Close to You

to be sung to the tune of Anne Murray’s “Close to You”.

Why do clouds suddenly appear

every time you are near?

Just like me, they long to be close to you.

Why does hail fall down from the sky

every time you walk by?

Just like me, it longs to be close to you.

On the day that you were born the angels got together

and decided to create a dream come true

so they sprinkled midnight in your hair and hints of corpselight

in your eyes of blue.

That is why all the ghouls in town

follow you all around.

Just like me, they long to be close to you.

Dragons and Halflings and Orcs?

Over the next few days, Lisa didn’t leave the house unless she had to. Dree came by to check on Father, and she also helped out with some of the cleaning and things.

Mother was horrified that Dree would do these things, because how would they ever pay for it, and besides, couldn’t she keep her own house? But Dree just cheerfully and calmly kept helping, and Mother really did enjoy when Dree played with the small children and taught them songs.

Lisa was dashing in to the house with the most recent purchase from the market as she saw Dree getting ready to leave the small house. Perhaps Lisa’s disappointment was evident on her face, as the Priestess looked at her with a smile.

“I’m glad you’re back,” she said. “Would you like to come with me to our camp?”

Lisa looked over at Mother, and Mother nodded in a way that indicated this had been discussed, and agreed upon. Annette started singing “Lisa and Usen, sitting in a tree…”, but she was more interested in playing with her sheep toy and the baby, so Lisa gratefully put the shopping on the table and slipped out of the door with Dree.

“Is the camp where the dragons are?” she asked, breathlessly.

Dree nodded. “It’s where we all stay at night,” she said.

Lisa realized that she had assumed Dree was staying at an inn, rather than some kind of camp, but she knew the dragons weren’t in town. There were some rumors, but nothing like the talk would be if the dragons had been clearly seen in town.

“Why don’t you stay at an inn?” Lisa asked.

“The dragons are hard to accommodate,” Dree replied. “Apart from prejudice and diet, they smell bad and horses are uncomfortable around them. I suppose when they get older they’ll have an aura of fear that will make things even more complicated.” She seemed thoughtful.

“I understand about the dragons,” Lisa said, “but you have servants to take care of them. I meant you, and maybe Usen.” She realized that she hadn’t seen Usen for a couple of days, and wondered what that meant.

Dree laughed. She never sounded like she was laughing at someone – she just enjoyed life and humor. “Oh, the rest of the party aren’t my servants,” she said. “Except for Milby, everyone has been a member of the group longer than I have.”

Lisa thought about this, but Dree changed the subject, and they shared small talk the rest of the way through town and into the woods.

As they made their way among the trees, Lisa realized with a shock that they were heading towards the haunted shack. The faint remains of the old trail showed signs of more recent travel than she would have suspected, and she was not entirely surprised when they emerged into a small clearing around a tumbledown wooden shack, its thatched roof green with moss and caved in in places.

Around the shack and filling the clearing was a camp, but one unlike she had ever seen before. The halfling woman was tending a stew-pot as big as she was that was suspended from a tripod over a fire. The halfling man was standing in the air three feet off the ground. He held a strung bow in his hands and was shooting at a target at the edge of the clearing, spinning slowly in place as he shot.

One of the men was sitting in the mouth of a tent, doing some sewing while reading a book, while the other man was racing a dragon around and around the clearing. While Lisa watched, he passed directly in front of the target as the halfling shot, and the man dodged under the arrow without breaking his stride, while the dragon thundered on its four legs just behind the target among the trees.

As she looked around the rest of the camp, she saw the other dragon curled up in the sun in front of another tent. Usen’s feet and legs stuck out from the far side of the dragon, and although the racing duo were making a racket, Lisa thought she could hear snoring.

The halfling woman waved when they entered the clearing, and called out, “Keom! Stop that foolishness! The lady is back!”

The running man rolled to a stop and braced himself as the dragon caromed into him. He went flying, but tumbled back up to his feet with a laugh and rubbed the dragon’s dorsal spines as it shoved its big ugly head under his arm. The man at the tent put his needlework away and came over to the newcomers, greeting Dree formally as “Mother Dree”, and then, “You must be Lisa,” turning to the young girl.

Lisa blushed and nodded. “I’m Brother Ron’has,” the man continued. “Welcome to our camp.” Then, he turned and walked over to where several big wooden barrels stood upright under a tarp.

The man who had been running came over as the halfling man slowly descended to the ground.

“Brother Keom,” he said in introduction. “Welcome back, Mother,” he said to Dree. “I think Fang will be a good boy – he’s had a good run.” With an impish grin he headed over to the barrels by Ron’has, who had begun pulling some disgusting-looking pieces of meat from one of the barrels, and a putrid smell washed over the clearing.

“Sorry about the smell,” Dree said, “but Fang always likes to eat after a run. It helps him to nap afterwards.”

“What is it?” Lisa found the courage to ask.

“Dead giant frog,” Dree replied. “It’s none too fresh, but the dragons don’t seem to mind, and we have a lot of it. It saves on needing to buy food in the area. Although …” She tailed off into an internal conversation to which Lisa was not privy.

The halfling woman pulled the kettle to the side and came over to Lisa, wiping her hands on her apron. Like all half-folk she was cheerful and pleasant looking, and she dropped a peasant curtsy as she said, “Milby Hoetoe, at your service. The lunk in the air is me husband, Boernthien.”

Mr. Hoetoe was actually just behind his wife, having descended and headed over to the women. “Boernthien Hoetoe, miss,” he said with a wink. “I think we first met by the ferry.”

Dree looked at Lisa in surprise while the girl blushed at being recognized. “Annette and I were washing clothes the morning you crossed over,” she said softly.

Dree nodded. “I was busy with the ferrymen,” she said. “People have such strong opinions about dragons, even when they’re small ones.”

Lisa looked at the sinuous creatures. They were bigger than ponies, and she thought she wouldn’t describe them as small.

“How old are they?”

“Keom, how old are the babies?” Dree called out.

“I figure they’re about a year hatched. Maybe a bit less.” He chuckled. “We kind of had our hands full, getting them out of Homlette before they caused too much of a stir!”

Lisa must have goggled at the off-hand comment, so Keom strolled over, sat on the grass, and began to tell the story.

“The Elders went up from Homlette to Mitrik to speak to the bigwigs over there,” Keom said. Lisa had heard the name Mitrik – it was somewhere to the north somewhere, up in the direction of Old Iuz’s land. Homlette was a new name to her, but she didn’t want to interrupt.

“While they were gone, Ron’has and I were left with the goods in Homlette, which included the dragon eggs.” Lisa must have gasped a little bit, because Keom chuckled. “The Elders got the dragon eggs on one of their adventures, when they traveled to a place just outside the Elemental Plane of Earth. Master Hieron was killed by the adult black dragons, but Father Ezekiel raised him up again, and they went back and killed the dragons.

“After they killed the dragons, they discovered these two eggs, and Father Ezekiel said that the eggs should be given the chance to hatch, even though their parents were evil, so Master Raven brought the eggs to us and had us watch them and take care of them, though we didn’t really know what black dragon eggs need to hatch. They’re certainly not much like chickens!”

Lisa laughed a little at this joke, so Keom continued with enthusiasm. “When the Elders got back to Homlette, we had these two little black squirts of dragons,” he said, seeming a little disappointed that Lisa didn’t laugh when he called the dragons squirts.

“Father Ezekiel spent a bunch of money with the local shepherds to arrange for sheep to be delivered to feed the babies, and we kept them in the stable with Master Mikael’s animals.”

Dree handed Lisa a stool, and she sat silently as Keom continued speaking.

“So, one evening Master Raven came to us and told us that they were having a fancy dinner at the inn, and he would bring us some leftovers later, or in the morning. We were out in the stables with the animals, and didn’t think much of it, but he didn’t come out to see us that night, and in the morning no one knew anything about where they had gone.

“The Elders had been kidnapped by slavers, although we didn’t know it yet, but Ron’has and I had been left in charge of the dragons, so when they got a little bit bigger we knew we needed to do something different to protect them.

“Master Gundigoot of the Welcome Wench wasn’t going to give us a hard time, especially since the Elders had left most of their treasure behind, and we could easily pay for the lodging. The problem was that many of the guests at the inn didn’t like the idea of leaving their horses with the dragons, and there were adventurers who increasingly talked as though they’d like to make their reputation as a dragon-slayer, even though they were just babies.

“So, one night, we headed out into the woods. Master Elmo helped us to pick out a good place to camp where we wouldn’t be easily found, and he also helped us by bringing the sheep carcasses that Father Ezekiel had paid for before all of the Elders disappeared.

By now it was clear that Lisa had completely lost sense of who was whom, and Keom paused for a breath.

“So, the Elders are Father Ezekiel, Master Raven, Lady Alianna, Master Elwyn, Master Mikael, Mistress Lydia, and Master Hieron. Lady Alianna wasn’t with them, yet, but she was already an Elder because she had joined Father Ezekiel’s church as the first Paladin, and had gone off on errantry to the Shield Lands.” He waved in a generally north-east direction.

“Father Ezekiel is the High Priest of the God of Gods, and the founder of the church. Master Raven is the first Monk, and the master of all of the monks of the God of Gods,” and here Keom gestured to himself and Ron’has.

“Master Elwyn is a Ranger of Ehlonna, but he’s been with Father Ezekiel for ever so long, and Master Mikael is a Druid of Obad-Hai who’s been with both of them since before they came into the regions around Homlette.”

“Mistress Lydia was with them, too, when they came, although I’m not sure where she came from originally, and Master Hieron was a man-at-arms they rescued from the torturers in the Temple of Elemental Evil.”

Lisa’s head bobbled as she absorbed all of the names and stories. She must have looked the question at Dree, because Keom quickly added, “Mother Dree and Bornthien and Milby and Usen didn’t join us until later, after the Elders had started to kill the Slave Lords.”

That wasn’t really an explanation, as far as Lisa was concerned, but it did explain why they hadn’t been named in the story so far.

“Anyway, once Mistress Lydia learned how to teleport,” Keom continued, “the Elders started visiting us in the Homlette area again, and it was agreed that we should take the dragons out of the area. Homlette always has adventurers traveling through, on their way to the Wild Coast, or looking for the Temple of Elemental Evil, even though the Elders destroyed it, but it was getting positively thick with them as people came to the area looking for a couple of easy black dragons to kill. Mistress Lydia says that their blood is an expensive ingredient for some things.

“So, we left Homlette, and have been wandering ever since. Once Mother Dree and Usen and Bornthien joined us we started to adventure, and we went through the Gnarly Forest and up to the Mist Marsh and the Cairn Hills.”

He nodded at Dree. “The Mist Marches are where we found out that black dragons just love giant frogs, and the Cairn Hills are where we learned that Mother Dree could destroy undead with her sheep toy just like Father Ezekiel does.”

He seemed to be finished, and Lisa had finally found her voice.

“How do you do that?” she asked Dree.

Dree smiled. “I don’t. My God does it.”

“But … aren’t Keom and Ron’has servants of that god, too?”

“They are. They are Master Raven’s disciples, and they work very hard to understand all of his teachings. But Master Raven can’t turn undead, either. Monks are not given that power, even if they wield a consecrated holy symbol,” and Dree patted the sheep that she had removed from its pouch.

“Only a cleric who has been invested by a higher cleric is given the power over undead that Father Ezekiel and I have.”

Lisa thought about this. “And Father Ezekiel invested you?”

Dree nodded.

Milby had been listening to the story from the side of the stew-pot, and commented over the quiet bubbling, “Before Mother Dree was even invested, she helped Father Ezekiel dig through a charnel pit for the pieces of my body.” Lisa’s horrified expression met only a steady nod from the halfling woman.

“Bornthien had been captured by the Slave Lords, and to force him to do terrible things, they took me and the children captive, as hostages for his good behavior.” She snorted derisively. “They never intended to keep us alive. Shortly after we arrived in Highport, we were given to the ant people,” and here she shuddered in memory, though she had stoically shared the rest of the story.

“The ant people tore us limb from limb, and I’m only glad I was killed first, although that meant that the children had to watch. Once Father Ezekiel had found my arm, which Bornthien knew because of my wedding ring, he used a precious magic artifact to bring me back to life. He didn’t know me, or even Bornthien, really, but he used the last power of that rod to bring me back, and we’ll be forever grateful to him, and to the God of Gods, for that mercy.

“He wasn’t able to identify any parts of the children, but the magic of the artifact was spent, anyway, and they’re with Sheela Peryroyl and Arvoreen now. Bornthien and I have been given a second chance at life together, and we’ll do what we can for Father Ezekiel and any of his people as long as this life lasts.”

Lisa glanced around the clearing and saw that although the second dragon still lay in the sun, and the snoring continued, Usen’s legs were no longer visible. “How about Usen?” she asked.

A soft voice behind her startled her and she turned to look, horrified, into the face of an orc! A moment later she recognized Usen’s armor, and the wounded look on his face told her everything she had just done to him.

Who made Pelor?

Dree put the flask and ointment back in her pouch, and put the cloth in another one. Then, she produced a jar of water to wash her hands.

Pulling the sheet over Father’s sleeping form, she retreated from the bedroom, ducking again in the low doorway, and taking the curtain from Annette’s unresponsive fingers to close it. She went to the front door and said some things quietly to Usen, who nodded and left. Finally, she went to the table in the middle of the room, pulled Annette’s stool from under it, and sat down.

“How long since he was wounded?” she asked.

“A month.” Mother turned away and busied herself at the hearth, glancing at the baby in the corner. As usual, he had arranged some sticks and wood chips into a battle scene, and was softly babbling to them about what they were doing. Mother rubbed her hands distractedly on her apron, and smoothed an errant hair.

“He’s a strong man,” Dree said. “The infection would have killed a weaker before now.”

Lisa wasn’t sure, but she thought Mother smiled briefly at this compliment.

“The medicine I used will help, but the wound was untreated for a long time,” Dree continued. “I don’t know if he’ll ever walk without a limp unless we can get him some better healing.”

“You’ve already done so much, my lady,” Mother said. Lisa saw her glance at the gold coins, still sitting on the table. They were not enough to pay for a healing spell, but they would help in so many other ways.

Dree smiled calmly, and opened one of the pouches that lined her belt. Somehow, she pulled a toy sheep, bigger than the pouch, out of the mouth of the pouch. The sheep was stuffed and soft, and may have been compressed somewhat, but Lisa still stared with her mouth open.

Annette didn’t hesitate, but ran over to Dree with her arms held out. “What’s his name?” she asked excitedly. Baby Joachim turned to see what the fuss was, and jumped to his feet to fight his sister for the toy.

Dree held the sheep just out of reach of Annette’s jumping, and pulled a second sheep out of the pouch with her other hand. Then, she handed one of the toys to each of the children.

“I don’t know his name,” she said softly. “All I know is that he is a powerful warrior for life.”

“I’ll call him Pelor!” Annette announced, lifting her toy over her head with both hands.

“No, don’t do that,” Dree cautioned sternly, causing Lisa to prick up her ears. Something about the way she had said it made even Annette pay attention, while Mother turned from her cooking to listen.

“I don’t know his name,” Dree repeated, “but I know that Pelor works for him.”

The shock that rippled through the little house was almost visible. Joachim didn’t understand, but Annette was amazed, Mother was alarmed, and Lisa was scandalized. Pelor was the great god. Even Beory had been revealed by his light, although he hadn’t made her. He was the father of the other gods.

Dree calmly waited until she thought that they were ready to listen again. “The sheep is a symbol,” she said. “Just as the disk that Lisa wears is a symbol.” Lisa’s right hand moved self-consciously to cup the symbol of Beory that she wore around her neck.

“When great Pelor shines,” Dree continued, “he can burn the skin of the laborer in the field. His light destroys the undead and nourishes the plants. His path in the sky tells us when to sleep and when to rise. But even Pelor came from another place, according to the stories.”

Lisa nodded. She didn’t know a story that explained where Pelor had come from when he came into the darkness overseen by Tharizdun and revealed Beory with his light.

“There is a god who is greater – as much greater than Pelor as Pelor is than the Hopping Prophet.” Annette giggled, thinking of the goggle-eyed prophet who ranted about human superiority. “There is a god who made Pelor, as the stories say that Pelor made Rao and Allitur.”

Lisa gasped at the thought of a god that powerful. Dree continued.

“If Pelor burns us without meaning to,” she said, “simply because he is so powerful, you can imagine what would happen to the mortal who encountered the god who made Pelor.”

Lisa imagined a being of such incredible power that Pelor became sun-burned in his glow. In her mind’s eye she saw the world engulfed in flames – even the rocks melting and burning in the intense heat. Dree nodded, as though she could see inside Lisa’s head.

“This god is not only powerful, but he is also wise and good,” Dree said. “After all, he gave us Pelor, and the other good gods to care for us. Since these gods care for us, the one who made them must love us also. But he is too mighty to show himself in all of his strength. If he did that, we would all die. Instead, he shows himself as a little lamb.” Lisa hadn’t noticed, so engrossed had she been with her inner vision, but Dree had produced a third sheep toy, and she was holding it tenderly.

“And if even a lamb is too frightening for some,” Dree said, “this lamb has been killed.” She turned the toy to show where it was clumsily stitched closed with bright red thread.

“This is the tenderness and gentleness of the god that I serve,” Dree continued. “He loves your family. He loves your father so much that he helped me to notice Lisa at the temple of Beory, so that I could come and help you here. He rescued me from the slave pits in the Pomarj, after the rest of my family had been killed by slavers. And the power of that little lamb –” she pointed at the sheep that Joachim was playing with “– can destroy undead in the hands of someone who believes.”

Joachim reacted to this news by using the sheep toy to send the sticks and wood chips of his armies flying. Annette was staring into the silly eyes of the toy, as though she would read its thoughts. Mother had turned back to the hearth. Lisa thought she knew what her mother was thinking. “Religion is all well and good for those who have the time and money for it,” was her general attitude, although she allowed Lisa to help at the temple when she could.

“Lady Dree,” Lisa said, “if your god is so powerful, why are there evil things, like undead and the dark god?”

Dree smiled at the question, but not as though it were a foolish one. “Why is there evil, if good is so powerful?” she asked. “Well, I like to think of it this way. If evil were the great force of the universe, there would be nothing but evil. In the Old One’s lands to the north, all that is good has been stamped out. So we know that evil is not the great force.

“Some people think that this means that good is also not the great force. After all, why would good not stamp out all that is evil? The answer is that we are all evil.”

There was a gasp of protest from the hearth, while Annette cocked her head on one side as though to help her understand. Lisa thought she had begun to understand already, however.

“As an example, when you go to the market, you tell the seller that you can’t possibly pay his price, and he must come down. Now, you don’t have a lot of money, but I know that for certain things, you would pay the seller’s price if you had to.

“At the same time, the seller tells you that he could not possibly reduce his price, or his family will starve. You know that this is not true, for he has reduced his price many times, and his family continue to be well fed.

“It’s all a kind of game, of course, and no one means much of anything by it, but it’s evil all the same.”

“Because it’s lying,” Lisa said.

“Yes, that’s true,” said Dree, “but it’s also selfishness. It’s a willingness to make the other person do with less so that I can have more. That’s greed.”

Lisa nodded slowly. She thought about the times she had come home, filled with pride at having reduced a merchant’s price below what the normal fee was. Now she felt ashamed.

“If the great god were to destroy all of the evil,” Dree said, “there would be nothing left. Also, if he forced us to love him, that wouldn’t be much of a true love. And so, he is gentle and patient, and he works through lesser beings like me…”

“And like Pelor,” Lisa said, understanding dawning.

Beory’s Choice

Lisa never told Annette about the dragons. How could she? How would the little girl believe her? The two men had taken the dragons south, away from town, while the winged boat on wheels drove into Hochoch with the woman, the halfling woman, and a man that Lisa hadn’t noticed before on the front seat. The halfling man who had casually risen into the air had come back down and was sitting in the back of the wagon on top of all sorts of boxes, bags, bales, and crates. Lisa saw the top of a cooking tripod protruding in one place, and there were several cookpots hanging on the outside of the boat – er, wagon.

Once the laundry had dried, Lisa and Annette folded it up into the basket, and made their way back home. Mother was glad to see them back, and Lisa helped her to turn Father to put the clean sheets back under him, getting some fresh straw to replace the soiled. Once that was done, and the girls had cleaned up after lunch, there were other chores, and so until bed.

It was two days until Mother told Lisa, “You’ve been a big help this week. Why don’t you go to the temple? It is Godsday, after all.”

Lisa didn’t hesitate. She was already wearing her best clothing — the other outfit was for field work and things of that sort — so she told Annette where she was going and left the house at a run. The other members of the family worshiped the Old Gods in their fashion, but Lisa never tired of going to the temple to see the rituals and hear the teaching. She tried to think if it was a special feast day, or if it would be a “normal” Godsday, but she couldn’t remember.

Arriving at the doors, she decided it must be a “normal” day. Most of the seats were empty, and the priestess of Beory was going through the liturgy half-heartedly, knowing that there was little enthusiasm among the little crowd gathered.

Lisa’s attention wandered. It was the story of how Nerull killed Obad-hai and hung him on the tree. The way she told it, Lisa knew that it would end before the part about Ehlonna planting him to be grown (born?) again in the spring. Some days they told the whole story, and some days only part of it.

She started looking at the other people in the seats. Most of them she knew, even to their names, for they were neighbors and the most faithful in attending Godsday services. There were a few strangers. One was a small Bakluni man, almost hidden in his big turban and flowing robes. She wondered how well he understood the story, the way his head bobbed around. There were three halflings that were talking to one another in hushed tones – politely enough, she supposed, but the way they were quietly laughing, she thought they weren’t paying too much attention.

One woman caught Lisa’s eye. She was plainly dressed in a light brown robe, almost like a priestess of some sort, and she was listening very closely to everything the priestess of Beory was saying. She didn’t seem “enthralled”, as though she was hanging on every word. Rather, it almost seemed to Lisa that the woman was evaluating the story, checking to see if it was correct.

With a bit of a thrill, Lisa realized that the woman she was studying was the one who had been on the ferry. She glanced around to see if she recognized any of the others from that group and was startled to notice a man leaning against the wall of the temple.

This man was in the shadow of a support column, and standing so still that she thought for a moment he might be a statue. He was clad in armor from head to toe, including a helmet that covered his face completely. A long cloak completed the outfit. There was no tunic to show allegiance to a lord or any other marking like that. Lisa decided that he was a mercenary or sell-sword, but his attention seemed to be on the woman in the brown robe.

About this time, Lisa realized that the priestess had finished the story, and had begun one of the lesser litanies. Lisa stumbled over the words, distracted as she was by the strange woman and stranger man. Finally, the service was over and she moved to the front to give an offering. It wasn’t much, for her family didn’t have much to give, and Lisa made sure to contribute only from her personal funds. When she turned around after receiving the priestess’ blessing, the woman from the ferry and the strange mercenary were gone. The three halflings greeted her jovially, each holding a small money bag as they went forward to the priestess. Lisa returned their greeting automatically and hurried away from the altar.

She puzzled over it in her own mind, but she wanted to find the strangers. When she emerged from the temple into the morning light, she scanned the street, but couldn’t see them anywhere. Somewhat dejected, she sat down on the temple steps and leaned against a column.

Why was she so interested in the strangers, she wondered? Was it because of the dragons? Was it because of the man who so casually had cuffed and tugged on the dragon? It might even have been something to do with the strange boat-cart, or the halfling who flew. Perhaps it was just the thought of strange, exciting people coming from the Dim Forest on mysterious business.

As she was mulling over all of these thoughts, she heard the priestess say, “You’ve given me much to think about,” and then there were steps on the stones by the threshold. She looked up to see the woman from the ferry lifting the hood of her robe to cover her long, black hair as she exited the temple.

“Beory warm and Pelor’s light guide you,” Lisa said, rising to her feet and curtsying awkwardly.

The woman turned to her and smiled. “The one who made them welcome you,” she responded.

Lisa was shocked. This was not one of the normal responses to the religious greeting. Beory was the earth mother. She made everything, with Pelor, when they danced in the new light Pelor had brought. She looked up into the calm, dark eyes of the strange woman, who seemed to be waiting for Lisa’s thoughts to clear. About then, she realized that the mercenary from the church had moved up right behind the woman, and the fear must have shown in her eyes, for the woman glanced over her shoulder and then looked back, smiling.

“My name is Dree,” she said, “and this is Usen. He is my protector.” Taking Lisa by the hand, Dree led her down the steps of the temple and to a nearby tavern that had tables set out in the square. Dree guided Lisa to a seat and sat down next to her while Usen stood between them and and the square, the helmet turning this way and that as he surveyed the small groups at the scattered tables.

Lisa was overwhelmed. She had never sat at a tavern like this, although she thought her father had. She hoped the woman wouldn’t think her rude if she didn’t order anything, for the only money she had brought was the half-copper she had left in the temple offering.

Dree caught the attention of the serving girl and ordered two short beers. Lisa shrank down in her chair when the girl looked her way, and the wench returned to the tavern with Dree’s order. When Lisa looked up again, Dree was calmly staring at her.

“Are you new to Hochoch?” Lisa finally asked, holding fast to her courage.

Dree nodded. “We arrived on Sunday,” she said.

“So, where are you from?”

Dree laughed, a musical sound. “I’m originally from the Principality of Ulek,” she said, “and Usen is from the Pomarj.”

Lisa’s eyes must have goggled. She knew the Uleks were far away on the other side of the Rushmoors, and the Pomarj was even farther than that.

“I’ve only been to Leilam’s Orchard,” she said. “That’s in Gran March, but they talk just the same as we do. Father took us to a festival there before …” She broke off, fearing that she had said too much.

The beers arrived, and Dree pushed one of them over to Lisa, rather than giving it to Usen. Lisa gulped.

“I’m sorry, ma’am,” she said, “I came out without any money today.”

Dree smiled gently. “That’s alright,” she said. “I have plenty.” Lisa looked again at her.

The robe was plainly woven, but of good quality. It looked like undyed sheep’s wool, although the sheep near Hochoch were a different color. She had no ornaments – no rings on her fingers or bangles on her wrists. She didn’t even have any pins in her hair.

Lisa glanced at Usen, and saw the glint of rubies from the pommel of his sword. He, at least, had some of the markings of wealth, and she thought that his armor must be somewhat costly too, though it was a different style than what the soldiers in Hochoch wore.

She picked up the beer and sipped it, feeling more at ease as her stomach responded to the wholesome drink.

“What’s your name?” Dree had hardly sampled her beer, but was looking intently into Lisa’s face.

“I’m Lisa,” the girl replied, taking another drink to avoid saying anything more.

“I noticed that you came to the temple alone,” Dree commented. “You mentioned your father. Is he still living?”

Lisa gulped. She had not wanted to talk about her father. “Yes,” she said. “He’s alive.” Perhaps there was something in her tone of voice that communicated the darker truth, that he was not well.

Dree nodded. “And your mother?” Her head was cocked on one side as she waited for Lisa’s reply.

“Oh, Mother is fine!” Lisa said in a rush, taking another drink of the beer.

“Do you have any siblings?”

Lisa wasn’t sure where all of these questions were leading, but at least she could talk about her siblings without worrying about complications. “Bobby is apprenticed to a carpenter over by the Town Gate,” she said. “I’m next, and then Annette. Baby Joachim is only three.”

Dree nodded. “Are the others working this Godsday?”

Lisa paused. “Well, I think Bobby works all the time. I don’t see him much because he’s always busy with his carpenting. Annette is helping mother at home, but I think she’s just mostly playing with the baby.” Dree’s calm face was like a forest pool that quietly absorbed everything Lisa said without showing a ripple of response.

“And your father?”

Lisa’s face burned, and she thought it was unfair of Dree to ask her questions like this. She hadn’t asked for a beer, and she didn’t feel that she ought to owe Dree answers to personal questions. Who was Dree, anyway, a stranger from Ulek?

“He… He can’t work.” Lisa studied her fingers, wrapped around the porcelain mug on the weather beaten wooden table top.

“Can the priests of Beory do nothing for him?”

Lisa looked up. There was care and compassion in Dree’s face. Looking back down at the mug, Lisa said, “We don’t have the money to ask them.”

Dree glanced at Lisa’s mug. It was basically empty, since she had drunk to keep from talking too much, and Dree drained her own in a single draught. Then, leaving a gold coin on the tabletop, she stood and held out a hand to Lisa.

“I’d like to meet your family,” she said.

“Are you a priest?”

“I am, although I have no healing magic,” Dree replied, anticipating Lisa’s thoughts. “I do have some skill as an apothecary, though.”

Lisa didn’t know how to respond, but Dree had been very nice so far, and although Usen was vaguely menacing, he hadn’t actually done anything frightening. She led the two strangers through town to the cramped neighborhood where her family lived.

When Lisa’s mother heard the door open, she said, “Oh, there you are. If you can give me a hand with the sheets I’ll take them down and wash them.” She stood and turned from the small hearth as she finished talking, and stood mutely, staring at the two strangers behind her daughter.

“I’m sorry,” she said. “I didn’t realize Lisa had brought company. How may I serve you?”

Dree nudged Lisa out of the way, where she had been standing in the doorway, and pulling her hood down off of her dark hair, she bowed to Lisa’s mother.

“My name is Dree Dantreyuss,” she said, “and I am a priestess of the God above all gods. I met your daughter at the temple of Beory in town.” She glanced around the cramped common room, the bundles of herbs hanging from the rafters and everything taking just a little more room than was available. “I don’t know, specifically, what your prayers have been,” she continued, “but I know that they have been heard. I don’t know how they will be answered, but I know that I have been sent to you as part of the answer.”

As she was speaking, Dree moved gracefully into the room, and Lisa saw that two gold coins appeared on the table where her hand passed. Mother was too stunned to notice that, her eyes seemed fixed on Dree’s face.

Finally finding her voice, she said, “My lady is gracious, but we have no money for temple services.” She spoke huskily, and her eyes were downcast on the floor.

“Did Lisa-bones finally come back from the temple?” a saucy voice asked as Annette slid down the ladder from the loft-space. She whirled around to tease Lisa some more and froze as she saw Dree standing in the middle of the room.

“Who are you?” she said in a moment, dancing over to shut the door, and stopping again when she saw Usen standing in the street.

Dree turned to follow the little girl’s movement, and Lisa saw a big smile on her face. Annette had that affect on most people outside the family.

“You must be Annette,” Dree said. “I’m Dree. I came to visit you because I want to meet your father.”

“He’s in his room,” Annette announced, cheerfully, and before their mother could say anything, she had danced over to the doorway at the back of the room and pulled the curtain to one side.

“Annette!” Their mother finally found her voice. “You shouldn’t — I’m sorry, ma’am.” Mother’s face was a mask of anguish as she sought the appropriate way to avert this catastrophe, but Dree ignored the obvious cues and ducked her head as she moved into the little bedroom.

The room stank of infection and a used chamber pot, and the small window let only a little light through the greased parchment that covered it. Dree went directly to the side of the bed and lifted the tangled sheets from Father’s body. Lisa, peering through the small doorway, could see that Father’s nightshirt had twisted around and was hiked around his waist, exposing him. The wound on his thigh was open again, and blood and pus oozed out, soiling shirt and sheet.

Dree knelt by the bed and reached into a pouch at her side. Although the pouch was quite small, hardly more than a purse, she removed quite a large piece of cloth from it, and then a small pot which proved to contain an ointment. Using one end of the cloth, she cleaned the wound and then smeared ointment on it. Through the process, Father lay motionless, his glazed eyes looking past her at the wall.

Finally, Dree produced a small flask from her pouch, and she held it to Father’s lips and told him to drink. He did, and suddenly relaxed in a way he hadn’t done for weeks. Eyes closing, he rolled onto his back and his steady breathing showed that he had gone to sleep.

Hiccoughs in Hochoch

In the west, the sunrise touched the distant mountains with rose, and their snowy peaks seemed to glow in the fresh morning air. The streets were still in shadow, though, as Lisa and her little sister picked up the basket of clothes after carefully closing the door behind them.
Annette danced around Lisa as the older girl faced the big basket and finally nodded.

“Okay, ‘Net”, she said. “Help me get this up.” The last word ended in a squeak as Lisa hiccuped.

Annette giggled. “I’m not going to help you,” she said saucily, pausing in her dance just a moment.

“Annette!” Lisa’s frustrated complaint ended, again, in a squeak.

“I’m just teasing you,” Annette said, sticking out her tongue. “You need someone to scare you to get rid of your hiccups.”

Lisa sighed and hiccuped, gripping the sides of the basket and bending her knees. Annette grabbed the far side, and together they lifted the basket up to Lisa’s head where she struggled for a moment to get the balance, frustrated by the little shudders that shook her body as the hiccups came again and again.

She had hardly gotten the basket balanced when Annette released any hold she had on the basket and began dancing around her again.

“Lisa and Jakob, sitting in a tree…” the little girl began to sing.

Lisa sighed, but smiled at her sister’s energy. Annette never seemed able to sit still for more than a moment. She was more like a butterfly than a girl in some ways, flitting here and there, never resting long. A shudder passed through her with another hiccup and her hand flew up to make sure the basket was still balanced, but she needn’t have worried. This was a task she had practiced for many years, and even with the involuntary shaking, the basket would stay where it belonged. She started to walk down the street east, towards the river.

As the girls made their way through town, doors and windows began to open to one side or another of them as people opened shops or came out on their own chores. Mrs. Biltmore came hobbling down her little alley, as bent and crooked as the stick she leaned on, or the alley itself.

“Good morning, Mrs. Biltmore,” Lisa hicced, bending ever so slightly at the knees in courtesy.

“Good morning, young thing,” Mrs. Biltmore replied, peering at the girls to make sure they were who they sounded like. “Goodness, but I can’t see the one that’s flitting around so much,” she remarked. “That must be Annette!”

Annette giggled, and gave the old woman a hug that might have knocked her off her feet. “Now, you stop that,” the old lady scolded, and then looked up at the basket looming on Lisa’s head.

“It can’t be wash day already!” she remarked, her cloudy eyes fixed on the large dark shape hovering over Lisa.

Hic. “The baby’s been sick,” Lisa informed her, “and papa’s wound opened up again, so the sheets are (hic) nasty.” Her neck ached each time her body jerked and the basket shifted, just a little.

“Well, don’t let me keep you,” Mrs. Biltmore said, pressing a half-copper at Annette, who didn’t see because she was just dashing across the road to try to catch a cat.

“Good day to you,” Lisa said, and she continued down the road towards the river gate.

With the delay, she wasn’t surprised that the entire steeple of the temple of Beory was lit with the sunshine before they got near the docks. When they could finally see the Realstream, he had already risen above the edge of the Dim Forest, escaping the mists that always seemed to gather there, and was shining brightly on the two sisters.

Annette rolled her eyes when Lisa didn’t turn right, to the nearer part of the shore, but went left. Past the fishing docks, past the ferry landing, Lisa finally found the part of the bank she wanted. She had explained to Annette a hundred times that if you washed the clothes downstream of the fishing docks it took much longer, as you were always cleaning fish scales out of the clothes, but the little girl thought it was a lot of pointless walking.

Pulling the sheets out of the basket that now sat on the ground, Lisa gulped to try to suppress a hiccup, and glanced across the smooth dark water of the Realstream.

There was a sort of unofficial camp over there, where people waited for the ferry to start in the morning. As it wasn’t market day, Lisa didn’t expect there to be many people, but was surprised to see some large tents spread around a smoky fire. The tents were low — probably half-folk — but there was a man walking around the fire, poking it.

Lisa turned her attention to the clothes, coaxing Annette into digging out the bar of soap that had been her burden on the way from the house. After she had wet most of the clothes, she made the little girl scrub with the soap while she rinsed the sheets in the river water. Her hiccups were louder, as she worked less at suppressing them, but focused on her work.

It wasn’t long before she heard the voices of the men who manned the ferry as they settled the oars in place. One of them grumbled loudly about the party on the far bank – why couldn’t they have waited until later in the day – but the other men mocked his laziness, and the ferry pulled away from the shore, hanging on the cable as it pushed across the main current of the Realstream.

Lisa had just spread one of the sheets out on top of some bushes near the bank when she glanced up to look at the people across the river. The ferry had arrived there, and there were several people walking around, including two half-folk. They had what looked like a boat that was being pulled by some horses, and the ferrymen were all standing back, on the near side of the ferry instead of helping to make sure they loaded the thing correctly. While Lisa was trying to figure out why the people didn’t just cross in their own boat (although it did look small) and why they hadn’t taken down all of their tents, one of the tents moved.

It was long, low, and black, and it might have been just a row of bundles, but now it stretched and flexed, and a big, black wing reached up shakily into the air before sorting itself onto to the creature’s back.

Two men-folk followed the boat onto the ferry, and the half-folk went with them, but the other man had stripped down and was standing passively on the shore while the ferrymen leaned to their oars and began to row.

Once the ferry was well away, the last man on the shore walked to the water, and followed by not one but two large, black, sinuous shapes, slid into the water.

Lisa’s laundry was forgotten, and somewhere along the line she had lost her hiccups, too. Annette was under the bushes, under the sheets, having a sing-song conversation with one of her imaginary friends, but Lisa stood transfixed, staring at the ferry laboring across the river, and the man swimming easily through the strong current with the two black, scaly creatures.

When the man climbed, dripping from the water, his finely-etched muscles gleaming in the morning light, the first of the black creatures surged out after him. It had an ugly, scaly snout, and as she stared it opened a long mouth full of sharp teeth and yawned. The man slapped it on the neck, just behind the head, and it jerked away from him, hauling itself completely out of the river water and stretching out, two huge wings spread to catch the sun. The other creature followed, and a hideous stink like the aftermath of vomit wafted down the bank to where Lisa stood, transfixed.

The ferry tied up at the landing, and the ferrymen busied themselves with untying the restrains that had been put on the boat. Lisa could see (when she looked away from the huge, black creatures) that the boat had bat-like wings, and also, inexplicably, wheels. The horses willingly pulled it onto the bank, ignoring the huge black creatures, and one of the half-folk, a woman, climbed up to a seat at the front of the boat.

The other half-folk, a man, rose casually into the air, pivoting slowly as he looked around. Lisa wasn’t sure, but she thought he might have winked at her as he turned past her, but she thought she couldn’t be sure of anything right now.

The other two folk on the ferry were regular people, a man and a woman. The man headed over to the swimmer to give him his clothes back, while the woman paid the ferrymen. Lisa couldn’t hear what she was saying, but could tell by the tones she used that she was calming and soothing them. Lisa was so interested, trying to catch the woman’s words, that she didn’t realize one of the black creatures had silently crept closer to her.

There was a sudden whiff of the acid stench as it opened its mouth and a long, black, slimy tongue stretched out towards the drying sheet. The swimmer had just finished putting his tunic back on, and saw what the creature was doing as his head cleared the neckline.

“Hey, cut that out!” he yelled, seeming to cross the distance between them without moving. Cuffing the creature behind the head, he turned to Lisa with a slight bow.

“My apologies, miss,” he said. “He knows better – usually.” Cuffing the creature again, so that it swung its head insolently away, he grabbed it by a horn and began tugging it towards the rest of the party.

Lisa found her voice. “Sir,” she said hesitantly. “Sir –” The man turned to look at her. “What is it?”

The man smiled broadly. “Fang?” he said. “Fang’s a black dragon.”

One Night in Two-Horse

Jared glanced down the narrow alley as they passed its mouth. His companions wouldn’t be able to see it, but Mrs. Wiggums‘ cat was stalking a rat in the weeds by the palisade. Her name wasn’t Wiggums, of course, but she was married to Mr. Wiggums, and that had been his name ever since Jared had observed him on a windy day some years ago.

Silver started to whistle, then cut it off as Jared glanced angrily at him. What was the point of listening for trouble before it found you if your comrades made so much noise? Ogre, to Jared’s right, couldn’t help how loudly he breathed, and didn’t see the point in preparation for a fight, anyway. Ogre‘s attitude was, once the fight started, he finished it.

“That’s my attitude, too, of course”, he thought as he glanced up towards the fingernail-thin sliver of Luna in the sky. “I just don’t see any point in getting more hurt in a fight than need be.” He didn’t put words to it, but he felt again the iron hate for the thin elven bones his parent had bequeathed him. He would never have Ogre‘s bulk, or his ability to be reckless in a fight.

Silver understood. He was fully human, but he was also more agile than strong. Jared could hear Silver‘s thumbnail flick the edge of one of his throwing knives, a restless fidget that didn’t mean anything, but that irritated the edges of Jared’s senses.

Jared hated night patrol. He hated most things, but night patrol brought out everything in him that he wished was different. He could see the heated forms of Flaccus the bum and his latest prostitute through the thin wall of his tent. He could hear the scrape and flutter as the bats and rats went about their nightly errands. He was aware of an entire world that his comrades were entirely unaware of, and he hated the mark of difference that it put on him.

“At least Celene won’t be up to any tricks,” he thought, glancing up at Luna. The big moon caused trouble in her own way, of course, as she pulled on Jared’s blood the way she pulled on the waters of the harbor, but Celene — the small moon led a dance that culminated on Godsday of every festival week, and She made Jared … dance.

Jared wasn’t terribly literate, but to the degree he thought in such terms, Celene was definitely capitalized, even in Her pronouns. She lit fire in his veins that peaked four times a year, and sometimes at the new moon and quarters, depending upon the year and how tired Jared was. On those nights, Jared used whatever excuses he could — once he had even abandoned his patrol-mates, and gotten a beating from Mic — in order to find a quiet, private place to dance. Celene was also one entity to whom Jared didn’t dare assign a nickname.

But, no, Celene was waxing towards the first quarter tonight, and wouldn’t cause him any embarrassment. Jared ducked under the low-hanging sign-board of the Grumpy Troll Tavern — it had been abandoned since the owner had disappeared three years ago, and the sign was going to fall into the street one of these days, but it was a kind of local entertainment when passers-by got smacked in the face by it.

Emerging at the next intersection, the lights of the Temple bloomed across their faces, spoiling Jared’s night vision. It was a Godsday, he realized, as he heard the light plucking of Charity’s harp. “It must be a processional,” he thought, since there was no one singing along to the music. He listened for the chime of the thurifer as it swung on its chain, but Silver nudged him in the ribs and they turned into the next street, the Temple fading into the darkness behind them as a whiff of salt water and rotten fish met their nostrils.

Jared had fallen a step or two behind, “Not because I want to hear more of the music,” he thought, when Ogre cried out and fell heavily on his face in the mud of the street. Pausing another moment for his eyes to adjust to the renewed darkness, Jared could now see the seed bag on the ground. “It must be soaked with mud,” he thought, for it lay in a trickle of water that always led from the well to the harbor, and he and Silver shushed Ogre like mothers as they helped him up off the ground.

“I’d send you back to Mic right now,” Silver was saying, “if it wasn’t so dark that no one will notice that you’re covered in mud. But I’ll do it if you don’t stop that cursing! It’s not professional.”

Jared grimaced in the darkness. While it was true that the merchant they were going to escort was one who cared about appearances, he always had trouble calling what the gang did “professional.” Ogre finally calmed down enough that they thought they could continue, but Jared could hear the big man’s heart racing, and the occasional cracking of his knuckles as he flexed his fists. This would be a bad night for trouble, and he fished in his pouch for a copper to throw across Norebo’s threshold when the passed the shrine a couple of streets down.

The merchant’s house was well lit, and a lamp-boy stood by the door waiting for them. When the trio emerged from the shadows in the middle of the street, the boy rapped sharply on the door, and the merchant emerged rather quickly, as though he had been waiting for them.

“Our apologies, Master Oaklock”, Silver smarmed, bowing to the wealthy man Jared thought of as Whiteface, for the powder he put on his cheeks to hide the blush of his heavy drinking.

Oaklock looked them up and down with a critical eye and sighed, resigning himself to the escort. “Thank you, Matt,” he huffed. “Perhaps Lester can wait outside?” Ogre huffed a little at this, but kept his mouth shut, and Silver continued verbally smoothing the feathers of their client as they continued towards the docks.

Jared inwardly rolled his eyes at the lamp-boy, even though he knew that the obstacle Ogre had tripped over wasn’t the only one between here and the docks, and the others couldn’t see in the dark the way he could. Still, he silently slid away from Silver and Whiteface, letting the darkness hide him, and becoming more aware of the other shapes that were concealed in the darkness.

The sound of the surf against the breakwater was loud in his ears as they came up to the Pentapus, the arcane shellfish splaying its five legs across the weather-beaten sign above the door. There was a big longshoreman leaning in at one of the tavern’s windows, so Jared silently steered Ogre to the other one. That way, he reasoned, he’d be in on any action, but wouldn’t upset Master Whiteface with his muddy clothes. Besides, he didn’t like to think of the exit being barred by that longshoreman.

Silver held the door for the merchant and the lamp-boy trimmed his lamp to wait for them to emerge. After Silver and Whiteface had disappeared inside, Jared counted three and followed them.

At least Silver was along this time, he thought. Mic seemed to have an idea that Jared was persuasive, and kept trying to cast him as the face-man. Silver could talk the scales off a flounder, as the saying went, and then charge it for the privilege. Jared thought of himself as muscle — less blunt and unimaginative than Ogre, but pointed and piercing. His eyes were two of his weapons. He leaned against the wall next to the bar and started counting.

Four longshoremen, that was certain, he thought. One man, a half-orc?, might be a sailor off the ship in the harbor, called the Ghoul. The merchant from the ship, Whiteface’s counterpart, was a fat and greasy man with deep folds on his face and stains all over his rich robes. There was half a goose in pieces on a trencher in front of him, and he scarcely looked up at Whiteface as the local merchant sat down across from him, loudly greeting him and proclaiming how good it was to see him.

Swine?” Jared thought. No, Swine might be a better name for the half-orc, whose greenish snout was very piglike, and whose little eyes glittered as he looked around the room. Jared could see that Swine was the reason that Oil-tub (that name worked) was so nonchalant about the open bag of coins on the table next to him. The extra bulk to his tunic might be the orcish muscles Jared had heard about, but it might be armor. Jared glanced at the board and flipped a two-copper piece on the bar as he ordered a short beer, loosening a dagger beneath his cloak with his other hand as he did so.

Oil-tub wiped his greasy fingers on Swine’s cloak, and Jared was unhappy that he couldn’t read the half-breed’s expression well enough to see if he cared. One of the longshoremen had gotten up and was moving behind Silver, seeming to be looking at the dart-board on the wall behind him. The one at the window leaned out and glanced towards where Ogre slouched, impassively, at the other window. Jared ordered another beer, commenting, “For my friend,” with a gesture to Silver, when the barman looked quizzically at him. He sipped from the first beer, glad that they served in bottles down here at the docks, and feeling the heft of the glass, the balance of the bottle as he drank it down. When the balance changed, he swapped for the other bottle, getting another look from the barman.

Whiteface was starting to lose his composure. There were sheaves of parchment on the table now, and he was reading from one of them, his mouth moving as he followed the letters. Oil-tub was watching him more carefully now, although he affected nonchalance, and Jared saw that his right hand disappeared into the folds of his robe time and again. Jared exhaled and took a sip of beer every time the hand emerged empty, but he could tell things were not going well.

Silver, meanwhile, had shifted his position so that the longshoreman was no longer right behind him, and he was making facial expressions and whispering to Swine both to distract him, and to size him up. The big Half-orc didn’t react in any way, and Jared found himself wondering if the creature was just too stupid to follow a conversation. Although his head was on a swivel, and the little pig-eyes kept taking in the whole of the room, he didn’t move in any other way, and Jared had not yet seen a weapon on him.

Dismayed, Jared realized that he had become distracted. Without his noticing, the greasy merchant now held a dagger just below the table, and he had begun to lean forward. Silver was glancing back at the longshoreman behind him and Ogre seemed disengaged — perhaps he was thinking of coming in for a beer, despite orders.

Suddenly, Oil-tub lashed out with his left hand, grabbing Whiteface by the wrist of the hand that held the parchment. As the dagger began coming back and prepared to rise above the table, Jared threw the bottle of beer he had been nursing. It stung the fat merchant on the elbow and shattered, the pain causing the man to drop the knife into the folds of his robe. However, Jared’s movement had not gone unnoticed.

Swine swung a heavy club — a thick stick with a band of iron around the end — and almost caught Silver in the face as he glanced back from the longshoreman. Silver dived forward and grabbed Whiteface, pulling him under the table while he called for Lester to help.

Things moved very quickly after that. Someone threw a knife at Jared that caught him in the left shoulder. The Half-orc now had an axe in one of his hands, and Silver’s back was unprotected, sticking out from beneath the table. Jared threw his dagger, intending to hit the Half-orc in the shoulder joint, gasping as the half-man lurched into the path of the blade and took it in the throat.

The longshoreman at the window was in the tavern now, having been thrown head-first through the window by Ogre, who entered the room by the door laughing wildly. Silver was on his back, kicking at a couple of longshoremen who were trying to pull him up and away by his legs, while Whiteface hid wretchedly under the table.

Jared threw the other beer bottle, and grabbed a wine bottle before the barman could put it out of reach behind the bar. Smashing the end off the bottle to make a satisfyingly jagged edge, he leapt forward from the bar to the side of the obese merchant.

“Call off the dogs,” he snarled, nicking the man slightly with the sharp glass. While he held the bottle mostly steady, he found the fallen knife in the man’s robes and retrieved it. He didn’t hear Oil-tub give the stand-down order.

He didn’t see Ogre fly into two of the longshoremen, bearing them bodily to the ground. He didn’t see Silver get to his feet, and then punch one of the longshoremen who renewed the attack when they saw that Ogre hadn’t stopped.

He seemed to hear a heartbeat, though it was not with his ears. The little pig-eyes of the half-breed locked onto his, and Swine reached up, pulled on Jared’s dagger, and died. Jared didn’t know what it was, but he seemed to feel it as the Half-orc’s spirit rushed out of his body and into the darkness.

He came to himself when one of the longshoremen tackled him, and he wrestled himself free, smashing the man’s face into the floor. Silver had somehow gotten Oaklock to the door, so Jared retrieved his dagger from the fallen Half-orc and picked up the latter’s club to help Ogre pacify the remaining longshoremen. He took a moment to knock the greasy merchant unconscious during the melee, aware that he might have things more dangerous than daggers hidden in his robes.

When the last of the longshoremen was moaning on the floor and Ogre looked around to find no more foes, he jerked his head towards the door and the two of them followed Silver and Whiteface into the darkness, Jared stopping only long enough to pick up the bag of coins from the table on the way.

As he glanced through the window as they began their way back, he saw the stiff, ungainly corpse of the Half-orc. What affinity had passed between them as that man died, he wondered. Was it simply that they were alike, the ugly and the handsome, both cast-offs of monsters who had left them to find their own way in the world of humans?

No Longer a Slave of the Horned Society

Dew dripped heavily from the twigs of the surrounding trees as the warlocks chanted. The clerics burned bits of incense that stank like the fourth circle as they wove the spell together. It was a ceremony, and would take nearly an hour for the first candidate to be ready.

As the ritual neared the first milestone, the temperature in the glade dropped, and as the hierarch raised the ornate dagger and plunged it into the chest of the candidate, the dripping stopped altogether, the dewdrops frozen with the blast of cold that emanated from the weathered stone slab.

Bloodsip shivered inside his woolen robes, and focused on the chant. He wasn’t sure it was required — certainly he felt no power flowing through him. At least, it felt nothing like the power he channeled when he unleashed an eldritch blast, but he was not going to be responsible for the failure of this ritual.

Snerdbane Edgeslice opened his eyes, vaguely aware that the blood dripping from the dagger above his face was his own. An aching pain in his chest made him think he knew where he had been stabbed, and he tried to lash out at the masked figure above him. However, it wasn’t the ropes that bound him to the stone slab that prevented him. Other chains, resting on his soul rather than his limbs, bound him.

As the ropes fell free from his body, he rose from the slab and knelt before the Dread Hierarch. He hated the man with every fiber of his being, but he could only obey. The hierarch extended a sword to him, the surface of which writhed with runes that glowed in Snerdbane’s vision. He reached out and took the sword, and his body was wracked with pains as the blade became his soul. Or possessed his soul. Or — he wasn’t sure exactly what had happened. However, strength now flowed into his body from the blade, and he stood, aware that the Hierarch had granted him permission.

Hate and rage flowed through his mind, and the smug look on the face of a nearby hobgoblin drove him into a frenzy. Hardly knowing what he was doing — had he been a fighter, once? — he clove the humanoid practically in two, swinging the runeblade with a heavy two-handed arc that took the creature completely by surprise.

A sharp cry of surprise — dismay? — broke from one of the surrounding, cloaked figures. Snerdbane smiled with what was more like a sneer and turned to the Dread Hierarch.

“You have done well,” that man said, his voice echoing hollowly in the mask he wore. “You have survived the transformation, and you have killed. Did you feel strength flow into you from the hobgoblin?”

Snerdbane thought a moment, then nodded. Something had flowed up the blade from the creature when he struck it. Glancing down, he saw that the wound over his sternum had closed.

“Good. You have become a Death Knight, and death is your master. When you serve him well, he will reward you with renewed health and vigor. Take the armor that the guard was wearing. It is yours, now, and you will need it shortly.”

Puzzled, the new Death Knight pulled the armor off of the hobgoblin. It fit him passably well, but was damaged from the blow he had given it. No one told me that this would be the way for me to get equipment he grumbled inwardly.

He had hardly finished fastening the final working straps of the leather armor when there was a cry from the stone behind him. Turning, he saw the Hierarch’s knife rising from the chest of another man.

This man, too, rose from the stone and knelt to the Hierarch, but when he took the sword from the hiearch’s hands, he cried out aloud and the blade shattered, leaving him nothing but a shard — hardly a dagger or short sword.

“Gutterspawn!” the Hierarch shouted in fury and disdain. “Worthless wretch! You are unable to hold the gift you have been given!” He turned to Snerdbane, but the Death Knight needed no order. He strode forward quickly and slashed at the gutterspawn, surprised when the wretch blocked with his feeble blade.

The fight was soon over, even with this unexpected resistance. With the creature’s demise, Snerdbane felt even stronger than before, and he seethed when the Hierarch told him to stand aside while others were processed. Some of the clerics were beginning to sound hoarse from chanting so long, although most of them were accustomed to this sort of duty.

After a half-dozen men had been transformed into either Death Knights or gutterspawn, and the latter had been dispatched by the former, one of the newer Death Knights noticed that Snerdbane was wearing armor, and immediately attacked him.

The first Knight was surprised at this action, and suffered a wound before bringing his own runeblade into play, parrying and riposting, slashing at his enemy’s unprotected flesh. It wasn’t long before he had defeated the newcomer, but although he felt more powerful from this victory, he noticed that the wound had not been healed.

Snerdbane approached a cleric that was observing rather than participating in the ritual and demanded that the priest explain what was happening.

“Only the living are able to heal you when you strike them with your runeblade,” the priest said with a cruel smile. Seeming to divine Snerdbane’s next thought, he said, “You are forbidden to harm one of our order.” Indeed, the invisible bonds on Snerdbane’s soul? prevented him from as much as slapping the man.

Furious, he stormed away from the ceremony until he found a small group of humanoids clustered around a smoky fire. He struck one of them down, and was immediately healed of the wound he had received from the other Death Knight. However, he had been careless again, and the armor of this victim was in even worse shape than that he was wearing.

Undeterred, he set upon the entire group, who had attacked him with the death of their comrade, and when he had slain all of them, he was able to piece together a more complete set of armor.

He was puzzled by only one thing. Although the blows he rained on the hobgoblins seemed to heal him, he didn’t feel the increased strength he had felt from killing gutterspawn or Death Knights.

Hardly had fitted the new armor to his body than he was set upon by another Death Knight. This one moved more swiftly than the last, and Snerdbane was soon fighting desperately, growing weary as he fended off the furious attacks of the other.

Finally, the attacker paused and said, “Bow before Delphus Shadowblade, and you shall live.” Snerdbane bowed reluctantly, and Shadowblade inhaled sharply, as though a surge of pleasure had moved him.

Turning from Snerdbane, Shadowblade searched for a new adversary, and the former gripped his sword, ready to run the previous victor through from behind. However, he soon realized that he was completely incapable of striking the one to whom he had bowed. Instead, he followed the victor and joined him in attacking some of the other wandering Death Knights, some of whom had, themselves, joined into small groups.

Luna was still high when Delphus Shadowblade took his place on one of the standing stones to the right of the Dread Hierarch. He had been given a suit of armor after defeating many of the other Knights, and was now called Master of Sorrow. Gutterborn and the lesser Death Knights still fought in the shadows beyond the fire pots, and there were no humanoids left within the circle that was permitted to the undead warriors. Generally, those Death Knights who had made the transition first were able to defeat the newer recruits, having collected gear from the unfortunate humanoid soldiers and guards who had surrounded the ritual circle. Others, like the unfortunate Snerdbane, were eventually cut down by warriors with finer mettle, and some of these waited with Shadowblade for the last of the victims to be processed.

In between the fighters and knights who were slaughtered to change them into Death Knights (or gutterborn, for the less fortunate) the clerics slaughtered sacrifices to the dread powers that were granting these transformations. As the Hierarch oversaw the last of these sacrifices — a young girl taken from the lands of the Bandit Kings — the sounds of combat from beyond the grove changed in tone.

While there had been a more-or-less constant clash of arms in the surrounding darkness, there were now the sound of thundering hooves and the shouts of living voices. Light bloomed in the darkness here and there as light spells were cast into the melee, and other lights cast black shadows from tree or standing stone as they emanated from unsheathed blade or uncovered shield.

Before Shadowblade could completely reckon what was happening, a great warhorse charged into the very circle, a tiny elf-maiden clad in shining armor on its back. In her right hand was a heavy lance and on her left arm a shield bearing the emblem of a rose encircled by thorns. She swept past the lesser Death Knights, ignoring even Shadowblade, to charge right up to the Dread Hierarch and strike him with her lance.

The blow would have killed a normal man, but the Dread Hierarch of the Horned Society was no normal man. Possessed of arcane powers and filled with the strength of the Hells, he flew a few feet through the air and landed on his feet.

His disciples immediately sprang into action to defend their master, while Shanks ran up behind the horse to attack the knight from the ground. However, before he could even swing his sword, several other horses charged in to the glade.

Each warhorse carried a warrior, and each warrior was hedged about with a power that made the Master of Sorrow tremble. A good-looking man in impeccable armor charged at Shadowblade, but the Master avoided the wicked-looking lance with ease. In return, he swung his massive hand-and-a-half sword over his head and brought it down upon the Cavalier. Although the runeblade guided his hand in the most effective blow possible, the opposing horseman seemed relatively unfazed by the attack.

Arrius Boldblade slid from his steed, simultaneously drawing his gleaming sword from its sheath as he did so. If the brooding Knight he faced wanted swordplay, he was more than up to the challenge.

To his left, Alianna Glimmersky leaped from her steed’s back as well, calling to the beast to retreat for the time-being. There was an aura of fear around these foes that made the horse restive, and she needed to concentrate on stopping this ritual.

Behind the two of them, Theobaldus the Observant, Guderwinda Everbright, and Clatriel Redmain repeated the maneuver, one they had rehearsed in training until it was as straightforward as breathing.

Calling forth a power he had never used, the Master of Sorrow mentally commanded the foes to despair. Although the elf and another of the warriors blanched for a moment, they pushed their assault on the Death Knights in the glade.

One of the other Knights unleashed a freezing blast of cold. While one of his comrades was inconvenienced by this, the Cavaliers were severely injured, the frost only slowly melting from the polished surfaces of their armor.

Shadowblade considered the cocky horseman before him. The man’s gleaming armor was clearly bound with arcane power that was proof against all but the mightiest swordsman, but he would see if it was protected against elemental forces. Like the lesser Knight had done, Shadowblade focused his power into a blast of cold that staggered his foe, though the man showed great courage on his face.

Across the glade two of the other Death Knights copied this action, blasting the cavaliers just as their joints were beginning to unfreeze from the earlier blast. Another of the Death Knights — Shadowblade couldn’t remember his name — was caught in these cones of cold as well, but if he wasn’t strong enough to shrug the bitter frost off, he wasn’t fit for the title.

The Dread Hierophant called upon his minions to deal with the intruders and vanished, while one of the Warlocks flew up into the sky, pointing his finger at the Elven Paladin to no apparent effect. The Death Knight behind the elf had been swinging his sword at her to no effect, and having lost her primary target, she turned her attention on him. With two mighty blows, she cut viciously through the Knight’s armor, her sword blazing redly as though enjoying the carnage.

The three interlopers across the glade were also hacking away at their foes, seemingly undeterred by the ferocious cold that had sapped them again and again. While Shadowblade glanced around to see what had become of the other Warlock, the one in the air cast a fireball at the elf.

At another time, the Master of Sorrow would have been entertained and impressed at the way the flames broke around the elf without harming her, bringing the Death Knight she faced to his knees as they scorched his cold undead flesh. Now, he was only angry, and unleashed a second blast of cold at the infuriating Cavalier who dared face him. The man staggered and blanched, and the Death Knight took comfort in knowing that his bravery now was mostly bravado. Still, the human warrior’s sword was beginning to take its toll of the Master’s health, and he seemed to be protected from the runeblade’s life-leaching ability.

A lightning bolt tore through the glade, removing the elf’s opponent from the fight, but Shadowblade couldn’t tell if the Paladin had been badly hurt or not. His senses told him not only that she was alive, but that she bore life within her, and he burned with a hate, and a desire to end her.

Keeping his final blast of cold for the elf, he swung at the Cavalier again, but the man deftly caught the blade on his shield and countered with a wounding thrust below Shadowblade’s guard.

Two of the other Death Knights were down, now, though he thought he had seen one of the female Paladins — of Pholtus, by the look of her — go down to a blast of cold. He looked to his right and saw the Elf approaching at the top of her speed, the glowing red sword held in a way that made his insides ache with anticipation.

While planes of shifting colored lights suddenly appeared throughout the glade — no one ever learned what had caused them or what purpose they were intended to serve — the Master of Sorrow focused his rage on the elf and called out, “Die!”

To his surprise, although the frost blasted her fiercely, instead of attacking him, she stretched out her hand to the Cavalier he had been fighting and said, “Courage, my friend,” the touch seeming to revive him.

As the last two of the lesser Death Knights went down before the Paladins, Alianna Glimmersky tested her blade against the skill and armor of the Master of Sorrows. Soon, Theobaldus and Clatriel had joined her, and with the combined attacks of the group, the Master soon lay lifeless, the mockery of undeath ended.

The flying Warlock had headed off around this time, and the other Warlock, on foot, was beginning to run away. Whistling for her steed, Alianna charged her followers to take care of Guderwinda’s body, then swung into the saddle to pursue the fleeing warlock. It wasn’t long before she returned, his senseless, bound body draped across the rear of her horse.

Arrius and the others were guarding a small group of “prisoners”. Alianna’s infravision told her that they were not alive, but undead of the sort she had lately been fighting. Clatriel told her that they had been herded this way by the rest of the force, and that they did not have the same spirit as the Death Knights they had been fighting.

“They don’t have any armor, to speak of, and no swords — look.” She pointed with her glowing longsword at the dagger-like shard one of the fiends was clutching to his chest.

Alianna’s look suddenly changed, as though she were listening to someone else speak, who was not present for the rest of the party, and she smiled.

Spurring forward, she leveled Fedifensor at one of the groveling prisoners, noting the way he avoided looking at the glowing red blade.

“You, there,” she said, accepting the sidelong glance he gave her. “If you wish to be freed of this corruption, and to be avenged on the Horned Society, seek out Pholtus.”

Several of the other gutterspawn murmured that they would also seek out Pholtus, but Alianna stopped a few of them. “No,” she said, commandingly, “you four are to seek out Pelor.” They crept away, seemingly accepting this word.

When the Paladin was about to turn her horse away from the wretches, one of them stood boldly up. Hate filled his face, but there was something else there, too. Perhaps a thirst for vengeance? He was broader than the others, and didn’t seem to fit with them in a number of ways.

“Where would you have me go, mistress?” he asked.

Something like a smile broke on the elf’s face as she saw his boldness. He didn’t cower like the others, although he cradled the broken scrap of a sword against his chest like the rest.

“Heironeous,” she said, emotion touching her voice. With a nod, the gutterspawn turned and strode through the midst of his fellows as though he had a mind to find Heironeous that very night.

Alianna turned her steed and saw that her companions were looking at her with amazement. “Come,” she said, “this one,” she nodded to the shape across her horse’s rump, “has information that the mages can reach, and Goodie needs a cleric to help her rejoin the fight.

“I also need to ask her forgiveness for leading her to a death. The next time we face these monsters, we must be prepared for their cold attacks.”

“What of the ones you released?” asked Theobaldus.

“I don’t know,” she laughed. “My God has a use for them, but what it is is beyond me. Perhaps my husband will be able to tell me when we see him again. In any case, I almost wish I could be there when the undead present themselves at a temple of Pholtus.” She laughed again at the thought, and taking the reins of Guderwinda’s horse in her left hand, she started the way back to the rest of the force, where she hoped to find a cleric who could return her herald to life. Failing that, they would need to return to the fortress before Goodie would be able to ride the horse again, instead of being carried like a sack.

NaNoWriMo 2019 — Firsts: Part 4 (Sign Post – White Mesa)

This is another story set in the world of White Mesa.

Sign looked down from the roof of the building as morning began to light the street below. There were a few spots in shadow from the trees, but he wasn’t concerned about them. Ferals would be in the open, straining their nearly-blind eyes in the early light, listening for movement and other sounds. They didn’t have the cunning to hide until a victim was close.

Plate looked at him anxiously. He looked like he hadn’t slept well, and Sign couldn’t blame him. Sign felt that he wouldn’t really sleep until they got back to the gang in Sissrow. Out here, it was only the two of them, and there were many dangers. Plus, the medicine woman was back with the gang, and Plate needed her to sing over his cuts on his shoulder.

Sign glanced down again, and nodded. “I think we’re okay,” he said, carefully making his way back to the tent. The roof surface crumbled and sagged in a number of places, and they had struggled to find a place where they could pitch the tent and be certain of a floor beneath them as they slept. Sign helped Plate pack the tent up, carefully separating the tent poles and wrapping them to protect them from bending. He had had to borrow one of the poles from Knife before they left home, since one of his had finally given way, and you couldn’t use a stick or other prop when you had to travel. No, when moving from place to place, you really wanted to be able to pack all of the poles together with your other gear, and only the legacy poles, made of bright white metal, came apart and went together like that.

They soon had finished their packing, and Sign dragged the pack across the roof to the edge, where the fyrescape was. He wasn’t about to carry it, when the extra weight could push his feet through the roof and plunge him — he shuddered as he thought of how far he might fall in the dark interior of the building. Plate pushed the pack over the short wall to him, and he was glad that the fyrescape didn’t creak any worse than it had the afternoon before, when they had climbed up this way. Sometimes these metal stairways collapsed, or separated from the building unexpectedly, and Sign remembered how his brother had screamed that day it had happened to him. Street had survived the fall, but had lain sick for a long time afterward and had never been able to hunt again. Now, he just made baskets or helped the women to clean hides that the hunters brought back to the camp.

Once Sign was half-way down, he gave a low hoot, and felt the stairs shudder as Plate climbed on to the fyrescape. It would be safer to wait until he was all the way down, unless there were enemies or vicious animals waiting down there. He glanced back and forth and assured himself that there were no ferals, at least.

Unburdened by the pack, Plate descended the stairs quickly, and Sign felt the metal shake and twist under the unaccustomed activity. Red flakes dropped on him from the upper parts of the fyrescape, and he tried to increase his speed, to be closer to the ground should the thing collapse.

Finally, he was on the firm ground, and Plate was soon next to him, rubbing his shoulder where the big cat had struck him.

“I told you, don’t rub that out here,” Sign grumbled at him. “You’ll get fected. Then, the medicine woman won’t be able to help you!”

“It hurts,” Plate grumbled back, but he brought his hand back down.

The two set off down the alley, angling for the broader street where the sun shone down more clearly, and where they could stick to the shadows of the trees and buildings while still seeing any ferals that might be basking in the sun. In the shadowy alley, they might come upon a feral unexpectedly, and that wouldn’t do at all.

Sign thought they would get home today. They had escorted Cymbal all the way to Burrwin and seen her joined to the gang leader there. He had given them a real mashetty, from the before time, and and some cloth that didn’t look too rotten. Burrwin had an old mall, and they could get stuff like that. Sign shifted the heavy pack on his back and smiled. Knife would be pleased at the gifts, and the cat skin belonged to Sign himself, since he and Plate had killed it on their own, separate from the mission.

“It’s a good thing that cat didn’t attack us before we dropped Cymbal off,” he commented to Plate, looking from side to side for danger.

“Yeah, we had a hard enough time killing it without a girl in the way,” the other replied, hefting his mashetty experimentally. This wasn’t a real one, like they had been given to take to Knife, but had been made from a sign that had been on a street corner. You could still see a little bit of the word that used to be there, white on green, but neither of the boys could read, even if the whole word had been there. Plate’s mashetty was sharpened along the side, the same as the “real” one, but he had also sharpened the point, like a knife, and had used that to pierce the cat’s chest and stop its attack while Sign hacked at its neck with his own mashetty. Maybe Plate would show him how he had done that, since the cat’s thick skin and muscles had prevented him from killing it quickly just hacking from behind.

There was a clatter in an alleyway that gave out onto the street, and they froze, Sign preparing to drop the pack if necessary. A skinny, rangy dog, ribs showing through its sparse coat, came out into the sunlight, nosing around under an old car, and they relaxed. The dog paused, leg half-raised by the back end of the car, and then decided that they were no threat, either, and finished its business before trotting off.

Soon, Sign could recognize some of the buildings, places he had scouted, or used as a hiding place. There was a tree where he had lain in wait for one of the Mortons, who had been separated from the rest of his warband. When he saw the Hunt building looming above the trees, he let out a whoop, both a password and a notice that a band was returning.

It turned out to be more than that, as a snarl erupted from the left side of the road, and a feral charged out from where it had been chewing on the corner of an old building. Without turning to see Plate’s reaction, Sign bolted forward, increasing to the fastest speed he could muster. He knew that a feral could be faster than a man, over a short distance, but he also knew that a feral needed to be locked on to its target for that to happen. He intended to get a good lead while it looked for them, although he knew that the light was now strong enough to make spotting them easy even for a feral.

He let out another whoop, this one a warning, and he heard several replies from several points ahead. The outliers were ready, and if he could get close enough, they would protect him from the feral. Plate huffed past him, whimpering slightly as blood began streaming down from the claw marks, the scabs re-opened by his exertion. There was another snarl behind him, and Sign knew the feral had sighted him and begun the pursuit.

The backpack jounced heavily across his shoulders as he ran, and he thought about what it would take for him to drop it. Not only did it contain the presents for Knife, and the irreplaceable tent, but it also held the cat skin, that would not only be useful, but would increase his status in the gang. Sign put his head down and ran harder, making his legs pump faster and faster until he began to catch up with Plate.

“Kai-yee!” a shout burst out just ahead, and Sign dove on to his face, dropping the pack and throwing his arms forward to catch himself on the the ground. There was a buzz above his head, and a strangled cry burst out from behind him. Rolling so as to look back, Sign saw the feral clutching and tugging at a crossbow bolt that transfixed its neck. It had been a woman, he saw, though it had been changed long enough that there was little enough left to attract him, naked as it was. It pulled and struggled with the bolt until suddenly it dropped to the ground, blood gushing from the great wound it had made with the bolt. Sign wasn’t surprised to see Hand-son coming forward, crossbow already cocked again and sliding a new bolt into the slot. Hand-son was one of their best shots, and while most would have shot for the creature’s chest, he knew that a neck hit would cause it to damage itself in this way.

Sign climbed to his feet, and picked up the pack, Hand-son pulling him by the shoulder supportively.

“That was a close one,” he grinned, glancing over to where Plate was getting to his feet as well. “Say, what happened to your shoulder, Plate? That thing didn’t get you, did it?” Hand-son shuddered appreciatively, for they all knew there was only one prescription for someone who had been clawed by a feral.

Sign shook his head. “We ran into a big cat,” he said, a trifle boastfully. “I’ll show you at the campfire.”

Hand-son whistled appreciatively. “Did you get Cymbal settled all right?”

“Yes, and the gang leader looks like a good guy. She’ll do great. He only has two others, right now, so she’ll have a lot of influence in how the gang is run.”

Hand-son smiled. “That’s nice. Knife will be glad to hear that.” He gave the low hoot that signaled the all-clear, and they turned away from the mangled corpse of the feral, walking slowly together towards the camp.

Many voices called greeting, and many hands were raised, as Sign and Plate walked into camp, Hand-son having returned to his place on the outskirts. When they got to Sign’s hut, Plate shook his hand and continued on to the medicine woman’s hut. He was looking a trifle pale, but Sign wasn’t sure if that was from the blood loss, or the fear at being chased by a feral. He unloaded the pack in the light outside of his hut, watching out of the corner of his eyes as people saw the mashetty, and saw him lay it to one side. Then came the cloth, and he smiled as he heard a couple of the women start to talk to each other in low tones. He couldn’t tell if they were Knife’s women, but even the other women might hope that their men could buy it from Knife, or that the gang leader would give it as a gift.

Finally, he pulled out the tawny, bloody cat skin. It was wrapped so that the head was inmost, the precious teeth protected from breaking, or from cutting anything else in the pack, the claws folded in, still dangling from the ends of the legs. Sign was proud of his skill at skinning, but this was a masterpiece, for they hadn’t seen a cat like this in all the time the tribe had lived in Sissrow. He slowly spread it out for everyone to see, noting the muttered comments from some of the hunters as they saw the cuts around the back of the thing’s neck, and mused about the difficulty of killing a thing like that.

A shadow fell across the skin, and he looked up. Knife stood there, taking in every detail. “Welcome back, brother,” the gang leader said, reaching out his hand to take Sign’s hand in a grip that lifted him to his feet.

“Thank you, Knife,” Sign replied. “Kreg, the leader in Burrwin, sends you this mashetty, and all of this cloth!” Knife smiled as he saw the loot.

“Did he send this skin, too?”

“No, Plate and I killed this cat after we had left Cymbal with Kreg. I will give you the right paw claws, if you want them.”

Knife smiled again. “That’s a nice gift, Sign,” he said. “Where’s Plate?”

“He was cut by the cat, so he’s with the medicine woman,” Sign sat back down to see to the skin, and to plan the next stage of curing the hide.

Knife nodded. “That was good work, Sign,” he said. “Hand told me that he’s tired of running the outskirts, and he’s going to work in the garden next season. Would you and Plate like to run with Hand-son in his place?”

Pride welled up in Sign as he nodded. He found he couldn’t think of what to say.

“You know,” Knife added, as he walked away, “Maraca will be lonely now that Cymbal is gone. Come to my hut when you’ve eaten and cleaned yourself, and you can talk with her.”

Brown and Red

This is fan-fiction. I love Kimia Wood’s White Mesa stories, and I decided to write one for her. She has given me permission to reproduce it here (although she’s hinted that she might decide it’s canon someday, and make it available through her website).

Sylvester Brown regarded the unfortunate man who sat slumped in the chair on the other side of his large, metal desk. The young man’s ridiculous hair had been damaged in his tussle with Security, and several of the long, red strands hung down over the right side of his face. Beneath the shadow cast by the hair, a bruise darkened the skin, shifting darker just in the time since the Security Men had brought him in.

Brown liked to smile. Casually, comfortingly, patronizingly — Brown usually smiled through these interviews with the savages brought in for questioning. He learned a great deal, and occasionally found a “diamond in the rough,” as the Old Republicans would have said — someone who could contribute to the progress and development of the New Republic.

Mr. Brown found himself unable to smile. He looked at the device on the desk before him, and absently straightened it with two fingers. It was outlandish, as all of the old weapons were: angular, cumbersome to swing or throw. He looked at the kill switch, the empty void below for the clamazine to go with the charges.

“Where did you get it?” he asked, again, calmly, as Brown always spoke calmly with the savages from outside the boundary.

“I told you,” the other slurred. He hunched his head to try to rub his swollen face on his shoulder. His hands were tied behind his back, unfortunately, because he had tried to harm Brown when the Security had first left him in the room. These interviews went better when the prisoner felt more free.

“You told me that you took it from someone. I want to know who that person is.” They had covered this ground many times, but each time, the answers made no sense.
“He didn’t tell me a name.” The prisoner glared past the dangling threads of hair. They had been glued together with something — probably animal fat — and then stained red with rust.

“How many times do you meet someone new, out there?” Brown asked. “Someone that you’ve never seen before?”

“I never met your security before,” the other sulked, but that wasn’t quite true, either. His gang had been moving into the Grasshopper territory because they had met the Security, and didn’t like it.

“Where did this man come from? What is his territory? What is the name of his gang?”

“I don’t know!” The prisoner tried to surge to his feet, but his hands were also tied to the back of his chair, and he caught himself before he fell to the floor. Brown glanced at the large, gleaming mirror on the wall. From the Old Republic, that was. Security sat in the dark, behind it, watching for danger. The small grill below it was new. The Old Republicans may have had ways to listen from behind a solid wall, but in the New Republic a hole in the wall was necessary.

“How did you meet him?” Brown adjusted the pad of paper and glanced at the notes he had taken so far. The pad had belonged to someone named Max, back when printers could put your name on anything. The box it had come from was more than half empty, but for now, Brown exulted in the smooth texture of the yellow paper, and the smooth, straight blue lines.

“I told you, he’s a trucker,” the gangster mumbled. “They come, sometimes, out there.” He waved with his head. “We been watching, and we saw that they went to the same places a lot. Some of those places was in the Grasshoppers’ terr’tory. So, we figured, the Grasshoppers is weak, and we could go in there and take the trucks.”

“And, did you take the trucks?”

“We got one of them!” A proud gleam showed in the gangster’s eye. “It was broke, though, so we let the truckers have it back.”

“I have never heard of the Mohawks giving anything, even something broken, for free.”
“It weren’t for free! I got that clock there!” He pointed with his chin at the object on the table.

“Did they call it a clock?”

“No, they just said it was their things.”

“Did they give it to you so that you would give them the truck?”

“No. I took it from the one we caught. We beat on him and took his things. The governor got his hat and I got his clock.”

“So, what did the … truckers … give you for the truck?”

The gangster looked down at the floor. “They killed Jimmy, and Pike, and the feral they had got three of our guys in the building. I just wanted them to go before we lost anyone else.

“The truck was broke, anyway! We tried it, and it didn’t go! Carl talked to it the way he has, even. But, the trucker got in and it just … went!”

“And so they got into the truck and left?”

“Well, they went by on the little truck, with a few of them, and some of the guys chased them, even though it was stupid. The little truck is way faster than the big one. And then, when their mayor got in the truck, and it started, one of the guys tried to knife him but they killed him … they had one of those clocks, too, and they just killed him from where they were standing.”

“Which way did they go?”

“How do I know which way? We had dead boys, and feral-bit, and some new stuff! They went off towards the sundown, I think, but they turn a lot. Maybe they’re from Harvey? I thought they might be from here.”

That part, at least, promised to be true. The Red Mohawks had attacked one of the southern border posts. Fortunately for the security, the tomahawks and arrows of the gang had been more effective than the strange weapon on the desk. Simple to use, it was never the less difficult to aim, and the charges it had fired had smashed loudly into the walls rather than into the men. Like the rifles carried by the security, but not so old. Not old, at all. The metal was clean, for the most part, without a trace of rust, and the design was new. Somewhere, out there, someone — someone not the New Republic — was making these weapons. Making new ones. And driving … trucks.

NaNoWriMo 2019 — Firsts: Part 3 (The Jentusi)

This is a piece set in Jack’s universe of the Jentusi invasion of the human-colonized worlds. Since I haven’t read all of his stuff, and since I like to explore the outskirts of an IP, it is set far from human space and relates an encounter with a non-canonical alien race.

The Phlankton ship crept slowly closer to the alien craft. Their sensors were incredibly sophisticated, and they scanned the ship over and over again.
“No life signs,” the ScanTec said firmly, turning to face her commander. “Sir.”
“What do you detect?” the captain asked, leaning on one arm of her command chair. The alien ship was not a derelict, for it hummed with power, and it was cruising through local space, engines blasting.
“Normal electro-mechanical signs,” the tech replied, looking back at her instruments. “It looks like a full complement of robotic crewmembers, to access parts of the ship for maintenance and repair. There is, however, no atmosphere inside the ship, and it is, in fact, not air tight. It was not designed to be crewed by a living crew.”
The captain mulled these facts over, then gave the order to bring her ship alongside the other. There was a reasonable access port along the port side, and she could safely send a suited crew over to reconnoiter. The big question on her mind remained that of “Who?”. If this was a drone, who had sent it, and who was scouting their system? How was another question, for the Phlankton did not have the technology to pass quickly between stars. As far as the captain knew, the big alien craft had to have come through space, some 80 light years, from the nearest star, plotting the craft’s course backward. That was a lot of fuel, since the ship seemed to not be drifting.

The commander of the other vessel evaluated sense data on the Phlankton craft. He dispatched a team of warbots to the port corridors, seeing that the other ship was maneuvering to board there. He calculated trajectories several times and was satisfied that the team would arrive in place at the most efficient moment to deal with the aliens.
They were fleshly — that much he knew. Their infrared signature was typical of most of the fleshly enemies he had encountered. A few, like the Andromedans, were endothermic, and he accessed records of that encounter — how the Jentusi craft had been surprised to find fleshly beings aboard the ship. The outcome had not been particularly different. Even now, the Jentusi fleet were engaged in locating and subjugating or eliminating all of the Andromedan colony worlds. Fleshly lack of coordination and slow reaction speed was always defeated by the superior speed and coordination of the Jentusi.
The commander reviewed several interlocking scans and filtered each using established criteria. There was no sign of Skaar technology, but he was always cautious at first contact. Jentusi ships had been lost, from time to time. He was determined that it wouldn’t happen to this one. As the Phlankton craft pulled alongside and extended grapples, the commander activated powerful electromagnets mounted beneath the skin of the ship.

“Captain, there are some round service robots clustered about the access port,” 1st Team Commander radioed back to the command deck. “They are about waist-high, and look like they are designed to not mar the inner surfaces of the passageways if there is an accidental collision.”
“They remind me of the robot vacuums back home,” 1st Team Support Specialist commented. 1st Team Commander rubbed her speaking bud petals together in frustration at this use of the official channel, but the captain replied.
“Thanks for that observation, Specialist,” she said. “Remember that there is interference on the video feed, and we are depending upon your verbal observations to decide quickly what we are dealing with here.”
It was typical. The captain tended to take the Specialist’s side in things, just because they were from the same rootstock. One day, 1st Team Commander was determined she would lead her own —

As the command was given, the warbots extended their bladed weapons and advanced on the boarding party, slowly at first, to gauge their reaction time and to identify the leader. Leaders tended to be the most valuable hostages when negotiating the surrender of a species.

The captain fumed as static filled the communications channel with the away team. Ever since the Chancellor’s pod mate had been given the supply contract for the communications devices, it seemed that quality had decreased. It sounded as though the team were continuing to report on the situation aboard the alien craft, but the Captain could hear nothing above the hum and bursts of static that filled the channel. She switched over to the secondary and tertiary channels a time or two, in case the team tried them for a clearer signal, but there were subordinate ComTechs who were responsible for monitoring those channels, and they had not indicated any problem. She sighed as the static suddenly cleared, and the Team Commander’s voice broke through.
“— total loss. I am the sole survivor. I don’t know why they haven’t killed me, but they are keeping me from leaving the ship. They moved so quickly! We didn’t stand a chance.”
“What?” The captain practically shouted the word into the receiver, heedless of the distortion this would cause before it was down-sampled to protect the tender auditory buds in the Team Commander’s suit.
“I repeat, the Team is a total loss. I am the sole survivor. 1st Team MedTech was the only one who was able to shoot before the rest of them were reduced to shreds on the decking. I have been disarmed…” There was a bitterness in the Team Commander’s voice that made the captain think this was a literal description of what had happened.
The static began on the channel again, and the Captain slammed her grasping vine on the console in frustration. Then, she stared in amazement as the static began to change, forming more and more discrete sounds until —
“You have been conquered by the Jentusi,” the static said in her headset. “We are holding your leader 1st Team Commander — these words were said in the commander’s own voice — as a hostage until our demands have been met. If you do not have the authority to negotiate with the Jentusi, you will relay our demands to those who do. If you can not relay our demands and you have no authority, you will be eliminated.”
The voice in the static was emotionless, and the pronunciation of some of the words was not completely correct, but the threat expressed was crystal clear.

The Jentusi commander did not settle into his command chair as he received the message of capitulation from the Phlankton ship captain. He did not sit, nor did he have muscles to grow tired or tense. Still, there was a sense in which there was a release. Thought patterns that had been devoted to the encounter were now free to perform other tasks, such as analyzing the spectrum of the nearest star to calculate what materials would likely be available in this system. Additional analysis of the technology expressed in the captured ship was performed, as warbots moved through the access and onto the vessel, scanning and evaluating every surface they encountered. It was not altogether surprising when a large heat buildup was detected in the Phlankton ship’s reactor, as power was increased and exhaust was closed. This was a tactic that had been seen many times, and had even been used by Jentusi commanders from time to time. When it became apparent that the warbots would not succeed in disabling the reactor before a damaging explosion resulted, an electro-magnetic pulse was generated that destroyed all of the warbots serving on the port side, but also propelled the Phlankton ship far enough away that the Jentusi cruiser’s main guns could engage it. As coherent energy sliced through the Phlankton hull and disrupted the reactor’s shielding, a much weaker explosion, largely pointed away from the Jentusi ship, resulted.
The commander edited a number of status reports and submitted a recommendation of genocide for the Phlankton population. Fleshlings who resorted to suicide so quickly tended to consume inefficient numbers of resources for containment, and the technology level was low enough that he was confident they would not lose in terms of technological advancement. It was no surprise when the response from Pride of the Jentusi returned by ansible: Extermination of alien species is approved. Do not pursue at expense of resource collection.
Sleek in-system fighter craft broke free of the cruiser and spread out across the system, seeking other ships, and clear in their orders to destroy and mark for salvage. The cruiser occupied itself with scanning for habitable planets — meaning, of course, planets habitable by the bioforms of the alien creatures. The sampling of their atmosphere from their ship simplified the search, as their home world would certainly have an atmospheric makeup that matched it closely.
Within the period of time of one planetary rotation on the homeworld of the Jentusi, the fighter craft had returned to the cruiser, and salvage craft were dispatched to collect the broken remnants of the space craft that had been found. In addition to a few warships, like the first one encountered, the fighters had found large orbital vessels that were undoubtedly space habitats, orbiting several of the planets near the Phlankton homeworld. These had also been destroyed, so that the salvage craft would not be endangered by suicidal aliens. The local reactors were sufficiently inefficient that it was not worthwhile to try to capture any of them intact, and there would doubtless be opportunity to do so on the homeworld, since a detonation there would not particularly endanger the Jentusi, nor would it benefit the non-combatant population.
The cruiser inched its way in to the system, still scanning for danger, for the warbots were limited in their processing power, especially when separated from command by such a distance, and they might have missed static defenses or mine fields, or such. There also were signs in the scanner logs that a LAMP ship might have been present in the system when the Jentusi arrived. As it slowly moved towards the Phlankton worlds the cruiser broadcast a message of consolation to the creatures who would soon be dead. This is, after all, the way of things. Some creatures live, and others die, and it does no good to fret about who the winners and losers are. The broadcast became clearer and clearer, and the Jentusi sent it on more and more frequencies, as analysis revealed which radio frequencies were considered quantized by the local inhabitants, and as analysis of the Phlankton radio chatter improved the Jentusi translation algorithms. While knowledge of Phlankton language would be of no use once that people were extinct, the improvements to the translation algorithms would bear fruit in a thousand other systems as the Jentusi spread through the galaxy, and perhaps beyond.
Several national leaders were broadcasting, powerfully projecting their voices directly at the Jentusi cruiser, pleading for negotiations or threatening retaliation. The commander muted these channels as a waste of bandwidth, and focused his attention on evaluating the planet for mineral exploitation. The planet was reasonably rich, even with the use of resources that had built the space habitats, and he regretted, for a moment, the emotional instability that made these creatures unsuited to being slaves. It would take time and energy to build an exploitation network, and to ferry the mining bots to the surface for their work, and to launch the materials back into orbit for retrieval. Slave populations could generally do most of that work themselves, with only a military garrison being needed to keep them focused on Jentusi needs, rather than their own. Some of the slave populations had even benefited from the Jentusi occupation, since Jentusi technology was so superior to their own. The exploitation of resources was greatly enhanced in these circumstances, and the bulk of Jentusi material and energy could be reserved for the fleet, for exploration and conquest.