Previously: Esmiralda and her
companions have discovered that the shattered ship—found upside-down and in the
middle of a forest—was once captained by Harfirgorn the Merciless, a pirate of
some repute that vanished long ago. On a quest to find his final
resting place and the treasure that he is most likely buried with, they are
accosted by a shambling, undead thing and draw the attention of a mysterious
woman...
I felt a pang of sympathy for her. It was
bad enough to see such an unnatural thing done to a man; how much worse would
it be to know the poor wretch, to have loved him, to have seen him in better
days?
"I'm sorry."
She dismissed the gesture. "It is none
of your concern. Thank you for releasing him."
"An..yt...ime," Broo Fang said.
"Had I known...that...you were.........near....I would not...have...kicked
him...so hard."
Baram grunted. Seymuhr slapped his forehead.
I gave the Daughter of the Wolf a tight apologetic smile. I had already
apologized for the manners of my companions and didn't see the need to do it
again.
"What I think my companion meant to say
is that he would have been more gentle with his release," I said.
"How did he come to this sorry state, if you'll pardon the question?"
She glared at me, but Seymuhr stepped in,
standing in front of me in what could have been a protective gesture. That was
odd. I thought it was unnecessary and wished he could have stood downwind.
"We are searching for this mountain
witch, as you call her," Merrick
said. "We know her name, which is Athelane, and seek to destroy her
if, in fact, she still lives."
"She exists. What you see is proof.
There is more further north, closer to the mountains. It is there that my
husband went, seeking the source of an evil that is permeating our land. He
left in the night, while I was asleep, under the misguided impression that he
was protecting me from danger."
I glanced at Seymuhr, who still stood in front
of me. I stepped aside and waved some fresh air toward my
nostrils. "How did he know where to go? Can you take us?"
She shook her head. "I don't know. He
might have just ventured north, with no clear direction in mind. Her evil—you
will see it soon enough, if you continue your course—should not be too
difficult to follow."
"You...followed your hus...band this
far. Could....you..."
"Yes, I can," Baram said. "If
you truly seek to confront this evil, then I will accompany you. I would have
done so long ago, and I urged my husband to be patient, as well. For the
mountain witch has found great power in her hidden domain and ending her reign
will be difficult."
"More than your husband could
handle," Seymuhr said. I winced, and wondered at the lack of compassion in
the man. I started to protest, but Baram stopped me.
"Indeed, more than he could handle, as
you said." She looked down at his shriveled body and paused. For a moment,
her eyes gleamed, but then she blinked the wetness away. "He was a stout
man, strong of heart and limb, with the fierce blood of a warrior in him. It
was not enough."
"We are four, where he was one,"
Seymurh said. He cocked his head from side to side, stretching the muscles
there and his fingers crackled as he tightened them into fists. "And I've
not met a foe that I could not send to Ewl's dark domain."
"We are five, not four," I
snapped. "Even you've enough fingers to count that high..."
"Save your strength," Merrick broke in. "And you as well, Seymuhr. For if
this Athelane still lives after all this time, it may be that she has already visited—or
been sent—to the dark god's realm and found the power to escape death's
embrace."
Previously: Esmiralda and her
companions have discovered that the shattered ship--found upside-down and in
the middle of a forest—was once captained by Harfirgorn the Merciless, a pirate
of some repute that vanished long ago. On a quest to find his final resting place and the treasure that he is most
likely buried with, they are accosted by a shambling, undead thing and draw the attention of a mysterious woman...
As a woman, the figure who emerged from the
forest was everything that I was not. Tall and lean, with strong limbs, a flat
stomach and a figure that drew appreciative stares from all of my
recently-found traveling companions. Her hair was dark and long, with strands
that glinted like gold in the afternoon sun. The pelt of some unfortunate
woodland creature covered her rounded hips and ample bosom—barely—and boots of
faded leather hugged her calves. She released the tension on her bow, pointing
the arrow toward the ground as she approached.
Nobody spoke. I cleared my throat and Merrick snapped his mouth shut, ran a hand through his
tangled hair and sheathed his sword.
"I am Merrick,
and these are my companions," he said. "Seymuhr, Broo-Fang Tane, an
Optimist Monk, and Esmiralda, a freelance historian in the loose employ of
Queen Phedera. May I ask your name? How did you come to this place, and what
knowledge have you of this mountain witch?"
She replaced the arrow in her quiver and
slung the bow over her shoulder. She looked at each of us in turn and her gaze
lingered on Seymuhr, who wore the glazed expression, as usual, of a horseman
who been knocked from his saddle by a low branch. The woman's eyes were darker
than any I had seen before and they conveyed age and wisdom in a way her lithe
form did not.
"I am called Baram d'Lupene, and this
is my domain," she said.
"d'Lupene," I found my voice at
last, and translated the name as I spoke it. "Daughter of the wolf?"
I had heard tales of a forest queen who counted herself among the greatest of
the woodland hunters. A legend that could not possibly account for this woman's
presence.
"The same," she said.
"Daughter of the wolf?" Seymuhr
asked. "Doesn't that make you a bi..."
"Show some class," I admonished
him. "My apologies. My companion knows little of the courtesies most
people extend to one another."
"I care little for them, and would
expect no less from one of his kind," Baram said.
"Men, you mean," I clarified,
sensing a kindred spirit. Tane gave me a wounded look, but Baram answered
before he could say anything—not surprising, considering the slow, erratic way
he formed his words.
"I do not." She looked down at the
corpse, and sadness flickered across her eyes. She prodded it with her foot.
"He won't be getting back up," Merrick told her. "At least, I think not. Our
companion saw to that.
Do you know who...or what...he is?"
She nodded. "I have answers to both of
your questions. I know little of the mountain witch, as you call her—although her
work is more and more common in my forest. As to this poor creature, who he is
and what is he are the same. He is a puppet, or was, before your companion 'saw
to that,' an aberration and evidence of the black power she wields. Before
that, he was my husband."
NEXT: Ranfryd's last Sojourn
Previously: Esmiralda and her companions have discovered that the shattered ship--found upside-down and in the middle of a forest—was once captained by Harfirgorn the Merciless, a pirate of some repute that had vanished long ago. Following clues in a log book they find in the pirate’s quarters, they hope to discover clues to his final resting place and the treasure that he is most likely buried with. Enraged by swarming insects, Seymuhr knocked himself unconscious in a vain attempt to rid himself of the flying pests. Meanwhile, Mira and her companions get a strange visitor...
The main swayed at the edge of the clearing, eyes vacant and arms hanging loosely in front of him. Drool glistened at the side of his mouth. Insects crawled over his face, but he made no move to brush them off. A fat fly paused on his open eye.
Merrick was the first to react. His pulled his blade halfway from its scabbard and took a step in front of me in a protective gesture that I did not appreciate. I snorted, indignant, and moved to get a better view of the man and to see if he was alone.
"State your name and purpose," Merrick demanded.
The figure tilted his head, but made no other move. Breath bubbled from his throat. His hands curled into claws.
"Turnnnnn backkKk." The sounds were harsh and wet, as if the man was unfamiliar with the way the words were formed.
"Who are you?" Merrick demanded.
"How do you know where...we...are go...ing?" Broo-Fang asked. He had appeared on my right. HIs feet were set slightly apart, his left in front of the other, as if he expected to fight.
The shambling man gave him a look that might have been quizzical, had there been any light behind his eyes. I noticed a faint smell that reminded me of moss.
"TurrnNn back," it repeated. Its right arm twitched and the fingers on the hand jerked as if pulled by strings. It occurred to me that this thing--for if it had been a man, it surely was one no longer--was trying to raise its arm and point in the direction we had just come. My stomach hitched and I tasted bile. What manner of evil was this?
Then both of its arms raised in front of it and it shambled forward, fingers reaching toward me. A bolt of ice ran down my spine and I stumbled back, fumbling for my longknife. I needn't have worried. Broo Fang was in motion, spanning the distance between himself and the twitching once-man in a single, lithe leap. The ball of his foot crashed into the side of its skull, staving it in and sending it sprawling in a convulsing heap. Ruined and oozing, the pathetic creature still tried to push itself back to its feet. Broo fang looked down, a disgusted expression on his face, then silenced it with a vicious blow from his staff.
"Bones of Barnok," I breathed. A cold sweat had formed on my forehead. Broo Fang poked at the dead man as Merrick cautiously approached them. Seymuhr was looking to the west, a curious expression on his face. He lifted his head slightly and looked like he was testing the wind like a hound.
I moved toward the twisted form that had once been a man. The mossy smell grew worse; it filled my lungs and mouth like a cloud of stagnant dirt. My eyes watered as I looked down at the vacant eyes that stared up from its shattered skull.
"The evil we track is a potent one, indeed," Merrick stated.
I covered my mouth with my sleeve. He and Broo Fang did not appear to notice the stench--or, at least, they weren't bothered by it. Perhaps that was because they had traveled with Seymuhr longer than I had and were more familiar with foul odors.
"An emissary from the pirate's witch?" I asked.
"It must be so," Merrick answered, bending toward the thing on the ground.
"Indeed it is," said a new voice. We all whirled toward its source. A woman had appeared from the trees, clothed in brown and brandishing a bow with an arrow at the ready. "The bigger puzzle is why would the mountain witch expend such energy to send it. Who, exactly, are you?"
Previously: Esmiralda and her companions have discovered that the shattered ship--found upside-down and in the middle of a forest—was once captained by Harfirgorn the Merciless, a pirate of some repute that had vanished long ago. Following clues in a log book they find in the pirate’s quarters, they hope to discover clues to his final resting place—and the treasure that he is most likely buried with...
Later, I looked down at Seymuhr's inert body. A swollen, purple knot showed where he had knocked himself cold in a vain attempt to kill a persistent insect. Even so, he wore a peaceful smile and I wondered if he dreamt and what those visions were. A land without insects, probably.
I sat on a fallen tree and ignored the rumbling in my stomach. Nearby, Broo Fang practiced what looked like a form of structured dance, moving his legs and arms in slow, graceful arcs that simulated punches, kicks and blocks. Occasionally, those steady, fluid movements would end in a sudden, violent snap and sharp exhalation of breath that would have made me chuckle if not for the power evident behind them. How could anything sound so silly and look so dangerous at the same time? That thought summed up our little band, I suddenly realized.
I pulled out the log book and propped it open.
"Do you think we'll find more clues to our destination?" Merrick stopped in front of me and rested a boot on the fallen trunk. He chewed absently on a dried spider leg.
"It's doubtful," I admitted. "This tome was left behind. There is no reason to believe that its author knew where Harfigorn and Adelane were heading." I was more interested in the history contained in the pages than anything else. As a historian myself, I wanted to compare the accounts within the book to the tales I had heard of the time. Besides, if some of them could be taken out, verified and sold into the Queen's Record, I would gain some coin as well as notoriety. Take that, Connell Malak.
"True," Merrick agreed. "The pirate or witch who made their plans known would be a strange one, indeed."
"And not as successful as Harigorn, most like. Still, I find the account of their voyage fascinating."
"Oh? You found something?" He leaned in and I could smell his musk mingling with the leather of his breastplate, a not entirely unpleasant scent.
"Look here," I said, turning the book around. "If I read this right, Harfigorn..."
But a peculiar feeling took hold of me and froze the words on my tongue. It felt as if the land was suddenly dipped in shadow, although the sun remained bright overhead. The wind stilled, the forest grew silent. Merrick gasped. Broo Fang stood as rigid as a statue, then a sneer formed on his lips.
"You seek me?" He said in a voice that was not his own. "Fools...."
Previously: Esmiralda and her companions have discovered that the shattered ship--found upside-down and in the middle of a forest—was once captained by Harfirgorn the Merciless, a pirate of some repute that had vanished long ago. Following clues in a log book they find in the pirate’s quarters, they hope to discover clues to his final resting place—and the treasure that he is most likely buried with...
Our trek continued. I fell into an easy silence, lulled from the dangers that awaited us by the lilting tune that Broo Fang plated on a wooden flute. I was impressed with his dexterity; I had little of the grace one expects in my sex and tripped continually over exposed roots or the gnarled vines that spread across the forest floor like twisted ropes. Broo Fang avoided all obstacles and kept a steady, if mournful, tone with his music. He never stopped smiling.
Ahead, Seymuhr smashed his was through the growth like a soldier determined to break down a siege wall. He constantly jerked his head to shake off the flying pests that surrounded him. His maces, one in each hand, struck tree from root as he cleared a somewhat northern path for us to follow. Merrick walked behind me, quiet and contemplative.
We headed toward the mountains in search of a lost pirate, his evil sorceress and, I hoped, vast wealth. I enjoyed my role in the land of Korin as a falcuhn, a historian of sorts who traveled in search of the stories and customs that would have been otherwise lost to the annuls of time. It was a noble occupation, a worthy cause, yet it often failed to fill my pouch with coin and I grew weary of wondering where my next meal would come from. And I had given up hope that I would be rescued from that fate by some knight or prosperous merchant--or even a farmer in need of a womanly touch. I was too old, too heavy, and too difficult to get along with for extended periods of time. A forgotten treasure trove was my best option, at the moment.
Sad.
As the day wore on, I grew hungry, but not hungry enough to call for a rest or to ask for one of the dried spider legs that Seymuhr had been munching on since we left the site of Harfigorn's shipwreck earlier in the day. He still had a fistful of the things stuck into his belt and if their stubbly, arm-length size was not enough of a deterrent, the proximity to his smelly hide was. Rarely in my life had I encountered an entity--human or otherwise--that filled the air around it with such unpleasantness. He was like a skunk, regaling in his own stench.
Then he halted, abruptly and let out a growl that might have been a profane curse.
"What must I do to rid myself of these pests?" He waved his arms wildly, disturbing another cloud of the humming things. "I've no more blood to give them!"
"You could try bathing," I suggested, before I could stop myself. "They might not be so attracted to you if they didn't think you were a rolling pile of fresh dung dropped by a sick cow in a field of rotting fish."
He paused and glared at me, his lip curling into a snarl. I stopped, fear prickling my belly. Seymuhr was a warrior of some repute, a man (I guessed) of great strength, with a twitchy disposition. Had I gone too far? It would not be the first time my tongue, unfettered by reason, had brought trouble to my feet.
Then he started to chuckle and I relaxed somewhat until another insect, this one large enough to cast a walnut-sized shadow, buzzed close to his ear. He shouted again then waved his maces in incoherent fury, bit only succeeded in felling two saplings and knocking himself cold.
"Well. I guess we....will....rest....here," Broo Fang said, flute poised at his lips. He was a monk and an optimist, who spoke slowly and with an unusual rhythm.
"Indeed." I was grateful. I looked around for a stump to rest on. "I, for one, am not wiling to try to carry him. I would never get the smell out of these clothes."
Previously: Esmiralda and her
companions have discovered that the shattered ship--found upside-down and in
the middle of a forest—was once captained by Harfirgorn the Merciless, a pirate
of some repute that had vanished long ago. Following clues in a log book they
find in the pirate’s quarters, they hope to discover clues to his final resting
place—and the treasure that he is most likely buried with...
We walked on through a forest that was still
damp from the previous night's storm. The trees were alive around us and the
air was occasionally thick with swarms of biting flies that hung in gray clouds
at chest level. They bothered Seymuhr more than Broo Fang, Merrick or I, for he
was the shortest of our odd company and where we could brush the pests away
from our chins, he ended up with a face full of them.
What a strange person, I thought, not for
the first time. Obviously I had only met these three companions only a few days
ago and still knew very little about them. The prodigious strength Seymuhr had
shown during our brief battle with the Hunyn and the ease with which he had
carried me out of the city did not match up with his diminutive stature. I
wondered if it matched that of the giants themselves and if he came by it from
some form of sorcery. He picked at his teeth and spat another wad of
spider flesh into a clump of weeds, then scratched at his backside. I
waved a hand in front of my face, as much to chase away the insects as
the sudden overripe human smell.
"Where did you find him, anyway?"
I asked Merrick, who walked beside me. Merrick was the tallest of our group. He carried
a knotted staff carved into a smooth orb at the top. Merrick chuckled.
"It was a bizarre encounter," he
cautioned.
"I would expect nothing else," I
muttered.
"In truth, it wasn't entirely
bizarre--although you may find it a bit difficult to believe. It was a day like
any other day and I was traveling far south of here, in the kingdom of Nicaria--you
know the place?"
"I know of it, although I have
hardly ventured very far beyond its borders. It is aptly named."
Indeed, it was rumored that the Enothopian explorer Grolly Ann had
named it thus when she first caught a glimpse of it after a brutal winter
traveling through the Mountains of Sineb. 'This now, is a nice area,' she
said, according to several historical tomes I was familiar with.
"Indeed. The reasons for my errand in
that fine country are not important. I walked along the main road, and was just
coming up a low, gradual slope when I saw a strange shape ahead of me: a
gigantic mass with a horse-shaped head walking steadily toward me on two stubby
legs.
"I had never seen the like," he
continued, "and I am not ashamed to say I felt a bolt of fear churn in my
bowels and threaten the cleanliness of my underclothes. I looked for a place to
get off the road and hide, but the country was wide open, with nothing but tall
grass on either side. I drew my blade, uncertain of what to do, when I saw
another appendage break free from the figure and wave."
Merrick looked ahead to see if Seymuhr was listening, but if
he was he gave no sign. Tane led the way, ducking away from errant branches and
avoiding the clouds of stinging insects as if he was one of their own.
"I could scarcely believe my eyes when
this figure approached. It was not one creature, but two: a man and a horse
traveling together, but inverted. Seymuhr--the man--was carrying the
horse."
"That's impossible."
He shook his head. "So I thought and I
would not believe it either, had I not seen it myself. The horse had gone lame,
and Seymuhr was carrying it to a temple or smith to see if there was anything
that could be done for the poor beast."
"A horse. An adult horse?"
"Aye."
"A big horse?"
"Big enough, I'd wager. Well, I
immediately saw that he could be of assistance in my...pursuits, so I
introduced myself--and immediately wished I hadn't."
"Why, what happened?"
"He dropped the horse when he shook my
hand. We had to put the poor thing out of its misery then."
"I see."
"Magnificent animal, too. It deserved a
better fate."
"Don't we all." Now I couldn't
help but be offended. Hadn't Seymuhr complained when he had me thrown over his
shoulder like a...like a horse? "I've never heard of a man who possesses
such strength. How did he come by it?"
"Ah. Well. Speaking of bizarre tales...you'll
have to ask him about that."
Previously: Esmiralda and her companions have discovered that the shattered ship--found upside-down and in the middle of a forest—was once captained by Harfirgorn the Merciless, a pirate of some repute that had long ago vanished. They find an old log book in the captain's quarters and decide to take it into the light, where they hope to discover more clues to his final resting place—and the treasure that he is most likely buried with...
Later, much later, we paused to rest and take stock of our situation. Seymuhr pulled a pair of dried spider legs out of his pouch and offered me one. I declined as politely as I could, struggling to keep the contents of my stomach where they were. He shrugged and bit noisily into one of the scorched appendages, making that internal struggle that much more difficult.
Merrick stopped beside me, resting both hands on his thick staff. "What are you thinking?"
I was caught momentarily unaware. It was strange for me to be asked such a blunt question. I was a Falcuhn, a historian, known for recording thoughts and actions, places and things. It was mildly flattering to be asked what I thought of them. I glanced again at my companions, Broo-Fang Tane, the Optimist Monk; Seymuhr: short, squat and smelly, but a warrior of fearsome ability and Merrick, whose service to the crown was secondary to his service to the human race.
"I wonder if we're heading in the right direction," I said honestly. The wrecked ship was far behind us. Ahead, I saw only trees and, beyond them, the white-capped peaks of the Mountains of Vemt.
He nodded. "As do I. It only stands to reason, however, that our quarry headed toward a more remote location. In any other direction, they may have encountered towns, villages or the like--and the people that inhabit them would likely have taken notice of such a strange group so laden with treasure."
"Hmm." Most of what he said was true. But if people were to notice odd groups, we might as well have been carrying a wooden target on our backs.
"I don't know what you're so worried about," Seymuhr said. He wiped the last traces of spider juice off his grizzled chin and flung it to the ground, where it slapped against a clump of grass. "It matters not where we walk. 'Tis a good day for it, anyway. Most likely we will find nothing but a moldy corpse in a deep cave--if that."
"And if we find more?"
He gave me a hungry smile and tapped the maces that hung on either side of his hip. "Fear not."
I nodded. I had seen him wield those weapons before, and was comforted--of a bit sickened--by his ability.
"Let's hope they will be as useful against this enemy as they were against the Hunan," I muttered. With that, I signaled toward the mountains and we started off once more.