CHAPTER I
It was far too late for Abiel to be out in the courtyard, but the
determination to master the sword-strikes she'd seen her mother's men
practicing during the day out-weighed her exhaustion and the trouble she
would be in were she caught.
'
Most of them couldn't do it properly,'
she thought to herself, and heaved a sigh. Abiel dusted
her dark leggings and stretched her aching muscles. Slightly renewed,
she resumed her fighting stance, walked herself through the footwork
she'd seen, swinging the short-sword down using both hands, ducking to the left, then
the right from her unseen attacker, swung the short-sword over her head,
parried, knelt, thrust upward, then lost her balance and fell back onto
her hind-end.
"Foooock." She swore with a growl and chucked the sword as best she could onto the ground away from herself, fighting back tears. Abiel was tired,
sweaty, frustrated, determined.
She stared at the blade that was so
heavy even after months of training. The sword was small in the hands of men, commonly a secondary weapon. It was a broadsword in her tiny dusty hands. Abiel inspected
the broken calluses, raw and sore on her palms. In her eighth spring, Abiel was slight in height and weight compared
to other children. While not disliked, having friends meant sharing
her secrets and so she was her own company most days.
The little girl got
to her feet, unlaced the tie holding the loosening braid of her long
unruly dark brown hair. She re-braided it stumbling awkwardly as she attempted to weave and twist the long
sections of hair behind her head. She'd almost finished when Abiel had
the distinct feeling someone was watching her. She dropped the braid, it unraveled until her hair was long and wild about her face and
shoulders, turned abruptly and began to spew apologies and beg for
forgiveness. Abiel had expected it to be soldier or a servant or worst of all, her
mother.
Abiel was met by a gaze so piercing and a face so
beautiful she stopped speaking. Mouth agape, the little girl was
transfixed by skin so touched by the sun and Heavens it glowed even
in the darkness. Blue eyes sparkled as the most perfect gems might
above cheeks and a jaw that must have been carved by the Gods artisan.
Silken white hair pulled to a small tail at the back of his head, the
man was tall and slender, but there was no denying the power and
confidence in his demeanor. The elf smiled and Abiel let out a giggle
she wished she could take back immediately and covered her mouth with
both hands.
"My Lord, I am so terribly sorry." Abiel knelt,
forehead nearly touching the dirt. He was still smiling when she came to
her feet.
"No need to apologize, youngling. We all practice
our arts when we find the time. Were it always convenient, I suspect
people would sleep more contently." He bowed to her slowly, precisely.
He straightened, pushing his dark blue cloak behind his shoulders.
Simple but no-less well made were his clothes, all a dark blue. A clasp
of dark platinum held his cloak about his shoulders- nine snake heads
with eyes of diamonds and Abiel realized she was not standing in front
of any elf, but someone of great power. He was a warrior of the Serpeant
Sect. Awe swept deeper across her face and through her- despite being
the daughter of the reagent, his authority swept across the lands, not
just within the confines of her mother's city.
The thought of
her mother caused her to remember one of the opinions her mother had
shared- that elves, male and female, be they high elf, half-elf, or from
the woodlands, even the blood elves, were unmatched in their beauty.
But occasionally, there were some who were clearly even more so, and
Abiel decided, this was the most magnificent being she'd ever been in
the presence of.
"You will make a fine warrior," he said, cutting through her contemplation. Abiel blushed profusely.
"My sincerest apologies again My Lord. I do not mean to stare. You are so beautiful." She lowered her chin and looked up at him
under her mane of hair. The elf moved toward her, kneeling down before
her.
"I do not recall a time I have ever been complimented so
sincerely, my lady and as such, I have lost my manners. I am a centurion of the Serpeant Sect. My elven name
is long and arduous- I am known as Shiftie throughout the realms."
Abiel let out a loud laugh at this odd name and covered her mouth
hastily again and apologized through her hands. Shiftie only smiled a deep charming smile that faded to a subtle smirk.
"I am not nearly as diabolical as it might
imply, but on second thought, perhaps I am." he winked and gave her a
mischievous smile that she returned, hers beaming from ear to ear.
"It is an honor to meet you," Abiel regained her composure and dawned
her courtly manner. Abiel had accepted but never truly understood the
need for formal respect- and now, she was over-flowing with desire to honor.
"I am Abiel, daughter of the Regent Juldain. It is my
greatest honor to meet you, my lord." Abiel knelt before him again as
humbly as she could manage.
"I believe we
were to be introduced tomorrow. How fortuitous. Fate has
intervened and I am pleased that it has. I do believe the honor of
the introduction is mine, fiercest youngling." He smiled and any
tension or soreness she'd been feeling had left her body, embarrassments forgotten.
"Will you be staying in the city for long, my lord?"
"A few weeks, I think. Much business to tend to and this is a hard city
to leave. I am quite sure your mother made sure of that for all who
enter its gates."
"Are you an acquaintance of my mother?"
"I have not had the pleasure. Your mother has quite the reputation for commerce, I am told."
"I am pleased to hear of this, good sir. I would be terribly put out to
learn otherwise." a thoughtful and oddly mature expression crossed her
face. Shiftie bit his lip to keep from laughing. He stood to his full
height and went to pick up the sword she'd been practicing with. Her
smile and innocence touched him in a way he'd never experienced. He wasn't annoyed that the human child was staring at him with intense reverence, that was curious. Most days he was blissfully unaware of how anyone looked at him. The elf pretended to inspect the sword while examining the girl.
"Would you like me to show you a few things? I think they might assist you in your studies."
"Truly?" She beamed.
"Truly." The elf held out the sword to the child.
Within the hour, the bond was forged. It was a rare thing, or so they
elves believed many loved ones would
come and go, but a bond of the soul was unbreakable. This was not lost
on Shiftie as Abiel listened so intently, absorbing his teaching with a
fervent joy and noticeably insatiable desire to learn more.
"I cannot promise you'll best dragons and the like by tomorrow, there's much to know and much I still have to
learn, but I feel satisfied you could defeat many a foe in time if you
continue to train in earnest. Balance and control of self in all things, these are the keys." Shiftie sat on an empty ale barrel
and watched the girl. "You will make a fine swordsman, if that is your path."
Abiel swung the sword one last time and wiped the
sweat from her brow with the back of her sleeve. "I feel it in my heart. This," she motioned at the
castle and city, "this is a home, but not mine, not really."
The
words were far too mature and sent a startling chill up his back followed by a
pain- the pain of foreshadowing that he seldom experienced. Straight in
the chest like a blow from the hilt of a sword.
"One can never be sure," he said. Not warning, but a leading statement to gauge Abiel's response.
"I am certain, my lord. I know in my skin. Just as my
mum knew she wasn't to be a farmer's wife or a jewel in the treasure
chest of an old lord. She paved her own path. It was not enough to be the daughter of an army captain, even if
his valor is still sung in the halls of the inns across the valleys all
the way to the dwarven mountain forges. Even if she never approves of my
choice, which she does not," she smiled at Shiftie briefly, "...this is
my road. This," she held her sword before her seeing beyond it, "It is
who I am- steel and iron."
A second strike to his heart.
"War is for you?"
"Not in making but ending. If words were the magic the
world needed to stop the evils and perils within, we would
have no need for it. But the bards do not sing of my grandfather
because he vanquished the hordes of orc and goblin and centaur with a well-cooked meal and chat at hearthside. He did it will steel, with valor, because he
wanted his young children and the children of his men to be free. I
wish this for myself- to protect those I care for- friends, should I
ever come to have any."
"Oh but you do have a friend, my
lady, if you will have me such as I am." Shiftie came to stand before
her and dropped to both knees.
Abiel's eyes lit up, she beamed a
smile of such happiness Shiftie was overcome with a foreign feeling
that enveloped him in its fervency.
"Then I shall protect
you, sir. Not that you would need it, but my sword is yours." She tucked
the sword to her shoulder, blade up at her side and bowed.
The shadow deepened upon Shiftie as the words fell from her lips.
"Perhaps I shall live a few extra years then." He got to his feet.
"Shall we toast to it? A drink I think is order for all of your hard
work. Let us see what is available in your mother's kitchens, if this
pleases you."
Without intending to, his hand reached out to
Abiel and she took it gladly. So small was her hand. The shadows turned
to consuming darkness.
**************
Shiftie did not mourn the loss of sleep staying up with Abiel passed midnight, then several hours more dissecting the events of the evening
with her, enjoying from time to time the simplicity of Abiel's youth and
tenacity to earn his respect and kinship. But there were answers he was
determined to discover, and it was a fortnight's hard ride to the
Serpaent Isles where the temple of the Serpaent Sect was located, and
within it, the head of the Nine Orders, a monk known to the world as Pouty.
Going to a Serpaent temple or to another sect meant too many ears and
whispers and he would not risk it without further knowledge.
There still remained his business and
that needed to be attended to without fail. Shiftie stared down at the
scrying bowl on the table- a small dark brown clay molded and fired by
monks long before his birth, it was such a simple tool for such a
powerful task- communicating with Pouty from across the land. Shiftie
detested using it, never trusting in the privacy it was supposed to
offer. Everything would change, initiatives set into motion that could
not be undone if he was wrong, revolving around his new friend that he
was alarmingly disinclined to share or part with. A knock on the door
pulled him from his thoughts.
"Centurion, the Regent will receive you now," a servant called through the door.
"Too many damned secrets," he sighed aloud and tipped the bowl to let the water drain onto the floor.
CHAPTER II
Abiel sat swinging her legs impatiently as she recited common greetings
in elvish and dwarvish. Abiel's mother had been teaching her both
languages since Abiel had been able to speak and was nearly fluent in
both, the necessity for 'formal learning' as her pedagogue phrased it,
nagged at the impatient girl. She was proud that she could write in
elvish, saddened that dwarves did not feel the need to write things
down, but Abiel was also quite sure that it would not look nearly as
beautiful. The dwarves preferred to pass things on through spoken word and imbued relics in order to maintain their magics for fear that they would be stolen-
mostly by humans. And gnomes. Their art was in the crafting of beautiful
things despite their race's rough appearance and graveled nature.
"Young Miss, it is important that you know this as a child of the
court." Lady Condessa, Abiel's teacher of most subjects, implored her
unruly student. A middle-aged widow, the Lady Condessa had no children
of her own and had been a childhood friend of Juldain. As such, the
education of young Abiel was of the utmost importance to the Regent and
the Lady.
"My apologies, Lady Condessa." Abiel stopped swinging her legs and sat up in her chair.
"We'll move on to mathematics then,"
Abiel rolled her eyes as her teacher turned her back to find her book.
Abiel's need to leave and find Shiftie was gnawing at her. She'd slept
hardly an hour, entranced by fantasies of herself as older, strong and
valiant, fighting alongside her new swords master against ravaging orc
and goblins- creatures she'd never seen except in books. A soft knock at the door caused Abiel to sit as straight as
her chair would allow, eyes wide, heart pounding in her chest.
It would not do if he saw her being an unruly student!
"Enter," Lady Condessa snapped hastily.
The large iron-framed oak door swung in softly. It took only a brief
glimpse of the heavy boot as it passed the threshold for Abiel to
realize it was Shiftie, and she was quite certain he was there to
retrieve her. Shiftie bowed deeply, gracefully. Abiel hopped from her
chair, nearly bouncing to him and wrapped her arms around his legs and
hugged him.
"Young miss!" the teacher chided, shock white at such an affectionate gesture.
"My sincerest apologies for the interruption my lady, but I have been
instructed by Regent Juldain to take Miss Abiel for the day." Shiftie
pat the young girl on the head as he smiled
apologetically to the teacher and realized he'd patted a child's head for the first time in his life.
Abiel released the warrior's legs, grinning from ear to ear.
"I am not entirely sure I approve of an untrained instructor molding
the young miss, but the Regent has expressed her wishes... I dismiss
you." the stern disapproving look did not fade from her face.
"Thank you, Lady Condessa,"Abiel bowed hastily and ran out the door
dragging Shiftie with her as he attempted to bow to the teacher.
The door to her private tutorial chambers had not closed yet when Abiel
began whooping and leaping down the corridor. Shiftie nearly doubled
over with laughter. Adorable was not a word he'd expressed toward human
children. Typically he found them obnoxious and crude, unusually filthy
and highly boorish, especacially compared to Elven children, whom he had little use for either. Her smile and unfettered joy struck him. Without thinking, he scooped little Abiel up
in one arm as he made his way down the hall and stairwell, then out into
the stable yard. Abiel rested her forearm upon his shoulder, enjoying
the world from such magnificent heights, mane of hair blowing behind her as they
went. She was terribly proud of this, her first friend. If there was
ever to be a first friend, then surely Shiftie must be the one to have.
A paige was waiting with Shiftie's horse, a tall slender dapple gray
stallion with a jet black mane and tail. Abiel gasped at the sight of
the magnificent horse, who turned and went to move toward her while the
young paige struggled to keep the steed still. A strange thing, given
his mount had no particular care for children. The horse had been well
trained to ignore and to work. Shiftie smiled and set Abiel upon the
saddle before swinging himself up behind her. Abiel took a small tuft of
mane in one hand the the small horn of the intricate leather saddle in
the other. Shiftie's hand rested upon her waste and curved around her to
take the reigns. She'd never felt so safe or powerful.
"Magic," she said softly.
"What was that?" Shiftie inquired, confused by the reference.
"Speaking my thoughts aloud. I apologize, my lord." a deep exhale of
contentment released from Abiel as the horse moved with such terrible
grace through the stable courtyard and toward the city.
"Where do we travel to, Sir?"
"A few places, I think. Your mother felt it was time for you to see more of your home under less formal circumstances than you're used to."
Shiftie steered the horse effortlessly down the cobblestone bridge and
through the gates into the main marketplace. Having never traveled
through the city outside of a carriage, the buildings loomed overhead.
Loud and bustling, Abiel found it difficult to look at any one thing at a
time or for very long. The smell of the sea was heavy today, the sun
warm upon her face. There was so much color, so many people. Abiel was
sitting as straight as a board, head turning this way and that as
Shiftie continued to maneuver through the pedestrians and carts.
"Sir!" she exclaimed, pointing fervently, pushing herself up as far as
she could. The high elf followed her gaze to a vendor with cages full of
small forest animals, the bulk of them being ferrets.
"Look! Look! A ferret trader! Please Sir, may we stop?" Abiel exclaimed
trying to turn to look at Shiftie with an imploring gaze but not wanting
to take her eyes off the small playing animals lest he say no.
A small smile started to form as Shiftie urged the horse over to the
trader where dozens of tall cages stood some linked allowing for the
dozens of ferrets and small woodland creatures to attempt to have room
to showcase their playfulness for just such an eye as Abiel's. The horse
had not yet reached the post but Abiel was off the horse so quickly,
Shiftie felt his heart stop at the fear of her falling and breaking her
head open. The youngling was as fast as she was agile and flexible and as small as she was, he couldn't quite make out how she'd slid off like water, landed on her feet and hit a full run in half a moment. '
More surprises,' he thought.
Lithe and adept
for such a young child, she moved through the constant flow of people
like a shadow. He chuckled to himself at the thought of her becoming a
rogue and led the gray to the tethering post.
"May I please
browse your ferrets, good sir?" Abiel asked so politely it would have
seemed insincere coming from an adult. The trader was not accustomed to
such niceties and coughed long and hard to recall what little formal
manners he had.
"Of course, little miss. Mind your fingers
though, those little bastar...," he coughed again, "... I mean those
creatures can be a bit feisty, if you catch my meanin'." the trader
nodded to Shiftie and the two men watched Abiel sink slowly to her knees
before the largest of the cages. The ferrets and other animals had
already become aware of her, stopped their play fighting and had
been eyeing her in stillness.
"Hello there little friends, I
hope I find you all well today." Abiel curled her hand, putting her
knuckles to the metal grate as her mother had shown her to do with
strange dogs and horses. The ferrets at first sat frozen and as if a snapped back
into life, they were rushing to smell, touch, and lick her hand gently,
scrambling like mad over and under and in between one another to be
touched by her. Abiel let out a giggle and slipped her fingers in
between the wire grating to touch them all. Her laughter and joy seemed
like a beacon to the animals, who continued to wildly attempt to touch
and be touched by her.
"By Gods!" the trader choked.
Abiel
turned to look back at Shiftie, who appeared mildly disapproving. His
stern glanced gave way to a warm smile- it was not his own smile, that
he knew. But she was happy- so terribly happy and he could not seem to
help feeling happy, though what he was witnessing was wrong. Their
leisurely trip through the city became one of great import. The others
had to meet her, see these things for themselves. He had to have
answers.
"Have you ever seen such a thing, sir?" the trader cut into Shiftie's brooding.
"They must know their own kind, all rascals seem to." Shiftie replied,
causing Abiel to howl with delighted pleasure, another smile upon his
heart that was as much hers as it was his. Shiftie called her name
quietly and reached out his hand to her.
"I am sorry little
ones, I must depart. My master calls." Abiel made small kissing
noises at them, causing the ferrets to go wild and lick her fervently,
almost pleading that she stay a while longer. Abiel giggled. "I must do
as he says. Just look upon him, you'll understand." and the ferrets'
gaze did fall upon Shiftie for a long moment before returning to their
attention to Abiel.
"See? What did I tell you." she whispered and giggled again lightly.
Shiftie went rigid.
"Goodbye little ones, I will see you again!" she promised and got
to her feet. Shiftie's hand was still waiting for hers and she took his smallest finger in hand as was her way.
"Thank you, Sir. Please be well." Abiel beamed a glowing smile and bowed at the trader, who could not find words to speak.
Upon the saddle Shiftie set Abiel again and swept up behind her. He
feigned looking through his saddle bag in order to see if any other had
witnessed beyond the trader. This was not normal, not even for druids
or shamans who lived among animals training for years to command them.
One did not simply approach untamed animals, nor did untamed animals
approach humans or elves or become wildly affectionate toward them in
the course of a moment. Shiftie put an arm under Abiel's, holding her
closely to him now. One witness meant ten and he needed to get her away
from the populous to his comrades.
"We have much to do
today, my young pupil. We best make haste for our destination. I hope
the introduction to the trader's ferrets will suffice for the meeting of
animals for one day." Shiftie stated and steered the horse through the
pedestrians at a small canter.
"Yes, yes, that will do
indeed, sir!" Abiel was still giddy. "I could never name them all," she
sighed, day dreaming of playing in her mother's gardens with the
ferrets.
There was so much to look at,
Abiel had stopped trying to take it all in. She would see more and
looked forward to the day when she knew her way about her mother's city
as well as Shiftie did. So many streets and bridges, the canals were a
maze and wonder of architecture. But now that she had the elven warrior
to herself and it appeared that they were going to cross the whole city
to wherever he was taking her, Abiel had questions. Many many
questions and decided that she would have to have the answers. And thus
came the barrage of inquiries the like Shiftie had never encountered.
"Are you married sir?" the question came after several other queries
regarding Dwarves, Black Forge, The Vale and how it became home to
mostly woodland elves, then moved on to the topics such as gnomes, iron,
jewels, horse riding, plate armor versus chain or leather, more about
jewels, building structures, the Nine Sects and elven hair colors.
"No, I am most certainly not."
"Do you like girls?"
Shiftie almost choked on his laughter. "I do, very much so. Perhaps not
as much as some of my companions." Shiftie smiled to himself, thinking
of several friends who lusted for women as much as they lusted for
battle, two of whom Abiel was soon to meet. Abiel smiled as well,
glad that he had found something amusing within her query.
"As a centurion, I do not often remain in the same place. I can be gone
for days, months... years even. My role in the world as it stands is far
more important to me and I do not imagine that will change in the
future."
"Oh." it was a simple response, one that Shiftie
found himself almost concerned by. The odd moment passed, and Abiel
continued asking questions about faerie wings and gnomish traditions in
the winter.
For all of the hurrying he'd intended,
Shiftie had taken the longest most winding route to their destination,
enjoying the company of his small energetic companion and her slew of
questions and deductions. In the midst of a dissertation on her mother's
opinions of elven wines versus dwarven ale, it occurred to Abiel that
she was hungry and mid-sentence, asked if they would be eating that day
or if fasting was a part of her training regiment now. Shiftie laughed
so hard, his horse stopped mid stride and turned to look back at him.
"Yes, my youngling, we are currently enroute to the tavern with the best sheepherders pie in the Lorelands."
"Sheepherders pie?!" she squeaked excitedly.
"The very best." Shiftie whispered in her ear. Abiel shivered and
leaned back against his chest. She began to play with the ends of the
horse's mane, watching the people and buildings float by.
"This is my best day," she sighed in contentment. The duo rode in
contented silence for the remainder of time until they reached the
tavern of the Green Shepherd.
From the front steps
of the Green Shepherd, Abiel could see her mother's castle over the roof
tops of the expansive city, sitting atop the cliffs overlooking the
bay, the banners of many colors a welcome beacon to all. It was strange
to see it from so far. Enormous even from a distance, Abiel had never
thought of it as large, but she was proud and had a small smile for it
and felt lucky in her heart that that was where she lived and was
profoundly proud. Somewhere within those giant walls, her mother was
seeing to the people's needs.



The
Green Shepherd was a modest two-storied place built of stone and
timber with a dark tiled roof. Chimneys billowed steam and smoke, a wonderful smell of fresh made food and bread consumed her,
causing her stomach to growl fiercely. Nine iron lanterns pained with
green leaded glass hung in a perfect row between the first and second
floors, two large glass-pained windows heavily curtained on either side
of the large wooden door. Shiftie opened the door for Abiel, following
closely behind and closed it quietly. It was warm, inviting. Heavy
wooded tables and chairs about the room, a long bar down one wall
leading back into the kitchens. Musky perfumed candles sat in the center
of each table. It was full, by the looks of it and people in it, the
Green Shepherd was customarily a busy place and attracted a wide variety
of clients. Abiel's grip on Shiftie's hand tightened as he took the
lead through to his waiting companions.
"There he is!" a gruff voice boomed from somewhere within.
Abiel could not see past Shiftie but trusted and followed
diligently, trying to be brave in this new environment. She felt eyes
upon her though it could not be said who was truly watching or why.
Shiftie led her to a round table in the far front corner near one of the
small hearths. There were six men in total- two humans, a dwarf, two
dark elves and a high elf. Abiel felt a strange sensation fall over her
skin, sending a chill up her spine. Shiftie began the introductions. The
men appeared surly and battle ready which thrilled Abiel to no end.
First was the dwarf, Thromguard. His cheerfulness was a trait she had
not seen in the many dwarves that she'd met in her short lifetime, his
beard an expanse of braids of different sizes clasped by small beads
and gems, dark brown eyes and well made clothing of leathers and
heavy cottons. He bowed his head, and raised a large tankard of ale and
took a drink in her honor.
"Pleasure is all mine in meeting
you, youngling!" and Throm took another long swig of ale, some of it
making it onto his beard, to which he paid no heed.
The two dark elves were introduced as Raxus and Toatle.
"Both are dread knights, converted to the Light by love and flowers,"
Shiftie feigned whispering, the two dark elves were not amused and
made no apologies for the profanities and rude gestures made in her
presence at Shiftie. Both were handsome, terribly handsome, she thought,
with blue-violet skin shock white
hair and gem-like twinkling eyes; sharp cornered chins, carved cheek bones, strong noses- they were a sight and Abiel could not remember the
last time she'd been so intimidated. Both were dressed similarly to
Throm and Shiftie in simple but no less well-made tunics and woven leather vests and leather breaches, cloaks clasped
with the seal of the Serpaent. They did not rise from their seats and
barely uttered greetings. Abiel was too apprehensive to be offended and
squeaked out a greeting.
It was the high elf enchanter that
Shiftie introduced as Mencius that brought a smile to Abiel, his presence put her more
at ease. He stood and went to her, taking her hands in his
and bowed from the waist. Mencius was the epitome of grace and beauty.
"An honor to meet you, my lady. If I
can ever be of service," Mencius smiled warmly.
His hair was a softer white than the other elves, almost a light golden
hint to it reaching the embroidered tie at his waist. His heavy silken blue robes begged to be touched. She was
sure her mother would have one hundred gowns made from this fabric given the chance.
Mencius's aquamarine eyes sparkled as if he'd caught her thoughts. He
touched her chin in the most gentle way.
"Untamed," he said
smiling and looked to Shiftie for a moment before taking his seat again.
Abiel blushed profusely and turned to face the two humans who were
introduced as Zykon and Vahlaur.
"Feral," Toatle retorted with a growl. Shiftie shot him a daggered glance before completing the introductions. "Master Zykon the monk, which is
why he seldom wears clothes," Shiftie joked. Zykon nodded in her
direction. He was truly the least dressed person she could ever recall meeting for that matter, wearing a
linen shift that he had not cared to lace or tie and loose dark brown linen pants. He might as well have been dressed for bed. Zykon's raven black
hair was pulled to a tail at the crown of his head and Abiel found him to be
handsome and suspected that he had originated from the Tin Wor
provinces several leagues away, the furthest of the eastern Lorelands beyond the Vale.
Zykon's demeanor was not overtly friendly in a manner that made her determined to earn his respect. Abiel smiled and turned her attention
to the last human, Vahlaur the bard, dressed in pale beige linen and
rich brown leather. Abiel caught sight of an elegant looking psalter in
his lap that he was plucking and strumming lightly. Waves of blond hair
hung just passed his shoulders, a warm smile greeted her and he stood to
kiss her hand. The two dark elves rustled irritably in their seats. Another glance from Shiftie forced them to settle as he helped Abiel
take her chair beside Throm, then slid his chair closer to hers and sat
down beside her.
Abiel tugged softly at the edge of Shiftie's shirt, causing him to lean toward her.
"Is Mencius an
ainion?"
she whispered. Shiftie smiled at the girl's use of the elvish word
meaning 'angel'. Mencius, who'd overheard the question, remained silent
but no less appreciative of the compliment. Abiel sat straight in her
chair, forearms resting on the table, her fingers locked.
"All of you make my skin tingle." she blurted out. The men laughed
uncomfortably in unison, which Abiel noted. All eyes were upon Shiftie.
There was much to discuss.
It did not take long once
the food and more drinks arrived at the table for Abiel to settle in
and revel in her surroundings. She took great care in asking detailed
and pointed questions to ensure that she had time to savor the
bites of the best food she'd ever eaten. The men were all centurions in
the Serpaent Sect alongside Shiftie, most downplayed their strengths
and powers but for the two dark elves, who were content in discussing
everything concerning their exploits and amassing of rare armor and weapons, one tale bled into another. It was like being swept up in a
giant bardsong, inflaming her imagination. For the centurions, it was
not hard to be charmed by the girl. The happier she was, the more intent
they became upon seeing to her needs and feeding into her joy. Zykon who was normally quiet and seldom genial, fetched her water and spiced
cider when her cups ran dry, more bread when the basket went empty. The
more they shared, the more enthralled Abiel became with the men and
their lives. The more Abiel wanted to know, the more the reserved men
found themselves sharing.
As the food and drink settled,
Abiel's energy level began to wane. The tavern was cozy, the wooden
chair she sat upon beside Shiftie may as well have been cushioned and
the young girl began to lean against the centurion as Vahlaur continued
to play quiet songs absently. Again, the instinct to give her comfort
seemed a natural thing to Shiftie, his arm curled around Abiel, holding
her to him. Her contentment at this gesture became palpable, causing
Mencius to straighten in his seat, and to become aware that he'd been
slouching in an unelvenly, overly-relaxed manner, the same
overly-relaxed manner visible in his companions. Mencius lifted his cup
to his mouth, watching the girl, but did not drink. He began to silently cast a spell.
Abiel's eyelids were heavy, so heavy. She was comfortable. Shiftie whispered to her, she was unsure if she'd been able
to respond, and did not question when he moved her easily to his lap,
holding her to him. He smelled wonderful, she thought. And then she was
asleep.
Abiel immediately dreamed wonderful dreams of bright
forests and animals and castles. Faceless people, valleys, vast oceans
and elves. She was riding a horse, a large horse- her horse. This was
somehow important and she told herself to remember that it was hers.
Shiftie was riding beside her, there were others but seeing him made her
smile. Her view shifted- they were charging toward something. Glints of
steel from shields and armor twinkled like diamonds as she floated
above and within the dream and tried to see more around them.
"The Paladin? Are you quite sure?" Vahlaur asked as quietly as he
could. The men were on the edge of their seats, leaning as far over the
table as they could.
"Of course I am not sure. There are one
hundred reasons for her to have gifts. She could have elven blood, she
could be a natural druid or an enchanter, or all of these things or none
of them. She could be any of one thousand prophecies." Shiftie replied
irritably and looked down upon her sleeping face, the slight smile on
her lips. "She was born on proper the day," his voice trailed off. Maybe
it was a ridiculous notion.
"Does she have religion?" Thromguard asked.
"None to speak of," Shiftie adjusted Abiel in his arms slightly and took a drink of his port.
"That's bloody helpful," Toatle grumbled.
"Having religion wouldn't matter if she were the Paladin. Even if the
Paladin were an orc, it'd convert to the Nine." Vahlaur retorted and
hunkered down in his chair, holding the stringed instrument tightly to
his chest.
"Has anyone even been looking? Haven't all the
Sects put aside the Paladin myth? Of all of the
prophecies, how many in our lifetimes have been seen to fruition? Why
now? There's no more danger now than there was fifty years ago or three
hundred from those bastards beyond the same wars that have plagued this
land since men walked upright. None of us in our lifetimes combined have borne
witness to such an event. It's been an age or more." Zykon stared at
the girl.
"It'd be folly to assume that she does not have
power and a good dose of it. And if she is the Paladin, then her presence is as much an omen of ill tidings as anything, it means that a threat is coming if it is not already upon us." Mencius was now watching her sleep. They
all were. "Are you not aware of what she had done to us before I lulled
her? Remarkable."
The dark elves did not hide their
disdain- having it pointed out they were unaware that magic had
affected them did not sit well and was an ill omen.
"Mad because you were happy for a moment?" Thromguard laughed deeply at Raxus and Toatle.
"Shut up." Toatle growled and left the table in a huff. Shiftie shook his head.
"As I was saying," Mencius folded his hands in his lap. "The little one
is seven? Eight human years? Assuming the foreshadowing you experienced, combined with the communications with the trader's ferrets, the presence she put upon all of us... No, I cannot say for
sure that these are indicators that she is indeed Paladin. But clearly
she has power and is yet unaware. It is quite possible she
has elven ancestry, but elven magic does not manifest itself in these
ways that I have seen. We all heard her- we make her... tingly."
Mencius laughed lightly at the word.
A long uneasy moment
passed, Toatle returned to the table with a new cask of port. He
glowered at the sleeping human girl in Shiftie's arms.
"What if she is Paladin or not? We will fight back those fucking beasts as we
always have, should they find humor and attempt to invade again." he
snorted and took his drink in one gulp and slapped the cup onto the
table.
"If she is the Paladin, we have far more to be
concerned with than another fucking orc invasion." Shiftie snapped at the
impatient dark elf, who'd been his friend for many years.
"And as I have always said, I trust in no one to save my skin but myself
and if death should come, then let it. I will be ready and
bringing many with me." Toatle refilled the cup.
"If
sacrificing you to whatever threats that bring back the Paladin's
presence is all it takes to keep the rest of us alive, I'll tie the damn bow
upon you myself." Raxus laughed and elbowed the cantankerous Toatle in
the ribs and was physically rebuked without humor for the effort.
"We must be certain." Zykon said quietly. "We cannot assume that she is Paladin, but to set aside the possibility would
be foolish."
"Therein lies the first mystery to
unravel... How did she come into her magics? How is it that she has a
physical reaction to our presence? Surely we cannot be the first with
Gods-given strengths in our blood that she's encountered." Throm stroked
his long beard.
"Maybe she never had cause to notice?" Vahlaur replied.
"Such is why I brought her for you to see for yourselves." Shiftie
gently pulled hair from her freckled cheek and held her more closely as
again, silence filled the space between the centurions.
Night was beginning to fall, attendants of the inn lit candles,
freshened the firewood and began to prepare for the evening's meal.
"Can we take her?" Vahlaur asked, cutting through the unease.
Raxus laughed. "Take her where to do what?"
"Stow it," Vahlaur snapped.
"She's far too young, too many questions. And though he
does not realize, Raxus is right. Where would we take her? How do we
train her? Paladin or no, we should watch out for her, teach
her, see what she develops into. What's the worst? She's an average
warrior? A ranger? A mage? As if the world isn't running short on
well-trained fighters." Throm's suggestion was not lost on Shiftie or
Mencius.
Within Abiel's dreams, she could hear the men speaking
though it meant nothing and made no sense, she struggled to grasp the words that were smoke in her hands. It seemed a natural
participation within her dreams as she adventured and journeyed within
new worlds. This was the most wonderful sleep she'd ever had.
"I'll go to Juldain and speak with her. There must be something she
knows, perhaps without realizing." Shiftie was absently twisting
Abiel's hair in his fingers. Raxus stared at him openly, his brow raised
and creased at the odd sight.
"Then don't tell her that part," Toatle snapped.
"Who will teach her?" Zykon sat up straight, the argument objecting to being the tutor already forming in his mind.
"We can send for someone?" Throm suggested.
"Who are you going to ask outside of this table? I can think of
probably a dozen souls we could trust to do the job, only to raise
suspicions about their presence here handling an eight
year old regents' daughter. No, this must stay between us for now and
Pouty, once we can reach him." Vahlaur stated and finished off his warm
mug of ale.
"Yes, I believe Pouty will know what to do."
Shiftie could not decide if he should stay with Abiel to begin her
training or to head straight to Pouty and tell the Serpaent leader
himself.
"The fucking world might yet end and here we sit, debating
old bloody mother's tales over a hatchling." Toatle muttered and stared down into
his drink. No sooner did the words pass from his lips when Abiel's eyes
opened, her line of sight encompassing them all, a small smile on her
face.
"One day, you will all be proud of me." Abiel tucked herself back into Shiftie's chest and was asleep again.
Stone still in their seats, they stared at Toatle and then turned their gazes to Shiftie.
"What in the Gods names was that, I'd like to know?" Throm whispered.
"Pouty will know no more than we do. We must watch her, train her as we
can, as we would any other and let her become whatever she will."
Mencius said softly, watching her.
"Bah! She's a fucking child!'
Raxus spat irritably. "These mysteries and such... I say we fucking forget them,
get back to our own damn business. Yesterday, she wanted to play with
swords. Tomorrow, she could pick up a stone and decide to become a
painter. War is coming and that's what bloody matters."
"I'll speak to Juldain tomorrow." Shiftie decided.
"And then I will go to Pouty with all that I have. There is no sense
getting any further mired in all of this, we have things we need to see
to regardless."
It was the sensible decision- the only decision that could be made for the time being.
After several moments, the centurions were approached by the inn keep
Harpalus with a fresh set of drinks and bread. It was a welcome
distraction and the men were able to move away from the subject of Abiel
long enough for the tension to leave them and for other business to be
tended to.
It had been dark in Coste Volte for over
an hour when Abiel began to yawn and stretch her way out of sleep.
Still in Shiftie's arms, she returned his warm smile through sleepy
brown eyes and touched the tip of his nose lightly for a moment.
"Good morning,
mellon titta ohtakyaro."
he inclined his head toward hers causing Abiel to giggle softly. He'd
called her his little warrior in Elvish. The dark elves sneered in
disgust but Abiel did not notice.
"I'm terribly sorry, sir." Shiftie helped her sit up straight in his lap, her apologies were
offered to the others. "Such poor manners I have not shown in many
years."
A twinge of guilt hit Mencius for lulling her so deeply into sleep for so long.
"I was having such wonderful dreams!" she exclaimed through a yawn.
"There were ferrets and horses and hawks! And I had my own horse! There
was a black falcon with fire in its eyes, and then!" Abiel was so
excited, the men felt excited, "And then there was a giant black
dragon! As big as my mother's castle on the hill! And he SPOKE to me!"
The earlier tension that had finally subsided was back ten fold now
among the companions, despite the slight presence of her wonder and joy.
"A dragon?" Mencius smiled. "And what did this dragon say?"
"He said I was very small. Which, I suppose I am, but who isn't
compared to a dragon?! And then he said that he missed me and he would '
wait to see me again when it was time, son of the gods.' SON of the gods? I am no son!" Abiel laughed heartily at this, but the men could not find humor within the news.
Vahlaur cursed under his breath, every man at the table struggled in their seats.
"Was there anything else?" Mencius asked.
"Yes! All of you were there." Abiel looked up at Shiftie. "You looked
after me, we traveled by sea to lands with no roads and no sun. But it
was bright and green and..."
"Did
we see the dragon?" Zykon cut in.
"It was... a different part of the dream? Truly, I cannot remember."
she was puzzled and struggled to remember now. The visions were leaving
her.
"I wish I had such splendid dreams as these," Mencius smiled at Abiel again.
"Do you think it means something?" Abiel asked with wonder.
"Do you?" Mencius posed the notion to her.
"I think it means I have a wonderful imagination!" Abiel exclaimed.
"That is what my teacher and my mother have told me, even some of the
servants, and I must say that I agree."
"You've had these dreams before?" Throm choked on his ale.
Vahlaur cursed again- others knowing meant potential problems if the girl was Gods-marked for some prophecy or another.
"I have and many others, though I could not tell you precisely what
they were." Abiel was struggling now to retain the visions precisely,
sad to let them go.
"Abi'," Shiftie adjusted her in his lap
so that she was facing him more directly and so that he had her full
attention. His gem-like eyes twinkled and a slight smile met hers, but
Abiel knew then that there was something wrong and she was the cause of
it somehow and frowned. "Abi', I need to request a great favor of you if
I may. We all do." he nodded to the others.
"Anything for
you, Sir." While Abiel sat up straight and dawned the air of seriousness
that the moment seemed to require, the foreshadowing of something in
her small response rippled over him and he collected himself.
"Your dreams- you are not to share these again with anyone else unless
one of us gives you permission to. Not under any circumstances and not
unless we are with you or have given you express instructions. Do you
understand?"
"I do not understand. But I will keep this
promise. I swear." Abiel was slightly frightened. She'd done something wrong. The disappointment began to creep from her, a fearful embrace sliding over them like silk, alarming
the men at the table, but even more so, patrons beyond them.
"Abi'!" Mencius snapped and she started in Shiftie's lap, the others
startled in their own seats. It was probably the first time Mencius had
ever raised his voice to anyone. He apologized profusely and collected
himself. But this did not help to console the young girl. Her panic held firm increased, not understanding what was happening and she could see the
men's demeanor change though she could not identify it. Everyone she
could see within the inn seemed shaken as she searched for some cause
for alarm and she clung to Shiftie.
"Abi," Shiftie attempted to calm her through the overwhelming emotions drowning him. "P
en ohtakyaro, calm yourself.
Saes pen tithen." He pleaded trying to remain calm in voice. The girl was shaking. He was beginning to shake.
"
Saes. I need you to do this for me little ferret.
Saes." he begged with all of the fear that she was feeling consuming him.
Abiel looked to Shiftie, saw her fear within his eyes, looked to those
at the table, men who held no fear in their lives and yet they were
being overwhelmed by it. Shame and embarrassment flushed over her and
then onto them. Shiftie felt the urge to laugh but it could not overcome
her feelings.
"Saes Abi'. please try to calm yourself. It's all right,
pen tithen. I promise."
Abiel took several deep breaths, tried to think of the ferrets and the weight of her presence began to lift from the room.
"That's better." Shiftie held her to him, stroked her hair. She was
going to cry. He could feel it within his own eyes. "No no, none of
that," he smiled, pulling her away from him. "It's all right. I
promise." Shiftie offered the best smile he could. "Better?" he asked.
"Yes," Abiel tried her best to contain herself, to be calm and to smile
and not think about what she had done, though she did not understand
any of it.
"How will I know it is you that is asking?" she tried to alleviate things, to be strong now.
"That is an excellent question." Throm smiled beneath his heavy beard.
The dark elves looked ready to flee the table, Vahlaur smiled
uncomfortably and Zykon sat in silence.
"The ferrets. If
there is ever a need to ask you about the dreams and you find yourself
with any concern as to why we would be asking, we will discuss the
ferrets. And if we, or someone else ask you about another animal, you
will know not to tell. You must lie as convincingly as you can. Do you
understand?"
"I understand." Abiel replied solemnly.
"Isn't the lass a little young for intrigue?" Throm winked.
"Of course I am!" Abiel smiled. "But I can't give away the keys to the
kingdom to the wrong regent, now can I?" Abiel sounded like her mother.
Shiftie hugged her warmly and at last Abiel began to feel at ease again.
"
Nin pen Abi'." Shiftie kissed her on top of the head.
CHAPTER III

Within the first year after meeting at the Green Shepherd, Shiftie's
presence within the city had not gone unnoticed, just as he'd feared. It was unusual for
someone of his stature to stay in any place for so long unless a large
contingent of a Sect had taken up residence or there was great need.
Given the position of Coste Volte at the southern most point of the
Lorelands, it was considered inconvenient. And no where within the
Lorelands were there problems that would require such a lengthy stay,
according to the people who were taking notice. Shiftie was less
concerned with the noticing of his presence initially as long as it
never occurred to anyone that his charge, Abiel, was someone to be
interested in. Juldain had laid a healthy foundation of cover initially,
proclaiming openly that her daughter should be well rounded in all
things, and no expense was spared for the multitude of teachers that
were coming and going, so as not to point out that the only teacher of
significance to Abiel was Shiftie. When the murmurs became outright
questions regarding Abiel's being spoiled during the years where she should be traveling to courts for potential future matches, Juldain was forced to end the formal weapons training.
Abiel had grown little in height that
year, remaining undersized compared to children of her age. The new
attentions showed to her by the various Serpeant Sect teachers garnered
no favor from other children of the castle. Abiel was accustomed now to
being around adults and behaved in the same manners as they, finding the
children's play games to be uninteresting and pointless, though she
found great joy in playing tag and anything that would make Shiftie
laugh when they were alone together. What she found herself unprepared
for, was the sudden disappearance of the high elf commander. He'd gone
one morning to tend to business, but had not returned that evening or
any evening after. Within the first few months, she'd received letters
from him, but never information as to where he was or what he was doing.
She could not correspond, only hope that he would return soon.
********************


Days turned to months, turned to 8 years. The dreams still came and far
more frequently now, where he always seemed to be waiting for her at
least. There was no consolation for the loneliness that remained in
Shiftie's stead. Abiel's martial training did not stop but
continued in secret, though she was seldom with the same teacher for
long. It was a revolving door to allay suspicions, the teachings varied
and were losing their luster, as they all had the most important lessons
for her that canceled out previous ones. Abiel felt loneliness would
be her truest friend. It was hard to know who to trust, leaving her
mother's castle under the guise of 'getting to know the city better',
which she had already done in previous years. The only interest she had
now was a new one- men. From day to day, it was hard to decide whom she
fancied more, and through her fifteenth year, she spent a considerable
amount of time learning the fine art of kissing and keeping her new
friends secret from one another, though the young servant girls did not
appreciate the time and new attentions spent on Abiel by those they fancied
when Abiel was in their presence during the day. Many tried to befriend
her in order to become more close to the young men they were eyeing and
if that did not succeed, the gossiping began.
"Abiel, Abiel! Come into my chamber, please." Juldain was in an icy
mood, the tone Abiel had become accustomed to over the years when she'd
been caught training by those who did not approve. Abiel had been walking down the corridor passed
her mother's chamber, heading to the stables to go riding. She'd wanted
to go down to the port that day. It was not to be, she could tell.
"Coming, mother." Abiel replied and turned on her heel and went back.
She walked through the archway, a servant, Coranay, one of the kitchen maids smirked and closed the door to
Juldain's bedchambers behind her.
"Have you lost all sense of decency?" Juldain snapped.
"What are you talking about, Mother?" Abiel snapped back.
"It has come to my attention that you have been spending personal time with Captain Hale!"
"You said I couldn't leave the city without an escort!"
"That's
not what I'm talking about!" Juldain gave Abiel a hard suggestive look.
Abiel realized what her mother was insinuating, her mouth dropping in
disbelief. "Nothing and I mean NOTHING is going on with the Captain,
mother! He's old enough to be my father!" Abiel shuddered. "Who is telling you such nonsense?!"
"Apparently
EVERYONE is talking about it, my dear, it was bound to reach me! Captain
Hale is married! I will not have my
daughter cavorting around like some ill-bred strumpet!"
"I
beg your pardon?!" Abiel turned on her mother. "He has been training me how to dual wield swords! And not
at the art of bedroom manners, regardless of what Coranay or anyone
else tells you! I cannot believe you would even think that I would do
such a thing!"
"So I am to believe that you have not had relations with him when no less than four witnesses speak to the contrary?"
"Yes! You of all people should believe me because what
they
are saying is not true! Captain Hale is an honorable man, he is
married and happily so." The last was a lie, Abiel knew all too well
that Captain Hale was unhappily married, and that he was quite in-lust
and involved with Coronay's cousin Druscilla. Outside of that, he had
tried to help Abiel and was a good well-intentioned man. It was in fact a
ranger from the Talon Sect, Anzarius, that Abiel was interested in, and
had been accompanying the Captain, Druscilla and Abiel so that Abiel
could be trained leaving Hale and Druscilla to have personal time
together. "He has only been helping me with weapons training!" Abiel
insisted.
"That isn't much better, you aren't supposed to get caught. I don't know how many times I have to tell you." Juldain was calming down but appeared no less strained. "Why can you not understand how important this is? You cannot be caught training with weapons" Juldain was exasperated and began to pace the room.
"Why does anyone care that I train or if I kiss a boy? I am
not some chambermaid hopping to and from one man to another like half
of the girls under your employ." Abiel tried not to smile and wished she
could somehow get revenge on those passing on rumors to her mother.
"So what I was told about you cavorting with Ellio, Trens, Kaleb and that Fillep...true then?" Juldain grumbled.
"Training and nothing more!" Abiel realized her mistake. "Though there isn't much Fillep could teach
me. I most likely could teach him a few things." Abiel's stance had
relaxed- she was standing like a man, legs apart, hands on her hips,
cocky, and thinking of the sloppy mess that was Fillep and his
short-swords. She had kissed Ellio a few times, Trens once- he was an
excellent kisser, she mused.
"Stand up straight."Juldain snapped.
Abiel
did as she was told, holding her hands together in front of herself,
imagining punching all of the maids who were in fact bed-hopping their
way into babies and marriage, squarely in their smug faces. Juldain's
attention was obviously on another matter now, she was picking at her
fingernails.
"You stop
that," Abiel nodded at her
mother's hands. "Mother, I assure you that my honor is still very much
intact. The men are my friends and instructors in weaponry, nothing
more, however much that distresses you, but that IS in fact all. I
suspect that my time with them is being perceived otherwise, causing
animosity toward those who seek to trap the men, assuming they haven't
trapped them already." Abiel relaxed again, standing in that terribly
unfeminine stance.
"Abiel!" Juldain shouted angrily.
Standing up (nearly) straight, Abiel attempted to find a pose more
suited to her mother's preference, enjoying the ridiculousness of the
situation. It was not often that mother and daughter fought, their
relationship was a solid one, usually filled with comfort and trust.
Away from the eyes of others, Juldain and her daughter were quite
relaxed and at times silly, titles and politics forgotten or at the
center of their amusement. More times than not, it was Abiel's ear that
Juldain sought regarding political matters, knowing her daughter did not
care for matters of state, but knowing that the girl, even in her
youth, was incisive and honest, with an uncommon ability to see multiple
sides of situations and people. Abiel had a knack for wit like her mother, which
Juldain enjoyed most days. This day did not appear to be one of them.
"I merely speak the truth." Abiel was fighting not to smile and laugh at her mother.
"And yet you still do little to keep your training secret. Training I do not have to allow! What was our agreement?" Juldain changed subjects again, another
distressed flash across her face, Juldain was about to chew on her thumb
nail in a very uncourtly manner and caught Abiel staring at her with an
amused raised eyebrow.
"I will continue to train until you accept that it's my destiny."
"Destiny, is it?" Juldain scoffed. "As if you have all say in the matter and I have none! You are
my daughter and as such you
will behave accordingly, even if I have to lock you in the library!"
"Have I not been educated at your command? Do I not dance well enough
and speak and read the languages you wanted me to learn? Do I not cook
well enough for your liking? I have done and continue to do what you
have asked and all that I ask is to do one thing that I truly love in
trade. Why is it so obscene to you that I train as a warrior? What rules
have I broken?"
"You are the daughter of a viceroy. I cannot
explain to the people who care about the mere appearance of this why
it makes no difference to me, but it affects the perception of this
house and my ability to rule over this land." Juldain stated coldly.
"What does it matter to anyone else what I do, especially where it
concerns my one day helping to protect ALL of the Lorelands? And
besides! You learned to read when grandmother told you it wasn't
important and was unseemly! According to her, you just needed to learn
to sew and cook..." Abiel laughed, her mother was a terrible cook. "You ride horses as well as anyone I've seen, you
weren't to know that if grandmother had gotten her way. I cannot take up
after you here as Regent..."
Nor do I wish to, Abiel thought.
"I know that! Which is why it is all important that you be married to
someone of stature so that you do not find yourself cleaning a king's
castle or serving some petty lord, but so that you may continue to live
the kind of life I have tried to provide for you. That won't happen if
you're viewed as some misfit with no respect for the position of your
mother or off fighting in some land war over cattle and crops!" Juldain moved to a large chest of drawers and began rummaging
through jewelry boxes.
"You will not continue your training,
of any kind! You are not to leave the city and if you force the issue,
you will not leave the castle."
"Mother!" Abiel whined.
Juldain turned to face Abiel again, her light blue silken robes twisting elegantly as they swept over the stone floor.
"You will not disobey me! Now bathe and dress yourself in proper attire. We are receiving guests for dinner."
Abiel conceded. She knew well enough when to stop. "As you wish." Abiel sighed and rolled her eyes. Before she
could leave, a knock came at the door to the chambers.
"Enter," Juldain commanded. The door opened, the servant Coronay stepped
into the room, holding the door open and staring almost longingly
behind her. Several men entered- men Abiel had known and hardly seen in
the years since their first meeting at the Green Shepherd- Zykon the
monk, the enchanter Mencius, and the two dread knights Raxus and Toatle.
The men bowed to the women. Before Coronay left, Abiel made
sure to give the slightest of rude hand gestures at the girl. Raxus hid
his smile.
Abiel waited for her mother's dismissal and bowed
to the men, her heart alight. If they were here, then surely Shiftie
must be and she would be saved from this dreary nonsense of courtly
manners and the talk of her supposed affairs with married men. Abiel
pulled the door closed behind her, but overheard something that caused
some confusion and curiosity.
"You were not to see me until later..." Juldain had said.
It was nearing sunset, meaning dinner would be served shortly. If these
weren't her expected guests, then what were they doing in the castle and how did they know her mother?
The dinner guests were several elven and dwarven dignitaries from the
northern Lorelands. Abiel did not speak, nor was she spoken to. She
ignored the conversation, smiled when it appeared her mother was
speaking of her, and used the meal to dream of leaving Coste Volte with
Shiftie. She wanted badly to spill a tray of drinks or a platter of food
when Coronay and several other servants came into the hall. She could
see them off in the corners of the hallway to the kitchen whispering and
snickering. The dinner dragged on for several courses.
"Mother, may I be excused?" Abiel asked before the bread pudding was served. She saw Juldain's cheeks tighten.
"You may," Juldain smiled the false smile Abiel knew so well.
"Good evening to you, my lords. It was a pleasure." Abiel curtsied,
holding out the folds of her dark green dress and walked purposefully
from the dining hall before sprinting down the corridors to her room to
change and meet with several guards at their posts to work on her shield
and sword techniques.
Dinner had gone far longer
than Juldain had expected. As much as she'd wanted Abiel to remain at
dinner to keep an eye on her daughter, there was a considerable amount
of things needing to be discussed with her dinner guests as well as the
four Serpeant Sect members who'd made their presence known to Abiel,
much to Juldain's dismay. War was coming, the newly named Gurvir armies
had been spied preparing for invasion. Juldain sent Coronay to fetch
Raxus and the others, then excused herself to go and check on Abiel. The
news was not good, Juldain needed to start preparing immediately for
what was to come and to help her daughter as much as possible.
Abiel was nearly changed when there was a knock on the door.
"Just a moment please!" Abiel shouted, hurriedly peeling off the dark
leather pants she'd just pulled on and threw a night gown over her
simple cotton jerkin. Another knock.
"I'm coming!" Abiel yelled and hurried to the door and opened it. It was Druscilla.
"Hello!" Abiel whispered excitedly and hugged the brunette servant.
"Your mother wishes to speak to you in her chamber," Druscilla whispered.
"Why?" Abiel pouted. Druscilla shrugged and they left the chamber.
"She didn't say, but I wanted to tell you I won't be able to meet with
you and the captain tomorrow. We've been told to begin making breads and
the hunters are being sent to bring in all the deer."
"But
it's a month out of season. What ever is going on?" Abiel wondered as
they walked down the torch-lit hallways. They arrived at Juldain's room,
Druscilla continued on, hurrying back to the kitchen.
Abiel
knocked on the door and entered her mother's large chamber. Juldain was
sitting at the foot of the bed holding something in her hand that Abiel
could not make out in the dim lit room.
"Mother, you wished to see me?" Abiel said.
"Yes." Juldain looked up at her daughter with an expression Abiel did
not recognize. "Where are your shoes?" Juldain scolded, looking down at
Abiel's bare feet. "Never mind that now, I have something to give you. I
couldn't find it earlier, and though I am hard-pressed to give you more
than a swat to the rear for this nonsense over Captain Hale and your
training,
I have found it and it is important that you should have it." Juldain
slid down from the high mattress until her slippered-feet touched the
floor and then moved to Abiel with purposeful strides, holding what
ever it was tightly in her hand.
"Mother, is everything all right?" Abiel asked.
"Yes, I should think so." Juldain said and tried to smile. "This,"
Juldain held her hand with the object out before Abiel, "was given to
your grandfather for his service against the Hordes during the last war.
No one is terribly sure of its origin, only that it was made by
the dwarves from a rare crystal they harvest from within their
mountains."
Abiel took it from her mother. In the dim light,
it was hard to get a good look at it, but it appeared to be a necklace
with the ugliest looking clear stones she'd ever seen.
"It looks..." Abiel tried to find a word that wouldn't be seeming ungrateful for the gift.
"Awful, yes, I know. One of the reasons it is valuable. Should someone
seek to rob you, they would not think to take it, nor could they. Most
have never seen the ore, so they would never know the worth. They are
very hard, and with the right dress, it may well suit you. The clasps
are made from mithril, but fortunately they are too small to melt down
and become hidden by the stones once locked in place."
"I will be happy to wear it, though I'd prefer to
wear it around my wrist, if it is all the same to you." Abiel held the
strand of stones at its full length, feeling over the carved cubes.
"What is the stone called?" Abiel asked.
"I would not know, to be honest." Juldain took the necklace from her
daughter and began to wrap it around Abiel's left wrist until the ends
met and were clasped.
"I shall wear it proudly," Abiel said
holding her arm up to admire the gaudy clear stones that barely gleamed
dull in the firelight.
"Of that, I have no doubt, my
daughter. Now off to bed with you. I still have guests to attend to."
Juldain said. Abiel turned to leave and stopped without turning to look
at her mother.
"I am sorry for the nonsense over Captain Hale. I promise that nothing sordid is happening there."
"I believe you. The nonsense lies with the girls who merely want men
for themselves. These things happen, it is common place at any court and
I should have simply asked you if it were true." Juldain exhaled
deeply.
Abiel went to leave the chamber.
"Wait,"
Juldain sounded out of sorts. She removed the large, jeweled pin that was
holding her hair and ran her hand through the ends and stared for a
long moment at the post of the bed before using it for support.
"Mother? Is everything all right?"
Juldain turned her head, a weak smile formed but her face was filled with worry.
"I had not expected this to happen so soon," Juldain said.
Abiel went to her mother.
"Expected what?" Abiel was concerned and it was starting to become a
presence. Juldain stood straight and looked to her daughter.
"Everything will be fine, I think. Once you've gone from this place."
"What?! Mother what in the name of the Gods of Hell are you talking
about?!" Abiel's presence of feelings was growing, startling Juldain all
the more.
"Please, calm yourself." Juldain said soothingly.
Abiel took several deep breaths and tried to settle down. It was not
often that this loss of control and projection of feelings happened, but
the sudden suggestion that she was leaving was far more important at
the time than noting her mother's knowledge and acceptance of this odd
ability.
"In a months' time, the Hordes, now called Gurvir,
under the flag of their new leader known as Gurivan, will be seeking to
invade our shores and then all of the Lorelands, I suspect."
Abiel's mouth opened wide in shock.
"I must begin making the preparations the best I can, see that our
people have everything they need and see them to a safer place until the
Lore armies can fend them off. In a few days, you are to leave with the
men you saw earlier tonight. They will take you to the dwarves, where
you shall remain safe until such time as we can return home." There was
a lie within Juldain's words, but it was hard to know which as Abiel
attempted to take this all in. The one bright thing in all of this is
that she would be with Shiftie. Who else would there be to see her
safely from harm?
"You must not let on what I have told you.
It is very important that we do not start a panic or do anything to
alert any would-be spies of this Gurivan. They must not suspect that we
know of their plans. As such, you are to go about your normal business
and do as you always do."
Abiel wondered if that meant continuing to train.
"I will not tell anyone, I promise." Abiel took her mother's hand. "I
always wondered if we would see the Hordes, the Gurvir I mean. I
wondered if they would remain terrible legends or if we would be visited
someday by their evil."
"With any luck, you will never have
to see them at all, my daughter." Juldain smiled the best she could. "It
is getting late. Off to bed with you." Juldain touched the tip of her
finger to the tip of Abiel's nose and smiled again.
"Good
night, mother." Abiel had no intention of going to bed. She would do as
she always did, just as her mother had instructed. Abiel stood on her
toes, kissed her mother on the cheek.
"And do not fear, everything will be fine." Juldain said.
Abiel
nodded and bowed, a hopeful smile for her mother then left to head
back to her room. She needed to get out of the castle before it was too
late.

There were no lanterns at the back of the Green Shepherd, but the door
to the kitchen was open. Abiel had been a frequent visitor to the
place, having become close over the span of years with its' owner
Harpalus. A human appearing to be in his forties (he'd assured her that
he was much older many times), he reminded Abiel of a seaman. He was
grizzled and hardened, quick to laugh but patient and stern with unruly
customers. Harpalus was a man of enterprise, Abiel had realized, and
much more than the simple innkeeper, though he seldom shared his other
business dealings. When Harp' told her of his adventures, he'd always
made them seem as if he'd been an observer as opposed to a participant,
which inflamed her curiosity. All of her teachers were friends of
Harpalus, whether by time or word of mouth and respected the inn keep
immensely. Members of the Nine always came to Harp for food and
shelter when they came to Coste Volte as did her mother's soldiers.
Harp had taught Abiel little tricks of the trade with small
arms like daggers and even simple eating utensils and even shared his
recipes. "You never know where you will find yourself or whom you may be
surrounded by in the world. It is always best to smile while you slip
the dagger into their gut." he'd said.
"Who goes there? Kitchen's closed." a gruff voice cut through the quiet night as Abiel stepped into the small hallway.
"I do," Abiel smiled to herself, rounding the corner into Harp's small room and office.
"Young Abiel, what brings you so late this evening?" Harpalus stood
from his dark wooden chair, a glass oil lamp burning brightly on his
cluttered table, his silver-tinged brown hair pulled to a tail high atop
his head, reminding her of Shiftie.
Abiel bowed and took his arm in greeting as he'd taught her.
"I came with some news, sir. News that I think you will find important."
"Do tell, do tell. Come, sit here." Harpalus gave Abiel his chair while he packed a long wooden pipe and lit it.
"My mother has told me this evening that the Horde..." she tried to
remember the name they were using now... "The Gurvir... they seek to
invade Coste Volte in a month's time."
"Your mother told you
this?" Harpalus raised an eyebrow and caught sight of the stones wrapped
around Abiel's wrist, then averted his gaze.
"Yes. She also
told me that I'll be leaving. Raxus and Mencius came to see
her tonight. I don't think she would send me away with strangers, but she will need them to fight...?" Abiel
wondered at that now, that her mother would send her off. Shiftie must be with them, so that would make more sense and led
Abiel to her first question for Harp. "Is he here? Did he
travel with them to fetch me?"
"If the high elf is here, tat would be news to me." He saw the disappointment in her eyes.
"Then it looks as though it will be Mencius, Raxus, Toatle and Zykon at
the very least to take me to the dwarves. Why the dwarves, sir? Why not
the elves of the Vale? Surely the Gurvir could never hope to invade
there?"
Harpalus wondered how much he should tell her. He had
also received the very same news from her escorts. There was much that
Juldain did not tell her daughter, Harp was unsure how wise it would
be to tell Abiel more.
"At this time, I do not believe they
have the ability to take over the Vale. The magics there are old, given
by the earth it grows from, the elven armies as good as good gets. At
the Forge, you would be better protected." ...but far more likely to be
assassinated, he thought to himself.
The elves as well as the
Vale itself, would be more likely to sense a traitor, the dwarves held open cities within their mountainous fortresses. Abiel looked absently
over the parchment and scrolls on Harp's table. Harp used the
opportunity to get a better look at the stones wrapped about her wrist.
"So, the Lore armies are not coming here to face them?" Abiel turned her
attention back to Harp and caught him eyeing the necklace. "My
mother gave me this tonight, it came from my grandfather, a token for
his service after the last invasion by the Hor- Gurvir."
The inn keep knew that was not the truth of the necklace, but said nothing.
"Do you know what the stones are called?" she asked. Harpalus stepped toward her, holding his had out.
"May I see it?"
Abiel searched it over for the clasp, but found it hard to find as
Juldain had said it would be and instead stood and held her arm out for
him. He took her forearm and hand gently into his rough hands and
turned her toward the lamp to see the stones better. Harpalus's
suspicions were correct- he knew what he was looking at.
"Qarget, is the old dwarven name, I believe. It is very precious to
them, precious to those who know what it is. Most precious gems and
stones can be magically enhanced to hold powers of one form another, the
magic is like a shield upon the gems. Qarget is different in that the
magic is held within."
"Magic?" Abiel was surprised.
"It is impossible to know what kind lays within these, if any remains,"
another lie, Harpalus sighed to himself, but felt it necessary. The
thing was radiating magic, though he could not tell what kind or its
purpose. "The stone has no purpose in and of itself. As it is rare and
the dwarves keep it for themselves, and would be infinitely expensive to
buy in any case, there are not many who would know what it was if they
saw it. It's cheap appearance is also another reason the
dwarves do not share it and the rest of the world largely has no use for
it. Because Qarget is naturally imbued, the magic cannot be changed.
When the magic runs out, the stones are useless."
He hated
lying to the girl, but she was still young and in many ways naive and at
this point, there was no sense in telling her the full truth, though he
had questions regarding just how Juldain had managed to obtain this
necklace, worth her kingdom one thousand times over to the dwarves. The
truth was, the stones would never lose their power and the magics
contained within them would continue to grow in power now that they were
being worn by someone worthy, and only the smith who'd honed to stones
would know precisely what power resided within them. How had Juldain
known that Abiel could wear them? What did she know and for how long?
Was it only a guess? Years of knowing Abiel had not answered the
questions stirred upon meeting her, but had only added more to the
list.
Abiel was slightly dismayed by the information Harp'
was sharing, though at least now she had a name for them. For a gift, it
seemed hardly worth much as a one at all beyond the sentiment.
She reminded herself that it was a family heirloom and its importance
remained for her. Abiel's fascination with the odd stones shielded her
from the scrutiny of Harpalus.
"Wear it proudly, though. It
is indeed a special gift." Harpalus smiled after reading her expression,
his scowl of thought changed to a broad grin.
"I will, sir." Abiel smiled at her new bracelet and sat back down in the chair.
"Forgive me, but you do not seem ill at ease with the news of the
impending war." Harpalus was watching her again, gauging her.
"Neither do you, sir." Abiel smiled. In that moment, Harpalus saw a
vision of the woman she was close to becoming and he smiled.
"War seems to be part of this world. I would be sad about it, but in
times of grief and struggle, there are friends to be found and life
regains value."
"Will you be leaving then, when my mother calls for the evacuation?"
"It is possible, though I wouldn't mind having another go at the
bastards. We shall see, a month is still time enough to prepare and make
decisions. If I leave, I will still be afforded the chance to fight
regardless of when the time comes." Harpalus had his own plans and
preparations to make.
Abiel thought this over and was
determined to remember it. Though he may not have intended it to be
advice, it was smart and Abiel appreciated it for its potential use in
her life. She looked about his small room, taking in his odd treasures
and keepsakes, his poorly hidden stash of weapons at the side of his
bed. She looked at an unfurled map strewn across the table, pinned down
by random things, including a half-finished mug of ale. It was a map of
the central Lorelands, crudely done but functional and accurate by her
estimates.
"I love this city, sir. I hate to leave it under
these circumstances." Abiel sighed, tracing with her finger down the
line of triangles meant to signify the Eldarian mountains that split
Coste Volte from the allied kingdoms and the coast line that was carved
out by the Vendrassi Ocean. She looked at the simple drawing that stood
for her mother's city, the last city of the Lorelands, the first that
would be invaded.
Harpalus cut into her saddening mood with a
cough. "Since tonight seems to be a night of gifts, I shall too offer
you something to keep with you. Have you a boot dagger?"
"I do, sir." She patted the knife buckled to her calf under her leather pant leg.
"Let me see it, please." Harpalus re-lit his pipe.
Abiel removed the simple knife and sheath that a friend had given to her and handed it to him.
"This will do in a pinch, but perhaps I have something better."
Harpalus began to rummage through his room, then went to a small chest
at the foot of the bed, searching until he found what he'd sought. He
handed Abiel a sheathed knife, it was larger than the one she'd been
wearing. She pulled it out, the blade was as long as her hand from
fingertip to wrist, the forged hybrid metal gleamed, the blade was
still sharp, though there was no telling how long it had been sitting in
the chest. The hilt was tidy, wrapped in black worked leather.
"'Tis beautiful. I do not think I should take it, sir." Abiel put it back into the sheath.
"Do not insult an old friend by returning things freely given, my
dear." Harpalus stuffed his free hand under his arm and chewed irritably
on the end of his pipe.
"It is far too fine a thing to give me." Abiel implored, embarrassed.
"There is no such gift too fine for my girl." Harpalus huffed. There
was no arguing with him at this point, she'd learned all too well and
his attempt to guilt her into taking it had succeeded. "Put it on then,
don't keep me waiting." Harpalus cracked a smile and set Abiel's old
dagger into the chest and closed it. "A fair trade."
Abiel buckled the sheath to her calf and thanked Harpalus.
"'Tis nothing but a trade between friends. Use it well and always remember where it came from." Harpalus winked.
"I feel terrible for doing this, but I must leave you now before it
gets any later. I was supposed to be at post tonight for more shield
training."
"Are you sure that's wise, my dear?" Harpalus asked.
"My mother instructed me to do as I always do." Abiel gave a
mischievous grin. "I must not disobey!" Abiel winked at him and hopped
up from the chair. "Thank you for seeing me and for my gift, sir. A
truer friend I could not hope to have." Abiel hugged Harpalus warmly.
"Be on your way then, girl. I will see you soon." Harpalus tried not to
blush as Abiel pulled the hood of her dark cloak over her
head and disappeared into the night.
CHAPTER IV
Raxus was first through the door of the Green Shepherd, a nod for
Harpalus, then surveyed the room for a private table. The others shoved
in behind him, Raxus grunted in irritation and moved in further.
Harpalus approached them, waving slightly for them to follow and led led
them upstairs to an unoccupied room. Raxus was last through this time,
shutting the door behind him. An eerie glow from the window illuminated
him slightly, giving his blue skin a hint of green and black. The monk
Zykon took up a position beside the window while Harpalus, Mencius and
Toatle took seats around the room. Harpalus muttered a small spell as
Mencius did the same to ward against eavesdropping.
"As grave
and more grave than you know," Harpalus slouched in his seat and wiped
the building perspiration from his forehead.
"She has asked
us to take the youngling Abiel two days hence." Mencius appeared the
most calm in the room, so fluid and lovely compared to his tense
companions.
"Black magic!" Harpalus thundered and leaned as
far back as the chair would allow. "Our Abi' has been to visit this
evening."
"Is she all right?" Zykon asked, his posture stiffened.
"Too much so, if you catch my meaning. Too much like her mother in some
ways, but I suppose it will be more than a help in the days to come or I
might doubt the success of your mission. All of
you are escorting her then?" Harpalus stroked his bearded chin.
"Yes. Shiftie would have come but Pouty has sent him elsewhere, so it
will be the four of us." Mencius smiled briefly at Toatle, who sat
irritated and brooding in his seat.
"By all accounts, the
first waves should arrive in a month's time, possibly three weeks at the
least." Harpalus sat forward and picked at a splinter in the table.
"The evacuation will begin shortly after we leave with the youngling,
before dawn while it is darkest. I am sure word will spread, many will
try to leave before then. The question remains- how many will want to
stay and fight and how many will want to flee?" Mencius locked his
slender fingers and rested them in his lap.
"It's their Gods given right to defend their homes," Raxus snapped.
"And Juldain's responsibility to see to their safety should they choose
to leave, as is also their right, my friend." Mencius's constant calm
was ever the frustration for Toatle and Raxus. Such was typically the
difference between the two elven races.
"She ought to be more
concerned with what is coming for HER. What good will it do these
people should Juldain die? IF Abiel survives, it's bound to reach the
wrong ears, as such news always manages to. The blood bounty will hold
against Abiel just as it did against her grandfather and as it stands
against Juldain. It will likely increase ten-fold once they realize
Juldain was a step ahead of them." Raxus leaned heavily against the
wall.
A silence beyond the two enchanters magics encroached upon them that they knew too well.
"Damnation!" Harpalus spat. "TO ARMS!!! TO ARMS! TO ARMS!" he roared,
but it was not for those in the room as they filed out weapons drawn.
His voice echoed from the building and was heard three streets down. A
wave of shouts and orders and screams erupted throughout the sleeping
sea port of Coste Volte. As
a fire spreading over dry brush, the panic of war set in. Children and
the infirm were being shuffled to secret places as soldiers and
mercenaries alike took to the streets as the army of goblin, orc,
minotaur and blood elves began to lay siege and infiltrate the city.
Battles broke out intermittently- for the time being, the city's
architecture and lay out were doing what it had been meant to do- slow
the flow of bodies causing a back up at the gates, allowing its soldiers
time to organize, its people to flee and hide. Toatle and Raxus were
first on their horses outside the inn.
"We must reach the castle before the bastards over run it!" Zykon barked as he mounted his horse.
"Castle?" Harpalus asked. "Oh Hells and damnation to us all! The girl
isn't in the castle! She's out at one of the soldier's posts!" Harpalus
was desperate now.
"What?!" was all Raxus could cough out.
"Do as she always does..." were the only words Harpalus got out.
Zykon swore profusely as were they all, but for Toatle who was ready to
meet the hordes head on and forget the girl. They stood frozen in anger
and frustration- what were they to do? There were nearly thirty guard
posts, the invasion was beginning which meant most if not all of the
city would be surrounded until it was over taken.
"Get inside!" Mencius shouted. The sounds of battle were drawing near
to them, fires blazing just a few streets over. One by one, they filed
into the tavern "Harpalus, I need a fire. The biggest you can conjure on
the outside of the building. You three secure the doors and stairs.
Quickly please!" Mencius went behind the bar, snatching two clay soup
bowls and a pitcher of fresh water. "I don't suppose you have a strand
of hair of Abiel's do you?" the high elf almost laughed.
"I've got her boot dagger, " Harpalus replied.
"It's metal, but it might do. I only hope that I can do this." Mencius
sighed gratefully and sat at the table nearest the fire and filled a
bowl with water. He took a vial from within the chest of his robes and
uncorked it. Carefully, he poured black ink in the pattern of a
five-pointed star, then another over it, slightly off kilter so that
there were ten points in all. Harpalus bounded into the dining area with
Abiel's boot-dagger still sheathed and handed it to Mencius.
Mencius took a deep breath and allowed it to pour out of him as his
body settled and relaxed beyond normal measure. Scrying for a soul was
an old magic, not nearly as easy as scrying for someone who was prepared
to receive a communication. Mencius could not recall the last time he'd
done this, and had barely succeeded in the attempt. But now was the
time for confidence, despite the dire circumstances. His insight reached
out from his mind and body. Any other enchanter scrying would see
Mencius' soul as a white vapor, long and stretching thinner as it
increased its distance from his elven body. His mouth repeated her name
silently in order to keep his attention fixed on the being he sought.
The ragged souls of the orc began to appear, orange and brown like hot
ash in a fire pit as they advanced through the city. Frightened souls of
humans glowed green and flickered in their fear- and then a fading and
consuming blackness. He could not linger, he caught himself as he
hovered above. It was tempting to stay and watch as well as foolish.
Mencius's conscious mind recognized the evil below him. No one found
would live. This first assault was to be a warning to all of the things
to come. The cruel races would have their long-awaited revenge and they
would destroy all in their path.
His body took another breath, something his aura could not do and
Mencius refocused on her name. As in a dream, he tried to speak the name
through the impossible silence. He concentrated on her hair, long
flowing brown hair, the sparkling light brown eyes that had beamed such a
wondrous smile at him that very afternoon. The white aura pushed on,
floating over the city toward the the guard posts along the city walls.
He felt a tug directing him, turning him toward the north. He could
make out the shimmer of the forests edge just beyond the wall. Mencius
was far from his body, his aura thin and beginning to lighten. The
yearning to return to his skin caused Mencius's still body to tremble,
his concentration faltered. He begged for the Gods to hive him another
moment, a sign, anything to show him where Abiel was, for confirmation
that she was at least alive. With a painful heave, his aura flew back to
its vessel and Mencius was whole again. Like a flash, a vivid feeling
of terror, of the hordes of orc, goblin and blood elves assailed his
senses. Human bodies in armor- Juldain's crest, strewn about. And long
brown hair- Abiel's hair- a faint heartbeat, then silence. The inn felt
cramped now, his head ached.
"Tell me you've found her. I can't be holding this illusion much
longer," Harpalus tried not to be impatient. He understood what his
elven counterpart had done to his own body and the risk he took in doing
so.
"We will find her in a northern guard post near the tree line. That is
the closest I could come to identifying her location," Mencius, in an
unelven-like fashion, lifted the jug of water to his lips and drank from
it until it was empty.
Harpalus sighed. "It's better than wasting time looking in all of the wrong places. Can we confirm she is alive?"
"As near as I can tell. In the moment I saw her, she was alive if but barely."
"We should split up." Raxus left his post at the back door. "There are
ten posts along the northern castle walls, the four of us should be able
to see to them quickly enough. I say we do what we can, meet in
Wrottsley in 2 days. By sundown, whom ever has arrived will head
straight for the Forge."
Toatle smiled to himself. Only glory could come from this task. Surely
he would find the girl first, kill his giant's share of Horde and see
little Abiel safely to the dwarves. He'd succeeded at tougher tasks,
bested many foes. This would be his time to show his worth.
"I agree," he said, watching out the window, dreaming of the spoils of victory.
Harpalus nodded solemnly and began to mutter a spell. The fire from the
hearth began to grow and creep as water from a tipped pitcher as the
false flames outside began to wane.
"Spread out, begin at the eastern gate, move north so that if we find
her, we should be able to seek cover from the forest. They'll be all too
concerned with the taking of the city to patrol and they know the
armies coming to meet them are still weeks away. They'll need to prepare
for that before they can advance." Raxus adjusted his gear, unloading
the saddle and gear from his horse.
Toatle was out the door into the night before anyone could object. Zykon was next to leave and then Mencius and Raxus.
"To the next life," Harp raised his hand as though it held a mug of
ale, toasting his beloved inn and escaped to the shadows and to what
fate might have in store.
CHAPTER V
Utter chaos awaited the small band as they headed away from the heart
of the city toward the posts. The invading army was like a black river
flowing through. The soldiers of Coste Volte were putting up valiant
attempts to hold back the tides of blood thirsty Gurvir. It was not hard
to hide within the rushes of battle and madness, within the smoke of
fires as buildings and homes burned. Once Raxus was free of the last
district, he would have no cover toward the guard post. He could make it
out through the smoke, from the shadows of the one of the mills giving
him cover. By the looks of things, the invaders had already been here
and moved on. Body upon body strewn about the lush grass, the rancid
smell of orc blood poisoning the earth as it soaked in, the coppery
smell of human blood over powered like its residents. Raxus drew a lean
sword quietly from the sheath at his back and crept forward, crossing
his steps. He took a blood elven helm from the ground and put it on,
approaching the post now with what appeared to be ill intent.

What he found inside looked to be a slaughterhouse. Bodies piled and split open, Raxus kicked them over out of
irritation. An orc warrior appeared to be breathing, off came his head
with a curse from the dark elf. He wiped the sword clean on the headless
body and continued to search. About to move on, he
saw a small finger under the legs of two Coste Volte guards. Hurriedly shoving and dragging aside bodies until he found what he'd been searching for-
the girl, covered in blood a short sword in her hand
that had clearly been run through several orc bodies, possibly human
ones... What had happened here? There was no time to investigate. Raxus
had her, she was alive and that was most important for the moment. The
pressing task was to get her to the tree line where the forest would
lend cover for their escape. Raxus pulled Abiel over his shoulder,
heading up the narrow ladder to the roof of the post. More dead bodies,
more stench of orc blood. Carefully, he looked down the wall to the
ground below. All was still clear. The Gurvir were in the city now,
unconcerned with defending the wall.
"My apologies," he said
quietly to Abiel before dropping her unceremoniously to the brush below.
Deftly, Raxus jumped down to the cushioning shrubs beside Abiel's body,
put her back over his shoulder and walked quickly toward the forest's
edge. He let out a sigh of relief when he felt the shelter of the trees
cut out the moon light and orange glow from the burning city. Utter
darkness was of no concern for the dark elf. The expanse of the trees
would make it difficult to track him in the night.
"Whatcha
got there for supper?" a hissing voice cut through Raxus's relief and
his heart swelled with irritation. He dumped the girl's body to the
ground and drew his sword but holding it loosely. Still in the blood-elven helm,
his appearance would be cloaked.
"It's warm and it's mine," Raxus growled with contempt.
Eight bodies moved out from the shadows- three orc and five goblin.
"Damned blood elves. Always thinkin' your better than the rest of us!. Velvety skin eh? More like rat skin me thinks!" an orc barked.
"It might be that you vultures
taint everything you touch. If we wanted to eat rot, we'd be feeding off your lot, cunt!" Raxus spun his sword with a relaxed turn of the
wrist, eyeing the orc warrior before him with death on his mind.
The
lack of trained fighting skill within the hordes ranks was made up for
with the strength of orcs and the speed of the goblin. En mass, a swarm
of them could best many men and elves and made for a tough fight
for even the skilled warriors throughout the Lore-protected lands. But a
weapon of any make in the hands of Raxus was an excellent evening of
the odds. Raxus was a dread knight, an artist skilled with any weapon,
be it staff or blade and the one thing he loved more than anything was battle.
Giving no warning, Raxus engaged the
eight, drawing a second sword as he parried with the first for good
measure, whispering spells of dark magic and protection. One goblin, two
and then three fell to the ground, split open and dead. A sharp jab to
the ribs caused Raxus to curse the orc who was now bringing his crude
sword down toward Raxus's neck to behead him. The sword stopped mid-arc
as a blade tore through the orcs chest, stopping inches from
Raxus's chest. The fighting paused, all combatants frozen in wonder as
the sword blade disappeared from the orc's dead body. Behind where the
orc had stood was Abiel holding a goblin sword, in a fighting stance Raxus
immediately recognized. Raxus's eyes widened within the helm.
"Little one, little one. Let's make this quick and painless for you. I
promise I won't share you, you've left me no choice. I must have you for
my meal," the last goblin promised in an eerily soothing manner.
"Abiel, NO!" Raxus commanded as she turned to face the goblin, sword ready.
"Abiel?" one of the remaining orc questioned. "It's the child!"
It made not one difference to Abiel, who was now advancing on the last
goblin as coolly as any warrior or knight Raxus had seen. The orc began to charge at her from behind, Raxus stepped
between them to fight them back. The goblin was parrying Abiel's
advancing blows until she dropped to a knee then sprang up, skewering
the goblin from gut to shoulder. The goblin fell in a heap, and she
picked up another sword and turned toward the skirmish behind her. As
she did so, Raxus stepped aside as an orc's blade arced upward. It
caught abiel mid chest, slicing up her neck to her chin, blood spraying
from her body. Raxus beheaded the orc and then hacked down the other.
Unphased by the mortal wound, Abiel charged at Raxus who was backing up
now, shouting at her to stop. He peeled off the helm, his movement
blocked by a tree.
"Abiel! Stop! It's me, it's Raxus! Abiel!"
She held the crude sword tightly at her shoulder, then raised it above
her head with both hands. As she neared, Raxus was astounded by her
eyes- gleaming, swirling mists like tendrils. A presence of anger
and loathing wheeled about him. If Abiel had once called him 'friend',
she did not know him now and Raxus was going to die. Raxus dropped to
his knees before her.
"Abiel! Remember! Look at ME! For Gods
sakes remember me! Shiftie! Your mother!" he pleaded arms stretched
toward her. "You must remember! Abiel, we must leave!" the
words flowed as fast as he could form them.
She was faltering
but still advancing. Abiel swung the sword at him. His reflexes saved
him from a fatal blow as he blocked her sword with one of his own. She
was close now, pressing down with her weapon with more strength than was
possible. It was taking most of Raxus's strength
to defend against it. His tone changed as he was determined that both
should live.
"Look at me, Abi'. For Gods
sakes you KNOW me." he spoke so softly and with care. "You know me,
youngling."
Her assault was easing, the smoke from her eyes fading. Abiel's arms were relaxing now, the sword lowered but remained fully in her grasp.
"Abi'," Raxus smiled slightly , hesitating but finally pressed the sword into the blood-soaked earth on beside him.
"I know you," she repeated and collapsed to the ground.
It would be a long run to Wrottsley carrying the girl, it'd be a
miracle if she survived the wound she'd been dealt. But she was still
breathing and that would have to suffice until Raxus could find a safe
enough place to set her down and inspect it. All weapons sheathed, Raxus
kicked the stolen blood elven helm into the brush and slung Abiel over
his shoulder and began to run. The ground passed swiftly beneath his
deft feet, he attempted to use animals paths and stay away from open
areas where he could easily be tracked. There was no consideration for
his friends. Whether they lived or died, the girl was in his custody and
he would have to see her to the dwarven fortress himself. It would be a
matter of days now when the entire southern area of the Lorelands would
be over run. It was the most vulnerable. An hour and then two, then a
third passed. Raxus could smell her blood, feel it flowing from her into
his own clothes. She needed tending, it could not wait any longer and
his legs were beginning to tire, his lungs burning more with every
breath. He found a small glade slightly lit by the moonlight. It might
be enough he thought and set her down, peeling off her blood-soaked
clothes.
"Fuck," he spat disheartened.
Pouring the last of his water skin over her chin and
chest, Raxus couldn't remember the last time he'd seen a wound so
terrible. Jagged and curled, the skin looked as though she'd been ripped
open. She'd lost so much blood. Raxus pulled needle and thread from a small pouch at his
waist. This was not the first time he'd had to stitch someone up on the
go, he'd stitched himself so many times over the years he wondered if he
shouldn't change professions to cleric. The sheer size of the wound-
from chin nearly to navel had Raxus second guessing if he had enough
thread. Again the thought that she should not still be alive pressed at
him, Raxus did his best to push it away. Time was not on their side. He
regretted that he was having to be so hasty. She did not stir in her
sleep as he stitched in the darkness. Raxus tried to cast the few
healing spells he knew but his training was in dark magic in battle. Raxus
pulled off his own blood-soaked cloak and vest and shirt, dressing her in
his shirt and re-dressed himself in the vest and cloak. Over his
shoulder she went again, and off into the darkness of morning Raxus ran.
Nearing dawn, they reached the watchtower of Wrottsley. It was not lit.
A tall tower of wood and stone, it reached high above the canopy of
trees. Raxus could smell orc and goblin alike- they were too near for
his liking, most likely hiding near to the tower waiting to ambush any
who might venture too near or to light the beacon. How could they be so far north? he wondered.
A hollowed tree
trunk would have to suffice as a hiding place for the girl while he
scouted. Raxus began whispering incantations for spells, shrouding him in the new morning light as he
walked silently, a long jagged bladed dagger in his hand at the ready. The
closer he came to the tower, the stronger the smell became- death. There were at least four- the wooden steel-hinged door lay on the
ground outside, Raxus stepped around it. The smell of human blood and
decay- four Wrottsley soldiers were in a heap against the stone wall.
Tentatively, Raxus stepped inside. A goblin soldier was asleep at his
post and paid for it. Raxus slit his throat in a silent sweep. Another
goblin called out in their gurgled language once, then twice, then came
rattling down the stairs. Raxus stood fast against the wall, wrapping
himself in shadow until the goblin came nearer. The dagger went hurling
through the air into the goblins throat. He could not cry for help and
fell in a clattering heap to the floor. The noise was enough to raise
curiosity in the others above. Raxus could hear them clambering from the
roof and the jangling of armor.
Back into the shadows Raxus
stepped as he waited. There were four... no, five voices, orc and goblin
shouting... Raxus drew the two swords at his back, whispering spells of disease and accursed pacts, as they neared. Using the darkness as cover, he slipped
beneath the last deck of stairs, his silvery eyes glowing within the
shadows.
It was an ugly but swift fight for Raxus.
Using the steep wooden stairs to his advantage, the rogues were put to
death. Raxus spit on the pile of corpses with a sneer and turned to head
outside to fetch Abiel. Dawn was upon them, they needed to be on the
move. Raxus approached the tree where he'd left her- she was gone.
Raxus stomped the ground and swore before following her tracks into the
tree line. There was someone near, he could smell them now and followed
the scent only to regret it. A knife was at his throat, and he knew it
was not Abiel.
"I'm sure
the Lorelands will grieve your loss for the short time it has left in
power, dread knight." the blood elf hissed. Raxus felt the cold steel
start to pierce his skin and then abruptly withdraw. The rogue collapsed
to the ground, Raxus whirled to find the fresh corpse with an arrow
through its throat. Abiel stepped from the brush-line some fifty feet
away, filthy and blood-covered, her eyes tired. She lowered the bow she'd stolen.
"Two others that waited for you after you went into the tower. They're dead now, sir."
"That's twice," was all Raxus could say and grabbed the rogue's body by the foot and began to drag him to the tower.
It took some time for the two of them to carry the bodies of the Gurvir
soldiers up to the top, but Raxus was more than satisfied to light
their carcasses on fire. The Wrottsley soldiers he left as they were.
There was no time to dig graves and he would not besmirch their honor
and burn them with the Gurvir. He waited to see that the Berigalian
beacon was lit to the northeast... a soft glow of orange
and gold began to reach higher and higher into the morning sky. He
hoped throughout the lands that armies were preparing to meet their
foes. It was time again for the world to be tested. Raxus prayed it was ready. Abiel waited quietly for him and made no complaint when
he told her to run. And run they did through the woods and thickets to Wrottsley.
The
village was a good size, simple mapping with graded
dirt streets lined with potted flowers and wooded walkways. It sat upon a plateau, the buildings large, two and three
story structures tan or cream plaster, lined with dark painted beams
borrowed from the forest. Wrottsley was in a quiet chaos, people,
children and soldiers running from place to place, preparing to leave.
As in wars past, the city was prepared to evacuate. There weren't enough
soldiers to defend it, their soldiers
would see to their safety and only then would they join with the Lore
armies to fight.
Suspicious glances could be felt as the dread
knight and human child rushed down the main road to a small inn with a
heavy lantern hanging over the door, iron and red glass in the same mold
as the lanterns over the Green Shepard. Abiel felt her throat swell as
she choked back tears. Raxus rushed into the inn, dragging Abiel behind
him.
"I have naught but food and water to offer, all my stores are depleted," a woman's voice called from the floor above them.
"I am but a simple sheepherder, here for your sheep, if you should have
any," Raxus called back. Abiel looked at him quizzically.
"Sheep, you say?" the woman replied. Floorboards creaked as the
woman crossed the wooden floor that was the ceiling above the dread
knight and his charge. Abiel watched the stairs as the woman made her
way down, a delicate hand sliding along the carved wooden banister. A
human woman, long silken red hair flowed to her waist, a little older
than Abiel's mother, but soft and welcoming. Raxus dragged Abiel to the
bottom of the stairs, took the woman by the hand, kissed it and bowed
deeply. The woman's green eyes sparkled, a knowing half-smile and a
curtsy for Raxus followed. She wore deep purple cotton robes that left
little to the imagination at the bust, her small waist and curved hips
accentuated by a golden rope tied and knotted to the side.
"Ursi," Raxus greeted her, kissing her hand again and then
kissing what appeared to be each side of Ursi's neck instead of her
cheeks. Abiel felt awkward in that moment and wished he'd left her at
the door. "...This is Abi'. Abi', this is a trusted friend, Ursi."
"How do you do, My Lady?" Abiel bowed at the waist.
"A pleasure, I'm sure." Ursi curtsied at Abiel, but looked strangely at Raxus.
"Is there a room for the child to clean up?" Raxus asked.
"Upstairs. The patron who was in it was about to bathe when the crier
gave word that the beacon had been lit, the water should still be warm
enough." Ursi raised an eyebrow. Raxus merely nodded at her silent
question then turned back to Abiel.
"After your done, see
what food we can take with us. The kitchen is through there." Raxus
pointed down a wide hallway over his shoulder.
"I'll see what fresh clothes I can find for her, then we can speak more." Ursi winked at Raxus and followed Abiel upstairs.
The water ran a sickly brown, the fetid smell of
Gurvir blood consumed her. Abiel scrubbed at her
face and arms, her nails encrusted, tried to scrape the dried blood from
the stones wrapped around her wrist- they were discolored now. She looked anywhere she could but at her chest. Ursi had
given her a salve to put over the stitches. Gently, Abiel wiped at the
areas of her chin and neck nearest the healing wound. The scarred flesh
itched, Raxus had said that meant it was healing. It would heal. It had
to heal. A small voice in the back of her mind yearned to see the
damage, but Abi' fought back the thoughts and continued to scrub at her
legs under the water. The water was disgusting. Now she wished only to
be out of it, as if she might become tainted and forever smell of
Gurvir, soaked in their blood.
Panic pounded in her chest. it felt as though
the stitches might open from the force. Where was Shiftie? Why was he not
there? Why was he not the one who'd found her? Taken her and her mother
away... A lump of emotion grew instantly at the thought of her mother,
who must now certainly be dead.
Abiel hurried out of the basin drying
off as quickly as she could, then stopped, holding the towel tightly
about her shoulders took look out the thick glass-paned window. The
sounds of chaos were so much more quiet here then what she could
remember from the night before, which was very little. She'd left
Harpalus at the Green Shepherd, made her way down to the guard post.
She'd done this 500 times in the years since Shiftie had left Coste
Volte. She was speaking to the men, they were showing her techniques
with shields and light swords. She'd been surrounded by her
mother's soldiers when the orc burst through the door. There were
several, there wasn't much room for the soldiers let alone their
assailants. Abiel remembered the soldier, Trenton had been his
name, pulling her behind him and charging ... and then she was in an old
tree trunk near the beacon. The rogue had gotten sloppy. She'd killed
him easily enough, that she knew. A well thrown dagger, the one Harpalus
had given her, lodged in the blood elf's spine. Down he went in a heap
onto the ground. To Abiel's knowledge, the first being she'd ever
killed. She'd taken his bow and arrow and made her second kill to save
Raxus.
And yet through all of the madness, everything she
could recall, every fear of the unknown merely brought her back to one
thought- Shiftie was not with her and it felt wrong. This was not what
she'd dreamed. Amidst all of
the violence, she had always been at his side. Abiel hastened to dry herself and began to sift through the clothes
Ursi had left. Women's shifts- pretty and colorful. No, that
would not do. The world was in the midst of crisis and Abiel refused to
spend what might very well be her final days in a flowery shift and
under-dress. She tore through the room, looking everywhere for what she
sought- an open trunk that had been shoved under the bed filled with a
man's things. These would do for now, she thought as she tossed unwanted
garments over her shoulder onto the floor, pulling an under shirt over
her wet hair and head, an excessively large brown jerkin that tied over
the chest and hung off one shoulder, then pulled on a pair of well-worn
brown leather pants that were far too long and wide in the waist. She
pulled the waist strings as tight as she could, the chords hanging near
to her knees. On went the boots and a dark green hooded cloak from
Ursi's collection that pooled on the floor, it was so long. Abiel rifled
through her things, making sure she had all that was important-
Harp's dagger... Abiel dug through the blood-stained clothes, the
lining of her cloak for any other link to home. But that was all there
was. She buckled the sheathed dagger around her calf under her
overly-long pant legs and looked to her mother's necklace that had
somehow survived the turmoil of the night, bound around her wrist. She
wondered if they would darken in the days to come, if they would darken
with her own blood.
Disgusted by the thought that her gift had been marred forever by Gurvir, Abiel left the room. She heard giggling and other utterances and she realized what she was hearing and
regretted it. It appeared Raxus and Ursi were... sharing a moment, as
Druscilla had so often put it.
Dru'... poor Dru, Abiel thought
as she quietly went down the stairs to the kitchen to find what she
could pack for her and Raxus. As she found acceptable foods that would
last them several days, Abiel's mind drifted home, wondering what had
become of everyone, struggling to believe they'd died but also that they might have lived. Now that Abiel had seen the true
meaning of dire and was being rushed head long into it, she actually
missed the gossiping, over-eager servant girls of her mother's castle.
Abiel missed her mother. She looked to the qarget stones. How could this have happened? Juldain had never done
irrational things, there was always a reason and a plan for her
actions. The sack of food Abiel held would hold no more. She headed
outside to inspect the 'sheep' Raxus had asked for.
There were
no sheep in the barnyard, of course. Only pigs, chickens and horses.
The chickens came to inspect her, but their train of thought was
short-sighted- food was their only concern. The pigs however, moved to
the fence line of their pen and squealed to her, piglets trying to shove
through and understand the fuss. Abiel smiled and said hello to them,
debated whether or not to set them free lest they became slaughtered by
the Gurvir upon their arrival. Abiel entered the open stable, the horses
ears immediately pricked up and they too moved to the front of their
stalls to see her and greet her. There were a dozen, a variety of breeds
and colors.
"Hello," Abiel said moving to each one to pet
their necks, to be nuzzled by their warm soft noses. The horses were
aware that something was amiss within the city, they could sense the
urgency of the people, were alerted by the ever clanging warning bells
still ringing through the city.
"I will need the assistance of
all of you, I think. Two to carry my friend Raxus and I, and probably
the mistress Ursi who cares for you. There is a possibility that several
more of my friends will come here, though I would not ask you to wait
in case the invaders reach here first, or if they've fallen in the city
of my home."
The horses stood and listened, discussed among
themselves who would stay and who would go with her. Two horses that stretched their necks
over the stall gates, the third would carry their caretaker when she was
ready to leave. Abiel let all of the horses out however, in case there
was such a need for them to flee. The two that waited were fillies,
the biggest in the stable and had been the most experienced within the
world outside of Ursi's care. One was a deep red with a dark brown mane
and tale, a white diamond down her face. The other was a pale sandy-hue with a cream colored main and tail. They waited patiently as
Abiel saddled and bridled them, let them get their fill of water and hay
as Raxus stepped into the stable yard adjusting his sword belt.
"The 'sheep' are ready, I have food and water enough for the three of us, if Mistress Ursi is joining us?"
"She will not be joining us," Raxus said simply.
Abiel made no further inquiry and waited for Raxus to choose between the two horses. He chose the slightly larger red.
"Be safe, my friends." Abiel waived at the other horses slightly, Raxus eyeing her suspiciously.
They rode around to the side gate where Ursi was waiting.
"Thank you for your help and hospitality, Mistress Ursi." Abiel smiled
as best she could and bowed from her saddle. This was awkward.
"It was a pleasure to meet you my dear, I hope our paths cross again
soon." Ursi replied. Raxus merely nodded and winked at Ursi before
urging his mare into a gallop back down the main street they'd entered
town from. Raxus was in a hurry to catch up to the caravan of towns
people, hoping he and Abiel would blend in for as long as possible.
*****************
It was not long before they reached the tail of the caravan as it
trailed its' way north through the wooded mountain side. Raxus urged
his horse to a gallop to catch one of the soldiers, spoke briefly then
turned back to Abiel.
"Follow me." His demeanor was was one
of grave urgency and all seriousness. He led Abiel to to a break in the
pack of Wrottsley citizens and left her there to follow amid them, then
rode off to the head of the procession to speak with the captain of the
guard.
Abiel could feel curious eyes upon her, unsure of
whether to smile or how to shield herself. Absently twisting the mane of
her horse between her fingertips, she tried to steel herself, to be
calm. She was tired, starving and wanted nothing more than to crawl into
her bed and sleep away the nightmare that her life was becoming. She
was frightened, unprepared and unsure of how to proceed or behave. If
her father were alive, she was sure he would have an answer. If her
mother were alive, there would be an answer. Something solid and true to
cling to. Abiel did not need to be reassured that she would be all
right, she had faith in Raxus and his friends that she would live
through this. But to do what? There was no home, no money to pay for
shelter. Abiel stared at the qarget stones, touching them gently.
Sunlight filtered through the trees, setting upon the marred stones an
eerie brown-red glow.
Soldiers were moving up and down the
lines, shouting orders at one another and the people, urging them to
pick up the pace. Raxus had passed on the news of the invasion of Coste
Volte and signal tower. Rangers and rogues were sent to scout- if there
were Gurvir already at the tower, then they could be here as well,
watching and waiting. This did not matter to Abiel now, who sat brooding
and trying not to let her grief and fear consume her. Let them come,
let them try to take me, she thought. After some time, Raxus joined
her, taking some of the bread and water for himself and eating in his
saddle. She could feel his eyes upon her though he did not appear to be
looking at her directly.
If he was nervous or frightened, she
could not tell, though Abiel was quite certain that Raxus knew very
little about fear or worry. Normally, that might have been of some
comfort. But her shame was mounting along with her fear and sadness,
swirling painfully in her mind and heart. One question leading to
another, imagined thoughts of how her mother might have died,
envisioning her home burning to the ground... Why am I alive? Abiel
wondered. Why am I here with
him? Abiel looked at the dark elf
from the corner of her eye, feeling the weight of his frustration
imposed upon her. The horse Abiel was riding upon, Venda, was becoming
restless underneath the worried girl, drawing the attention of the
guards and people of Wrottsley. Abiel tried to calm the horse, calm
herself, but it was not working. Abiel became suddenly overwhelmed by
visions of orc and goblin, blood, fighting, screaming. She saw her
mother's face contorted in pain and agony. Abiel felt the wind rush from
her, confined now by those around her. She began to panic- she needed
quiet, to be away and quickly or she might surely die there of panic.
"I am sorry, I need to excuse myself a moment," the words barely made
their way out as she urged Venda past Raxus and the others, breaking the
lines of angered soldiers, ignoring Raxus's calls to her.
Leaving the security of the caravan was a mistake, one that she did not
recognize through the cloud of her anxiety. Soldiers shouted, people
stared after her. It took several moments for Raxus to get clear and
follow Abiel, cursing at her under his breath and ready to kill her
himself. She was putting herself in severe jeopardy as well as the
the villagers. He'd only gone a little way before the tracks of her
horse became jumbled and hard to identify. There were thickets and
foliage among the trees, he could not see her, though he could faintly
smell her horse. This was irritating beyond measure to Raxus, who heeled
his horse forward into the brush.
It was taking far too long
to locate her. There was no reason he should not have been able to find
her, she could not have gotten that far. Raxus attempted to stand in his
saddle. They would not be able to rejoin the caravan now he realized
bitterly, and surely the two strangers that had come and gone would be
remembered... Raxus turned and looked this way and that... not one sign.
As he sat down however, a horrible cry rang out, one like he'd never
heard in his life, piercing into his heart and mind causing him to grasp
his chest, doubled over in his saddle, his eyes welling with tears, a
roar of agony not his own trapped in his throat. It echoed through the
mountains. Birds and animals alike responded. His horse lunged forward, galloping as fast as she could,
despite nearly dumping Raxus into a nasty looking thorn bush. Raxus
tried to reign the horse in, but to no avail. The strong mare leaped
over a fallen tree and a thicket, Raxus was holding on now unable to
stop the horse as she continued to run head long further down the
mountainside, coming to an abrupt halt in a small meadow, where Abiel's horse was standing over Abiel, the girl curled up on the
ground crying terribly... surrounded by any number of animlas. Mountain
lions, badgers, raccoons, hawks, squirrels... they were sheltering her,
more were approaching, leering at the dread knight cautiously, but
intent upon seeing to the girl.
Raxus slipped off of his
horse, approaching cautiously. Her grief was nearly over-whelming, his
discomfort at having these feral creatures about unnerving. He moved
toward her slowly, quietly, tried calling her name but she did not
respond, continuing to cry and mourn.
"Abi'," Raxus neared
her, several of the rabbits moved aside, a mountain lion growled and a
badger hissed, but they did not attack, they pressed closer against her
for comfort. Raxus touched her shoulder, moving her hair aside, feeling
her tears well in his own eyes.
"Abiel," he said a little
more harshly but she looked up, the sadness exuding from her was unbearable. He was kneeling in front of her now, she mistook his
outstretched arms meant to get her to her feet and pushed herself into
them, crying against his chest. Raxus had never understood what had
caused Shiftie to treat Abiel as he had, warmly, affectionately. He
understood now, there was no choice. There was too strong a need in her
to deny and in that moment, Raxus felt compelled to meet that need. His
arms moved around her, holding her to him, wanting so much for this
foreign grief and fear to end and never to be felt by either of them
again. She tried several times to apologize through the breakdown. Raxus understood because he could feel it.
After some time, the crying stopped, Raxus wiped
hastily at the tears he'd shed. Still surrounded by a forest's worth of
animals willing to protect her, Raxus was forced to continue with the
soft supportive role. Her grief was lightening, at least enough to give
several of the beasts the idea that she was going to be all right, and
they slunk away back to their animal lives.
"We need to
leave this place, and quickly, child. We are not safe here. It will be
dark soon and very cold." Raxus forced her gently to sit up and look at
him to understand the grave nature of their predicament. He'd half
expected her to fall to pieces again and waited for her reaction.
"I am sorry, Sir. I don't know what came over me. What I have done is
very foolish. Please forgive me." Abiel used the sleeve of her cloak to
wipe her tears and face, wiped at the tears she had left on Raxus's
leather vest.
He bit his tongue, wanting nothing more than to berate her, but there
would be time for that later, the looming need to comfort her was
finally waning. Leaving was the priority now, and looking about him, he
wondered which route was best to take and to be sure that they remained
unseen and untrackable. Without the caravan to hide them, there was no
safe way to get to anywhere but the Vale of the woodland elves, which
was at least two days hard ride to the west, but they would be safe
there and he could find others to journey with him and the girl to the
dwarven lands for escort without suspicion.
It was a long night moving through the forest of the mountains, Raxus
pushing the horses hard to make it down the eastern side of the range.
They'd barely remained out of sight of three Gurvir patrols, Raxus had
had to dispatch of two rogues and hoped no one would discover their
bodies until the next day. Abiel's forest friends were keen to help the
two along their way, even going so far as to distract the Gurvir and
draw attention away. For once, Raxus was grateful for their presence.
Moving over a mountain side during the day was tricky at best, but at
night, even with his enhanced sight, there were no warning
signs lingering over dark gnarled roots or an animal's burrow until it
was too late. Having the Gurvir so near at hand worried Raxus. They
should not be so far into the Lorelands and regardless of the Nine
Sect's abilities, amassing forces and riding out to meet the Gurvir head
on so quickly was dubious, let alone marching them so far south. The
Nine seldom communicated or worked together when there was no need and
through years of peace, life and politics had always intervened. Such
was the way of the world.
Abiel did not seem to be so troubled as she had been earlier, Raxus was
thankful for this and it was more than likely that she was too
distracted trying not to trip and fall to think about her grief or give
into it again. She was very tired, that he was sure of, but she did not
complain or slacken her pace.
At dawn, they reached the base of the mountain, the valley marking the
south-eastern Woodland Elf Vale lands that lay before them like a vast
green ocean. It reached out for miles to the west and northward, cutting
through the mountain range where the Otium Pools sprang. Upon the hills
overlooking the pools were the southern paths leading to the heart of
the Vale where the wood elves resided, where help had to be found.
The Vale elves would have to be the first line of defense against the
Gurvir if Raxus and Abiel could get there in time.
The horses were exhausted and Raxus was quite sure they would not
survive at the pace they were keeping, but Abiel assured him they
understood the peril. Skirting along the tree line, Raxus kept a
watchful eye on the trees. The Gurvir patrols had been moving fast in
the night. They could afford to stop and rest, moving more slowly in the
light of day but it was more likely that they had pushed forward as he
and the girl had. Though the sloping road to the Vale was still a half a
day's ride away, Raxus could see it in the distance like a beacon,
urging him on.
The dread knight spotted something in the distance- a caravan. He and
Abiel took the horses deeper into the forest as they approached. He
could see several colorful tents, a few working horses and mules, the
gleam of armor plates on several human men. Raxus spurred is horse
forward, hoping it could at least get him to the camp where they could
rest a bit before completing the journey. As he approached, he realized
it was a trader's camp, a well-to-do trader, to afford the payment of
such a well-geared escort. There were dwarves as well, four of them.
About a dozen people in all, sitting about a small camp fire over which a
pot of food boiled. Raxus saluted and hailed them as he neared, they'd
been watching him and Abiel since they appeared out of the forest.
"Hello there, good centurion!" one of the dwarves stood and saluted back.
Raxus slid off the horse.
"Good day to you," Raxus replied with little cheer. "I am Raxus, this
is my squire-at-arms, Abi'." Raxus waived briefly at Abiel, who was
dismounting and taken aback at the introduction.
"I fear to tell you sirs, that there has been a Horde invasion in the
south, if that is where you might be headed." Raxus announced.
"A what?!" one of the rangers, a simple looking man in what appeared to
be brand new leather elven armor, hopped to his feet.
"They go by the title Gurvir now, as if changing the name makes them different from what they've ever been." Raxus spat. "They've over run
Coste Volte and Wrottsley as well and are making their way north toward
the main of the Lorelands. My suggestion to you sirs, would be to return
to the Vale until such a time when we know where they are and their
full intentions." Raxus spoke almost politely, Abiel raised an eyebrow.
"Pull up a stool then, the both of you. Take a rest. We'll see to your
horses and you can tell us the tale. I am Telmut, these are my brothers
Kammut, Babbot, and Grammot." the dwarf pointed to the three others, who
looked almost too identical to tell them all apart. Abiel decided she would refer to them all as 'sir'.
After she and Raxus were given sitting stools, food and drink, Raxus
began to spin a wild story regarding where Abi' was from and how they'd
come to be in Coste Volte. He explained about the sudden invasion and
wondered at how much truth there was about their escape. He did not
mention the Gurvir at the watch tower and lied about it being lit when
they arrived and failed to mention stopping in Wrottsley.
"There are patrols about in the mountains and hills already, thanks be
to the Gods we were not discovered, but there is no way to know if they
will be seeking to target the Vale at the present time, or how much of
their army is marching already." Raxus said and began to eat while the
dwarves and their guards discussed at length what to do and what this
meant for business. Several times, Telmut looked to Abiel, inspecting
her. She could feel his steely gaze resting upon her healing scar, and
several glances from the brothers at the stones bound around her wrist.
She took the opportunity to stretch and pull her sleeves down until they
nearly covered her hands, bending over her metal bowl to eat.
"I need to speak to these men further," Raxus set his bowl on the
ground and stood and stretched his aching back and legs. "See what wood
you can find at the edge of the forest, do not linger." Raxus said to
Abiel commandingly.
"As you wish," Abiel replied, hoping it was sufficient. She'd never
given much thought as to how a squire would speak to their master until
then and prayed she was convincing.
There wasn't a terrible amount of scrap wood to choose from, and she
did not want to get too far from camp. She went in as far as she would
dare, the sun was beginning to dip behind the mountain. Abiel picked up
what she could and hoped she'd found enough and been gone long enough
for Raxus to say what ever he needed to out of her presence, which
unnerved her all the more. Abiel turned to head back and found Telmut
approaching.
"Hello, Sir." Abiel inclined her head, giving an awkward half-bow, trying not to drop the wood she'd found.
"And a hello to you, young miss. If I can be of assistance?" Telmut reached up to take the wood.
"It's quite all right, thank you, I can carry it." Abiel smiled. Telmut's leathery cheeks flushed pink at her smile.
"This business with the Gurvir,"
Telmut stumbled over the new title for the horde and seemed amused by
it. "'Tis a nasty nasty thing." He was watching her, but not in such a
way as to make Abiel uncomfortable. He seemed to know something, waiting
for her to speak of it.
"Aye, war is hardly a pleasant experience for anyone, I would think."
"Have you been a squire for long, young Abi'?" Telmut tugged at his
beard. It reminded her of Thromguard, the axe-weilding dwarf she'd known
for years.
"Alas, I have not." Abiel said quietly. "If you would excuse me sir, I
should return to camp." Abiel bowed slightly and started to leave.
"Thank you for you hospitality today."
"The pleasure and honor of hosting a centurion of the Serpeants and his
companion are mine." Telmut said sincerely. Abiel did not know how she
should receive the term 'companion', it made her think of the
enchantress Ursi and her 'companionship' with Raxus and bit her lip
before leaving the cover of the trees.
Upon Abiel's return, Raxus instructed her to rest some, they would be
leaving for the Vale shortly. The dwarves and their guard continued to
discuss the best course of action for them, as now they would not be
making stops in Wrottsley or Coste Volte with their wares. Telmut and
his brothers were craftsman of fine hybrid-metals, mostly short swords
and axes. Telmut was quite pleased with himself over the craftsmanship,
pulled out several pieces for Raxus to look over. They were minimal and
simple in appearance, but well made and it was not lost upon Raxus that
Telmut would have no problem selling some of it to the dread knight at a
discount.
Over the mountainside, the light was still bright. The valley was
darkening, long shadows of the tree line were stretching over the grass.
In the distance, the torch lights of the southern forest line of the
Vale could be seen against the barrier of dark trees. Raxus checked the
horses, began to saddle them as the traders began to break camp and
prepare. They would all travel to the Vale together, it had been
decided. Raxus felt more at ease having other fighters at hand should a
Gurvir patrol locate them, though Raxus couldn't be certain that they'd
dare to venture so close to the Vale. He wondered what had become of his
three companions, if they'd all survived and managed to elude the
Gurvir. Raxus would have the answers soon enough, but for now it was
time to make haste and see Abiel to the elves and then the dwarves as
quickly as possible.
There was a smell upon the air Raxus did not like. The band was ready
to leave and Raxus had just put his foot in the stirrup to mount his
horse.
"Telmut, ready your men." he whispered to the dwarf not far from him.
"Aye," Telmut did not question and slowly pulled an axe from under the bench he sat upon in the cart.
Raxus could hear the dwarf 'whisper', it wasn't much of one. The gurads took up their weapons.
"Ride straight for the southern road, as quickly as possible. Leave the goods." Raxus whispered.
"We didn't make these weapons to see them used upon the Loreland people, no sir, we'll take our chances." Grod grumbled.
Raxus shook his head slightly, it would be their funeral then.
"Move out," he commanded, watching as Abiel, still half-asleep, pulled herself up into the saddle.
"Abi'," Raxus called quietly.
"Yes, my lord?: she yawned deeply.
"Wake
up!" he snapped. "Look at me." he hissed. Abiel's eyes widened.
"Be ready to ride for the Vale at my order, do you understand me?"
"Yes," she nodded quickly.
"When I tell you, you ride as fast as you can to those lights there in the distance."
"They're here, aren't they?" Abiel whispered.
"They're very close. Are you ready?"
Abiel was wide awake now. "Yes."
"Unless you can turn those feelings upon whatever is coming, I suggest you keep them in check," Raxus snarled quietly, her growing fear beginning to creep from her and onto the dark elf.
Abiel nodded and took a deep breath, willing herself to remain calm.
Raxus waived the group forward, the band moving as fast as the
cart-mules could run. If they should be attacked, they were out in the
open, sitting targets. Displeased with this, Raxus urged them on,
turning to watch the tree line of the forest as often as he could. The
dwarves wares were rattling and jangling about, echoing through the
valley. Raxus felt as though they may as well be standing still
screaming "We are right here!" The torch lights in the distance still
seemed so far off. They were making little ground, but the dwarves
refused to leave their things.
The attack came swiftly, a volley of arrows raining about them,
striking at the ground and the carts, one glanced off one of the human
guards shoulder plated armor.
"Ride!" Raxus yelled as another hale of arrows arced over them.
The patrol of Gurvir emerged from the forest, some on horseback, though
the horses did not look like any Raxus had seen before. Massive beasts,
scaled with thick heads and jet-black eyes. Orc, goblin, centaur and
blood elves ran at them, roaring, firing arrows, hurling magics. There
were at least a dozen, it was hard to count. Raxus turned his attention
for the moment, seeing the torches slightly larger, still a fair
distance off. Another band of Gurvir rushed from the tree line ahead of
them. It would not be long before they were
surrounded.
"Halt! Circle!" Raxus yelled. "Prepare for battle! Abiel, set your
mare loose, you tell it to make for the Vale, you understand?!" Raxus
pulled a bow from his saddle and began to fire, pulling a steady stream
of poison-tipped arrows from a quiver behind his leg, ignoring the
strange looks from the others as they pulled the mules and horses into
their position. Abiel slid off the saddle, spoke quietly to the mare
then slapped it on the rump, sending her fleeing for the Vale. The horse
was sure to give the Gurvir a wide birth as she streaked toward
the tree line.
The rangers of Telmut's escort began firing multiple arrows at once
from beautiful carved bows, uttering magics as they let loose their
volleys. The warriors took up positions around the carts, Abiel standing
in the center, trapped on Raxus's order. Magic impacted around them, a
ranger staggered some, but continued to loose his arrows.
"Get under one of the carts and stay there!" Raxus shouted at Abiel. The Gurvir were closing in now.
Unsure as to whether or not his mare would understand, Raxus took the chance of giving orders to the horse.
"Be ready to take her!" Raxus pulled the horse quickly to the cart Abiel was beneath nearest him.
The Gurvir were nearly upon them, speeding toward the small camp.
Raxus
drew two of the swords from his back and readied himself, whispering
spells of death and protection. He ran out to meet the first few, swords
clashed and shields split. Abiel buried her face in the ground,
covering her head with her hands. If she would not be allowed to fight,
then she did not think she could bear to watch. Raxus's horse reared and
shrieked as a bolt of magic landed close by. The smell of orc and
goblin blood assailed Abiel, she felt some hit her. How she hated that
smell. She looked up to see bodies strewn about, Raxus and the others
fighting fiercely, the dwarves hacking with their axes like a sharp
knife through soft cheese. The band was outnumbered, but they
were holding their own. They'd cut the Gurvir attackers down by half,
but the human warriors were tiring. One of them went down in a scream.
"Get ready to run!" she heard Raxus shout, much to the amusement of the
Gurvir. Abiel grabbed a shield from Telmut's cart, hoping he would
forgive her for stealing it, then leaped in to the saddle, doing her
best to shield herself and Raxus's horse.
"GO! GO! GO!"
Abiel heeled the horse in the flanks, holding tightly to the mane with
one hand, leaning over trying to shield them. The Gurvir were too
entrenched in their battles to do much to stop her from fleeing and once
clear of the fight, Abiel dropped the shield and turned to look back.
Two rangers and a second warrior had died, bodies of the Gurvir... She
could see Raxus surrounded now. One of the dwarves fell. Abiel could
see the road ahead leading up into the Vale, it wasn't far. Abiel turned
in her saddle again as another dwarf fell, then two more of their
guard. A violent anger swelled in the girl's heart. No, she decided.
They would not die for her. Abiel snatched the reigns, hearing the
horse's objections to this in her mind, she had agreed to and understood
the urgency to see Abiel to safety.
"You will obey me!" Abiel yelled. The horse acquiesced and wheeled
around, charging for the battle. Abiel drew one of Raxus's swords from
the saddle, heading straight for a massive orc on horseback and slashed,
decapitated a blood elf and slashed another orc about to run through
the dwarf Telmut. As easy as silk, she slid from the galloping mare's
saddle and engaged in the fight. The Gurvir were far less in number now,
Abiel's training became second nature. She was in control but did not
wonder then that she was weilding a heavy two-handed broadsword with one
hand, she did not appear to be the under-sized fifteen year old she was
as she stabbed and hacked her way to Raxus's side, appearing ever the
adult she would eventually become. Abiel ignored his anger and cursing,
fighting at his back as the last of the Gurvir bandits engaged the
survivors. Things appeared to be looking up now, she was quite pleased
with herself as she parried and dodged and the dread knight's cursing
ceased.
More magic landed around them, a third wave of Gurvir rushed from the
forest. Abiel spun and slashed, trying to cut as many down with a single
swing as she could. She was getting further from Raxus, the new group
of Gurvir were running at directly at her.
"Raxus!" She shouted. A blood elf lunged at Abiel, grabbing her
forearm. She butted the beautiful tan-skinned elf in the nose and though
the elf's grip released with an angry curse over the exploded nose,
Abiel was dizzy now, her head throbbed. Raxus fought his way quickly to
her, the wave of Gurvir was nearly upon them.
"Run! And don't you turn back!" he yelled, and began to cast spells as
quickly as he could while parrying and advancing, trying to give Abiel
room to flee.
Abiel
scrambled out of the pack and began to sprint. The Gurvir did not stay
to fight this time, they gave chase after her, leaving Raxus and the
remaining four of the trading camp standing amongst the dead, forgotten.
Raxus raced to one of the fallen men's horses, swung up into the saddle
and spurred it to a gallop. As soon as Abiel realized the Gurvir were
now after her, she dropped the sword and ran for the Vale as fast as her
legs could carry her.
She was beginning to slow, her lungs burned and her head still ached.
She could hear the Gurvir getting closer, she did not want to look back,
but did so. They were gaining on her in the quiet of the plains, some
Gurvir were back on their nightmarish horses, gaining with every
footfall like thunder at her heels. They began to call and cackle,
magics exploding around her as she ran. Finally she had made it to the
road, there were no guards posted and her heart sank. The Gurvir were
still giving chase, only a few feet from her now. She pressed up the
sloping path, the beauty of the place ignored by the fear driving her
forward. The steepening grade of the hill caused Abiel's muscles to
burn, she could hardly feel them and stumbled, trying not to lose her
balance. The hooves were right behind her now, the rushing breath of the
Gurvir steeds was hot against her neck.
A large horse charged over the top of the crest before her, a rider in
black wearing a blood-elven helm, sword drawn, charging at Abiel. She
slipped and fell back, the Gurvir who'd been right behind her and about
to snatch her, barely missed her, the horse leaping over her body. Abiel
scrambled, running off the road now, panicked and
surrounded as she ran. There was no path as she burst through one
thicket after another, branches and foliage cutting her face and hands,
snagging on her clothes. Again she could feel the hot breath of the
charging horse right at her heels, so close now, too close... she was
going to be caught and die in the Vale, she was sure of it. There was
shouting, the sounds of battle, the warmth was gone. Abiel chanced a
glance over her shoulder to see the blood elven warrior who'd come at
her over the crest still riding her down reaching for her, the orc who'd
almost snatched her before, no where to be seen. Abiel's heart stopped
and a scream erupted around her as she fell. She had not seen the ledge
and now she was falling so fast it looked as though the water below was
rushing to meet her. The impact relieved her of all fear and
consciousness as darkness claimed her.
CHAPTER V

Was it a nightmare? There had been such a fierce battle. Abiel had been
leading an army, a terrible human army, invading.... Shiftie had been
there, commanding her, but it had not looked like him. And she had not
looked like herself, though Abiel was quite certain it was them in the
dream. As she began to awaken, the images became more brief until she
could not recall the dream long enough to distinguish anything that made
sense. It was pain that had roused her from her deep, vivid sleep. She
was comfortable and warm, and there was a fragrant smell upon the air.
Abiel's eyes began to open, she did not recognize where she was, but it
was beautiful. She lay among thick silken sheets, goose feather-filled
blankets and pillows upon a mattress that had to have been made in
heaven. The bed frame was built of thick woven tree branches that still
appeared to be growing leaves as they grew upward to from posts and a
canopy, light sheets of silken drapes were held back by silver chords matching the large open windows across the room. There were sculpture,
plants, flowers in abundance, a tall chest of drawers on the far end of
the room, a small fire burned lazily in a large hearth, tall wax
candles waiting to be lit sat upon tall well-worked black iron stands.
So much of it reminded Abiel of her mother's taste.
A beautiful hand painted pitcher of water sat upon a small wooden table
beside her. Abiel pushed herself uncomfortably into a sitting position
to reach for the pitcher ignoring the cup and drank greedily. She was
too thirsty to care and she was alone. It wasn't long before she'd
consumed the contents of the berry and rose tinged drink and pulled the
covers from herself, dangling her legs over the side of the bed. Her
feet did not touch the woolen rug below, a grimace etched across her
face as Abiel attempted to set her feet to the floor and stand. Being
still, only her head ached. Moving, everything ached and pinched.
Finally her feet touched the soft mat and she pushed herself to stand.
Her body rejected this, her back and legs screaming with discomfort.
She staggered back trying to catch her balance and spent a moment
trying to regain herself. Across the room beside the chest of drawers
was a silver carved mirror that sat upon the floor and was taller than
Abiel. Using the bed for support, Abiel took slow small steps toward it.
Something had caught her eye and it was not the long pale blue sleeping
gown she was dressed in.
After some time, Abiel reached the mirror, steadied herself with one
hand on the dresser, and with the other, moved aside the untied panel
over her chest to see her scar. It was healed, that made no sense to
her, Raxus had only sewn the stitches a few days prior. Jagged and
roughly sewn together, it looked to be a harsh trail beginning at her
stomach, creeping up her sternum to her neck, stopping momentarily under
her chin only to begin again to stop under her lower lip. With a
shaking hand, Abiel slowly traced the scar with her fingertip from chin
to chest. While she could feel the odd texture of the scar
against her finger, she could not feel where her finger was touching the
scar. Abiel had been afraid that it might still hurt, it looked
painful, wretched. She was marked for the entirety of her life now, and
no memory of how she received it. Abiel could not bear to look at it any
longer and hastily drew the chords of her nightgown together, covering
what she could with the panels, then hurried through her discomfort back
into the bed, warm tears her only company as she drifted back to sleep.
Her dreams were a far better place to be than wherever she was and
whomever was holding her, badly scarred and confused.
In the midst of her wonderful and colorful dreams, Abiel felt something
tugging on her consciousness. Her eye lids were so heavy. There were
others in the room, she could make out movement of three, maybe four but
her eyes were so heavy, she was still so tired. They spoke, the words
would not register though she struggled to listen. Something moved
toward her, maybe a hand, Abiel did not know. It would have to wait,
they would have to wait, for her dreams were calling.
"She drank it all," the elven woman said, holding the empty pitcher beside Abiel's bed.
"She lives? Is she all right?" an elven man in the doorway stepped into the room, surprised and horrified.
"It appears so," a golden-haired half elf sat upon the bed feeling Abiel's hands and forehead.
"The girl takes a mortal blow from a goblin rapier and lives," the half-elf inspected Abiel's nasty scar with irritation.
"As though there were time enough to stitch it properly," the dark elf
huffed. "We were running for our lives in case no one had told you that
part of the story."
"...Falls to her death into the Otium pools," the half-elf said softly, thinking, wondering.
"And drinks an entire pitcher of water laced with rosebane," a male
woodland elf sat in a comfortable chair across the room, watching her.
"Is she or isn't she?" the dark elf demanded. The elves looked to one another, and their gaze fell to the sleeping child.
"If she isn't, then what is she?"
***********************************
The feeling stirred again, the feeling of eyes upon her, and voices....
Abiel was terribly comfortable in the bed... Bed? She was in a
bed. Yes, a warm comfortable bed. Her eyes flew open, she turned over
quickly and came to sit up, surrounded by elves, several faces she
recognized and she smiled brightly.
"You found me," Abiel smiled at Mencius, Toatle and Zykon. Mencius
smiled widely at the girl, Zykon tried to hide his grin, Raxus stepped
out from the corner behind Toatle, the dread knights scowling as they
always did.
"Thank you for saving me, my lord." Abiel said sincerely to Raxus, who inclined his head and took a step back behind Toatle again.
"As I am sure you are quite tired still, my dearest, we shall wait to
do the formal introductions when the time is better." Mencius stepped
toward her and took her hand in his. "How are you feeling?"
"Sore, hungry. Like I could sleep for days more still and eat the
entirety of one of my mother's banquets. How long have I been asleep?
"Eight days," Mencius smiled.
"Eight?! What in the Gods world would I be doing asleep for so long?" Abiel asked frightfully.
"You might have awoken sooner," Mencius pushed several strands of her
almond color hair from her face to be tucked behind her ear. "...except
that you were quite thirsty and drank a large jug of rosebane water."
Abiel turned to look for the pitcher that was beside her bed.
"I drank rosebane?!"
"In small doses tempered by water, it helps one sleep while trying to recovery from....injury."
"Injury?" Abiel inspected her arms, patted down her legs. "I'm just a wee bit sore is all."
"You don't remember?" Mencius asked.
"You died." Toatle grumbled irritably. Raxus hit him in the chest with his fist.
"I..." Abiel's hands moved to her chest but the look in Mencius's eyes
told her that her scar had nothing to do with it. And the memory
returned in a flash of running from the Gurvir, the blood elven warrior
charging after her... "I fell," she said unsure still, having no memory
after that.
"You fell quite a long way, my dearest, into the Otium Pools. Toatle
was trying to reach you, but you did not recognize him."
Abiel sat open-mouthed, trying to remember something, anything at
all, but only the dreadful vision of that plated hand reaching for her
as she ran remained in her mind. She sighed quietly. All of these things
happening and she had no memory. How many times had her life been in
peril and she was mentally absent? It was very unnerving to the girl and
she sat biting her lip, a slight pout on her face.
"Do not dwell on these mysteries, there will be time enough for that, I
am sure." Mencius assured her softly. "For now, rest more still if you
need to."
"What of the Gurvir?" she asked, looking to Raxus.
"The bands so near to the forest have been... disposed of."
Mencius smiled softly looking her over. Abiel lowered her chin,
catching a slight glance at it in the mirror across the room, the fleshy
scar seemed horribly vivid.
"And their army?" Abiel folded her arms about herself.
"Still hold up in Coste Volte." the enchanter tried to be reassuring.
"My mother?" Abiel looked to meet Mencius's gaze.
"No word yet, I am afraid my dear." Mencius patted her arm. "But there
is another who would like to look in on you, if you don't mind one more
person joining us."
Abiel looked at the beautiful high elf quizzically as a boot crossed
the threshold of the door to her room. It took naught but a moment to
recognize and Abiel was scrambling out of bed jumping from it to sprint
and leap into Shiftie's arms, pain forgotten. She appeared the small
girl she had been seven years before as the white-haired centurion held
Abiel, her arms and legs wrapped about him tightly, crying quietly into
the crook of his neck. The change in her appearance caught all but
Shiftie and Raxus off guard, the two having become somewhat accustomed.
"I've missed you terribly. I was so worried." Abiel sobbed, leaning
back to look Shiftie in the eye. Shiftie wiped the streams of tears from
her cheeks with the back of his soft hand.
"Mellon titta ohtakyaro. I
am sorry for not having been at your side, as I have missed you as
well. But I am pleased to see that you are alive and safe." Shiftie
smiled and touched his forehead gently to hers. He felt her exhale in
relief, feeling a sense of security and happiness emanating from her,
and also a slight fear and resentment.
Shiftie pulled her to him again to hug her and to whisper into her ear.
"I will not leave you again, this I promise." Shiftie spoke so quietly
and soothing, the girl's grip around his neck and waist tightened for
several moments in thankfulness. She was happy now, a giant smile of
truest joy spread across her face, her feelings touching each of the
elves in the room. The two dread knights shifted uncomfortably where
they stood and opted to quietly take their leave and be free of Abiel's
feelings.
Abiel looked about the room confused and was then aware that everyone
was smiling almost unnaturally. She loosened her grasp on Shiftie,
sliding down slightly until her feet touched the floor and stood on her
own, back to her normal height, appearing her age again.
"Amin hiraetha," Abiel apologized, blushing as she attempted to control her emotions, to be less over-joyed than she was.
"Better happiness than something else," Shiftie quipped. "You said that
you were hungry. Shall we dine then?" he held out his hand to her,
Abiel took his little finger as she always had, her height diminishing
again as they left the room.
Abiel ate. Then ate some more. The elves tried hard not to stare, the
girl took no notice, but occasionally apologized for the mass
consumption they were witnessing. Abiel's hunger felt insatiable, she
could not stop eating and her hunger was foremost in her mind. She was
taking care not to shove everything she could reach with her hands into
her mouth straight away, she managed, if but barely, to use her utensils
and constantly wiped at her mouth as she went with the napkin at
her setting, though if it were not for the dozen or more witnesses,
Abiel would have crawled up onto the table and shoved the food into her
face without ceremony.
Abiel had consumed enough for half a dozen men,
there was nothing left on the table and several additional dishes of
sweet meats and aged cheese and bread had been brought to her. Though
she knew she could eat more, Abiel had had enough to finally gain some
control over herself and to care enough about appearance that she willed
herself to stop. Her elven hosts Chazmirs, a fair-haired high elf
cleric and her mate Rethim, a silver-haired high elven bard, offered her
more food, but Abiel declined, embarrassed. Taking the moment to
measure what she'd just consumed, Abiel was almost ill at the thought,
but considered asking if a large dessert of some kind could be brought
to her room later. Abiel dismissed this notion, thinking how dismayed
Juldain would be at her daughter's crassness.
"Are you quite sure?" Chazmirs smiled sincerely.
"Quite. I really have never eaten so much food in all my life. It was wonderful!" Abiel blushed at her excited outburst.
"Perhaps a light walk would be in order." Shiftie suggested, smiling at
Abiel, who returned his smile with eagerness. "Toatle?" Shiftie looked
to the dark elf, who was picking at the linens on the table, clearly
irritated at having been made to dine in what Abiel learned to be a
large home in the middle of the Vale. The dread knight had hoped to be
keeping the company of a woodland elf seamstress he'd met several days
before, not watching an undersized demon-child consume his weights'
worth of food.
Toatle looked to Shiftie, roused from his thoughts. "Hmm?"
"Would you be so kind as to escort Abiel on a walk of the grounds?" Shiftie asked pointedly.
Toatle's mouth opened, irritation poorly concealed within his
light-crystalline eyes and face, he wasn't about to stand watch over
this girl, this thing, whatever she was, so prone to dying and
coming back to life. He felt her eyes move to him, he looked to Abiel,
seeing her initial disappointment over being sent on the walk with him
instead of Shiftie. More insult to injury.
"Let's go then," he snapped and abruptly shoved himself away from the
large carved table, his chair scraping purposefully over the stone
floor, unnerving the guests. He ignored the glare from Shiftie as he
marched toward the archway leading out onto the terrace and waited
impatiently as Shiftie whispered something to Abiel. He heard her excuse
herself and walk quickly to him. Toatle stood up straight as a board
when the girl, looking naught more than eight again, took his smallest
finger in hand.
He would have ripped it away, but the look in her eyes and her small
smile that he detested so much halted the rude reaction. For the time
being, Toatle acquiesced. As with all of his meetings with her, his
irritation would have to wait until after she was out of his presence.
Begrudgingly, the dark elf clasped her small hand in return and led her
down the smooth ornately decorated walkway out to the gardens.
Abiel
had questions. She always had questions. Toatle was not
opposed to talking, but the girl was never silent in his company unless
she was asleep... or dead. He chuckled to himself at this realization,
prompting more questions from her, eliciting a sigh of frustration from
him.
"Are you all right?" Abiel asked concerned, still appearing to him as the child he'd met 8 years before. Toatle could have choked
her there and then among the flowers. It was a cool night, he barely
noticed but for the ice-cold feeling of her skin against his, Abiel was
still in her sleeping gown. She seemed unaffected for a long while, the
talking and the questions apparently kept her unaware of the chill. He
did not offer her his cloak, but pulled it off and knelt to wrap it
around her and pulled the large hood over her head. Another fleeting
thought of pulling it over her face and he had to stifle the chuckle
with a cough.
"Thank you," Abiel beamed appreciatively.
"Come back to life from falling and drowning to be taken down by chll or worse- I'd never hear the end of it." Toatle grumbled.
Abiel pulled the hood back from her eyes as Toatle still knelt before her.
"You do not care for me." It was a small statement without the intonations of suspicion, mostly disappointment.
"You're fine." Toatle replied trying not to look her in the face directly.
The dark elf sat back some, forced now to at least meet her gaze.
"I care little for anyone." It was
the truth in theory and reputation, but Toatle spied the disbelief in
Abiel's eyes.
"I suppose you do not have to like me, I hope that it's acceptable
that I like you, sir. And I am grateful for all that you have done to
help me. And if you don't care for me and still helped me anyway, well
that makes you a good person."
No one had ever referred to Toatle as a good person that he could
recall. He allowed himself to sit back onto his rear in the damp grass
and looked at her, inspecting her as she looked at him and sat down
before him, wrapping his cloak tightly about herself and picking lightly
at the grass.
"I couldn't blame you for not liking me, and I don't mean that to
garner pity. I have only brought strangeness and danger into your life,
into everyone's lives. And for what?" Abiel laughed softly, a pained
laugh. "What is my life worth?"
the girl looked to him, hoping he had an answer. Toatle had none to
offer.
"Your importance remains relevant to some, a mystery to many." Toatle replied.
Abiel looked at him quizzically.
"We,"
Toatle waived his arm lazily in the general direction of the house and
its' occupants, "...can't be certain. We are trying to discover the
answers to the puzzle that you have become."
"I don't want to be a puzzle, sir. I just want to stop dying." an odd expression crossed the girls face at her
own words. "Life was much more simple a fortnight ago. I was just my
mother's daughter. Now it seems I am a fugitive and a demon."
"You're not a demon." Toatle laughed almost mockingly, though he was certain she was one.
"What am I then?" Abiel asked simply, staring at Toatle with a stillness that made his skin prickle.
A voice called to Abiel- it was Shiftie, standing at the top of the stairs leading down into the garden.
"Come," Shiftie raised his arm before him, holding out his hand.
Abiel did not stand immediately, she looked back to Toatle, who had no answer for her.
"You're our puzzle, I suppose." Toatle cracked smile.
"Then I suppose you must keep me until you put my pieces together."
Abiel replied, no longer looking the young child but very much
like the maturing fifteen year old she was, with a
smile that struck Toatle straight in the chest. She leaned forward and
kissed him on the cheek as he sat frozen. "Thank you for helping me."
The words fell upon his ear as a gentle whisper enveloping his body- a
foreshadowing.
Abiel got to her feet and sprinted through the torch-lit garden to take
Shiftie's still out-stretched hand. Toatle felt her look back at him
briefly, though he could not bring himself to stand or to watch her
leave with him. It seemed he did not despise the girl as much as he'd wanted to and despised himself all the more for it.
"Shall we wait until the morning then?" Shiftie looked to Abiel, who
was beaming a smile at him as they walked the terrace out into the quiet
canopied-city. The moon touched the ground gently like little lights
through the foliage high above. This was a magical place, full of life
that thrummed and buzzed within Abiel. It reminded her of when she'd
first met Toatle and Raxus and Mencius, Shiftie's friends, she thought
softly, and her skin had taken a slight chill among them. She could not
recall the last time she'd felt such a thing since meeting them, but here among the Vale,
her skin was alight with vibration, like a thousand gentle silken
strings were being run over her body and through her mind. Abiel's smile
faded at the prospect of losing any time with Shiftie. The thought of
being out of hand's reach from him struck at her like a blow.
"If you need to rest my lord, I understand. Sleeping for nearly a
fortnight has me well rested." Abiel replied and watched as her
slippered feet moved over the grass and smooth pathing stones. She spied
something moving in the shadows of the tree line, behind the houses and
shops and looked to Shiftie. "Did you see that?" Abiel looked again but
saw nothing.
"Not to worry, my little one, the Gurvir could take over all of the
world if they wanted, but never the Vale." Shiftie assured her and
patted her head.
"Because it's enchanted?" Abiel asked, sounding child-like.
Shiftie
laughed softly. "It is the first magic, or so the elves
believe. This was once and still remains a place that reveres honor and
the good hearted. It is said that many lifetimes ago, this was a prison
for the elves of all races from the human world. That no elf should
leave the barrier of the trees and enter into the world of men. But the
magics of the land had their revenge so that no unworthy being could
come here and lay claim to the beauty of this place or its natural
riches, protecting my kind."
"Do you prefer the Vale to your home?" Abiel asked, looking for movement in everything about them.
"They are both equally beautiful to me, there are several human
kingdoms that I marvel at as well. Here, you are surrounded by a world
given to us to use, to live within. It provides all that any could need.
Bountiful fish from lakes and streams, flowers the like you will never
see in the world. The homes here are built with the permission
and even the aid of the trees. Irentaru though is a crafted beauty, it's spires rising high into the sky."
Within the high elf's words, Abiel could see what he was describing, an
enormous castle and city built of white, with icy-blue silken banners
flowing from the tops of the towers stretching up toward the heavens.
"I shall have to take you there one day, I think." Shiftie mused.
"My mother has spoken of it..." Abiel's voice
trailed off. How she longed to know that her mother was well. Or even
dead. Just to know the truth of what had become of Juldain would
suffice. Abiel folded her hands in front of her as she
walked. "I have so many questions, I don't think I can find the
beginning."
"Choose one, and we shall move on from there." Shiftie stood aside to
allow for Abiel to pass first over a small wooded bridge as they headed
into the forest, away from the heart of the city.
Abiel's questions turned to the tales of things she'd done over the
years in Shiftie's absence, her many teachers and the various things
she'd learned, purposefully omitting the brief dalliances with love and
held out her wrist to him when she spoke of the last night in Coste
Volte.
"It does not come off, the stones do not wash clean." Abiel explained.
Shiftie knew quite well what they were, and had a theory regarding how
they'd truly come to be in her mother's possession but said nothing, and
when Abiel did not press for his opinion on it, he was relieved. "But she
gave them to me. " Abiel
picked gently at the grass as she and Shiftie sat upon his dark cloak.
"Possessions can never replace the love in your heart or your memories
of her. Much of who you are now is because you are a part of your
mother. Never forget that." Shiftie pulled a long pipe and small
pouch from within his vest and set to packing a small amount of
pipeweed into the bowl.
"I hope I have only the good parts." Abiel sneered quietly.
Shiftie
laughed, choking slightly on the smoke as he had inhaled when Abiel had
responded. She smiled slightly and patted him on the back several
times.
"Will you tell me where you've been, my lord?" Abiel watched the high
elf, entranced by his face. How long she had waited to see him. Abiel had nearly forgotten what he looked like. Struck again by his
carved face and sparkling sapphire eyes, she might be seeing him for the
first time.
Abiel listened as Shiftie spoke, noting silently when he gave little
detail or merely a brief mention of a topic that seemed important. He
spoke at length of Pouty, the cities they'd traveled to, petty issues
between kingdoms and lords needing to be settled, skirmishes he'd fought
in, weaponry and battle gear he'd either amassed or had seen and wanted
to call his own, but could not afford. There were new techniques he
wanted to show Abiel that would have to wait until they reached the
dwarves. In the end, Shiftie had spoken at length. But to Abiel, he'd
hardly said a thing of true substance. Though she'd hung on every word, Abiel was positive he was leaving something
sizable out. But it was late, creeping upon dawn and despite the rest
she'd had, Abiel was ready to climb back into the wonderful bed and
dream more wonderful dreams. No longer the shadow of memory in her mind,
he'd come back to her. Shiftie had come for her after all. Abiel
dwelled on his words from when he'd first stepped through the door and
held her so closely to him... "I will not leave you again." He'd promised this, and Abiel meant to make sure he kept his word.
The heart of the city was abuzz with talk of war, the spotting of
Gurvir patrols, bandits and attacks up into the central valleys of the
Lorelands. Midnight raids, killing and
burning, taking anything of value to them, only to vanish and attack
elsewhere the following night or a few nights after. There were reports
of slaves being taken, bodies mutilated and left upon main roads and
trails in warning. If even half of the stories were true, Shiftie and
the others assumed it was to distract and intimidate in order to
complete their foothold on the southern lands. Since the day in the
valley when the Gurvir had attempted to take Abiel, the Gurvir had
stayed far from the Vale, lending credit to the theory. If they were not
willing to come near the Vale, then they were not ready for full scale
war.
Spring was quickly turning to summer, and the entourage preparing to
take Abiel to the dwarves was questioning the logic behind it. At least
in the Vale, it would be easier to keep her safe, to train and watch her
and the likelihood of unsavory characters reaching the girl was small.
But at the Forge, all manner of people were free to come and go, the
dwarves did not care who entered their kingdom so long as it did not
interfere with their mining. While quick to show that 'nonsense' of an
unsavory nature would not be tolerated, the Forge was an enormous place
with many a dark corner for shady dealings and even murder. The dwarves
did not fear an invasion from anyone. The steel doors that were raised
above each of the entrances to their cities could be closed in a moment,
sealing them off without a thought to go about their business. They
feared no known magic, for their own was powerful and was drawn from the
mountains, the largest range in the known world. They did see the
coming war as they saw all wars- as an opportunity to put their crafts
in ironwork and steel to use, to turn the hard monies and gems they were
paid in, into treasures of art for themselves.
The days became long, although Abiel was still euphoric from Shiftie's
return, the training was hard and extensive, the highelf's patience
was short and there seemed no end to the list of weapons Shiftie wished
her to learn. Abiel was exhausted, frustrated, and wished for nothing
more than to sleep for hours on end the moment they finished each
evening. She longed for nothing but information or news about her mother
and yet none came. Toatle and Raxus appeared two to three times a month
with news or confirmation of rumors regarding the Gurivan and to assist
with her training.
All the years Shiftie had spent away from Abiel were
causing the resentment she'd thought had gone toward him with every
correction and and frustrated sigh that came from him over every poor swing, kick, and punch she attempted. The shield was held too high, her
chin not high enough, one leg bent too much, the foot of the other leg
too stiff. Every failure to execute felt like a slap in the face Abiel
did not feel she deserved. And always, Abiel realized after some
time, there were always others there, causing the rebukes to sting all
the more. If it wasn't Mencius the enchanter or Throm the dwarf, or the
monk Zykon, there was some person or persons always watching. Always
watching her, gauging, speaking softly as they watched . Surrounded by
people who seemed to know more, there always loomed an awkwardness.
Abiel was always waiting to be asked questions, but none came. She spent
hours wondering what it is that everyone wanted or seemed to expect but
no one would come out and say.
"If he'd been there to teach me, I wouldn't be so terrible!" Abiel
snapped one night as she and Toatle walked the grounds of the castle
after dinner. She'd regretted the words as soon as she'd spoken them,
even more so since she'd said them to Toatle, who seemed amused by her
frustration with Shiftie.
"Had any one of us been there to teach you, you would indeed be far
better off than you are. But, you aren't all that terrible, I am quite
positive Shiftie is merely overwhelmed." The words were not spoken in
any form of empathy on Shiftie's part, as always, Toatle was the picture
of not-so-subtle irritability. "It might interest you to know that we
will be leaving soon for the dwarven-lands. You must be as educated as
we can hope to make you, should battle arise."
"Have I not proved myself enough?" Abiel demanded to know, turning and planting her feet firmly on the ground.
The dark elf laughed mockingly. "Proved yourself? The only thing you've
proven to anyone thus far is that you seldom do as your told to and you
manage to lose control of yourself in such an artfully violent manner
that might kill us with your own hands."
Abiel stared at Toatle's unflinching face, not sure whether to slap him or cry.
"Has no one told you what happened with Raxus the night of the invasion
at Coste Volte? Apparently not." Toatle appeared amused further by this
and the look of astonishment on Abiel's face. "Here is the wondrous
tale of little Abiel the initiate, primed and ready for battle. We find
slayer Raxus, first locating our amazing warrior-to-be beneath a pile of
carcasses, men, orc, goblin, barely breathing and, what a surprise,
conked out, as it were. So he carries the little warrior away from the
city only to be accosted by a Gurvir patrol. In the midst of the ensuing
fight, just as it appears our steadfast dread knight might see his end,
the little warrior has awakened and proceeds to dispatch the
remaining Gurvir even while being mortally wounded herself, only to
attack the dread knight, nearly murdering him before, and, surprise! Our little warrior dies. Again."
Abiel was mortified. She stared with her mouth wide open, frozen in her
place, trying with all of her might to remember, to understand what
Toatle was telling her.
"I would never..." Abiel's voice was a whisper as she tried to remember.
"Oh but you did, my youngling. And nearly succeeded. We assume that
wound, fatal to any mortal," he stared pointedly at the exposed scar,
"was the only thing that kept him alive. Now how do you suppose that
would sit with the rest of us? Had you been any better trained before
that night, you might have succeeded in killing him and Gods know who
else. And you think we're going to take you into this now
Gurvir-infested world without, One: seeing if your mentally fit, and two,
assuming you've managed to retain your wits, be sure that you won't
kill us all along the way?"
Abiel had heard all she could stand to hear. She began to run as far
from the dark elf as fast as she could into the forest, fighting back
tears as she went. Toatle shrugged and returned to the castle.
It was time for the evening meal, elves, dwarves, and humans met in the
dining hall of the home of Chazmirs and Rethim to eat and discuss the
matters of the day. Shiftie entered the hall, bowing and clasping arms
with his companions. He had expected to see Abiel seated already, she
was usually first in for dinner, starving after training and excited to
speak with everyone, and to receive news of her mother Juldain, if there
was any. There had been no word until that day, Shiftie had
information for the girl that he was positive she would be glad to hear.
"Where is young Abiel?" Chazmirs asked as she poured glasses of port for the guests.
"I can't be sure, I have not seen her since earlier this afternoon." Shiftie was clearly distressed.
"Has anyone seen her recently?" Mencius asked.
"Not I," Rethim replied.
"Nor I." Throm stated gruffly. He and Mencius had just been discussing
how quiet things had seemed in the last week. This did not bode well in
his opinion.
"I'm quite sure she is fine," Toatle sighed irritated. "The little git is probably off crying in a corner somewhere."
"Why would
she be crying?" Chazmirs snapped. She had never been overly fond of
Toatle and found his constant provoking of the girl to be unsettling.
"It seems that our steadfast little demon still has quite a bit to
learn about hearing the truth when it does not please her." Toatle
casually took a drink of his wine and chewed on a piece of cheese.
"What have you done?" Mencius gasped.
"What? I have done nothing, thank you, only shared with her the goings
on after Raxus found her. Seems no one thought to tell the little demon
that she had nearly killed him."
"Gods damn you and your mouth." Shiftie spat and got to his feet, looking ready to fight.
"You keep lying to herand expecting all of us to. To protect her? From what? How long did you plan on keeping it from her? Until she murders
one of us during some Gurvir attack on the road?
She knows she's being watched by all of us, while we wait to see if she
has another murderous fit, you've got her as twisted as a sailor's knot
over the misguided teachings of others after you so lovingly abandoned
her in Coste Volte."
"You know I had to!" Shiftie started to lunge at Toatle, but stopped
himself as Toatle rose from his own seat to back away from the high elf,
a smug grin on his blue-hued face.
"Settle yourself. You don't have to explain that to me, my friend! But you might consider explaining to your little berserker. " Toatle
was almost laughing. His easy attitude was infuriating everyone in the
room. "She told me herself, she feels inferior because you abandoned her
and left her in the hands of others to learn, only to be punished again
and again for it here as you attempt to retrain the little twit. I
explained that it was better for all of us that she'd been so poorly
trained or Raxus here, " Toatle slapped his hand in a jovial manner on
Raxus' shoulder, "would have been made Gurvir meat by
her."
Raxus did not hesitate to punch Toatle in the side of his head. There
was no humor in this. Promptly, Raxus had a stunned Toatle on his back
on the table. Toatle was no longer smug, but enraged by the
attack. Rethim and Vahlaur were attempting to pull Raxus off of
Toatle, while Shiftie pinned Toatle down by the chest and got nose to
nose with the dread knight.
"Where is she?" Shiftie seethed through clenched teeth.
"I don't know, I don't care. All the safer for us. Now get your hands
off of me." Toatle's eyes began to glow with anger. Tired of being
forced to cater to what he considered a foolish little human, Toatle had had his fill of all of
the lot of them and their ridiculous prophecies. He was not a tutor, he was a dreadknight, and his time had been
wasted. He tried to sit up as he felt Shiftie's grip on his vest and
tunic loosen.
"Tell me where she is!" Shiftie slammed Toatle hard against the
table again, causing glasses to spill and plates to clatter.
"She ran off into the forest crying like the
child she is. Now get your hands off of me!" Toatle growled. Shiftie
let go of him and immediately turned to Chazmirs.
"Send out guards, search the grounds. We," Shiftie motioned at the
others, "will go into the woods. And you!" Shiftie turned toward Toatle,
who was leaving the room.
"I! Am leaving. There is a war to be fought, I am not going to sit here
and play 'who wants to be murdered by a demon' any longer.
See you all on the battlefield, assuming you live long enough." And with
that, Toatle left the dining hall.
Raxus rushed to go after him, caught again by Rethim and Vahlaur.
"Leave him. We must find Abiel, make sure she hasn't left the city."
Hour after hour they searched the grounds, the taverns and inns, the
woods. The entire city was on alert by the end of the night. It was
nearing midnight, the band filtered in to the dining hall that was still
cluttered from the scuffle earlier.
"Where would she have gone?" Throm asked sitting down heavily in one of the chairs.
Shiftie was angry, shaking with rage, unable to speak. The others were
speaking, going over a list of possible places she might be, whether or
not she could have left the Vale, sharing their anger over Toatle's
behavior. Shiftie wasn't listening, he was trying to set aside his anger
in order to better suss out the possible location of his charge.
"Has anyone checked her room to see if she might have come in earlier to get her things?" Chazmirs asked.
Shiftie grumbled and hastily left the dining room, a small lamp in hand. He did not knock but swung the door open looking this way and that to see
what might be missing, only to discover that Abiel was in bed asleep.
Anger sprung forth in a slew of profanities in every tongue he knew
so loudly that it echoed through the house. Abiel sat up straight, eyes
wide and fearful. It was obvious she'd been crying for some time, her
eyes and nose were red even in the dim light, eye lids puffy and
irritated.
After spending the day crying, Abiel had no tears left.
"We have been looking for you for hours!" Shiftie roared.
"Why? So you can learn how to tame your vicious dog?" Abiel threw her covers off and leaped from the bed to stand
before Shiftie. For the first time, her presence did not shrink, it
grew and she was eye to eye with Shiftie, her rage and pain becoming
palpable. Shiftie was too furious to notice, it only heightened his own anger.
"I am trying to train you so that you can be prepared!" the high elf stood his ground.
"Prepare me or prepare yourself for what I might do?" Abiel began
to pace the room like a caged wild cat, turned and pointed at Shiftie.
"Why would you keep something like this from me? Must I suffer more before you deem me worthy to
know that I am a killer? I have to find out from Toatle? How can I be
the best that you can make me if I don't know how to help you?!" She was
calming down now, the distance between them lessened her presence over
him.
Shiftie glared at her, watched her form slowly shrink until she was her
normal height and appeared her actual age. "You don't even know
when you've lost control, Abi'. It isn't about trust. We have questions.
I have questions and some I am not even sure what
they are yet, and so far, the answers find me unprepared. Yes,
you are different, but I don't know why or how. I don't understand your
strengths, I don't know if we have even seen all of your true power. Thus far at its worst? yes, you become something... someone
other than yourself. Someone who does not know friends from enemies. Most
importantly, if you are not prepared for war," Shiftie sat down in the armchair beside the door, his
elbows on his knees, he placed his face in his hands and looked at the
ground.
Abiel moved to kneel before him. He looked up slightly.
"I don't know how to help you and for that I am sorry. I do not know
why I am this way. Don't you think that it's hard for me to know what
I've done? What I almost did? Knowing that I almost killed Raxus- how
can I ever look at him without shame? And as you train me, Toatle was
right... it might only serve to make me all the more efficient. I don't
know if I can harness my feelings. I don't even realize until something
goes wrong that I am projecting my feelings upon others. And how
terrible that must be for you," Abiel said softly. "I am so terribly
sorry, Sir. Please forgive me. Please." Abiel took his hands in hers.
"You don't need to apologize to me, Abi'. We simply need to find the
answers and train you the best we can. I think it is time that you
started training further with Zykon. His people and his own training as a
monk might be able to temper some of your power. It has to."
CHAPTER VI
Abiel slept terribly for the rest of the morning, wracked by dreams of
destruction and violence at her own hands. Villages and cities burned,
not a soul left alive in her wake. She seemed to slide from her own
body, watching in horror as the vision of her took in the scene with
serenity and peace. When Mencius came to wake her, Abiel had tears in
her eyes, tears she'd been crying in the dream. She wiped her eyes as
the elf appeared to float to her bedside and sit beside her, wiping her
tears and smoothing her sweat-dampened hair.
"Are you all right?" Mencius's silken voice was like a warm blanket.
"I believe so, just terrible dreams. I was doing terrible things." Abiel looked away from the enchanter, ashamed.
"Perhaps it would lighten your heart to know that there is news of your
mother." Mencius smiled as Abiel sat up and looked at him, waiting.
"She is alive, my dear. It seems she escaped unscathed and undetected. She is with Pouty now..."
"At the Keep? With Pouty? But why would she be with Pouty?" Abiel was
confused. None but the members of the Nine Sects were allowed in the
Keep and though Pouty was one of the most powerful beings in the known
world, he was also a recluse. He was infamous for it. And now her mother
was to be his guest?
Mencius shook his head. "Things in the
world are very dangerous right now and look to be worsening as each day
passes. Pouty seldom acts in haste, I can only think that it is
important. And right now, there is no safer place. You will learn more
later, but as it stands now, the Gurvir are attacking cities no one
thought could be taken. They dealt a heavy heavy blow to the
Hammerhead armies and have destroyed villages throughout the western
Lorelands. They are many and the Loreland armies and the Nine Sects have
been caught off guard. Things are in a bad way, my dear. We leave today
for the dwarven kingdom and I... we all need to be sure that you are
ready."
"It doesn't appear that I have a choice. I will ready
my things." Abiel was not ready and she was tired. "Will Toatle be with
us?" Abiel asked irritably.
"The dreadknight has chosen to depart, sadly." Mencius patted her hand.
"Tis nothing sad about it. If I never see him again, I will not shed a tear." Mencius stood to allow the girl out of bed.
"The loss will be for his skills. I fear we may need him sooner rather
than later. He is rough and quite the scoundrel as darkelves go, but he
is an excellent warrior none the less."
Abiel sighed and began to search her room. "I really don't have anything to take, my lord."
"As we will be traveling with all haste, you won't need much. We
should take you into the village and outfit you as best we can."
"I have no gold, my lord. I have nothing to buy wares with."
"But you do, my dearest youngling. Your mother being the forward
thinking woman that she is, has made arrangements. You only need to
present yourself to the bankmen of the Sect-Allied cities along with
this seal," Mencius placed a small golden ring bearing the crest of
Coste Volte, "...and you will have access to all of the funding you
might need. And even if that were not true, you would be well taken care
of, all of us would see to that. Shall I meet you in the garden when
you are ready?"
Abiel smiled and shook her head. "As you wish, I shall be there momentarily."
Abiel took a thorough bath. Something told her it might be a few days
or weeks before she would be able to wash herself properly. She dressed
in clothes Rethim had loaned her, politely refusing to wear anything
dress-like outside of her night shirt that Chazmirs had offered. All of
the bard's clothes were too big, but she'd become accustomed to the fit
and rather enjoyed the look of longer sleeves and though Shiftie
detested it, Abiel loved having trousers that were so long that she
stepped on the back of them. Chazmirs had loaned her a dark gray hooded
cloak that crossed over her chest to clasp at the opposite shoulder,
allowing Abiel to cover a considerable amount of the scar, she was
determined to find another like it.
As she stepped onto to
parapet, it was not Mencius waiting for her but Raxus and Shiftie.
Abiel's heart thudded in embarrassment, she hesitated a moment before
joining them and barely whispered greetings to them, her eyes fixed to
the ground. Raxus pulled her by the hood of the cloak to him and knelt
in front of her.
"You have nothing to be sorry for,
youngling. Nothing what so ever. We shall unravel this mystery together.
You have nothing to fear or to be ashamed of." Raxus held her eyes with
his own.
Abiel barely nodded. She was not convinced. Raxus
took one of her hands and opened it and placed his little finger in her
hand and closed it for her. "It's like this, is it not?" Raxus asked,
trying to confirm that Abiel always held Shiftie's littlest finger when
they walked together. Abiel smiled slightly and nodded. "Then off we
go." Raxus stood and with the girl in tow, followed after Shiftie toward
the market square of the Vale.
When it came to the
jerkins, cloaks, and trousers, the elves had little to say, other than
casual comments from Shiftie regarding the color, the night before
seemingly forgotten. Abiel took his opinions to heart and picked the
colors she liked best of the colors Shiftie approved of most. The
weaponry, however, Abiel allowed the centurions to choose from. Abiel
spied Shiftie eyeing several daggers and long swords, several recurved
bows and a staff. He fumed irritably about his lack of money and
suddenly Abiel had an idea that cheered her greatly. They were leaving
the last of the storefronts to head back to Chazmir's home when Abiel
muttered something and ran inside the weaponsmith's shop again, the
elves waited impatiently. In another few moments, she was bolting back
out the door, extremely happy.
The elves raised an eyebrow.
"I decided to get the lavender blouse after all." She lied smiling from ear to ear.
The men shook their heads.
"It is time we were heading back and begin saddling the horses. Your
things should be delivered by then and we can be off." Shiftie stated
and headed back for the cleric's quickly.
Abiel said her goodbyes to those remaining at the Vale, Chazmirs and Rethim the saddest among them.
"We shall see you very soon, I am sure. Rethim and I will be leaving to
meet with our own Sect shortly. We hope to reach you at the Forge once
you are safely settled there. We would like to call upon you, if it
pleases you?" Chazmirs smiled, her eyes sparkling with tears.
"This would please me greatly. Please be safe on your journey, I will
await your arrival with great anticipation." Abiel hugged Chazmirs
tightly and then Rethim. "Thank you for your hospitality. I hope some
day to repay you both for the kindness you have shown me." Abiel was
choking on her own emotion now and trying with all of her effort not to
cry or to allow her feelings to come over those nearest.
"Go
now and be well, you take our best wishes with you." Chazmirs wiped the
falling tears from Abiel's freckled cheek, then looked to Shiftie, who
was sitting atop his horse impatiently. "Be safe, we will see you soon."
The high elf nodded and looked to Abiel who said her final goodbyes and
went to her horse, a large speckled gray gelding that looked almost too
large for her to handle, but was eager to carry her.
"Hello,
my new friend," Abiel smiled at the horse and patted his neck before
pulling herself deftly into the saddle and urged him onto the road.
CHAPTER VII
There were more than a dozen riders and two pack horses heading for the
dwarven stronghold. It would take at least a fortnight to reach without delay and Shiftie was praying to the Gods that there would be none.
Many in the caravan were new to Abiel, two rogues- one man called Dremus, and a dark elf rogue called Norfolk, whom Abiel had heard mention of over
the years as being one of the best at his trade and more. Abiel lost sight of two handsome wood elf rangers, Praxis and Faeron, within the first mile
of the journey as they immediately took to the woods to put their
tracking skills to use. Shiftie and the monk Zykon rode at the head of
the group followed by Abiel who rode alone. Mencius accompanied
Philphans, a large troll Shaman, the first troll Abiel had ever met, with a personality that reminded Abiel of the dwarves she'd met in the
Vale before the attacks. Surly in appearance was to put it politely. It
seemed genetically impossible that the troll could ever appear friendly
on any terms. His voice was gruff, his manner lacked the grace of most
races, but Abiel did not fear him and was all the happier for it when
they were introduced and he seemed quite pleased to meet Abiel and she
was at ease with Philphans from then on.
The most beautiful
red-haired high elven cleric draped in deep purples and gleaming
light-plated armor rode in the center of the small convoy. Shiftie had
introduced her as Mykaylla. Their familiarity might have otherwise irked
Abiel, but for the clerics grace and perfect looks, she even smelled
beautiful, Abiel would understand perfectly well if her keeper had taken
more than notice of the cleric. She rode between the enchanter and
shaman. The constant urge to turn and stare at Mykaylla gripped her
more so than Abi' would have liked. The curiosity gnawed at Abiel,
causing her to squirm in her seat and increase her embarrassment, for
she was sure the elven woman could see her moving about in the saddle
and must have been wondering what the God's the girl was doing fidgeting
as a child might.
The three casters were flanked on the sides
by Raxus and a barbarian warrior called Aneurin, one of the few men
Abiel had ever met that made her heart stop with his brutish
handsomeness. He did not speak often to anyone, though he was known by
most of the party. He was as tall as Shiftie, but twice as thick in
musculature. While his dark hair was kept short, he had an expanse of
beaded braids growing wildly from a thick beard speckled with the
occasional graying hair. Under most circumstances, Abiel would have been
twisted in knots over the look of him, but there was something about
the cleric Mykaylla that even a chiseled-faced barbarian could not
distract Abiel from.
Both the Mykaylla and Philphans were from
the most historically powerful of the Nine Sects, that of the Dragon.
Though Shiftie and Mencius never spoke regularly of the Dragon Sect,
when it was mentioned, both spoke of it with respect and not-so subtle
desire to one day wear the dragonwing crest. The leader of the Dragons
was rumored to be a battle-savvy and obscenely hard-mannered wood elven
warrior named Swag. While Pouty and those under the banner of the
Serpeant Sect had finally risen to the unofficial top of the Sects,
those within the Sects knew it would only be a matter of time before the
Dragons led the fighting guilds. Over the storied history of the Nine,
power and the recruitment of the best and finest casters and melee
fighters helped shift the balance of power from one Sect to another.
Though competitive in accolades and occasional rivalry between leaders
and member of the Sects, never had one Sect fought against another. None
sought to destroy or interfere with a guild outside of their own,
though it was rumored that over the last few decades, the Serpeant and
those of the Hammerhead had come close to full scale wars against one
another and a deep-ceded rivalry still lingered between the two crests.
The occasional personal issue might erupt into skirmishes between
members, but all accepted, even if begrudgingly, and honored the overall
purpose and function of the Nine, to keep peace and see to the safety
within the borders of the Lorelands.
By mid-day,
the band was pressing hard northward through the mountains, sticking to
the patrolled roads. Shiftie's goal was to reach the valley crest by
sundown, to rest the horses in Ehton, then continue down the mountain
and into the plains of Lanscombe and cross the wide open territory by
sunset. Ehton was a large outpost for the Vale's army now, swarming with
nearly five thousand wood elven soldiers and casters. It had been a
large village and trading post for several centuries and Abiel was
familiar with Ehton through their dealings with Juldain. She wondered
about her mother then, long passed glad that Juldain was alive and now
solely curious as to why she would be with Pouty in the Keep. This was
highly unusual, the Keep at Trentaru was a place occupied solely by the
guildmasters of the Nine Sects. None outside the Nine was allowed to
enter, except for those in the employ of the guilds and even they were
not permitted entrance without formal credentials presented by a member
of one of the Nine.
"Abi'," Shiftie called quietly without turning in his saddle and motioned her forward slightly with his hand.
Abiel spurred her horse forward to come along side the elven centurion.
"Sir?"
"Should issues arise, stay near to the casters." It was not a
suggestion. "Fall back as you were, Zykon will ride with you and begin
your lessons on meditation." Shiftie did not look at her.
"As you command." Abiel slowed her horse some to allow for space to grow between them as did Zykon.
"Do you know of the arts of meditation?" Zykon asked quietly.
"Some perhaps." Abiel shrugged. At that point, Abiel was not sure what she did or didn't know any longer.
"There are different forms of the meditative state. The highest is
achieved when you can focus out the world around you and elevate your
soul to a quiet restful state. Your mind does not focus on trivial
things in this life."
Abiel nodded. She was not sure she'd ever be able to shut her mind off to anything that pressed her.
"The most important for you I think, is to find the balanced form of
meditation I use for combat. In this state, your mid focuses on sound,
smell, a control of ones self and ones mind to anticipate and react. It
is complete harmony between mind and body. If you are able to do this,
you should be well grounded in battle so that you do not lose yourself."
Zykon steered his horse closer to hers. "A combatant with true skill
leaves out emotion. Anger, frustration, fear, all of these things cloud
the mind, cloud judgment and reaction until you learn how to control and use them. In your case, according to what
Raxus has explained to me, it is most likely that these things
contribute to your change and loss of self. As I have witnessed your
ability to," Zykon took a moment to find the proper wording, "...affect
those around you with simple feelings, I am sure that when surrounded by
violence, it is amplified."
Abiel's cheeks flushed with the color of her shame.
"You must let these things go. They are done with. The burdens of the
now are heavy enough without carrying the weight of things passed. You
can not change what has been done. You must learn to view your mistakes
and use them as tools to learn from. Do you understand?" Zykon was very
serious in demeanor.
"I do, Sir." Abiel breathed and exhaled deeply.
"Good. Never forget that. You will find that it applies to all things
in life, not just in battle. You will make mistakes, you WILL
fail." Zykon seemed anxious to drive this point home, causing the shame
again to resurface and wonder if the monk or anyone around her had ever
been capable of failings so large as hers.
*to be filled*
Abiel met Shiftie's gaze and bowed slightly, her face passive despite the anxiousness to get back to raiding, back to her friends. For the first time in her still young life, she did not want to be with her master. The years she had spent when he'd first left her in Costa Volte had been a suffering she did not want to experience again. When she was with Darkteror, Chaz and the others, Abiel felt whole and strong. She was gaining reputation for her skills and valor and amid the dangers, she was having fun. Her companions had initially been a distraction from the confusion and uncertainties, but that had faded into an ever growing familial bond that she'd never known. But now before her master, she steeled herself to remain still and to leave his presence as quickly as she could.
"My lord," Abiel said softly, bowing again and waited for his nod of approval for standing straight and squaring her shoulders. She glimpsed briefly at Throm and smiled before leaning over to kiss his temple. She turned and walked from them with a certainty that stung the high-elf. It showed on his face. He turned to face Throm, the dwarf was grinning from ear to ear. He both adored the girl and enjoyed the way she turned his great friend in knots.
"What?!" Shiftie snapped. "Speak your mind." Shiftie growled.
"You are a lion among lions, my friend. Of that, there is no debate." Throm's chuckled trailed off as he lost himself in the amusement.
"But?" Shiftie cut harshly as he sat down and took a drink of ale.
The bar maid interrupted and said something about payment but Shiftie was not listening and only returned to the present to catch Throm saying, "...Well of course she did." and Shiftie knew then that Abiel had already paid for the drinks and whatever else he and Throm might want. Without realizing, Shiftie's hand went to touch the new mail she'd given to him. It was so light, he regularly forgot he was wearing it. Shiftie's thoughts moved to her skill- whatever she was, she was becoming an effective enough tanque in battle, her reputation growing and being paid well for her services. Enough so that it was keeping him geared and upgraded regularly, as he continued to be the most oft recipient of her generosity.
"Say it." Shiftie said quietly, aware that Throm was waiting for him.
"You are a lion indeed, my friend. But that..." the dwarf focused his attention on Abiel outside before she was lost from sight, "...that is no lion. That is a dragon. And more so, whether you accept it or not, is not only a dragon. Your girl is THE Dragon."
Shiftie's shoulders fell as he slid back into his thoughts. "The dragon is mine." he hadn't meant to say it aloud. A sharp chill ran up his back.
"Aye. And it is by the Gods favor that she is."
The unease wrapped around the high-elf's shoulders.
"Whatever the truth of her soul and your shared blood-bound destiny."
"Soul-bound." Shiftie corrected gently. Throm laughed and elbowed the elf in the ribs.
"Destruction in living form- Love. The dragon burns all things in It's fire and reveals the truth. You'd do well to remember the Sword of Karr cuts both ways." Throm took a deep drink of ale.
"Pouty? Is that you?" Shiftie smirked but he was not amused.