake Bartoff?! By Agara’s balls, is that really you?!”

Aftermath of the Temple of Madness

They were all dazed and bone weary as they made their way out of the underground ruins of the Naventhülian temple. Only Devrik’s young wolfhound pup, Brann, seemed to have life and energy in him when they reached the entrance where he’d been tied. He leaped and whined at Devrik, who carried the young boy, Borin, still asleep in his arms. He tried to calm the pup, but to little effect.

Mariala had insisted on carrying the body of the boy’s sister, wrapped in the pale blue nimbus of Vulk’s stasis field. She snapped a single word at the puppy, and he was instantly quiet, heeling at his masters feet. Devrik raised an eyebrow in surprise, but Mariala was clearly in no mood to talk, and he let it pass. The group waded into the water next to the causeway, and headed for the shore, Drake carrying the pup.

He was the last one to reach the shore, as he stepped out of the water a shadow detached itself from the darkness under the bridge, in the shape of a man. Before the others had a chance to react, Devrik had set Borin down and drawn his battlesword, in one fluid motion. By the time Drake had dropped Brann and grasped for his own sword, the figured had moved into the pale light of the setting half-moon, chuckling.

“Easy my young friends,” said Master Vetaris. “From the look of you all there’s been enough action this night. I’ve come to offer what aid I can in this dark hour.”

Devrik lowered his sword, and Mariala stepped forward. The old mage looked sadly at the body of Mirial Baysiron, and shook his head.

“I knew death would stalk the town tonight, but I had yet hoped…” He looked beyond her to Borin Baysiron, laid out on the ground, the puppy curled up next to him, muzzle resting on his chest. “The boy yet lives, though?”

“Yes Magister,” Mariala replied, her voice thin but unwavering. “In that much at least we did not fail.” As she spoke Vulk suddenly dropped to his knees, a hand held to his head.

Drake hurried to his side to steady him and help him back to his feet, but Vulk waved him off, though he swayed slightly as he faced Mariala’s mentor.

“How came you here so timely, Master Vetaris,” he asked. “We hardly knew our destination tonight even when we arrived at it… how did you…”

“I have not been unaware of the disappearances in town this past tenday, Cantor,” the older man replied calmly. “And I have been making my own inquiries, especially once the child went missing. Though to little enough avail… I felt almost blocked…

“Tonight I turned to divination, casting the Star Runes, and at last I had some success. The signs were clear enough, that this would be the time and place where answers would be found.”

“So you came alone, unarmed?” interjected Devrik in his grating voice, sheathing his sword at last. “That seems foolish.”

“Bluntly spoken, young man,” Vetaris replied. “But I am hardly unarmed.” A faint glitter of violet light caught the eye as he pocketed something long and slender in his voluminous sleeve.

“Now quickly, the night moves on and I fear we have little time to spare. Tell me what has transpired, that we may best divine a correct course of action in the coming hours.”

After the briefest hesitation, Mariala gently set the body of the girl down next to her sleeping brother, on the opposite side of the dog, and began to relate all that happened since they had set out from their inn – was it really only a little over a watch ago? It seemed so much longer…

Devrik and Drake added few comments to her narration, while Vulk sat down on a rock and seemed to doze. When she was done Master Vetaris looked grim, all trace of amusement gone from his usually kindly face. For the first time since she had met him, Mariala thought she saw the dangerous mage behind his avuncular façade, and was a little surprised at her own surprise – after all, one did not rise to his exalted and powerful rank without becoming very dangerous indeed!

But his wrath was not with his new pupil or her friends, he soon made clear, pacing up and down a strip of sandy beach.

“I knew it was bad, but I had not realized how bad – the Undead, here under our very noses… a cursed demonic artifact… and a renegade mage…” He looked at the companions intently for a moment, and shook his head. He then knelt down beside Vulk and tilted his head back, looking into his eyes for several minutes, muttering under his breath.

“Yes, our young cantor will be fine, given a few days rest and proper nutrition.” He stood back up and gathered the group in by eye.

“Please do not be insulted when I say it amazes me to find you all still alive and relatively unscathed. A zamora, perhaps two, I could believe… but to defeat a fully mature gülmora… and a moderately powerful renegade T’ara Kul to boot…”

“Yes,” Mariala sighed, “we were lucky. The zamora seemed easy enough, Drake dispatched that with almost a single blow. The gülmora was another question…” she shuddered at the thought of the Shadow that had touched her own mind before being rebuffed and wondered how much worse it must have been for Vulk.

“It seemed to have been… not itself,” she went on. “From the ramblings of Polus, or Fornat, or whatever his name truly was, I think that Joran, the gülmora, was possessed by the spirit of the poor boy Golhan sacrificed into the Orb centuries ago. All those years alone, trapped… it was clearly insane, and just as clearly in control of Joran’s undead body. Thank Shala the little ghost didn’t know how to fully control his host’s powers… in essence, we didn’t really beat a gülmora at it’s peak, but rather the insane ghost of a little boy.”

Mariala shook her head as Devrik started to object, and went on.

“As for the renegade mage… well, he had us from the start! We were all entranced by his spell, and if he hadn’t wanted us all alive so he could drain our life force, he could have killed us all quite easily. And if the damn Orb hadn’t been cursed, or broken, or whatever, he would have succeeded in draining us and gaining a couple more centuries of life…

“We were lucky. But we still couldn’t save a little girl.” She sat down next to Vulk and put her head in her hands. She was damned if she’d cry in front of any of them…

“Don’t discount luck, my dear Mariala,” Vetaris said gently. “And take your victories however you can get them – I can assure you, your enemies will! You can’t always save everyone… it’s a cold and cruel world sometimes, but that doesn’t mean you stop trying, eh?

“But what are your next steps, that is what I must know now. The town is a boiling beaker right now, almost at the saturation point, between the recent Korönian scare and the disappearances. One more ingredient thrown in and the whole thing could explode, violently!”

“But the Earl, at least, and the Church, need to know,” said Vulk firmly. “There can be no question of keeping this to ourselves!”

“I quite agree, it’s too big for sweeping under the rug. But I would encourage discretion. Certainly the Earl, or at least his son, should be informed, and the Archcantor of the Temple. If you’ll take my advice, limit your contact to those two, and let them take matters from there.

“But if there is any other in the Earl’s household you feel should know of these events,” and here the old man looked innocently across the water at the castle, “perhaps that would best be left for after Earl and Archcantor are informed, eh?”

He then turned to look at the bodies of the two children, the quick and the dead, and laid his hand on Mariala’s shoulder.

“I know you’ll want to return the children to their parents, but you would do them no service to tell them the truth of their daughter’s death. Rather than force them to imagine the terror and fear she must have faced under the Shadow, let them believe she simply wandered off and drowned. The boy will remember nothing, I think. A blessing, really…”

“But what about the other bodies, the disappearances –”

Vetaris sighed and shook his head.

“With the girl’s disappearance explained, and no further ones occurring, the townsfolk will draw other conclusions… in a surprisingly short time this will all have faded into obscurity. Remember, no one was much exercised about the disappearance of a drunken sailor, a street tough, or an orphan apprentice boy, until a beloved child, of solid family, went missing…”

Unable to argue with that, the group pulled themselves once again to their feet, and set about getting their stories straight. Master Vetaris agreed to take the unreadable grimoire of Golhan Zhanul, to see if he could break it’s encryption, promising to share whatever he learned with those who had uncovered it. Once he was assured his young friends knew what they were about, he prepared to depart for his sanctum across the river, until Mariala drew him aside.

“I wanted to show you one other thing I found within Golhan’s treasure room,” she said, pulling the brilliant shiarez crystal from her girdle. The older mage’s eyes widened briefly, and he broke into a great smile.

“Congratulations my dear woman,” he said, peering closely at the stone, but not touching it. “Not a few T’ara Kul goes their whole life without finding a Matrix Crystal, and this one…” he looked suddenly more sharply at the stone, and snapped his finger, causing a small, pure white light to flash into existence above them. In it, the gem sparkled in a prismatic rainbow of colors.

He stepped back and snuffed the light, shaking his head, but still smiling.

“I told you earlier not to discount luck, Mariala, and I can only reiterate that advice! For this is no ordinary Matrix Crystal, attuned to only a single convocation – it is a Prism Matrix, capable of channeling all convocations with equal facility!

“Once you have attuned yourself to it, I’ll be fascinated to know how strong a boost you’ll gain in your spell casting. Assuming you wish to share that information of course,” he added hastily. “A very private matter, I’m afraid I sometimes let my curiosity get the better of my manners!”

With that he turned and disappeared up the road into town.

–——————————————————

While Mariala had spoken privately with her mentor, Vulk and Drake had taken Mirial’s body down to the water’s edge, where the cantor released his stasis field. Drake gently lowered the body into the water, allowing it to soak into the girl’s clothes and hair. When Mariala returned to them she took up the girl once again with a nod to her friends, and headed silently off down the beach, Devrik following with the now restless, but still unconscious, Borin in his arms and a subdued puppy at his heels.

They turned inland when they reached the cemetery, making their way past the spot where Borin had been darted by the possessed Joran, and then turning back towards town. When they arrived at the butcher’s home/shop, they were surprised to find it ablaze with light and the young couple arguing on the doorstep.

“I’ll rouse a few of the men, Elana,” the butcher was saying. “We’ll find the boy, I promise. But you’re not going out there; I won’t lose you too!”

“I can search as well as any, Marik,” he wife replied vehemently, “and I’ll be damned if I’ll stay sitting inside going crazy while my remaining child is missing!”

“But what if he returns, darling, and no one is here? I’m sure he’s looking for his sister, and he’ll return on his own. You should –”

He broke off as he saw Mariala and Devrik step into the light spilling from their open doorway. For a moment both parent’s eyes went wide with relief when they saw what they carried, but relief quickly turned to fear when they saw that neither moved, and their daughter’s dripping clothes.

“Oh no, not both of them!” cried Elana, running to Mariala.

“The boy lives, he just sleeps,” Devrik assured her. It was a sign of their distress that neither parent flinched at the harsh harmonics of his voice. Marik took his son from the warriors arms, then turned to pull his wife to him as she sobbed over the body of their daughter.

The ensuing hour was torture for Mariala, as she had to explain how Devrik’s wolfhound pup had led them to find Mirial’s body in the surf, and how they had stumbled across Borin asleep under a bush as they had returned from the beach. The lies pained her enough, but having to accept the thanks of the grateful, though bereaved, parents was almost unendurable. But as they finally left the butcher’s house in the pre-dawn darkness, she had to admit that Master Vetaris had been right… as bad as this had been, the truth would have been so very much worse for those poor people.

–——————————————————

As Mariala and Devrik made their way through the darkened streets to their inn, Vulk and Drake were also headed home. As their two friends had headed down the beach with the children, they had climbed the embankment from the beach to the road. Crossing the water once again, but this time on the causeway rather than beside it, they pounded on the postern gate, demanding entrance on the Earl’s business.

Vulk’s Herald’s Baton and Cantor’s sigil eventually battered down the resistance of the drowsy guards, and after repeating the performance at the gates of the main keep, they were eventually shown into a private sitting room. There they cooled their heels for a good two turns of the glass while varying levels of servants tried to avoid the responsibility of waking their masters.

Eventually a bleary-eyed Ser Dalan confronted them and demanded to know what all the fuss was about. He seemed even less happy to see them than he usually was when acting on behalf of his lord, Ser Owain, but perhaps the late hour explained that.

“We have dire news to report Ser Dalan,” Vulk stood and gave the other a half-bow. “And while I intend to speak with Ser Owain, I’m afraid this is a matter that must, in propriety, be first put before his brother the Earl.”

Drake had noticed, in the past, that Vulk tended to get very formal and Herald-y sounding when he was tired, angry or hurt, and he was all three tonight. Or this morning, rather. He decided to keep quiet for once… must be pretty damn tired myself, he thought.

“Nonsense, Cantor Vulk,” Ser Dalan sniffed. “I’m sure you can pass on this “dire” information to me, and I’ll see that both Ser Owain and Ser Ronalt hear of it in the morning. They can decide if the Earl needs –”

“Ser Dalan, I’m not here to argue with you. If you can’t be of assistance in getting Ser Ronalt down here, then get the hell out. This news is not for you, unless his Grace or his regent (or Ser Owain) decides otherwise. And frankly, I’ll be surprised if they do. Now help or go back to bed!”

Well, so much for formal and diplomatic, Drake grinned inwardly.

Ser Dalan was momentarily left speechless, mouth agape, but quickly pulled himself together. Something in Vulk’s eyes, perhaps, convinced him this was not the time to push…

“If this isn’t as important as you claim Elida, it’ll be your ass nailed to the wall. I’ll get Ser Ronalt.” With a spooked glance back at Vulk, he left the room, and within five minutes had returned with the equally sleepy looking son of the Earl, his Grace’s regent in most affairs of the earldom.

“Cantor Vulk,” he began, “I hope you have a good reason for waking half the castle at this unseemly hour!” I –”

“I do your lordship,” Vulk interrupted. “It involves the disappearances in Devoktown this past tenday, a buried Naventhülian temple practically beneath your very feet, two flavors of the Undead, a cursed demonic artifact, and a renegade T’ara Kul…”

Vulk thought about asking Ser Ronalt to send Ser Dalan out of the room, but decided that indulging his pique would just mean having to tell the story again later to Ser Owain. This way Eristern could tell his master himself, and Vulk could kill two birds with one stone, while never letting on that he had any kind of “understanding” with Ser Owain…

As it turned out, he was able to kill three birds with his one stone. As soon as Ser Ronalt understood the full import of what Vulk was telling him, he stopped him and called for a servant.

“The Archcantor was here for a banquet this evening, and decided to spend the night here in the castle,” he explained to Vulk as he sent the servant to wake the cleric and fetch him thither. “He’ll need to hear this as well, best to get it done all together, eh?”

So Vulk had only to tell the story of their recent adventure once, and was saved from the trip to the Great Temple and another round of convincing servants to wake their masters. The regent and the Archcantor asked few questions, but cogent ones, and Ser Dalan merely listened. To his credit, he acknowledged to Vulk with a look and a seated bow, that he had been right to rouse their lordships.

Eventually Vulk and Drake were allowed to depart, while Ser Ronalt and the Archcantor bent over a desk discussing what steps would have to be taken to destroy and sanctify the buried complex, and how to keep it from the general knowledge. Ser Dalan saw them out, offering them rooms in the keep for the night, but they declined, parting rather more amicably than they had met.

The pre-dawn air was bracing, and a relief after the stuffy closeness of the castle’s sitting room. The stars burned like a myriad of diamonds against the velvet blackness, the milky double-band of Arial’s Girdle stretched from horizon to horizon, and Vulk realized just how good it was to be alive.

–——————————————————

At the Inn of the Cloven Shield Vulk and Drake found Mariala and Devrik apologizing to a sleepy and rather cranky innkeeper for waking him at such an unholy hour, but insisting that they really needed to get to their rooms. It took a few moments, but once he understood that they had been searching for the missing girl, and that she’d been found tragically drowned, he quickly unbarred the door. He even offered to start the fire and prepare an early breakfast for them, but said he understood completely when they claimed exhaustion.

Once Master Grennan had seen them to their rooms and again retired to his own bed, the four companions quietly met in Devrik’s room, which was closest to the stairs to the third floor. That was where Fornat, or Polus, had taken a suite earlier in the tenday. They all agreed that there should be no delay in searching his rooms for his grimoire, if it hadn’t been destroyed with him, and any other artifacts or items that might connect him with the T’ara Kul. Mariala was quite vocal about not letting news of a renegade mage become common knowledge – people were wary enough of magic, even when they demanded the fruits of its practice, without giving them a villain to fear. Devrik agreed with her, but since no one was objecting, he said nothing.

Drake impressed everyone, and himself most of all, when he managed to pick the lock to the suite in almost nothing flat… two twists and a click, and the door swung open! Inside, in the dim glow of Kasira’s Light from Vulk, they quickly found the renegade mage’s saddle bags, apparently his only luggage. The chest provided by the management was unlocked and contained a few clothes, but nothing of value or import.

But the saddle bags did contain a large, leather-bound book, locked with an iron lock, four glass sphere’s, each about 2” in diameter, seven sealed vials of various materials and sizes, and a money belt containing two gold Darikazi crowns, 12 Arushali pennies, and six copper bits.

“Well it looks like we hit pay dirt,” Drake quietly crowed. The other two suites on the floor where currently unoccupied, but somehow skulking seemed to require whispered voices. “These glass sphere’s look interesting, I wonder what they do… and could these be potions? Certainly this is the infamous grimoire we seek, no?”

He pulled the book out of the bags last, laying it on bed next to the other items.

“Yes, it certainly looks like it,” Mariala agreed. “Not many other books require such security.” She tapped the lock with the nail of her index finger.

“Allow me, milady,” Drake said, pulling out his lock picks. “I’m on fire tonight with the locks!”

“No Drake, the book is almost certainly–”

“No you fool!”

Before Mariala or Devrik could stop him, Drake had inserted one of his picks into the iron lock of the book. With the first twist of the pick the whole book suddenly burst into a searing glow of white light and Drake’s face twisted in a rictus of agonizing pain. He fell back from the book with a strangled scream, his hands and face an angry red and already beginning to blister.

“Damn!” Vulk barked, leaping forward to catch his friend as he fell. The book tumbled back onto the bed, it’s brilliant glow quickly fading, seemingly unharmed.

As Vulk laid Drake gently on the floor he immediately began reaching out with his healing sense, assessing the damage. It was bad, but if he acted quickly… he laid one hand over Drakes folded ones, and another on his forehead, saying a quick prayer to Kasira. Then he concentrated.

In his mind’s eye he saw the spreading damage in Drake’s tissues – burns always continued to cause more damage, even after the heat source was removed. He reached out and… absorbed… the damaging energy, channeling the remaining heat up and out of the body… the burns would get no worse, at least. He then set his power to repairing the damage already done.

For twenty minutes he labored over his friend, until he finally sagged back against the bed, more exhausted than he could ever remember being. Between the encounter with the Shadow and this attempt at healing, he felt twenty years had been sucked from his life… but at least Drake would live, and unscarred at that.

Miriala and Devrik had silently watched as Vulk had worked his healing, seeing the blisters slowly reabsorb into Drake’s skin. And while that skin was still red, it clearly was much better than it had been. When the cantor finally slumped back, Devrik lifted Drake up.

“Can you get Vulk back to their room?” he asked Mariala. “I’ll take Drake. And we’d better take the book, vials and glass balls with us.”

Mariala nodded agreement and quickly gathered up Polus’ arcane detritus, leaving the money and mundane objects where they lay. She then helped Vulk to his feet and , with one arm around his waist and his arm over her shoulder, guided the stumbling cantor down the stairs.

When she eventually got him to the room he shared with Drake, she found that Devrik had retrieved his own medical kit and was further tending to their friend’s burns.

Vulk collapsed onto his own bed, and almost instantly was asleep. After checking to make sure he was breathing properly, and not in shock, Mariala pulled Drake’s pack from under his bed and rummaged through it.

“Ah, here it is,” she exclaimed, pulling a red leather tube, sealed with wax, from the depths. “I knew he still had some of this stuff!”

She handed the tube to Devrik, who instantly recognized it.

“Ichor of Korön! I’m surprised to see it here in Arushal. But it’s very good for burns, especially, and it should help prevent infection…” He broke the seal and began apply the pungent paste to Drakes wounds.

Mariala sat down on the chest under the window, sagging in exhaustion herself. For the love of Shala, would this hellish day never end?

–——————————————————

But it did end, and the four friends slept throughout the day. It was evening before everyone but Drake, who was still in some pain, met in the common room for a much needed meal. It was then that they learned, from their enraged host himself, that the “gold” Polus had paid him for his accommodations had overnight turned to mere copper!

So much for keeping magic out of this, Mariala thought to herself with an internal wince. But as it turned out, the innkeeper’s anger was mollified by the money (“real money this time!”) he’d discovered just laying on the bed when he’d gone up to confront the man in the late morning.

“He obviously knew the jig was up, and was packing to flee – must have heard me coming and fled over the rooftops!”

The money more than compensated him for his losses, with a little extra for the pain and suffering, so he was content to merely report the would-be theft to the Watch, in case the rascal dared to show his face again. No one explained to him that he was, in fact, very lucky not to have encountered the man, or that he would not be making any future appearances in Devok or anywhere else.

The next day saw Mariala at Master Vetaris’ home and sanctum, meditating and preparing to attune to her new Matrix Crystal. At sunset she felt she was ready, and Kiril left her alone to perform the ritual. When it was over, she attempted to cast the Violet Eye, and was impressed at the increased power and control she felt in the casting.

She had no qualms about sharing her success with Master Vetaris, who was duly impressed with the level she had achieved. It was a tired but very satisfied woman who made her way back to the inn that night.

While Mariala was busy with arcane matters, Vulk and Devrik spent the early part of the day converting the old silver coins and the rubies recovered from the Naventhülian temple into more convenient forms of cash. Mariala having claimed the shiarez gem as her share, the men each chose one of the rubies of approximately the same size, and then converted the others into silver. When they were done, each of the three had five new gold coins and 35 silver pennies.

During lunch a messenger from the Temple found Vulk and asked if he and his companions would be willing to accompany the Archcantor’s men into the underground temple, as they prepared to examine it, seeking the best way to exorcise and destroy it. Drake was in no shape, of course, and Mariala was otherwise engaged, but Devrik was more than happy to accompany Vulk on the errand.

And so the early afternoon found them once again walking the dank corridors of the ancient demonic temple, this time with a large party of clerics and temple soldiers of the Cult of Cael. The areas to the south, with which Vulk and Devrik were familiar, seemed unchanged, save perhaps that the bodies were even more decayed and rotting than before. The clerics blessed and purified them, and they were taken away for proper Eldari cremation.

The area to the north proved disturbing but unoccupied… a long hallway lined with statues of hideously masked figures, one of which lay shattered across the floor… a huge room whose walls, pillars and large alter were all carved in grotesque figures and faces, which seemed to writhe and twist in the shifting light, as if in torment… and a sea cave, with an underwater tunnel that clearly led to the outside. This latter area was sealed by a heavy bronze door that seemed to have been smashed and battered by huge fists, or something, from the cave side…

It was dusk when the searchers again resurfaced, sealing the secret cliff-side door behind them. The lead cantor thanked the friends for their help, and assured them that the Temple would soon set the place to rights. A pity they couldn’t simply put it all to the torch…

Mariala rejoined them back at the inn later that evening, just as the three men were finishing up supper in the common room. Drake was finally feeling, and looking, well enough to leave his bed, but was still weak from his injuries. And while Vulk seemed fully recovered from his psychic wounds inflicted by the gülmora, the day’s activity seemed to have left him in a funk. Everyone agreed that tomorrow would be soon enough to discuss what to do about Colith and the possible danger he and his men were being led into by this Ardath fellow that Mariala so distrusted.

They agreed to meet in the morning to discuss it over breakfast, when everyone was rested and sharp…

 

Aftermath of the Red Death Plot

Aftermath of the Red Death Plot

It was a cold, wet night after the battle in the forest clearing. Drake and Denik helped the caravan guards move the bodies of the Darikazi sailors and the diseased acolyte off the road at the far end of the clearing, while Vulk and Mariala tended to the wounded and aided in the set up of a secure camp. A cold rain began before the evening meal was ready, and continued on and off throughout the night.

They kept a watch, of course, and the caravan master, Kenis Alvar, insisted that two people stand each watch – one from his own guard and one from the group. Their actions had spoken loudly, to be sure, but he was a cautious man who hadn’t arrived at his station in life by being too trusting… and Captain Bokelan, despite his wounds, needed close watching.

After a cold breakfast in a misty dawn the enlarged caravan set out for Kar Devok, the prisoner slumped onto the back of one of the pack mules. Three hours saw them to the central square of Devoktown, just as the rain let up and the winter sun began to break through the clouds. While the caravan master’s men set about arranging his goods, the man himself accompanied the group, and the prisoner, to the castle itself.

Kar Devok stood on a small island in Kelin Bay, at the mouth of the minor River Thes, accessible by land only across a fortified bridge. The party crossed from the shore to the Middle Island, where a gatehouse blocked the entrance to the shorter section of bridge that spanned the water to the island castle itself. When the guards demanded their business, both Vulk and the caravan master stepped forward, Captain Bokelan supported between them, and demanded the Earl’s justice for “this pirate captain of Darikaz.”

Bokelan was quickly hustled off to the castle’s dungeon by two men-at-arms, while his captors were escorted into the castle proper to await the Earl’s pleasure. The wait was short, as the Earl’s son, Ser Ronalt Hanorn, soon summoned them into a small audience room to hear the whole story. His father, he explained, left the day-to-day running of the earldom to him, but would be told of all that had transpired.

Ser Ronalt’s face darkened quickly as he heard the story of the ambush in the forest unfold, and cast suspicous looks at the four “turncoats.” Vulk quickly explained how they had come to be on the ship, and as proof that they had been acting under orders from Ser Ronalt’s own uncle, Ser Owain, produced the bronze token his lordship had once given him. This seemed to calm Ser Ronalt down considerably, and when the tale was fully told he stood to thank them all for their service to the Realm. As they were ushered out, and told not to leave town just yet, he began issuing orders to his secretary to have two ships sent in immediate pursuit of the Sea Hag.

“Tyvos knows, she should be easy enough to overtake,” he laughed, “with no more than two men crewing her!” He also ordered patrols into the countryside to seek out any other Darikazi conspirators or spies, and sent word to the temple of Cael to alert the soldiers of the Order of the Bronze Shield.

Once they were back in town Master Alvar bid the others farewell, thanking them again for their aid in the ambush (and the gold taken from the pirate captain) and heading for his regular lodging in town, his mother’s home. At a question from Mariala he turned and suggested the Inn of the Broken Shield as a fine establishment, clean and with decent food.

Denik seemed to have attached himself to the group, and when they took rooms at the inn so to did he. Vulk looked more than a little askance at this, and wasn’t shy about sharing his distaste with his companions.

“I don’t trust the Darikazi bastard,” he said to the others as they entered the room he and Drake were to share. “He may seem innocent in all this, but for all we know he’s still a spy… just a very clever and skilled one. And in any case, no good has ever come from any Darikazi scum, peasant or lord!”

“Vulk,” sighed Mariala, “you’re being unreasonable. He was ‘pressed the same as us, and he fought well at the ambush – and on our side, once he saw what we were doing. I sense no evil intent in him, although I’ll admit he seems to have secrets…”

“And who doesn’t,” laughed Drake, dropping his pack on the bed nearest the window. “He seems a decent enough fellow to me Vulk.”

Vulk just shook his head darkly and turned away to rummage through his own pack for a change of clothes. Mariala sighed again and departed for her own room just down the hall. Denik’s room was a small one on the same floor, near the stairs, so he had not accompanied them down the hall.

The rest of the day, and all of the next, passed quietly for the group. Drake found sparing partners in several of the caravan guards, especially Obras Arven, while both Vulk and Mariala devoted their time to catching up on studying and meditating, activities sharply curtailed in recent days. Denik disappeared for much of the day, but joined the group for dinner in the common room, and seemed more talkative… though his voice still grated a bit.

The next day the weather turned cold and wet again, but was brightened for the companions by the arrival, on the late morning tide, of the Earl’s two ships, with the Sea Hag between them. They arrived on the docks in time to see the one-eyed pilot and crazed bosun being lead off in irons to join their captain in the dungeons of Kar Devok. Mariala pointed out the cantor of Mara, the Immortal Healer, aboard the captured ship swinging a censor of burning incense and chanting.

“To cleanse the ship of any remaining taint of plague, no doubt,” Vulk commented. “I’m surprised they even brought it into harbor, actually.”

“Perhaps they took the cantor with them, and she’s been performing the cleansing rites all the way back,” Mariala suggested. “Although I suppose just burning it at sea might have been easier…”

“No, it seemed a solid ship,” Drake replied. “No sense wasting a valuable prize when it can be saved with just a little extra effort; and I’m sure the Earl will appreciate the addition to his little fleet.”

Word came to them that evening that their presence would be required next morning at the Earl’s Court, where the Darikazi pirates and raiders would be tried. It was Ser Dalan Eristern, aide-de-camp to Ser Owain, who delivered the news as they sat down to the evening meal.

“I have come from Virzon, at the request of Ser Owain, to debrief you on your mission for him to Darikaz, “ he told them as he joined them at table.

“He certainly has his methods,” was all he would say, with a thin smile, in response to questions about how he knew about their return so quickly. He then had the story of their adventure in Izmirk and on the high seas out of them, listening intently and asking only a few questions.

“I meet with the Earl later tonight,” he told them as he rose to leave. “Be prepared to tell your story again tomorrow under his questioning.”

The trial took place in the Great Hall of Kar Devok, and the Earl of Devok himself presided. Older and more frail than his brother Owain, his mind was nonetheless sharp and incisive, as evidenced by his penetrating questioning of each witness to the events of the past tenday. Vulk also noted that he carefully avoided any mention, in this public venue, of he and his companions acting as agents for his brother.

The testimony lasted into the early afternoon, and when it was done the Earl took little time in pronouncing his judgement. Bokelan, “erstwhile captain of the Darikazi vessel Sea Hag,” was found guilty of espionage and attempted murder, and sentenced to be “hanged by the neck until he is dead, then drawn and quartered, his remains to be cast into the sea.”

His crewmen were found innocent of their captain’s crimes, having followed orders they were bound to obey and without prior knowledge of the diseased nature of their passenger. But they were ordered to be quit of the borders of Arushal within a tenday under penalty of imprisonment.

The companions, including Denik (much to Vulk’s annoyance), attended the hanging of “Blood-eagle” Bokelan the next day at dawn. As the sun rose over the eastern hills into a clear, cold winter sky, the Darikazi captain was led to the gibbet in Victory Square, cursing and swearing the whole way. His almost unintelligible tirade was only ended when his heels finally danced on the air at the end of a sudden drop.

As the sombre group left the square to return to their rooms they met Ser Dalan, who informed them that the Sea Hag had been formally seized by the Earl, and that Sharm Norel, her former pilot, and Krydel Storex, the crazed bosun, had been forced to watch the execution before being shown the road west.

The next several days were spent in study, meditation, and practice at arms as the group considered what to do next. Mariala met a fellow T’ara Kul, a man of middle years named Kiril Vetaris, while researching at the Guild of Arcane Lore. He was impressed by her during their chat, and eventually offered to tutor her and let her use his private library. His secluded home, in the woods on the other side of the river from town, was the perfect place to delve into the deeper mysteries, and Mariala began to spend most days there. She soon became convinced that he might be a Gray Mage, the mightiest of the T’ara Kul, though he remained reticent on the point…

The friends were surprised, near the end of the tenday, to find Ser Dalan once again joining them for dinner, this time in a private room of the inn. Vulk had hoped this might mean Denik would be excluded, but Ser Dalan seemed perfectly happy to have the damn Darikazi interloper there…

“ I have good news for you all,” Ser Dalan announced, once the food had been laid out. “As a reward for your service to Arushal, Ser Owain has urged his brother the Earl to bestow upon you three a great gift.” He paused for dramatic effect, and seemed a little disappointed that no one was inclined to beg him to go on.

“You three are to receive,” he said finally,” in joint ownership, the former Darikazi ship known as the Sea Hag, to use as you see fit.” He sat back with a self-satisfied smile. The companions just stared at him blankly for a moment, then looked at one another.

“By the fiery balls of Agara, what are we supposed to do with a ship,” Drake finally blurted out.

“A plague ship at that,” added Mariala, looking a bit pale.

“A Darikazi plague ship,” Vulk said flatly.

Ser Dalan looked more than a little annoyed at their apparent ingratitude, apparently because it had really been his idea to gift the group with the prize ship. He threw a small bag onto the table, a bag that jingled loudly and interestingly.

“His Grace also includes this bag of coin to help defray the costs of refitting the vessel,” he said coolly, rising to leave. “That is to be divided amongst the four of you, which is why I invited young… Denik… to join us.”

With that he rose and took his leave of them without another word.

As Drake upended the bag onto the table and began to count the gold that poured out, Denik took a sip of his wine and addressed the group.

“I suppose this is as good a time as any,” he began in his deep, rasping and somehow unnerving voice. “I’ve been meaning to tell you all for awhile now… you see, my name isn’t really Denik…”

Vulk’s ears perked up at this and he somehow managed to glower at “Denik” and glare triumphantly at his friends as the same time. Mariala rolled her eyes and Drake just ignored him.

“My name is actually Devrik,” the young man went on. “Devrik Askalan. I’m not really a peasant from Darikaz – that just seemed a prudent thing to tell our captors. I’m a mercenary fighter, or at least I was most recently, and I’m originally from the Republic.” He paused before adding, “And I’m a bastard, as well, of Clan Nordaka, if that means anything to you. It’s a noble clan, and proud…” He looked around a bit defiantly at his companions and waited for a response.

“Well, I’m a bastard myself,” Mariala said after a moment, smiling. “I don’t think you’ll find anyone here cares about that, one way or the other. Nice to formally meet you Devrik!.”

As she held out her hand she made one of the seven secret signs of the T’ara Kul, indicating she was a Kolori herself, and asking about his own status. He took her hand, grinning in relief, but didn’t respond to the signal. Did he not see it, she wondered, or is he not T’ara Kul? It was only a feeling, of course… and he did seem rather… physical… for an arcanist…

Drake slapped Devrik on his very solidly muscled back and poured another round of drinks. “Thank the Lady you’re not really Darikazi! Maybe now Vulk will get the stick out of his ass and start acting like you’re actually in the room.” He laughed at Vulk’s expression and tossed back his drink.

“Yes, well, this does put a different light on things,” Vulk mumbled through an embarrassed cough. “I hope I haven’t been too… rude… to you Den- er, Devrik… I have a rather hard time dealing with Darikazi, you see..” He trailed off and knocked back his own drink.

“Not a problem, Vulk,” Devrik shrugged. “Drake did explain about your family’s history with the Darikazi and Korönians during Zarik’s War… I can understand your feelings, growing up so close to the border.” He decided not to mention the fact that his father was a follower of Korön. It has nothing to do with me in any case, he thought, as I’m a proper Eldarian myself.

After this things with his new friends quickly grew better, as they learned more about each other and became friends in truth. Devrik and Drake quickly found they had much in common. And Mariala and Devrik found they both shared a powerful interest in divination and foretelling, which reinforced her intuition that he was T’ara Kul. Things with Vulk remained a little awkward, until he joined the training/sparring sessions Devrik set up for Drake, which warmed up everyone nicely.

Over the next tenday the group settled into a routine of sorts – Vulk was the most heavily involved in the repair, refitting and re-crewing of their prize ship, Mariala spent most days with her new mentor, studying deeply, Drake explored the town and worked on outfitting himself with clever devices and objects, and Devrik went a little giddy with more money to spend than he’d ever had in his life.

His first action, once things had settled down, had been to send a message, and an usurers note for 100 silver pennies, to the captain of his mercenary company to hold his possessions (especially his saddle bags, which contained his priceless grimoire) until they should meet up again in the coming months. He trusted Colith absolutely, his only concern being that the letter should find the company if they’d started on a new contract…

Over the next tenday, between training with Drake and Vulk and full-out sparring with several of the caravan guards, Devrik methodically went about outfitting himself as he’d never been able to do before. His biggest purchases were a hauberk of good scale and a finely made battlesword – he got a sense that the young weaponcrafter might be a Tykizu mage, but true or not, his work was very fine.

Devrik also spend some time alone with Mariala, when she was free from her studies, to discuss arcane matters best kept from the others. He was still a bit shy about telling his own story, and downplayed his esoteric skills , but he did finally return her secret signs of the T’ara Kul. They were both pleased to explore their shared interested in divination and foretelling. When they each admitted to a strong desire to possess a tarot deck, they decided to set about making it happen.

The day after they found and acquired their complementary decks (Mariala’s green and black, Devrik’s blue and black, both ornamented in beautiful matching Torel patterns of interlocking snakes and geometric shapes) they were having breakfast in the common room of the inn, examining them in the morning light, when a short, thin man in good, if travel stained, clothes approached their table.

“I’m so sorry to intrude madame, ser,” he began, “but I wonder if you might spare me a moment of your time? I couldn’t help but notice the beautiful decks of cards, and wonder if you, either of you, is skilled in the reading of them?” He smiled ingratiatingly and plucked nervously at his vest cloak.

“I’m afraid these are merely curios,” Mariala said quickly, before Devrik could tell the poor man to bugger off… he was clearly rather nervous and she wanted no hostility or fuss when she disappointed whatever request he was obviously going to make. “We’d hardly know where to begin, trying to do an actual reading. Why do you ask?”

“It’s my brother, you see,” the little man said, seating himself at the table and actually wringing his hands. “He’s gone missing this past month and more, and I’ve travelled all the way from Delfarin seeking him. But the trail grows cold here in Devok, and I had hoped, perhaps, there might be someone who could divine his location for me with, er, more… esoteric means… I­–”

“As the lady said,” Devrik interrupted, “we are not practitioners of any arcane arts – we just dabble in curious and beautiful bits of arcana.” His expression didn’t invite continuation of the conversation, but the little fellow seemed not to sense it, though he started a bit at Devrik’s harsh harmonics.

“Oh, excuse me, how rude… my name is Fornat Sanza. I’m a dealer in fine luxuries, especially rugs and perfumes. I would be more than able to pay–”

“Then I’m sure that someone at the Guild of Arcane Lore would be more than happy to take your money,” Devrik snapped. “As we said, we are unable to help you.”

“But good luck finding your brother,” Mariala added, patting Master Sanza on the arm. “I’m sure they can help you at the Guildhall.”

The odd, nervous man finally seemed to take the hint, and with much apologizing and head bobbing, he took his leave. With bemused shrugs Mariala and Devrik tucked away their decks and returned to their meal.

Vulk spent the balance of his days arranging for the needs of the group’s new “prize,” and it left him less time than he’d have liked for his own meditations and study, especially once he began training with Devrik and Drake. And Devrik’s polite refusal to buy into co-ownership of the Sea Hag (they really needed to find a new name) complicated the finances a bit.

Fortunately, he and his friends were in good mettle with the townsfolk, thanks to the garbled and increasingly grandiose tales of their heroic rescue of the region from the Red Death. The local shipwright, Davil Synolkantar, was a large, taciturn man with a pockmarked face and graying hair. When he learned who Vulk was, on their first meeting to discuss repairs and refitting, he broke into a great grin (apparently shocking his apprentices, by their looks), and pumped Vulk’s hand vigorously.

“As you might guess from my face,” he said, his smile fading, “ I once had an encounter with the Red Death. It was when I was a lad, 12 years old… an outbreak in our small mountain town. It took my whole family, and left me marked.

“I hope never to see such a thing again, especially now that I have a wife and children of my own. So to those who prevented this terrible crime, I offer my best services at cost for materials and labour – I’ll take no profit myself, my friend! Now let us see this former ship of the Darikazi…”

In the end they agreed to a very fair price, but still one that ate up a great deal of the purse of gold the Earl had gifted them. And after meeting with Kenis Alvar, the mercantyler whose caravan they had attacked and then saved, he saw the rest of it, and more, flying away on the wind.

“It’s no use you trying to run that ship on your own, Vulk,” Kenis said as they took the mid-day meal in the common room of the Mercantyler’s Guildhall. “Take my advice, hire a competent captain and let him crew and provision the ship. In fact, with the right man you can even leave the finding of cargoes and trade in his hands.”

“I take it you have someone in mind, Kenis,” Vulk commented dryly. He liked the fellow, but knew him to be a sharp man of business, and experienced. Indeed, his mother, Helain Alvar, was the Mercantyler’s Guild Master in Devok and her sons had learned the trade at her knee.

“Indeed,” Kenis smiled back. “And I see an advantage to both parties in this… and possibly to myself.

“Barin Levtor is an experienced man, of middle years but still hale and vigorous. He made money for many a ship owner, and enough for himself to buy his own ship. He is a member of my guild as well as the Seaman’s Guild, so he was able to buy and sell his own cargoes, and was on his way to becoming quite rich.

“Unfortunately, last year his ship was set upon by Darikazi pirates. He and his crew fought valiantly, and he was grievously wounded, but to no avail – his cargo was taken and his ship sunk. The pirates were impressed by his mettle, however, and agreed to ransom him, and he insisted on ransoming his surviving men as well.”

“A tragic tale, but you’re not inspiring confidence,” Vulk said, ripping a leg off the capon. “Has no one hired him again since this unfortunate encounter?”

“No, it’s been hard for him to find a berth again… not due to the loss of the ship (which, after all, could happen to anyone… Kasira is fickle that way), but rather because of the loss of his right arm, from infection in his wounds.

“He had little left after the loss of ship and cargo and the paying of the ransoms, so financing his own business again was impossible. And so far none of the sea-going merchants here have been able (or maybe willing) to provide him a command.

“But he remains a good mariner and trader, and his crews tend to be fiercely loyal to him, knowing his history. And I can vouch for his absolute honesty and integrity – if I was in the sea trade I’d hire him myself.”

Vulk considered this carefully. He and Mariala both felt that Kenis was an honest, if sharp, man and it was unlikely they were going to get a more trustworthy recommendation elsewhere in town.

“Well, if you feel that strongly,” he finally said, “then I should certainly meet the gentleman. Let’s see how we feel about each other, and then perhaps we can come to an arrangement.”

In the end they did, indeed, come to an agreement. Vulk was impressed with both the one-armed man’s gravity and the hint of humor that lurked in his gray eyes. He agreed to captain the ship, help hire a crew and, on this first voyage, help find a cargo. He would be happy to deal with everything himself, in future, but felt that the owner ashore should be involved in the initial preparations. He also agreed to work for a small stipend and shares in the profits.

Kenis also proved very useful in finding cargo lots for their first run, which Captain Levtor and he both agreed should be to Ralux, on the southern shore of the Sea of Ukalus. He himself invested 20% in the venture, while Vulk, Mariala and Drake were able to pony up 10% each. With a prayer to Kasira, Vulk plunged in and borrowed the last 3,760 silver pennies from a local usurer, at a mere 20% per tenday. Captain Levtor was certain he’d be back in just two tendays – certainly no more than three.

Hiring the crew was an experience Vulk hoped never to repeat. Levtor insisted he be at the table in the low dock-side tavern where he’d let it be known he would interview prospective crewmen. Vulk had imagined they’d simply go to the Seaman’s Guildhall, but the captain assured him it was a worse dive, with a shadier clientele, than the Safe Harbour, a reputation that questioning others about town soon confirmed.

The very first person to present himself for consideration as a young physician, looking for experience treating the ills and injuries of seagoing men. The captain snapped him up without hesitation, saying it would be a plus for other crewmen to know they already had a doctor aboard. For the next five days they spent their mornings at the tavern, interviewing and debating the merits of a scurvy bunch of seadogs, untrained boys and a few good men. Between the brawls and general mayhem of a dockside tavern, Captain Levtor assembled a crew he assured Vulk would work out just fine. Vulk was just glad he wasn’t going to sea with them, at least not on this voyage.

At the ceremony on the 9th at the shipyard, to re-dedicate and rename the old Sea Hag, the entire crew was gathered and bought a round of grog. Mariala dedicated the Fortune’s Favor by smashing a bottle of very expensive wine over her prow (the ship’s, not Mariala’s), and the shipwright unfurled the sails to reveal the surprise he had arranged with his bonded sailmaker – they had been dyed in six broad vertical bands of alternating purple and yellow, in honor of the Immortal Kasira, Lady of Luck and Chance.

Drake noticed one sailor in particular, a tall, scrawny fellow, who quickly became very drunk. All the men were a bit merry, but this Brin seemed to take it to a whole new level.

“Oh yes, we were scrapping the bottom of the barrel when we got to him,” Vulk said when Drake pointed him out. “I was all for skipping him, but Captain Levtor says he knows him of old, and at sea he’s a competent enough sailor.”

Drake shrugged and went back to fiddling with the lock picks in his pocket, practicing his blind technique while sipping his wine (he’d tried the grog and just about gagged on the stuff). He’d managed to secure the lock picks from a pair of scrawny street kids, Cris and Dani, several days earlier The boys had also been helpful in showing him around the seedier side of town, and didn’t ask why he’d wanted picks. In return he didn’t ask where they’d got such a fine set, which was well worth the silver he’d paid for it.

With things coming together nicely with the ship, and her own studies going so well, Mariala decided to rent one of the meeting rooms in the Mercantyler’s Guildhall for a private party for her friends to celebrate the double full moons that would grace the night sky on the 12th. She planned the menu, and even visited the local food stalls and farmer’s market to make sure the kitchen got only the best.

At the butcher’s, with Devrik along for the heavy lifting, she selected a prime haunch of beef, eight plump pork chops, and several capons, among other delicacies. Devrik charmed the butcher’s 10 year old son with sleight of hand (something he can do with minimal speech), while Mariala was equally charmed herself by the 4 year old daughter, Mirala. The little girl was delighted that their names were so similar… she gave her a copper for a sweet, “if mommy says it’s OK.”

The party the next night was a wonderful treat for everyone. Aside from the four companions there was Captain Levtor, who enthralled them all with stories of his years at sea, Kiril Vetaris, who told amusing stories of local lore, and Kenis Alvar and his mother Helain, the Guildmisstress, both of whom told stories of adventure and danger on the road. The food was excellent and the drink flowed, although Devrik disappeared sometime after the sweets but before the port.

“Well Brother Vulk,” Captain Levtor sighed, stretching his legs toward the fire and sipping his port, “it seems you might have been right about seaman Brin after all.”

Vulk raised an inquiring eyebrow towards his companion, as the others chatted quietly in various corners of the room.

“It seems he hasn’t been seen for two days,” the captain went on. “Since the evening of the re-naming ceremony, in fact. I’ve had to hire an extra hand for stevedoring these past two days, but we should fare well enough at sea if he doesn’t show by the 16th.

“Several of the men say he was staggering along the docks that night, and are evenly divided between those who believe he fell into the harbour and drowned, and those who believe the Rigath’mu got him.”

Vulk smiled at the name of the Downdragger, the sea monster alleged to have made these waters its home since Men first settled here. He’d been thrilled by tales of the Rigath’mu when he’d been a child, but took a more skeptical view these days.

“Well, I hope it’s neither of those things,” he replied, “and that he’ll show up hung over and ready to sail before the tide turns on the 16th.”

The next day, while Vulk finalized the last lots for the Fortune’s Favor, Drake lounged in the pleasant morning sun in front of the inn. You could tell that spring was just a few days away, and he was looking forward to the trip to the country for the High Holy Day. It was nice of Vulk’s father and aunt to invite them all to Elidar Manor for the Saridás feast.

As he drowsed, contemplating fresh young farm folk and the rising sap of spring, he was suddenly yanked awake by a kick to his crossed feet.

“It’s your fault!” Cris, the young street tough almost cried. “We stole those lock picks for you, and now they’ve taken Dani!” He did his best to loom over Drake, but didn’t really have the build, height or presence for it.

At the mention of the lock picks Drake was instantly awake, looking around to be sure no one was within earshot. He quickly stood up and grabbed Cris by the arm and dragged him around the corner of the building.

“OK, whatever’s wrong it would be best for everyone it you kept your voice down. I’d hate have to call you a liar in front of the Watch, with this wild accusation.”

“But they’ve taken Dani,” the youth said again. “The damn Zalik-mal, there always hassling us, trying to get us to join or get out of town. Now they’ve taken Dani and I’m afraid they’ll kill him… he’s my best friend.”

The boy was actually crying now, to the mutual embarrassment of them both. Drake awkwardly patted him on the shoulder.

“Did you see them take him?” he asked.

“No,” Cris said, getting himself under control again. “But I know it was them, we stole the picks from one of ‘em, they must’a found out was us. But no one believes me and no one cares anyways!”

With that the ragged youth whirled away and dashed off down the alley beside the inn. Drake watched him go and wondered what, if anything, he could be expected to do about this. They were obnoxious little would-be criminals, but for all that, they were young and he’d sort of liked them. He sighed and went into the inn to find some breakfast.

The next night, as Devrik led he and Vulk in nighttime fighting exercises in the moonlit expanse of the Alean cemetery south of town, Drake brought up the issue of the missing street kid with his companions, who agreed the boy had probably just had enough and run away. Drake thought Cris might have followed him there, having seen a shadowy figure pacing him; that same figure had been watching them for awhile now. But when Devrik had called out to him, the figure had slipped away towards the beach, giving them a better look – probably a male, but older and larger than Cris. Odd, but no harm done, they all agreed.

The next day the group left mid-morning for the leisurely ride to Elidar Manor. It was another pleasant near-spring day, and everyone was pleased to get out of town for a bit. Devrik rented a horse for the trip from the ostler next to their inn, but hoped to return with one of his own, if Vulk’s promises about his uncle’s horseflesh proved true.

They arrived not long after noon, to the excitement and bustle of a large extended family preparing for a major holiday. Everyone seemed glad to see Vulk, and pleased to meet his friends who had been so brave in helping him stop the dark Korönian plot to kill them all.

Devrik’s voice rather frightened some of the younger children, and fascinated the older ones, but they soon grew used to him and by the time came for bed they were using him as a climbing tree and general rallying point.

Saridás dawned gray and misty, but by late morning the sun had burned away the clouds and a sweet breeze brought the smell of new life beginning to stir to the outdoor feast. The eating, drinking and dancing went on all day, interspersed with religious and secular rituals to ensure a fertile and fruitful year to come. And fertility rites of a different sort continued well into the night, at least for some…

The next morning the group bid a reluctant good-bye to Clan Elida, and headed back to Devok. Devrik was riding his new Azirdad warhorse, Immelen, and leading the mare he’d rented behind – a man very satisfied with his new steed. He’d have to find suitable tack and saddle for this fine beast once back in town…

And when they arrived in town he did just that, while the others headed for the docks and the “maiden” sailing of the Fortune’s Favor, and their financial futures. Vulk made a speech, the Captain made a shorter one, and then the tide was changing, the ropes were cast off, and the sail billowed into the wind as the small group on the dock cheered and waved.

“Kasira and Tyvos see them safe back here in two tendays,” Vulk murmured under his breath as they turned away to make their way back to the Inn of the Cloven Shield.

 

Aftermath of the Raven’s Lodge

It was a somber group of friends who left the hidden Khundari hunting lodge, and it’s even more hidden Ancient artifact, that gray Launta morning. It was the day of the Festival of Harps, in honor of the Immortal Brindar, usually a gay and merry time of stories and music. But none of the companions felt terribly festive… Vulk felt grief and worry for the youth he’d shared a night with, and Mariala was weighted by both grief and guilt, blaming herself for the boy’s unknown fate… Drake was bothered little by grief and not at all by guilt, but he was wrapped in a haze of pain and stiffness, gift of that damnable stone golem.

They had sealed up the hidden lodge that morning, although Vulk had to do most of the work, Mariala helping where she could, and had worked out the story they would tell the Sheriff when they reached Kar Vandol. They found a clearing several miles further on from the bluff, and set about making it look like this was where they had camped that fateful night.

They would tell the Sheriff that they had awakened the next morning to find Edan gone, his possessions and goods left behind, save for what he wore. They had searched for an entire day for the lad, and stayed a second night, but could find no sign of him. They had decided it was best to bring his goods on to their proper destination and report his loss to the proper authorities.

Did he wander off to piss and get taken my some wild beast? There was no spoor they could find. Did he run away from his master? He seemed happy enough, and proud of the responsibility he’d been given. In many ways a mystery was better than trying to provide a pat answer, Drake had argued, and in the end the others had agreed.

They arrived at the gates to Vandoltown just before sunset, exhausted and sore, but wasted no time in seeking out the Sheriff. He, however, was seeing no one before morning, so the companions found rooms at the Iron Maiden Inn. The choice was based on the recommendation of the castle’s seneschal, who had seemed friendly enough as he took charge of the ironwork carried by Edan’s donkeys.

The next morning the group was summoned to the castle and an audience with the Sheriff of Savartimshire, Ser Jenkus Demalian. A hard but reasonable and just man, he questioned them closely about the events surrounding the disappearance of the smith’s apprentice. But there seemed little reason to doubt their story, as told by a cantor of the Church; and besides, his goods have been safely delivered – small matter the fate of a careless apprentice boy, really.

“I would ask that you remain in town for a few days while I send men to investigate,” he said as he stood to end the interview. “In case I have further questions.” His smile didn’t reach his sea-gray eyes. The companions agreed, of course, recognizing an order in the request.

For the next three days they rested, seldom leaving their rooms at the inn, save to take meals in the common room. The weather remained as gray and cold as their thoughts, with occasional spats of rain and light hail. Vulk and Mariala studied, while Drake healed and contemplated how best to increase his odds of surviving his next fight… in his time with the mercenaries he’d never had to deal with anything more uncanny than angry men, but in less than two months on the road with Vulk he’d faced a hill troll and a golem. Kasira knew what would be next!

On the third day the Sheriff sent word that they were free to depart the town, if that was their wish, with thanks again for their help. And leave they did, that very morning, taking the ancient Imperial Highway west towards Savartim and their next task – telling those in authority of their great discovery. They took a slow pace, in regard for Drakes still-healing injuries, but still it took just two days to reach the city, the weather staying cool but clear. They entered the city gates at mid-day, and paused to consider their options one last time.

“Are we all still sure that this is what we want to do?” Vulk asked his companions, although he looked only at Mariala. He knew Drake would follow his lead, at least in this matter.

“Yes,” Mariala sighed. “I don’t think it’s right that we should keep such an amazing, not to say potentially powerful and dangerous, find to ourselves. It’s best to let wiser heads take over.

“I DO agree it’s best that no single element gains control of this artifact.” She threw a smile towards her friends as she wheeled her horse around. “Although I’ll wager that neither the Church nor the Guild will agree with us. So stick to the plan!”

With that she spurred her horse up one of the winding streets that lead up the hill from the eastern gate. Vulk and Drake shouted goodbye and turned the other way, to head towards the docks and the Temple complex that lay beyond them.

Mariala’s prediction that neither the Church nor Guild would be happy with the news they brought turned out to be spot on. Both she and Vulk were met with initial skepticism, but once they were able to convince their superiors of the seriousness of what they’d found, doubt turned to annoyance that they’d let such vital information fall into hands other than their own.

Both pointed out that they had had little choice, short of murder, which silenced the complaints, if it didn’t actually mollify anyone. And they both were kept close as their respective organizations sent experts, and armed men, to verify their claims. Vulk and Drake were confined to the Temple complex, while Mariala was given rooms at the Guild Hall of the Guild of Arcane Lore.

For six days they all remained isolated, Vulk studying and meditating, and Drake recuperating and working on his improved chemical arsenal in the Temple, and Mariala pursuing her own studies in the Guild Hall library. As the end of the month approached the cantors and scholars, and their guards, returned to Savartim – they had ridden out separately, but returned together.

The cantors had arrived at the hidden lodge, in the rain, to find the Guild scholars already there, if not yet inside. Tensions rode high for a time, but in the end logic and cooler heads prevailed, and the two groups combined to penetrate the Ancient site.

What they learned, and what was decided, the companions were not told, despite being called in questioning again during several days of meetings, held by both Temple and Guild alone and together. But on the first of Margas Vulk and Drake were called to the High Cantor’s chambers.

“It seems you did indeed stumble onto an amazing find,” he began without preamble. “One that not only may advance our understanding of the Ancients, but may change the balance of power not only here in the North, but across…” He trailed off and shook his head, as if dismissing the thought.

“In any case, Cantor Vulk, it is a matter of the utmost importance and secrecy, at least for now. Should certain elements learn of this… well, much discussion has been devoted to how to keep that secrecy intact. And much time wasted wishing you had not shared this find with a… ‘scholar’” he sneered over the word, “of the Arcanist’s Guild.”

“But it is what it is, and we must move on from here. You are both enjoined, under penalty of ultimate sanction, to remain silent about what you know of this Ancient facility and it’s artifact…” He paused again. “You’re quite certain you found no other, lesser artifacts within the site?” he asked, squinting in suspicion.

“No your Grace, we did not,” Vulk replied smoothly. “Only some tarnished Khundari coins, which we sent through the… gate… to aid the boy we inadvertently banished.” He had no intention of telling anyone that they’d thrown away a priceless Ancient artifact; he knew for a certainty that Mariala would remain silent!

“Hmmfh,” the High Cantor sniffed. “Well, in any case, we feel it’s best if you continue on your year’s sabbatical Cantor Vulk.” He stared briefly at Drake, adding “And take your bodyguard with you.”

Vulk and Drake left the opulent room both relieved and annoyed.

“He didn’t even require us to swear our silence,” Drake huffed. “Arrogant bastard.”

“I think he felt the threat was enough,” Vulk replied. “He is a bit of an ass… I wish I could have confided all this in my old mentor instead. Him I would have trusted. But it seems we’re free again, so let us pack up and repair to some more hospitable digs my friend!”

“I’ll agree to that with a will,” Drake grinned. “The beds here are torture on my poor broken body…. and anyway, I’ve got all I can from the Temple apothecary. I hear the Sign of the Broken Wheel is quite a decent place, and it’s near the Arcanist’s Guild Hall.”

And so before the day was out the two had decamped from the Temple and taken a large room at the said inn, sending word to Mariala of their changed situation and inviting her to sup with them that evening.

When she arrived they ordered food sent up, and retired to their chamber to talk away from prying ears. The boys quickly filled her in on their tenday, then encouraged her to tell what she knew.

“Not much more than you, I’m afraid,” she said regretfully. “The master of my Order here is perhaps not quite the jackass as your High Cantor sounds, but he was not best pleased with having to share this momentous find with the Church.

“I asked to be a part of the group that will be studying the site, but he was adamant that it was no place for one so inexperienced and young.” She frowned into her wine glass. “And given what I did to poor Edan, I suppose he’s right.”

“Oh bullshit,” exclaimed Drake. “It was an accident, one that your so-wise and no-doubt-elderly Master could just as well have made. Stop flogging yourself over it!”

Mariala shrugged noncommittally, but looked up to continue. “When I asked him what was to be done with the site, all he would say is that our top people would be looking into it… whoever “our top people” might be.

“I haven’t been banished from the Guild Hall, like you have from the Temple, but I do get the strong feeling that many people would be glad to see me go… elsewhere.”

The three of them stared glumly into their drinks for a time, and picked at the remains of their meal.

“Well, you’re welcome to continue travelling with us,” Vulk offered. “Once we know where we’re going. It won’t be for another tenday or two, though, until Drake is fully healed.”

“I’m not sure what I’ll be doing,” Mariala replied, “but I appreciate the offer. The library here has enough to keep me occupied for awhile, so however uncomfortable my presence makes some people, I’m happy to stay where I am.” She tossed back her wine and poured more from the bottle on the table.

The next tenday saw the friends settle into a routine, of study for Mariala and Vulk, and healing and chemical research for Drake. Vulk, concerned about the recent violent turn his life seemed to have taken, visited a well-spoken-of armorer in town and commissioned a kurbul breastplate and matching backplate, to wear under his tunic; Mariala found a weaponcrafter of some note, and had a fitting handle placed on the Khundari blade she’d found; and Drake slowly began exercising, regaining some lost conditioning.

They all attended the Midwives’ Festival on the 5th, so Drake could seek out a few last ingredients for his still hush-hush alchemical project, and they often dined together, sometimes at the inn, sometimes at the Guild Hall. Mariala studied her new dagger, and came to discover it did indeed carry some dwarven enchantment… it’s edge never dulled, and her skill with it was clearly, markedly better than with her old dagger. It seemed almost to anticipate her moves.

A tremendous storm blew down from the mountains, wind and rain and sleet, and lasted for two days. Sun and mild weather soon followed, only to be followed again by rain. And so the days went. Vulk and Drake began to spar and train together, and Mariala was beginning to wonder if she shouldn’t seek better training in arms herself… but her books and scrolls called more strongly, and she put off the idea for the time.

On the 13th invitations were delivered to each of the three companions, left at their lodgings by persons unknown, inviting them to a private dinner at the public party to be thrown by the Inn of the Golden Eye the following evening. The reason for the party, of course, was the Banquet of Delights, an epicurean celebration of the Immortal Kalura, goddess of love, beauty and wealth. A popular holiday of good food, strong drink, and sexual license, the party at the Inn of the Golden Eye was one of the most exclusive in the city, attended by only the best people, generally.

“Who could be inviting us to such an event.” Mariala wondered when they’d gathered to discuss the invitations. “I don’t think any of us know anyone of that social station here in Savartim.”

“Perhaps it’s someone with a taste for attractive young people,” Drake leered. “It is a private dinner, after all, and these celebrations are famous for ending in all sorts of hot, slippery –”

“Oh shut up, you pig,” Mariala snorted, throwing a crust of bread at his head. “Be serious!”

Drake caught the crust and took a bite, grinning.

“Very well, I’ll be serious,” he said, dropping the crust and picking up his invitation. He turned it towards the candle light, angling it slightly towards his companions. A water mark was thus visible, an eleven-pointed, double tailed star.

“Now where have we seen that before,” he asked, somewhat smugly in the face of his friend’s surprise.

Aftermath of the Abbey Murders

It took two more days to wrap up all the loose ends and consider all the ramifications flowing from the discovery of the murderous Korönian spy in the heart of the Caelite abbey. More importantly, it took that long for the weather to clear. The principals involved in the matter were both grateful for the assistance provided by the Cantor of Kasira and his companions, and disturbed to find strangers so deeply involved in their secret affairs.

The High Cantor, Lisbil Kalarin, made her thanks very clear, but made her desire that news of the recent events not become common gossip in the kingdom even clearer. Her emphasis on her close relationship with her brother, the Kleros of Savartim, was not lost of on any of the three travelers. Her generous provisioning of them for their continued trip south was an equally unsubtle “carrot.”

Ser Owain Hanorn was both more diplomatic and more subtle when he invited Vulk, Mariala and Draik to breakfast with him the second morning after the final confrontation with the false cantor. After a remarkably rich and abundant meal in the guest house, during which no mention was made of the previous day’s events, he lifted his cup of steaming chocolate to his lips, and smiled over it at his obviously nervous guests.

“I know that High Cantor Lisbil has rather put the fear of the Immortals into you, or at least the fear of her powerful brother. Be assured, I’ve not asked you here this morning for more of the same.”

He set his cup down and the smile faded from his ice-blue eyes.

“If I thought for a moment that you could not be trusted with the knowledge you’ve gained here, you would now be swiftly on your way to a very secure dungeon, for a stay of indeterminate length.” Despite his 75 years and the iron gray in his black hair no one was inclined to take this as hyperbole.

“In fact,” he continued, his faint smile returning, “ I have been very impressed with the courage, resourcefulness and skill you’ve shown during this crisis. The secret negotiations I’ve undertaken here with the Darikazi are new-born and still very delicate… the death of either one of their representatives at this juncture, or even one of ours, would not only have destroyed the talks, but could have been used by some as a pretext for war.

Cantor Elida, I know you have strong feelings about our neighbors to the west, feelings I am not insensible to… remember, I fought in Zarik’s War myself, and lost many good friends and comrades. But we have the… possibility… of seeing that such a conflict will not engulf our nation again for a generation. That is what I’m working towards here, and I’ll say no more about it.”

He sipped again from his cup, then turned to Mariala. “Cantor Elida’s discretion I take for granted as a fellow noble of Arushal and an Eldari cantor. But I must not take such liberties with you, Scholar Teryne, nor you,” he added, nodding at Draik, “Ser… Bartoff, as you are both natives of our some-times ally Nolkior.

“May I have your word of honor, each of you, that this secret meeting will remain unspoken of by you to any living person, of any degree or station, until I, the Prince, or the King release you?” His eye held each of theirs until both had spoken their assent.

“I am grateful for your implicit trust in me, Ser Owain,” Vulk spoke after a moments silence, “but as you ask my companions to swear, so too shall I. I affirm that I shall speak to no other living person, of any degree or station, about the secret matters I have learned of here, until either you, Prince Darlanis, or His Majesty shall release me.”

“Unless,” he added after a slight pause, “I should have reason to believe that treason is being committed in this affair, in which case I shall speak to His Majesty or such of his advisors as seem best to me.”

Ser Owain frowned, one brow raised in either surprise or annoyance. But after a moment his face broke into a grin, and he laughed. “Fair enough, boy, fair enough! But I trust you’ll find no cause to suspect me of anything but concern for the welfare of our great land and her people.

“Indeed, you do continue to impress me… I will not insult you, any of you, by offering monetary consideration for the oath you’ve just sworn, but I will tell you that should you ever have need of any help that I, or my agents, might provide, you have my leave to ask for it.”

He drew a small pouch from his belt and shook three bronze coins into his hand. Each was inscribed with the Hanorn family crest on one side, and 11-pointed, double-tailed star on the other. He handed one to each of his three guests.

“Show this to any agent of mine and they will provide you with whatever assistance you need, if it is within their power to do so.”

With that, breakfast, and the interview, seemed to be over. Ser Owain stood, as did his guests, perforce. He bid them farewell and a safe journey, and turned to mount the steps to his chamber to prepare for the day’s resumed meetings with the Darikazi envoys. With one foot on the stairs he paused and raised a hand to stop them.

“You three make a good team… you might consider what might be accomplished should your roads carry you onward together.” With an enigmatic smile he turned away once more and was gone.

♦ ♦ ♦

The next morning dawned sunny once again, and warmer. The snow, while still blanketing the countryside, was turning to slush on the roads. Saddlebags stuffed with the largesse of Eldora Abbey, horses rested and well-fed, and their own bellies full, the three companions departed before the end of first watch. Neither the High Cantor nor Ser Owain saw them off, but the old physician, Torold Isgaren, was there to offer once again his thanks and prayers for their continued health. Though he tried to put a good face on it, it was obvious to them all that he was shaken to the core by the vengeance he’d brought down on those he loved.

“I fear the Korönians may have had their revenge after all,” Mariala sighed, as the abbey disappeared behind a curve of the road. “Mirelael’s death in particular was a blow I don’t think the old man will ever really recover from.”

The others nodded agreement, and they rode on in contemplative silence for the rest of the morning. But the world was bright and beautiful under its blinding blanket of snow, and they were young, and by lunch they were singing songs and laughing again.

They were able to secure two rooms at the only public house in a small village, just as dusk was falling and the temperature again dropping. It was the last village on the River Gemin before the road left it and turned southwestward, and the inn, though small, was cozy, warm and relatively clean. Aside from a young blacksmith’s apprentice, they were the only travelers in the tap room that evening, although several locals drifted in after supper.

Sopping up the last of the hearty stew in his bowl with the last crust of bread, Draik sat back with a sigh and lifted his mug of ale. Continuing a debate that had been interrupted by the arrival of their meal, he saluted Vulk and took a drink.

“I still say that the Ancients were more powerful in their day than the Immortals are today. I mean, they destroyed the entire world, and yet still some of their works remain functional a million years later. It’s only been 4,000 years since the Codominion, when the Immortals ruled the world directly with us and our longer-lived cousins, yet you’d be hard pressed to find anything more than ruins of that civilization.”

“Oh, there are some rather spectacular bits of Codominion civilization that still work quite well,” Vulk replied. “They’re just not well known outside of the Church or the T’ara Kul.” He glanced sideways at Mariala, who had not yet confided in him (or Draik, he didn’t think) about her… skills. But after the fight with both the hill troll and the Korönian cleric it was obvious that she was more than just an arcanist scholar with an interest in folklore. But he was patient, she’d bring it up when she felt comfortable enough with him.

“But really, I hardly think the ability to destroy your world indicates any particular greatness of mind or spirit. I think it far more impressive that the Immortals took that dead world and brought it back to life. A much tougher job than mere destruction.

“Or would you argue that we Umantari are greater than the Immortals, since it was our mages who almost destroyed the world again during the Age of Chaos?”

Mariala shifted uneasily in her seat at this, and Vulk quickly added, “And the warring cults of those years were at least as much to blame, of course.” She shot him a wry smile, but returned her gaze to her cup of wine.

“Well, who’s to say that the Ancients didn’t bring life to this world first, and then destroy it,” Draik demanded, ignoring the question.

“Mmm, actually,” interjected Mariala, “both certain writings from the Telnori and research by various… arcanists… seem to prove that life existed on Novendo for an immeasurably long time before either the Ancients or the Immortals existed.”

At inquiring looks from the two men she went on. “For example, it’s believed that rock oil comes from very ancient forests and swamps that have been compressed and changed over millions of years… the burning rock of the Khundari is another form of such ancient organic material. Such alterations take tens of millions of years to form… or so I’ve been told by those whose opinions I trust.”

“I’ve seen the rock oil,” Draik said, waving his empty mug at the inn keeper. “When we would go into the marshes to gather rare herbs and other plants for my uncle…” His face darkened momentarily at the memory of his harsh and unforgiving “guardian,” and of his lost brother.

“I never gave much thought to where it came from, just that it was useful for many potions when distilled properly…”

“Oh, please, go on more about the Ancients!”

All three turned in surprise at this interjection, which came from the table behind them. It was the young smith’s boy, who had apparently been drinking his cider and listening to their conversation. At their sudden attention he blushed brightly to the roots of his dark blond hair. He was an attractive youth, about 18 years old Vulk guessed, simply dressed in russet trousers and a homespun shirt, which appeared too small for his broad shoulders and the bulging biceps that proclaimed his profession. He was clearly still growing.

“I – I’m sorry,” stuttered on. “I didn’t mean to eavesdrop on you, but when I heard you mention the Ancients… I’ve always loved stories about them, and about the Immortals, and the great mages and warrior-cantors of the past, and, and…” He tapered off in renewed embarrassment at his own outburst.

“Well, you’re young,” said Draik, from his lofty advantage of maybe six years, “so I’m inclined to forgive your shocking lack of manners…” At the youth’s abashed face he grinned, and added “And who doesn’t love a good tale of the exciting past!”

“Indeed,” said Vulk. “And our friend Mariala here is an expert in such lore, though she is rather shy about sharing it.” He grinned, despite her quelling frown. “Perhaps you can worm a story out her, boy… and if you’re going to join us, we’d best know your name, eh?”

At this invitation the boy jumped up, grabbed his mug of cider, and took the proffered seat next to the cleric. The blush was fading from his face but his eyes shone with excitement at the thought of hearing tales of adventure and magic.

“My name is Edan, of clan Harox,” he said. “I’m a smith’s apprentice in the village of Dirdan, on my way with a load of finished metalwork to the Sheriff at Kar Vandol.” He seemed rather proud of this responsibility, perhaps the first time he’d been so entrusted Mariala thought, as the others introduced themselves.

“Please Lady, do you know any stories of the Ancients?” the boy pleaded. She was annoyed at Vulk’s putting her in this position, she hated public speaking, even this mild, informal sort. But the young man’s enthusiasm was hard to resist, and she gave in with a sigh.

“Well, there are no tales of the Ancients, as such,” she began. “They lived so very long ago, and there are no surviving records or even images of them, so all we know of them comes from the scattered ruins they left behind. Although ruins isn’t exactly the right word… over a million years old, and they are mostly still intact, thanks to the amazing pseudostone they built with.”

“They say that the Khundari once knew the secret of creating pseudostone,” Draik interrupted. “But it was lost with the fall of Zirkonth during the Great War.”

“Actually, the Dwarves of Zirkonth possessed an Ancient artifact that could turn any substance into pseudostone,” Mariala said. “And it’s rumored that another such device exists in the United Realms, but the Khundari King there forbids its use for any but his own people.

“In any case, the point is there are no stories about the Ancients, only stories about what their artifacts do when they fall into mortal hands. But such tales are not really my speciality…”

At Edan’s crestfallen look she added, “But you said you liked stories of great magics and adventure, Edan, and Draik’s talk of his apothecary roots reminds me of one such tale that I think you’ll find instructive. Have you ever heard the story of Baylora’s Folly?”

Edan seemed dubious about any instructive content, but eager enough for the story as he fixed his gaze on her in rapt attention and shook his head. Vulk smiled in recognition, but said nothing.

“I’ve heard some garbled tales,” Draik said, looking interested. “But I took them for mere bogie stories to frighten the children. Beware the man-eating plants of Baylora, that wander the swamps and marshes!”

“Ah, this is no fairy tale,” Mariala smiled. “Baylora Ariath was very much a real person, one of the greatest, and undoubtedly one of the strangest, Torazan mages of the last century.

“We know that Baylora had been an alchemist and herbalist in her youth prior to her being taken into the Guild of Arcane Lore by a wandering mage in the 2920’s. Baylora had a deep knowledge of Torazan lore and an almost uncanny knowledge of plants and animals. One of the youngest mages to achieve the rank of Vendari, in her twenties, Baylora was considered a leading light of her profession, a mage of enormous talent and power.

“Alas, Baylora was also a woman of terrible temper and stubborn pride. Many of her peers could not understand her complex theories, and feared the direction of her research. This lead to arguments and debate, and restraints on her studies and experiments.

“After years of personal conflicts with other mages of her convocation, Baylora one day stormed out of her chancery, vowing never to return, and disappeared for five years. No one knows for sure where she went, but rumor says that she traveled widely during this time, perhaps even to the furthest reaches of eastern Ishkala.

“In any event, she returned to Arushal in 2942, a changed woman – hair wild and unkempt, garments ragged and torn, and her eyes, they say, held the gleam of a visionary… or a fanatic. After a brief stop in Lithkor, she soon vanished again, this time into the western vastness of the Pelon Delta.

Baylora settled deep in the vast marshlands of the Delta, living in a small abandoned tower she had discovered on an isolated island. There, she was free to conduct her research and live free of the disputes and constraints of other mages, which she so loathed. She had few servants and, with the aid of powerful enchantments, she discouraged visitors from disturbing her peace, although she did allow a few followers to become her students.

Baylora was a great master of all aspects of Torazan lore, but she seemed to delight most in enchantments that dealt with plants, and particularly with accelerating their growth to monstrous sizes, and increasing their intelligence. That’s where the legends of walking, man-eating plants come from, Draik.” Mariala smiled at her friend, who grinned back.

“Unrestrained by her peers, it is believed that Baylora began to dabble in powerful arts far beyond her capacity to fully understand, much less control. But what, exactly, she did remains a mystery…

“In 2948, one of Baylora’s students, Therax Isgaren, was found drifting at sea in a small coracle; he was near death from exposure and dehydration, raving, almost incoherent, and in a deep state of shock. He was eventually nursed back to health, but if questioned about his mistress, his eyes… well, the look in his eyes would chill your soul… all that could ever be gotten out him was rambling talk about “horrific plants,” “putrid doom,” and “wretched, twisting death.”

“Obviously, something terrible had happened to Baylora and her household. Experts who questioned Therax eventually came to the conclusion that some great experiment of the mage had gone deeply wrong, releasing an explosion of vast Torazan energies that killed her and all of her household, save for Therax. It was assumed that he was away from her sanctum when the disaster occurred, and thus spared.

“If any deeper knowledge of the exact nature of Baylora’s Folly exists, I’ve not heard of it. I met Therax several years ago, in the course of my studies… he’s a very old man now, of course, and a great mage in his own right. But still he will not talk about what happened to Baylora, not even to his own apprentice Ardath, or so I’m told. Of course Ardath is a creep, so I can hardly blame the old man. He continues to maintain that he has no idea of the exact location of Baylora’s island.”

“Has anyone ever tried to find her island?” Edan asked breathelessly.

“I do know of at least two expeditions that have attempted it,” Mariala said. “ In 2962, and again in 3005, parties of adventurers set out across the vast marshes of the Delta in search of her famed tower. The first could not find it, and returned mostly intact, if defeated in their purpose.

“The second expedition disappeared, never to be heard from again… possibly as a result of bandits and brigands hiding in the bogs, or the native Rethmani, who are said to be secretive and hostile to outsiders. Or maybe they were victims of a Darikazi patrol.”

“That last seems unlikely,” Vulk offered. “Darikaz may claim the Delta, but they have little actual control there, and seldom venture into it, except by ship, when chasing the pirates that harbor there.”

“Whatever their fate,” Mariala sighed, “to this day it remains as unknown as Baylora’s own, as does the exact location of her sanctum. And given the nature of her research, many of the wise wonder what may be growing out there… and if it will ever crawl out of the swamps.”

Edan’s eyes were wide at this point, entranced by the visions of monstrous, shambling plant-men, and he jumped up with a strangled squeak, knocking over his cider mug, when Draik tickled the back of his neck. He flushed red again as Draik laughed, but hard feelings were averted when he bought the youth another mug.

More stories were told, with Edan offering up one of his own, a tale of brigands and the bravery of a local posse that tracked them down, until it was time to retire for the night. As the companions prepared to go up to their rooms, and Edan to his bed in the stable, the youth was visibly working up his courage to say something.

“Why don’t we travel together tomorrow?” he blurted out at last. “I know a shortcut to the road to Kar Vandol… I know you’re headed to Savartim, but the western road is rough and slow, especially this time of year… going through Vandoltown will put you on the old Imperial Highway, and in the end you’ll save a whole day! I, um… it would be nice…”

He wound down and looked at the three companions hopefully. They looked at each other, Draik suddenly dubious, Vulk uncertain, and Mariala smiling slightly at the boy’s enthusiasm.

“I’m certain that he’s on the level, Draik,” she said, and after a moment he shrugged and looked at Vulk.

“A day less in the saddle, and the rain,” he said, listening to the steady patter on the roof that had begun an hour earlier, “would be fine with me. Very well, we accept your offer as our local guide Edan, and will travel with you to Kar Vandol.

A few more minutes settled the matter of when they would start in the morning, and Edan headed out to check on his mule and packs and settle into the warmth of the stable loft. Vulk and Draik bedded down in their small room upstairs, and Mariala in hers next door, only after Vulk had cast a small cantrip to clear both beds of any unwanted companions.

As Vulk drifted off to sleep to the sound of Draik snores, he pondered the future. “Three more days to Savartim,” he thought. “And then what…?”