The Return of The Eagle – Chapter 27

*Scene 01* – 10:10 (Containing the Threat)

Twilight settled over the ancient woods of Kilrane, and a hush fell as if even the wind dared not disturb the secrets hidden in the tangled undergrowth. Deep within the vast forest, at the foot of a moss-choked hill, the mouth of a yawning cave gaped—black as midnight–exhaling a chill that hinted at more than mere shadows.

Around the cave, a ring of scouts made their silent encampment. Armor muted beneath layers of forest green; they moved with the careful discipline of those who knew that vigilance was not just a virtue, but a necessity. Their task was clear: no living thing must emerge from the labyrinthine tunnels beneath their watch, for below them lurked a creature whose hunger could engulf the land.

A large net covered with leaves and vines woven through it had been pealed back from the mouth of the cave revealing its hidden stone entrance.  The vigilant watchers needed a clear view of the opening so that whatever creature emerged would be visible once it came near the cave’s entrance and be met with a fusillade of arrows and spears to herald its coming.

It had been a long trek back down from the fronting mountain pass from the summit of Mount Zefat, and these men were weary and ready to return back to their homes, wives and children.  They had not expected to find their company’s return to be delayed and barred from entry by a beast lurking within the inner passages up to the secret underground gates of Azragoth.

When they entered the hidden path along the outer edge of Kilrane, a narrow trail behind a hedge of thick brambles that ran a few hundred yards parallel to the clearing, they found a messenger from the hidden city waiting for them bearing a warning.  He was to accompany them back through the winding woods to the underground entrance to Azragoth but had a message to be given to The Eagle from Lord Nem that made their desire for a swift return to hearth and home a little less immediate.

A burrowing monster was confirmed to have entered the caves and tunnels beneath the hidden city.  Lord Nem’s suspicion was that the creature was a surviving relic of The Pan’s tunnelling behemoths that he had once used for mining.  A massive beast that shunned the daylight, thrived in darkness, ate through the land, subverting it with sink holes, and fracturing foundations.  Such a beast was ruinous to a city, especially one built over lower tunnels, buried ruins and cavernous voids.  The messenger also told them of the recent arrival of Surface Worlders that preceded the detection of this beast beneath.  And that one man had been sent below to deal with the creature and distract it until they could find a way to root the beast out from under the city.  The man in question was someone that The Eagle had met in battle and knew from long ago.  A man, now going under the name O’Brian.  A wanted man, hunted by Xarmnians, who had disappeared twenty-one years ago, formerly known by the name Brian David.

The Eagle’s expression was unreadable when told this news.  He grew very quiet, seeming to be deep in thought.  Wherever Brian showed up, trouble usually followed close behind.  And this time was no different.  So, this “O’Brian” had finally come out of hiding and brought an earth-eating dragon with him, had he?  There was enough trouble with the landing and approach of the Capitalian army, no doubt armed and stirred to suspicion by the pernicious and inflammatory letters sent to the Capitalian monarch charging Lord Nem with plotting sedition and rebellion.  Letters suggesting that Nem masked his objective for rebuilding and refortification efforts for the city of Azragoth and exploited the king’s trust and provision.  The king’s records would surely show that the old city had once been a thriving commercial center bringing in much revenue to the Capitalian kingdom when it was seeking to establish itself on the other side of its mountain redoubt, during the present monarch’s father’s reign.

King Artemis Xerxes well knew the bloodied history of dealing with Xarmni, and that the cities of the highlands had not always been the allies of the Capitalians before the battles with The Pan and its Half-Men began.  Alliances were made only after The Pan and its hybrid creatures had been routed and driven to the shadowy lands of the north.  When the brotherhood of Xerxes and Xarm split and began to be strained, the old cities realized that Xarm’s ambitions threatened them.  Capitalia sought to make peace through trade with the native cities and was successful in doing so.

King Xarm was a sly ruler who envied the prosperity of Capitalia but in his own pride, he refused to follow its methods of building wealth through alliances and mutually beneficial trade agreements.  Xerxes was a mighty king, who had once fought The Pan and his Half-Men creatures with his brother Xarm and had driven them out of the highlands into the northern lands into the region called The Moon Kingdom.  A place that seemed to exist in a perpetual twilight and was congested with ancient growths and diseased woods blackened by frosts and irregular seasons which hindered growth.

Xarm believed in the divine right of rulership.  That a monarch was owed both wealth and service by those under his rule.  That his subjects should serve his interests, rather than that the king served at the pleasure of his people.  With the inability to see how this notion failed to gain true loyalty or foster trust, his demands for fealty and service gained him little respect.  So, he opted for a campaign of rule through threat, terror and seizure of all means of production, making those under his rule dependent on the mercy of the state for their needs.  He razed fields, stole cattle, he demanded tribute and extorted money from the smaller towns and hamlets, sending out his thuggish squads to monitor and protect the king’s interests.  Capitalia objected to this encroachment, and brutal means to amass lands and properties.  But they chose not to intervene until their lands and those of their alliance lands were threatened.

But King Xarm would not let the Capitalian lands alone, nor refrain from threatening the lands and towns thriving under their trade alliances made with the Capitalian King Xerxes.  Xarm was constantly seeking to subvert Xerxes and provoke him into battle, until King Xerxes finally decided to close the mountain pass.  King Xarm took the closing of the sole pass beyond and through the formidable Walls of Stone mountains to be a sign of cowardice, thinking that they had won the battle of wills with the Capitalian King.  Only to be unprepared when Capitalia engaged them in a final assault to put down the aggressors and regather his kingdom into its newly established fortification and close off all dealings with its contentious provocateur, the ever-fractious kingdom of Xarm.

Capitalia soundly defeated the forces of Xarm but failed to stomp them out completely.

In the intervening years, Xarmni regained its strength through cunning and subversion.  In the years following, their only symbolic defeat had been at the siege of Azragoth as it succumbed to plague and a fusillade of battering through its out walls, eventually demolishing the inner courts and residences, as far as catapults and trebuchets could cast their cut stones.  When the Xarmnians’ moved in to take the spoils, however, they learned the harsh truth that the city had fallen under sickness.  It waters were polluted by an infestation of rats and decaying corpses left to rot, stink and decompose in the streets from the prior assault.  The Xarmnian soldiers who had made the initial incursion were falling as well under the spreading disease.  Xarmni then fled the field and were further driven back by weakened survivors who had managed to turn their catapults and use them to fling their dead soldiers back into their encampment.   Xarmnian soldiers and some of the princes were beginning to fall ill, having contracted the disease from exposure to the pitched corpses landing in their midst.

Eventually the catapults and trebuchets were dismantled and used for firewood in burn pyres and pits along with those Xarmnian trenches dug to hold the dead of the fallen city.  The Eagle had contributed what he knew to the knowledge of the comprehensive history of both of these major kingdoms and the young man named Sage, recently arrived, had filled in the gaps from his father’s records and intimate knowledge of Xarm’s palace intrigues.

Now a further threat from beneath again threatened the beleaguered city of Azragoth.  A beast that lingered from the Mid-World’s past, when The Pan and his creatures first brought instruments of warfare to this world beyond the threat of tooth and claw.

How odd it was, The Eagle thought, looking intently into the revealed cave mouth, that the past conflicts should keep curving back as obstacles of threat to the present, with him being now on the opposing side of the threats rather than allied with them.  A fleeting thought passed through his mind before he dismissed it away.  Perhaps, he should have killed Brian when he last had the chance.

*Scene 02* – 05:23 (Battle Dress)

“I really don’t feel like training today,” Cheryl said, as she pulled on and laced her footwear that morning as she and Christie dressed in the room they shared in the upstairs of Jalnus and Judith’s tavern.  “The leg still bothering you?” Christie asked as she fastened the front piece of her formed bodice with string ties.  “A little.  The bruise is still there.  It’s getting better, though, I think.”

“I’ve noticed you’re not limping as much as before,” Christie said, trying to inhale and pull the strings through their corresponding eyelets.  She squinted and tugged the ties, trying to hold in her breath.  “Ugh!  I’m not sure how one breathes in this thing,” she commented dryly, “much less fights in it.”

“They said its s’posed to protect you.  Made out of hardened and dried wool soaked in seawater, someone told me,” Cheryl observed.  “Hard enough to turn and arrow shot or turn a blade, so they say.”

“I’ll take their word for it,” Christie said. “I’m not anxious to test the theory. At least these are lighter than iron and do seem to breathe a little.”

Cheryl sighed, “I thought medieval women wore long luxurious gowns, with elaborate head pieces, and went to balls and such.”  Christie chuckled releasing the ties, catching her breath again, “Yeah, well doesn’t look like we’ll be going to any balls soon.  More likely to get one thrown at us, than attend one.”

“Well, these boots don’t help.  Shouldn’t we have asked for glass slippers or something?”

“Yeah, if you want your feet cut.  Glass slippers wouldn’t be practical here.  We won’t be doing much waltzing in the Warrior’s court today, I think.  No matter what Ezra says about foot placement and so on.”

“Don’t cross your legs, girls!” Cheryl said in an attempt at a deeper masculine tone, trying to imitate Ezra’s baritone.

“That’s only when you are fencing.  Etiquette suggests otherwise when sitting.  Something those boys should learn.  You’ve seen how they slouch and sprawl.”

“Yeah, well none of them have to wear a skirt and bodice.  Or a corset for that matter,” Cheryl responded.

“I’ll wear this protective equipment, but a corset is where I draw the line,” Christie sniffed, “You can’t fight, if you can’t breathe.”

“Why do we have to fight anyway?” Cheryl queried. “Seems like every time we go out, someone or something is after us.  Maybe Laura had the right idea.”

“Well, you can’t run forever,” Christie sighed, “At some point we will have to take a stand, and when that time comes, I’d like to be prepared for it.  Did you see Maeven with the bow and arrows?  Or Nell with those throwing knives?”

“Yeah, I watched Nell prepare breakfast.  The way she handled a cleaver dicing and slicing gave me a sense of her skill, but I admit I was surprised by her precision throwing blades.”

“When I saw her knives bouncing off this molded tunic it convinced me.  However snug it may be, I figure it is worth a little discomfort if it can deflect a knife like that.”

“Aren’t we all supposed to be in the Warrior’s Court this morning?  I’m surprised they haven’t come to get us before now.”

“There was some secret meeting this morning,” Christie remarked.  “Ezra said he would send Maeven to come get us after.  For once, just be thankful that we got to sleep in.”

“Yeah, well I’m getting hungry, and we usually only have breakfast after a morning exercise.  What’s it supposed to be today?”

“For breakfast or for the exercise?” Christie favored Cheryl with a quizzical look.

“The exercise,” Cheryl fastened the gathers on her waist coat.  “Whatever’s for breakfast, I’m eating it.  Look here, I’m starving.  Either I’m shrinking or these gather strings are getting longer.  I don’t know what to do with these long loops once I tie them.  Even double knotting the loops doesn’t seem to matter.  If I triple knot them, I’ll never get this thing off at the end of the day.  Might as well bathe in it.  Do you think I’m too skinny?”

“I think its archery with Maeven, …and no, I don’t think you’re too skinny.  But I think we will all get a lot leaner before this is over.  Appreciate the meals here for food will be harder to come by on the trip ahead.”

“That’s what worries me,” Cheryl sighed.  “What d’you think we will be eating once we leave here?  Will we have to kill something?”

“Unless you know of a way to pack a vegetable garden, yeah.  Probably.”

“Not sure how I feel about that,” Cheryl lamented.  “But starvation might motivate me to try it.”

Christie picked up her knap sack and turned her shoulder into the loop, “Which is why we need to pay close attention to Maeven’s archery lesson.”

Suddenly, there was a loud commotion coming from downstairs.  And a shriek that seemed to come from their hostess lady, named Judith.

“Everybody out!” a man’s voice shouted.  “Quickly!”

Christie and Cheryl threw open the door to their bedroom and clambered outside, coming to the wooden railing overlooking the dining hall below.  Others emerged from the apartment rooms.

“What’s going on?” Cheryl asked.

Below the corpulent owner of the tavern and inn waved hurriedly to them.  “Come on! Come on!  Hurry, before it’s too late.  This building may collapse at any moment!”

*Scene 03* – 12:24 (Into The Mouth of Madness)

The supernatural arrows flashed as they sped through the air, hissing with a kinetic energy that blazed through the visible and invisible spectrum of all light.  With razor precision, they found their marks even as the beast twisted away from the threat they posed.  One buried itself in the corner of its jaw, piercing its scaled lip, and lodging in its blackened gums.  The other glanced off its hard beak-like proboscis, and entered the flared slit of a nostril, causing it to ululate with an ear-splitting shriek and roll violently, thrashing and whipping its bladed tail, scattering rocks and debris as it raged.  For a fraction of a second, hunting for an opening I found the moment I had been waiting for.  The dust dragon’s serpentine tongue unfolded from the cleft in its open maw, seeking to dislodge the arrow that had pinned its lip to its gum, its vile sulfurous breath whistling like a gale past the arrow lodged in its nostril.  The creature rolled on its back over the crumbling mound of rock, twisting and shrieking like a dog with back fleas, its large talons raking the air and walls like the harvesting blade of a grim reaper.

I mounted the hill again, seeking a way through the slashing claws, trying my best to avoid the obsidian eye that was soon to find me and focus this terrible rage on my person.  Its jaw was agape, unable to break the shaft of the arrow of truth that prevented it champing and gnashing its dangerous, rock-cutting teeth.  I held the honor sword in my right hand, slashing my way towards its twisting head, avoiding the jutting spikes that could skewer me in an instant.  My attacking sweeps failing to connect and break through its scaled skin and tough hide, making my approach much more difficult.

The beast’s body slammed against the stones, sending jagged fragments spinning and rocketing into the air as its crushing weight broke the larger stones apart.  A sharp fragment of flint caught me in the torso, cutting through my tunic, abrading my ribs and cutting a shallow gash into my side.  I felt the wet heat of my blood flow down my side, the abrasions burning as if I had been stung by an angry swarm of hornets.  The dragon tried to snap at my arm, as I hammered the honor sword into its beaded fleshy gill, trying to get closer to its mouth and cleave its dervish-tongue.

A powerful claw dug deeply into the ground next to me, its talons grasping and burrowing into the sand.  Its body contorted like a cat and righted itself, the other foot and claws slamming down on the opposite side of its body and its tail gathered in double-arcs below.  The force of the forelegs hitting the rocks shook the mound upon which we fought, and I stumbled, grazing the side of my head as I fell, knocking the wind from my lungs.  I lay gasping, knowing that at any second the creature could take my life.  My pulse pounded like a kettle drum in my ears, my muscles, starved for oxygen, making it hard to make my limbs move enough to scramble to safety.  The end would be swift, I hoped.  Otherwise, I would slowly bleed out, with parts of my body crushed, should the creature thrash about once more.

But that was not what it had in mind.  Its intent was far worse.

The coiling tail flexed, its forearms crouched gathering power and positioning the weight of the monster for a mighty lunge upward.

“no, no, no, No, NO, NO!” I heard my own voice gaining in volume as oxygen returned to my lungs.

With the strength that remained, I twisted and pulled my knees under me, my free hand pulling my body upon the boulder that I had clipped on my way down, fingers sliding in a slickness where my head had struck.  I could not let this monster get into the city above.

Abandoning all caution or thought of self-preservation, I gained my feet, setting my bruised and bloody side afire in pain.  Adrenaline pumped into my arms and legs, like a fuel injection system, and my battered form raced forward in spite of the pain and I leaped onto the fringed neck of the creature, striking its hard-plated flesh with my sword, pummeling it with my free fist trying everything I could to keep it from what it was about to do.

My left fist was raw and bloodied, because the hide of the beast was like that of coarse grit sandpaper, and had no feeling of muscle or soft tissue below it.  I grasped at anything I could, flailing with the honor sword, but gaining control again and beating upon the beast with the flat of the blade since the edge and point could find no soft entry.  In an instant, my fingers closed around the bristling shaft of the arrow that had materialized out of the words of truth that I had brought to mind.  As my grip closed, I felt the ground beneath me suddenly fall away, and my arm was very nearly pulled

From its shoulder socket.  Two verses, quick as thought, raced through my mind as the pain of the pull nearly caused me to lose consciousness.

“(For the weapons of our warfare [are] not carnal, but mighty through God to the pulling down of strong holds;)” [2 Corinthians 10:4 KJV]

“…so is my word that goes out from my mouth: It will not return to me empty, but will accomplish what I desire and achieve the purpose for which I sent it.” [Isaiah 55:11 NIV]

Such pain as I had never felt before, burned due to the torque and twisting of my arm and from the pull of my bodyweight downward.  My feet dangled as the ground fell away, and my sword arm flailed, yet my unyielding left fist clung unrelentingly to the shaft of the arrow in its cheek. The pain threatened to cloud my mind with dark oblivion, as I was wrenched back and forth, as the beast caught itself on the edges of the cavity created by the collapsed ceiling and with powerful arms and claws dug upward into the narrowing shaft above.

The light streaming in from the hole around the buried outside wall and the cellar room interior, now darkened with the door closed, was still above us about forty feet in distance.  A considerable amount of rock and earth had fallen from the cavity crater which had formed the mound of rock and debris piled on the tunnel floor below us, yet the cavity narrowed the closer it came to the surface.  At some point soon, the monster would have to dig the rest of the way through to get into the city, and as the walls of the chute rapidly narrow around us, I knew I would be crushed against the walls as soon as the dust dragon drove its head into the tightening space and had to eat away the earth to move ahead.  With an arrow bristling from its nostril, I wondered if the beast would be able to clamp its nose shut against the dust that would inevitably clog its airways, and with the arrow lodged in its jaw, I wondered how well it could eat through the earth and expel it out of its gills if the creature had difficulty closing its mouth.  Did this beast even feel pain?  Of course, it did.  That is why the raging and writhing occurred when those arrows struck, but I wondered about the true nature of that pain.  Was it physical alone, or some other part of its being feeling these piercings in a way I could not easily imagine.

I swung my honor sword upward, grateful for the binding of the bloodline to my wrist and forearm.  Without this binding, I knew I surely would have dropped this weapon long before now.  I needed to wedge the sword into the hinge of the beast’s jaw to relieve the weight of my entire body hanging from my left arm alone.

The creature’s powerful arms and claws pushed and dug into the ceiling chute walls, creating a lunging upward and downward motion, tossing my body upward with momentum fighting the pull of gravity.  The temporary weightlessness allowed me to slash the sword sideways, over the beast’s auguring teeth and into the corner of the creature’s gaping mouth.  The slinging motion propelled my body over the arc of the sword, aided by an upward thrust forearm, giving me a temporary foothold, and I was able to swing my body into the creature’s gaping mouth, barely avoiding its jagged teeth.

As I may have stated before, the creature’s head was about the size of a serial killer’s panel van, and its mouth was the size of its cargo area.  So, there I crouched, in what felt like this killer’s bloody abattoir, rocking from side to side, as its enraged driver rocketed through the ever-narrowing tunnel like a madman.  I freed my honor sword from its clamped jaw, just as I heard a sickening wet noise in the roof of the creature’s mouth directly overhead.  Its slimy black tongue was being freed from the flapped cavity and with it, the back of the creature’s throat, previously clamped shut, was opening like a dank, vile-smelling, dark chasm.  Its gullet and digestive track were not involved in its consumption and expulsion of dirt and rock, for the channels routing to the creature’s acidic salivary wash and crushing gill slits were being diverted in favor of a pathway through its razor-lined gullet directly into the pit of its vile, stomach.

The tongue of the beast felt horrid, and there was something round and hard buried within its oily, mucous covered black flesh.  The creature used its tongue for more than just detecting scents.  The embedded stone was used as a wrecking ball to smash and pulverize whatever unfortunate victim found its way into its mouth.  The first pass of the tongue rapidly acquainted me with these features as it whipped around and struck me with an incredible force that cracked one of my ribs with an audible snap.  I gasped and fell to my knees, the sharp pain blinding me for an awful dark fraction of a second, that felt like all time and existence had stopped.

My honor sword blazed anew, and I felt the overwhelming power of the quickening surge within me, sending fiery pulses into my aching muscles such that I was numbed to the former pain.  The quickened energy crackled along the blade, igniting the runes and tracery with white fire, and my right arm was in motion before I was even aware of it.  My blade struck the dragon’s tongue, arresting its movement, the edge of the blade searing and cleaving through the thickly muscled meat and colliding with the stone-like sphere inside it.

Black, oily blood gushed forth from the cut, a deluge of foul-smelling liquid heat, engorged the creature’s mouth, streaming down into the back of its open throat, soaking me in stinking sewage.  I felt the creature tremble and wretch, and its body convulsed as its gaping jaws, at last closed over me, shutting out all light, enveloping me in smothering and final darkness.  In a shuddering, fleshy cocoon that I believed to be my coffin, I felt the monster’s forward momentum slip.  My body became weightless for an instant, and then we both began to fall backward, me trapped within the tumbling beast as it rebounded off the tunnel walls, into the abyssal depths below.

*Scene 04* – 13:07 (Nurse She-Bear)

Underground Image-05

I do not know how long it was before I was found.  The last thing I remembered was the fall, and the sickening feeling of being pulled backward by gravity into the abyss.  Whether it was the abyss within the creature’s stomach sluiced along by the stream of black blood jetting out of its tongue, or the abyssal pits in the tunnel network beneath the city of Azragoth, with my body still trapped within the creature’s closed mouth, I could not tell.  I did not remember the actual impact as we hit the floor of the caverns, because the smell of the gorged death coming from the creature’s belly overwhelmed me and I lost consciousness.

When I regained awareness, I was being turned over on my side and wiped down, the vile black blood cleared from my face, hair, and beard.

“Where am I?” I croaked.

“Lie still, Mr. O’Brian,” a woman’s voice spoke, “You’ve been through quite an ordeal.”

Disoriented, I tried to sit up but felt a severe flash of white-hot pain take my breath away.

“I said, lie still!” she scolded, “Do that again and I’ll have them tie you down.  You’ve got some bruised ribs if they are not broken.  You’re lucky they didn’t pierce a lung.  You’ve got multiple abrasions and contusions. A shallow gash down your left side and you’ve lost quite a bit of blood.  I’m not sure what this crap is all over you, but I’ll bet it does no good for your open wounds.  Your left arm had been pulled out of the socket, but I had the guys help me get it popped back into place while you were still unconscious.  You can thank me later.  Now do what I say and keep your butt in bed for a few days, until we can get you thoroughly cleaned up and bandaged.”

I started to say something, but she shut me up.

“Argue with me, and you’ll wish you hadn’t.  I’m a She-Bear, remember?”

Christie, my mind formed the name, and I realized that somehow, I had been found and carried out of the underground and back up into the city.  I was in a room I did not recognize, and a steady cooling breeze blew in from an open window.  I could see that the honor sword lay on a table not far from me, its scabbard cleared of all cavern dust, its metal cap, hilt or cross-guard, and surfaces cleaned and buffed to a restored polish.  No trace of the gore remaining on the scabbard, hilt or bloodline sash, now wound back neatly around the cross-guard posts.  The very sight and knowledge that it was within reach comforted me and set my mind at ease.

“How did you find me?”

“Find you?” Christie laughed, “You and that dragon scared the living you know what out of the townsfolk.  It wasn’t that hard to find you.  How did you get down there anyway?”

“Well, it wasn’t my idea,” I answered with a deep sigh.  “You might say I sort of fell into the conflict.”

She stared at me half-smiling, “I can’t seem to figure you out.  I don’t know if you have a persistent death wish or are just clumsy and accident prone.  Others saw you.  They say it looked like you were trying to fight it.”

I learned from Christie that the conflict below had drawn a crowd, as soon as the story of a certain pub owner named Jalnus and his wife Judith came running in a panic into the Warrior’s Court, crying about a monster in their cellar who ate a gaping hole in the floor.  No one could make sense of what they were saying, with the husband Jalnus and wife Judith talking over one another, the man in befuddled shock and the woman crying and shouting for someone to help them save their food stores.  It took some doing, but Ezra and his attendants finally got them calmed down enough until they began to make more rational sense.

Jalnus had been sent by his wife down into their food cellars to bring up a bottle of wine and some cured beef for some of their guests.  When the man returned empty-handed and white as a sheet, his wife had a fit, called him a catalog of names, and attempted to go down herself, but her husband was adamant that she didn’t, insisting there was something down there she did not want to encounter.  Unable to stop her, however, she marched down to the basement and threw open the door.  The people up in the restaurant above and the people two streets over said they could hear the scream.

Townsfolk came to their aid, but not before Jalnus, and his wife Judith had rocketed out of the lower stairwell and rounded the corner of their pub, almost falling into the sinkhole crater that gaped along the side of their building.

A terrible noise arising from the hole suddenly suggested to other townsfolk that the pub owners had the right idea.  Some fled the area with them, while others gaped and gawked trying to figure out what was going on below.

The hysteria of the couple might have been dismissed, had it not been for the other townsfolk who arrived shortly thereafter to corroborate their story.  Christie and Cheryl had been among those witnesses. She and Cheryl had occupied one of the upper bedrooms in Jalnus’ Tavern and they heard the commotion from below.  There had been some delay in both being called to the Warrior’s Court that morning.  They heard Judith’s cry of shock and Jalnus, fearing the further collapse of his establishment, had frantically urged everyone out, thinking the entire structure might sink into the pit below, or be torn asunder by the great beast he had encountered through the gaping hole in the basement.

Judith remained in the doorway, sobbing and waving frantically.  When all had been cleared from the tavern, the crowd and onlookers outside further discovered the gaping hole next to the wall of the couple’s Alehouse.  And it seemed just as probable that there was a portion of that same gaping hole extending under their lower cellar subfloor.

The city’s warriors quickly assembled, and those of my own company who had previously arrived at the Warrior’s Court, fell in along the quick procession to the alehouse and pub belonging to the couple.  What they witnessed from above was the noises of a protracted battle, as the creature below writhed and wretched, and stumbled about in a blind stupor, after having crashed back down to the floor of the tunnel cavern below it.  The force of its final crash had broken the creature’s backbone, and it had expelled what was my battered body upon the embankment of a deep, cave pool of boiling hot water.

The pub owner, Jalnus Freeweather, had insisted that he had seen a man down there with the creature, but his wife, Judith said that he was prone to seeing things once he’d had a pint or three.  Lord Nem was told of what transpired, and, to Christie’s mind, seemed not to be shocked by it, and conceded that a party should be sent down to find the man that Jalnus had spoken of.  In fact, he said that one was already within the caves and should find out soon enough.  And that, of course, is how I was found and recovered and brought back up into the city.

And she said, by the way, did I know that the Eagle had landed?

I blinked.

“What?”

The seeming switch in topic caught me off guard.

Seeing my puzzlement, Christie laughed, “C’mon, you know. The Eagle has landed.”

When my face also clouded with befuddlement, she sighed and clarified, “One small step for man…?  The Apollo program.”

“Oh, I get it.  In the uh…” I gestured upward.

“Back in the Surface World, yeah.  But not exactly.  The moon landing.  I’ve always been sort of a sci-fi nerd, I guess.  Always wanted to say that phrase.  Kind of hard to work it into a normal conversation, but it seemed to fit here.  When wiping my kids noses when they were little, I would take a tissue and say, ‘Beam me up, Snotty!’  Then I caught them running all over the house with a tissue box, tossing tissues in the air yelling ‘Beam me, Snotty!  Beam me, Snotty!’”

Christie smiled and sighed at the pleasant memory, “It’s funny the things kids pick up on.  They made quite a mess, but it was kind of hard for me to get onto them for it.  Little stinkers knew if they could make their momma laugh, I couldn’t punish them.  Now, here I am wiping you up.  Being in this place is sort of like being on another planet, though.  A twin Earth but with weird creatures and strange lights.  Don’t you know your own history?”

“Of course, but I’ve kind of been preoccupied dealing with my history in this place.  Especially since a part of it almost ate me.”

She laughed, “Well at least it seems your sense of humor is returning.  That’s a good sign.”

“Christie, how do you…I mean…how am I…?”

She was always quick on the uptake, I remembered, and able to complete my thought, even though I had difficulty formulating it.

“How do I know about your condition and how to treat you?”

“Yeah, that.”

“Because, back in the Surface World, I am a registered nurse, and I am good at it.  Besides having two exceptional children who had their share of scrapes cuts and bruises growing up, and two very big brothers who I took care of as their big sister, I have been around enough broken bones, barbed wire cuts, pocket knife injuries, and a few kicks by the horses to have seen my fair share of nursing before I even got into the profession.  Years of fieldwork had already prepared me for this.”

“I didn’t know that.”

“There’s quite a bit you don’t know about us, Mr. O’Brian.  Maybe you should just ask.  Get to know all of us a little before we go off on this quest.”

She paused and then added, “And for that matter, we all still know very little about you, Mister O’Brian.”

I smiled.  “You do get right to the point, don’t you?”

She smiled back.  “I’ve always been sort of a get-to-the-point, no-nonsense, girl, Mr. O’Brian.  It’s called being a straight shooter, where I come from.”

“And once again, you couldn’t be more right.  It is time I got to know all of you a little better.”

She stood up and tossed the wet and blackened cloth, she had been cleaning me up with into a pail in the corner of the room.

“First things, first, Mr. O’Brian.  Let’s have another look at that wound on your side, then you’ll need to get some rest.  The one they call the Eagle has been eager for you to wake up, but I have kept him out for now.”

“Why does he want to speak with me?”

“He says, you’ve met before.  But under very different circumstances.  He doesn’t want to alarm you if you see him first, so he has asked that I tell him the moment you wake up and have him summoned here, at once, before you get out of bed.”

Something about her words troubled me, but I was too tired to think about how I might know or remember someone called ‘The Eagle’.

My hand slipped under the coverlet of the bed I was lying on, as she pulled the sheet down from my torso, and examined my bloodied gash, wetting another linen cloth with a bottle of spirits, intending to wash out the wound further.

I was feeling vulnerable, and the honor sword lying on the table suddenly seemed too far away to reach.  Then, with eyes widening, I realized there might still be another reason beyond my weakened and wounded state, causing my sense of unease, and I blushed.

My hand surreptitiously felt down under the sheet confirming what I suspected, while she was preoccupied with cleaning the gash.

“Christie?”

“What is it?” she asked, mopping dried blood away, and tossing yet another filthy cloth into the waste pail, and then wetting another fresh cloth with the spirits.

“What have you done with my pants?”

As if in answer, she pressed the spirited cloth into the encrusted wound, causing me to gasp.

“Trust me, Mister O’Brian.  They were burned along with everything else you were wearing.  You will never want to be wearing those again.  Now shut up and lie still.  She-Bear.  Remember?”

“When will I get some new pants?” I asked meekly.

“When I say, it’s okay for you to get out of this bed.”

“That’s piracy.  I need some pants.  I can’t be held here a prisoner of my own modesty.”

“You’re a patient, now lie still or this will hurt more.”

I gasped. And through gritted teeth said, “Aye, aye, Captain She-Bear.”

She poured some of the spirits directly into my wound convincing me further that I should’ve kept my mouth shut.

*Scene 05* – 06:03 (Actio Mortis)

Deep below the citadel of Azragoth, in the network of tunnels, near a steamy, bubbling, volcanic pool, the broken body of the mysterious Dust Dragon twitched in the darkness.  Its upraised claw slightly expanded and retracted, responding to the dying synaptic pulse of the beast’s fading muscle memory.  Its elongated neck and thorned head twisted at an odd angle, its rib of back spines driven into the floor, staking its form to the ground under the weight of the beast’s bulk.

Its odd eye stared unseeing into the darkness, a webbing film occluding its large moistened glaucomic bulge.  And then, for the briefest fraction of a second, the iris of that eye changed once more, from deep space black to a glacial blue, and then withered to opaque black, lacking the darkling gleam it once had before.

The mound of monstrous muscles, beaded-flesh, glassy-scales, crushing granite-like teeth, bony plates, and diamond-hard raking claws, blackened, seeming to resolve into the shadows as its hard massive eyes sunk and withered into its head, leaving gaping black sockets.

A strange and unnatural sort of rigor mortis had set into its body, beginning the inexorable process of slow decay, signaling the dwindling of a dying fire within.  Each twitch and shudder gave off a pulse of light that flashed between the photosensitive scales of the beast, sliding like St. Elmo’s fire down its reptilian body. The flash was not limited to the body alone but leaped from it into the excretion weeping into oily puddles spreading from beneath its mysterious and monstrous body.  The globular glow transferred, by electrophoresis, into the mucosal smears that had tracked from the creature’s slithering progress through the tunnels.

Its body jolted once more, and a brighter electric pulse cast a strobe-like sheen over the great beast’s scaly hide.  A fractured and fibrous image arose from the wet gloss then moved as a phosphor vapor down from its body into the slick crisscrossing oily substance that the beast had left on the tunnel floors in its destructive passage beneath the city.  As it left, the body of the beast then fractured and began to crumble into dust, and rock.  Appearing like nothing more than the tailings of mine-ejected scree.

The strange light projection warped, splintered and rewove itself, moving away from the prone hulk of the beast and down through the slick trail like an electric current passing through tangled wiring.  Light pulses of energy, rushed in a succession of waves, pushing the projection and following a path deeper into the caverns below.

Charged particles of fine dust and powder were drawn after the pulse, swirling and forming a magnetized dust cloud that lifted off and from between the glass-like scales of the monster.  These flakes swirled and puffed into the stale air but were drawn after the rolling pulses like a conical cloud being drawn by the downward push of a cold airmass.

These grainy contrails follow the course of the moving projection like a wake following a speeding boat across water. The final pulse moved swiftly, tracing the erratic course along the cavern floors, casting odd vaporous shadows on the cavern walls and uneven rises and dips in the floor.  Their strange phrenetic course disappeared into another cavern with what appeared, in the brief flash of light, to be a room cluttered with hundreds of small, pillared stalagmites.

The phosphorous glow fanned out through the rows and ranks of columns, lighting up the field with crackling arcs.  Each column trembled as the flash fire swirled around it as winds swirling above the cavern’s ceiling descended growing from gust to gale.  The flecks of magnetized dust scoured the tops of each stalagmite, abrading the face of each, opening a slash of a hole revealing that the stalagmites were hollow.  The winds coalesced into swirling cones and poured into each of these hollow cavities, rushing down the throat of each pillar.  The column began to slough off the rough, mud-like exterior, as electric blue arcs of light flashed up and down each column.

Finally, the foremost column, closest to the tunnel where the amorphous blue light had first entered the broad cavern, began to close the slashed gap where the strange wind had entered its hollows.  A ring of dirt slid off of the upper portion of the column forming an ovoid sphere, making the column appear like a large pawn piece on a massive chess board.  The ovoid flaked cracked and fell away revealing the rudimentary shape of a human face.  Two concavities sunk into the surface of the ovoid shape and a small vertical plane pushed forward.

Then, with a hissing pop, two eyes sprang open from deep within the concavities, as more of the surface layer sloughed away.  The cheeks on either side of the vertical plane bunched, the slash aperture of the mouth turned upward, and the revealed face of an old woman smiled into the darkness.

*Scene 06* – 08:08 (Rock-a-bye, Baby)

When Grum-Blud returned from scouting the perimeter of the old city ruins, Briar met him coming around the path in the shadow of the remains of the old outer wall.  He was grinning in as much as ever a troll with a natural scowling face might be said to grin.

The wall over him, appearing to be covered by spreading ivy, suddenly rustled and the crawling vines whipped around him, arresting his gamboling gait.

“What did you learn, frog?” Briar’s dissonant voice came from out of a bunched gathering of leaves, followed by her human face, her green irises adjusting from the shadow—Her alabaster skin first appearing devoid of color then finally obtaining a faint blush on her cheeks, lessening the strange greenish tint they initially bore.  The ivy framing her face, enshrouding her feminine body receded somewhere into her open back, and her delicate gossamer gown once again shimmered out of the folding and entwining leaves.

Briar’s womanly beauty was stunning, but ghostly in some ineffable way resisting adequate descriptors.

“It’s a ruse,” Grum chuckled.  “There is more to these old broken walls than meets the eye.  An inner wall has been built, coated with this!” Grum-Blud held up his hand stained with a sticky black substance, that made Briar step back from him instantly.

“Blood?!”

“Not blood, but something like,” Grum bared his teeth in a sneer, again attempting to approximate a grin.  “I wouldn’t advise risking moving against this city with your kind, just the same.”

Grum-Blud then proceeded to explain to her what he had seen of through the opened door as a man passed through it into the inner courtyards beyond view, and of his mind on how to attack the city, if the monster they had perceived below it, was not up to the job.  The city within did not appear to be under alarm and he had heard no sounds of distress walking along the inner black wall and donning his stone cloak from time to time when he suspected he might be spotted.  There was enough interior rubble remaining from the siege of many years prior, that he felt comfortable blending in among the weathered rocks and debris, without the worry of being spotted.  Mats and tangles of creeper vines and forest shrubs peeled through the old stone pavements allowing a short fellow to easily scurry under the cloaking vines when needed.

Briar seemed to approve of Grum’s plan and escorted him back to where the others had awaited them.  Only, when they returned, there was no sign of the sleeping Shelberd, or the two onocentaurs, Brem and Bray, annoying as they may be.  When venturing a comment about their absence, he was told only that they had been “tucked away for safe keeping.”  Hesitating to pry further on what “tucked away” might mean, he shuddered, thinking that to these wood sirens, that just might include one of those hanging blood bags they had witnessed in Rim Wood above deep in the highlands.

Sylvan seemed pleased with herself, not having to carry his chum Shelberd anymore as they turned to go.

Grum-Blud’s pulse quickened, and his stomach soured as he felt vines slither around his waist and his weight shift forward on dragging toes.

“Come!  The Pan awaits!” Briar commanded her followers, now including about six more of the sinister but beautifully deceptive wood sirens, sidling alongside them, winking at Grum-Blud as they lifted him aloft.

Two days of travel ensued once they left the forest of Kilrane, and they edged along the valleys, and over the plains of Ono.  They plunged through other stands of trees, picking up other sirens along the way, receiving words of the march and progress of The Pan and his coming with a retinue of satyrs, hulking centaurs, and about twenty of his fierce part lion, part human, part insectile creatures called manticores.  Carrion birds and scavenger creatures followed, for they knew that wherever The Pan went, there were sure to be feasting and copious instances involving the spilling of blood.

***

High in the treetops, in a makeshift sort of cradled bower, Shelberd squirmed and stretched, then smacked his lips in sleepy satisfaction, unaware that he was thirty feet off the ground slung and wrapped with vines, swaying with the creak and bend of the tree upon which he’d been unwittingly perched.  A leafy branch tickled his bulbous nose and sleepily he laughed and snorted, still oblivious to his own precarious situation.

The two onocentaurs sat on their haunches, beneath the tree, muzzled and tied by twist vines in tandem to the base of the tree’s trunk and thick knuckles of protruding roots grappling with the ground below.

“Can you make him, shut up?!” Brem groused.  “He’s going to attract attention with all his snoring and grunting!  And here we are, left to nanny that squatty little booger!”

“Ain’t no use getting to him.  Trees to thick to shake him down, and I don’t suppose you’ve every tried climbing one in hooves.”

Brem sniffed.  “S’ppose so!” he snuffed, rolling his shoulders, attempting to stand again, but failing to free the vines that bound him.  “Ugh!  Blasted wood women!  Who’d’ve thought they could tie a hobble so effectively!  I can’t even gnaw through this one, it’s so bitter!”

“Just be glad they didn’t hang us up in a blood basket, mister big mouth! You beat everything, y’know that?  Talkin’ as if you wuz so fascinated by them wood witches!”

“Well, it did serve to scare those trolls a bit back into simmer rather than boil.  Like nice little cabbages.”

“Cabbages?!  Don’t start in on cabbages, mister!  I ain’t et nothin’ since yestiddy mornin’.  Trolls were stingy with the rations.”

“The rations!” Brem perked up.  “The packs on our saddle.  Can you reach one?”

Bray twisted in the vined hobble and strained a hand out from under one of the tight wrapped vines.  “I think I just might…”  He writhed and twisted, managing to get one knuckle and then another through the braided vest, flexing his fingers.  The vine frayed a bit, and with some further straining, bray freed an arm, panting in triumph.  “That does it!” Brem encouraged.  “Now reach back here and pull that strap loose.  I saw the littler one tuck a knife in this bag.  That should be easy enough to get to.”

Grunting, twisting and turning, eventually allowed both Brem and Bray to untangle themselves from their bindings and cut away from tree where they were charged with holding a vigil for their chubby rock-a-bye baby.  Either one of which would have been all too happy to give that snoring Shelberd’s bough borne cradle a shake and a break.

Now freed from their bindings, they would have happily abandoned their post, however, neither were they sure that one of those wood sirens would not have remained to keep them under watch.  Now freed of the vines and happily crunching on the contents of one of the food packs, the onocentaurs gave a start when they saw a shadow pass overheard amid a fluttering of wings.  Three harpies, oblivious to their presence, flew over the tops of the trees of Kilrane and landed somewhere in the trees beyond them.  They both looked at one another, knowing that harpies and the wood witches’ presence in the same forest did not bode well.  Trouble was brewing.  And things were about to heat up once either of the two groups became aware of one another.

*Scene 07* – 05:10 (Meeting the Eagle)

I was only able to rest for a few days more before the word reached the man called the Eagle that I was up and convalescing.  On the day I was to receive him, my wounds had begun to heal, and I had been treated with poultices, and herbs, and various and sundry medicines procured from the local apothecary and field herbs that both Maeven and Christie brought in.  I was given a new shirt, and had pants tailored for me, and was given a sort of jacket with buckles to bind and continue the healing progress of my broken ribs.  According to Christie and Maeven, two of the most well-meaning but bossiest nurses when paired together, I was not permitted to move around too much or travel for at least another three weeks.  And, for goodness’s sake, I was to not so much as look at a saddled horse for another four.  I thought savagely of them as “My Two S’mothers”, though, I knew better than to voice that appellation out loud.  I would most likely get whipped for that quip, and I was not sure I had gained the strength to defend myself yet from their indignant assault.

I was restless.  Anxious to be up and about.  To be rid of the bed and free to walk around unchaperoned.  I was sore but felt that the soreness would fade if I could just get some fresh air and move.

But that was not meant to be.  Both of my “s’mothers” were too worried that I would reopen my wounds and risk infection.  Bless their hearts.

When I was finally…temporarily…discharged from their infirmary, based upon my own recognizance and an oath of good behavior, I was led and helped into the town courtyard for a meeting with The Eagle, and the town leadership.  I wondered how my meeting with Lord Nem might go, since the last time I saw him, he armed me and pushed me down into a dry fountain to confront the Dust Dragon.  If his intention was to get rid of me, I was only too happy to disappoint him in that.

Still and all, it felt good to be back on my feet, but I realized the tightness in my chest, bound wounds and the bruising would limit me on the road ahead.

No sooner had I arrived at the meeting than there was a shout with news we had all feared hearing.

A messenger from one of the outer wall posts came running across the courtyard, and breathless he said, “The Protectorate’s in the backwoods!  They are half a league’s distance (0.7 miles based on Ancient Roman leagues [approximately 1.4 miles]), following the trail of our guests.  The scouts heard their monster dogs in the woods.”

“What will we do?”  Calum, the treasurer, asked, wringing his hands.

“We shall do as we have done before,” Ezra answered calmly, “Wait and watch.  Arm and hold our position.  No need to reveal by overt action, what may not be known yet.”

“What with Tobias and others stirring up trouble, do you think they suspect our being here in such numbers?”

Lord Nem interjected, “At this point, it is unclear what they know, so Ezra’s counsel is best.  We wait and watch.  The wall is sound.  They will not easily find a way in to Azragoth without constructing ladders or a siege ramp.  They will find the old walls but not encounter the new construction unless they reach the pitch walls.”

“Are you sure they are following the back trail?” Ezra asked the messenger.

“We spotted them working through the brush of what remains of the old side road.  They were confused when the road seemed to fade and could not find the side bridge that used to cross the northern ravine.  But one of their dogs must’ve picked up some linger scents through the brush onto the hidden back trail.  Those scents should have faded by now, but those Cerberi are trained trackers.”

“The dogs will either lead them to the sally-port or the postern gate.  Both are watched from cover and heavily fortified,” Lord Nem added.

“How many strong?”

“Last count was about twelve men all told—four on horseback and eight afoot.  Best we can tell, but there may be some lingering in the fields beyond the highland road.  One rider was seen leaving.  He would’ve been the thirteenth, but he was going west in the general direction of Xarm City.”

“That’s a good five- or six-days ride from here.  He may be gathering a contingent.” Corimanth suggested.

“Who have we got manning the gate?” Lord Nem asked.

“Captain Thrax and company.  Lorgray’s men are stationed near the outpost at Trathorn falls and stand ready to close the rear flank at your word.”

Maeven stepped forward, “The Lehi and I stand at your service.  Tell us what needs to be done.”

Lord Nem turned and spoke quietly to one of the city soldiers, we had met before named Morgrath.  “Has The Eagle been summoned?”

“Here he comes directly, my Lord.”  Morgrath said, turning with a gesture.

And beyond them, a man I had long thought was dead, stepped forward, bearing a breastplate insignia emblazoned with an Eagle, talons forward in attack flight.

A man I had known to be one of the most cunning and feared Xarmnian warriors.

The Dragon in the Darkness – Chapter 26

*Scene 01* – 08:00 (The Light-Bender)

I heard the sounds of running water as it sang in whispers and trilled over stones on either side of me.  I could feel the steam off of the water in calcifying and bubbling pools to my left and a warbling chill from a shallow brook to my right.

The blade of the honor sword glimmered from a circulating light emanating and throbbing from within, igniting the fiery runes engraved and etched into its shaft, making them seem to move up and down the blade like the burn of a crackling fuse.  The honor sword, to the eyes of an ancient man, would appear to be a blade on fire.  Yet the power did not come from the blade itself, but through it, and through me.  I could even feel the pulsing of it coming through the bloodline tether bound to my arm, as if it had transformed into a conduit network of throbbing veins and arteries supplying blood and oxygen to my extremities and the blade itself, readying them both for battle.

My senses seemed sharper, as I cautiously moved over broken stone, proceeding deeper into the tunnels.  What once was opaque darkness that hungrily devoured all light filtering in from the land above, now seemed to be bathed in a grayish half-light that allowed me to make out a washed-out pathway across the tunnel floor.  A great deal of water had once passed through this area, and its unleashed weight cut uneven fissures through the dirt and rock.  Each step I made was calculated, careful and quiet, so as not to arouse the suspicion of the quarry I sought.

There was a presence.  An otherness that I could feel was somewhere ahead, but I could not get a specific fix on exactly where.  It seemed to shift its locale in a sort of undulating fashion.  Its movements felt fluid, yet in some ways furtive, constantly testing its surroundings for a bearing.

I could not explain it, but whatever it was, the creature ahead seemed to smell me, yet in some diffuse fashion as if it was confused by the scents it was picking up.  It wasn’t long after this, that I finally heard its movements up ahead and to the left of me.  Perhaps one hundred feet or more judging by the sound alone.

Clink, clink, snap.  A popping noise, as if rocks were being dislodged as something large wove in and out around the pillared mound stones, crushing and pulling loose gravel with it.  Sounds of rocks falling upon other rocks struck with a tumbling series high and brittle notes like the sound an old bamboo wind chime might make, swaying from a tree branch on a blustery Fall day.

Though I could not see the creature clearly, I was given the sense that it was of some length, perhaps somewhere between twenty to thirty-five feet, with a series of bony spines and thick scales running along its body.  My mind wanted to think of dragons of mythical lore, but that did not feel entirely right.  There was a suggestion of a burrowing reptile about it, but more along the lines of a serpent than that of any lizard of known variety.

Try as I might, I still could not see it ahead.  It was almost as if it was camouflaging itself, biding its time to strike out at me from the shadows.  I imagined the flare of the circulating light from my sword would expose me as soon as I stepped out to confront it, so I kept the blade blocked behind my body as I crouched and crept forward.

The thing had moved under the daylight in invisibility.  Nem had called its invisibility…something…that I struggled to remember because it was so briefly mentioned.  Ah, yes.  He’d called it a ‘Light-bender‘ when he’d spoken of Azragoth’s inner walls being covered in pitch.  It had not been so much that the creature was transparent in some magical way but merely had the ability to bend light around it somehow, to give off that kind of illusion.  I pondered this.  To do something like that, the creature’s surface skin had to have some sort of polish about it, a sort of mirror-like plating, that confused the eyes of those witnessing its approach.

In the darkness, there was no available ambient light to bend, save in what was emanating from the honor sword I kept outstretched and hidden behind me.  At most, I would be a backlit silhouette moving toward it, if perchance it had spotted me, but somehow, I didn’t feel like it had yet.  It would know me, and I intuitively knew I would recognize it, though I had never witnessed anything like it before.

Glancing slightly downward, carefully placing my feet as I moved stealthily forward, I noticed the sheen of an oily, mucus-like substance, winding and arcing about over the rocky cavern floor.  I crouched down to touch some of the viscous substance and could feel a tingling and burning sensation in my fingertips.  Whatever this creature might be, it was leaving a sort of wet trail as it went, perhaps excreting this substance to allow its large body to glide across the tunnel floors without attracting too much noise as it hunted and probed the darkness.

I realized that if I could catch the wet glistening of it from the patterns it subscribed over the floor, I might be able to track it from behind.  Provided it did not double-back on me.

That thought gave me pause, and for a moment, it felt like the glow of the honor sword dimmed for just a brief second.  But I pushed the thought aside with the trace memory of a verse from the sustaining words:

“Even when I go through the darkest valley, I fear no danger, for you are with me; your rod and your staff; they comfort me.”  [Psalms 23:4 CSB]

Ancient Texts offer up present wisdom.  There was a reason these passages were coming to me, and I dared not dismiss them.  I thought about the two instruments of comfort mentioned.  The staff of a shepherd, curved with a hook, kept a wayward sheep from straying, snatching it away from the path of danger.  The rod, a long cudgel, was used to beat back any enemy threatening the life of the sheep.  But most of all, the sheep knew the kindness and the over-watching nature of their shepherd’s voice which guiding them through dark valleys on their way to pastoral green fields and along embankments beside still waters.  The Shepherd, My Shepherd could be trusted.

*Scene 02* – 17:37 (Pernicious Letters)

Begglar was up early pacing the floor and clearly restless.  “What troubles you, dear?” Nell asked, yawning and sidling up to her husband as he watched the sun’s rays peek over the horizon through the window of the small bedroom they had been staying in since they arrived in Azragoth.  Begglar placed his arm around her hugging her close to him and sighed.  “Ah, it’s somethin’ I heard from Cori last night in the courtyard before it started raining.  I fear we have been much deceived in some of the people we have trusted in the past.”

“You don’t mean O’Brian?” she asked nuzzling up against his side.

“Nah.  O’Brian is transparent enough.  I know he struggles with the past, but at least he is honest enough about it.”  Nell leaned her head against Begglar as he encircled her with his arms, feeling the warmth of her.

“Who then?”

“Corimanth said that Lord Nem is being harassed by two fellows we know from Sorrow’s Gate.  Two that played us for fools.”

Nell sighed and closed her eyes.  “I think I know who you mean.”

“I never trusted Tobias.  I never could get used to his over eagerness to help us and fund the resistance.”

Nell nodded, “Him and his shady friend.  That Sanballat fellow.  They overpaid us for Noadiah’s Inn, and it did not feel right, but I did not know what else to do.  We were too well known in Surrogate…uh Sorrow’s Gate.  I doubt I will ever get used to its new name.  We had to leave, and you were already a wanted man.”

“I know. I know,” Begglar sighed resignedly.

“What did Cori tell you?  What trouble have they been making for Lord Nem?”

“We only spoke briefly about it, but Cori mentioned that there have been letters intercepted sent from Tobias.  Both Tobias and Sanballat are adamantly against Lord Nem rebuilding the walls of Azragoth.  They have tried to lure him away from the work on the wall many times, but Lord Nem would not be persuaded to meet with them.  They seem to think that rebuilding Azragoth will incite Xarmni to raid the towns and come towards the highlands with their armies to wipe us out.  At least that is their cover story.  But I don’t know.”

Nell shook her head, “I should have sensed it.  Tobias is a politician.  He ingratiated himself with the magistrates in Sorrow’s Gate.  He was strategically placed to get and give information and met privately with Noadiah many times.  She seemed to trust him, even though I always had an uneasy feeling about him.”

Begglar huffed, “Well, we will soon know more.  Cori suggested that we meet with that fellow we helped–Sage.  It turns out that his father was the palace historian for Xarmni.  He alerted Ezra and Lord Nem to Tobias’s background.  Seems he is an Ammonite.  Normally, they are suspicious of the Xarmnians, which might explain why Tobias was ready to help with the resistance, but he fell out of favor recently and I don’t think he is taking it well.”

“Who told you that?” Nell asked, turning towards him?

“Ezra and I talked when we were leaving the courtyard.  We are to meet with them soon, when Lord Nem gets back, so we’d best get dressed and get going.”

Nell and Begglar returned to the adjoining bedroom and did just that.  Soon they were downstairs and met Ezra as he was coming to fetch them.  They walked towards the governor’s residence, and Maeven joined them along the way.  They were led into the large multi-storied state house as work crew were clearing the walkways where several of the bough-laden booth structures had been lifted and blown off the rooftops, camouflaging the houses from the air.  Ademir, Lord Nem’s manservant met them at the door and led them into the large receiving room.

Lord Nem, Corimanth, another man of about the same size and stature to Nem, and the young Xarmnian refugee, Sage were seated at a long table, but rose as they entered and were announced.  After an exchange of warm greetings, Lord Nem introduced the unnamed man to them.

“This is my brother, Hanani,” Lord Nem announced.  “He is a one of the King’s couriers, who routinely makes trips to and from Capitalia, giving reports to King Xerxes, regarding his outer holdings and the communities still allied to Capitalia.  It is a dangerous job, and one requiring great skill in subterfuge and evasion, going to and fro through enemy territories.  Hanani relies heavily on the network of The Resistance to alert him to areas where the Xarmnian Protectorate have a roving presence.  Maeven and her Lehi riders have assisted him on more than a few occasions, creating a diversion, so that Hanani and his trusted team could pass through a patrolled region.  We have kept our familial relation secret, for there are those who might exploit his connection with me, if they knew of it.  Hanani, will you tell them what you recently uncovered?”

Hanani rose and took out a rolled parchment from a courier’s pouch he had slung around his shoulder and spread it out on the table using a flat stone paperweight to hold down the edges.

“Madam, I am told that you are a Seer,” Hanani addressed Nell.  “Would you mind looking at this script and telling me if you can identify the hand of the man who drafted this letter?”

Nell exchanged a quick glance at Begglar, received a nod, and slowly rose from her seat, coming to the head of the table where Hanani held down the parchment.

Turning to get a better look, she cautiously glanced at the letter, noting its sharp loops, swept curves that looked like hooks dragging through waters, and punctuated lines that looked as if the writer penning the ink pressed too hard down upon the paper.  Right away she knew who had penned this missive.  She had seen this hand style on many scripts before: Orders for stock supplies, notices of protocols for distinguished customers who would be visiting the inn, legal paperwork for merchant agreements, etc.  Yes, she knew this hand, and the very person it belonged to with certitude.  She and Begglar even had a bill of sale in their papers, with the same distinctive script drafted to transfer the ownership of Noadiah’s Inn to the interested friend of the broker of the deal.

The man had been given the confidences of the secret resistance, and had even visited Azragoth a few times, and, reportedly, mocked the rebuilding efforts that Lord Nem had undertaken to secure the city’s walls against former threats.

Lord Nem watched Nell carefully and saw her brow furrow in recognition.  “Tell us,” he said quietly.

Nell sighed, “I have no doubt.  This is the hand of Tobias.  I’ve seen his writing too many times working for Noadiah to fail recognizing it.  Tobias helped her with getting supplies and making arrangements with the magistrates for her to continue to conduct business, even when Xarmni kept a tight bridle on the town’s commerce and treasury.”

“I know you interceded on our behalf when we first arrived,” Lord Nem said, slowly.  “But if you remember, your host, Noadiah was strongly against our coming to Azragoth.  She warned us to leave that accursed city alone.  That nothing good would come of finding it again.  That the woods of Kilrane were damned.  Haunted, and the plague city was full of more death.  She strongly objected to us asking any more about it, saying the subject was closed.  That if we brought it up again, or if she heard of us making any more inquires about it, she would throw us out of her lodging, and we could sleep with the wolves of the plains.”

Nell nodded somberly, “Noadiah was never one to mince words.”

Hanani cleared his throat, “I believe she alerted this Tobias and his associates about Nem’s plans.  That is why this Sanballat fellow got involved.  They had made repeated threats, and derisive overtures cloaked as an appeal.  All of which were designed to stop Nem’s work and dedication to completing the wall.”

“I am not sure how to ask this,” Lord Nem said hesitantly, “considering all the help you have been.”

Nell raised her head, her eyes and her face reflecting sadness and fatigue that arose more from emotional stress than from lack of rest.  “Nothing is harmed in the asking.”

Lord Nem cleared his throat, “Do you…did you…share Noadiah’s opinion regarding this city?”

Sighing, Nell raised up and slowly shook her head.  “Much as I dreaded coming here…to the place where I lost my dear parents.  I have no doubt that this city needed to break with the past and serve as a place representing rebirth.  Renewed hope out of bleak tragedy.  No.  I did not agree with Noadiah.  Cori can attest to it.  My brother and I both pleaded with Noadiah to take us here when we were younger.  To see what had become of our parents.  To honor them in some way in death, as appreciation for the love they gave us in life.  I would not want this once great city to remain an anathema.  A blight in the annuals of history.  Fortifying its walls seems to be a promise of renewed strength.  I would not have it be otherwise.”

Lord Nem nodded and then gestured to his brother.  “Please read them the content of the letter.”

Hanani cleared his throat and stated, “This is just one of several.  We have received many other missives from other sources.  Some from the present owner of your former Inn in Sorrow’s Gate.  This Sanballat fellow, claiming that our motives here are to rebel against the Capitalian King, using his authorizations and provisions to stir up a rebellion against him, and have my brother here anoint and have himself crowned king, and if need be, form an alliance with Xarmni to undermine Capitalia’s highland claims and those villages still holding allegiance to Xerxes.  That now that Ezra and his former team have restored the temple, that prophets have been appointed to proclaim Nem king.  He attempted to lure my brother out of the city to meet with him to discuss these rumors, but we know they were planning to kill him if he dared go out and stop the work.”

Nell quietly returned to her seat next to her husband, her fists tightening and loosening, trying to keep herself from trembling.  She lowered herself carefully to her seat and Begglar took her hand, sensing her distress.  She felt strength in his calm, quiet grip, gently squeezing her hand in encouragement.

“This letter represents only the latest attempt to undermine us and lure my brother out of the city and distract him from his mission.  With these two and others, presently holding prominent and influential positions within the resistance, we can no longer fully trust those in that group to assist us in gathering information related to our shared enemies.  They could just as easily sell us out to the Xarmnians and eliminate our standing by creating factions when we so desperately need to be united.  They have even begun to turn some of the people within Azragoth against us, planting fear and threats in their minds to discourage their efforts in helping us complete all that is required to secure this city.  One suggested that my brother hide out in the temple and bolt the doors shut against a hidden assassin, but he refused, saying that The One who appointed him and gave him the vision and materials for this work was capable also of protecting him from harm.  That to hide out would set a bad example for his workers, and he would not stoop to fearing man over The One who called him to this purpose and present post.  We later learned that the man had been bribed to say this by both Tobias and Sanballat.”

“Sanballat was the more vocal of the two, and Tobias was more reserved.”

“Ever the politician!” Begglar snorted.  “The jackal!  Always playing both sides of the issue to see which profits him most!”

Hanani continued, “Tobias was communicating with many, trying to form a coalition against us.  Paying people to give good reports about him, to get us to trust him.”

“The sniveling weasel!” Corimanth interjected, speaking up for the first time since the meeting started.

“What none of them knew was,” Lord Nem spoke up, “I want given the right to delegate my successor.  The wall was just completed yesterday, and the gates were fortified and set.  I had made a promise to King Xerxes, that shortly after completing the task, I would return to his court to give an account of all that had been accomplished on my watch.  Hanani has agreed to take my place as governor when I return.  I have appointed Hananiah as commander of the fortress to assist him.  The Eagle is our field commander and is soon to return.  But this recent letter adds complications.  Read it aloud Hanani.”

“To the Esteemed King Artemis Xerxes: From your servants, the men of the region beyond the River Cascale.  Let it be known to the king that those you commissioned and charged, sent out from your esteemed court, have come to us to rebuild the rebellious and evil city of Azragoth, and are finishing its walls and repairing its foundations.  This act it due to stir up a rebellion, not just in inciting the kingdom of Xarmni to object to its insulting rise, reminding them of their once defeat, but it also threatens you, O king and your claim to holdings in the outer lands.  Since there is a great distance between your present might, and the encroachment of the resurging Xarmnian claims, this rising city must survive its rebirth only by making a treaty with the closest monarch for protection.  Xarmni is in defiance of your claims.  Daily they conquer towns whose citizens were once loyal to you and paid tribute to your treasuries.  Now, let it be known to the king that if this city is rebuilt and the walls are finished, they too will deny you tribute, custom tax, or toll, and it will be detrimental to the revenue of the kings.  They may only swear fealty to the local kingdom, which you are aware stands against you.  Now because we remain in service to your palace, it is not fitting for us to see the king’s shame, and for this reason we have sent this present word and informed your Lordship, the King.  We request that a search be conducted in the record books of your esteemed father, the former sovereign of your mighty realm, so that you may learn the history of this rebellious city and its prior detriment to area kings and provinces in the past.  We believe that the curse of the plague that came upon it was due to its wickedness, and this was the reason the gods allow that city to be laid to waste.  We are duly informing the king that if that city is rebuilt and its walls finished, then because of this, you will have no further possession in the province beyond the great river Cascale and will cede all holdings to the Xarmnian empire.  We remain your humble servants, Rehum, the commander and Shimshai the scribe, whose hand penned this letter.” [Adapted from Ezra 4:11-16]

All were quiet, digesting the serious implications of the letter.

Finally, Nell spoke up, “Shimshai… was a nickname Tobias grudgingly used.  Noadiah gave it to him because every time he visited, he was always in such a dour mood.  It has a meaning in the old tongue.  She teased him often enough.”

“What does it mean?” Maeven asked.

“Sunshine!” Nell snorted.

*Scene 03* – 18:17 (The Haunted Hollows)

Water dripped from the ceiling of the karst cave, pinging loudly in the stilled pools of water, echoing down the shafts and tunnel tubes branching out in a web of black-throated hollows. There was a natural coolness in caverns, but I felt an additional chill from weird breezes coming out of the deeper dark.  In the half-light glow, coming from the blade, the walls of the cave appeared rough and scored by the grit and abrasion of dirt thrust through these hollows under the force of flowing water, but since the water had been diverted, as Lord Nem had said, the shift had drained these hollows and left an emptied basin and mere rivulets lingering in the few channels carved in the lower flowstone steps that led down into to those vacated hollows below.  If the sources of the water were from the seep of charged groundwater or rain that had permeated through crevices in the rock above, these rock formations would have been scoured by the naturally forming acids and perhaps the acids from the decay of organic decomposition.  Signifying this, the flow stone I carefully stepped down on had the appearance of a polished glass surface under the gleam cast from the Honor Sword.  I worried that I might lose footing or balance if the uneven ground stones proved to be too slippery.  Below was a basin with a series of naturally terraced collection pools of water trickling into those haunted hollows where the breezes were coming from.

The strange breezes intrigued me.  Typically, I would expect the air in a cavern to be still and have a musty odor with a coppery taste of limestone about it and a powdery scent of crushed chalk.  But the breezes indicated that there were either some porous holes in the rock above or there were other openings to the outside ahead.  The noises I heard before now seemed to come from a greater distance.

I followed onward, sensing that the creature might be moving away from me, but uncertain whether this was so.  Sound seemed to reverberate oddly here.  The oozing substance that I had found along the drier ground before seemed to terminate at the edge of the largest pool in the basin below.  The creature had been here, but not for long.  I saw strange abrasions in the cave wall as I neared that pool.  Water from above dripped into my hair and tingled my scalp, causing my face to tighten.  I glanced upward seeing the first sign of a cave formation I was accustomed to—a stalactite.  It hung over me like an unsheathed fang, sharp and pointed, descending from the roof of a mouth of stone.  I froze, and felt the room darken around me, as fear once again threatened me with immobility.  The drip that had landed in my hair snaked its way down the nape of my neck into my collar in down the groove of my spine.  I took in a ragged breath as the room darkened yet again.  The stone dagger above me felt like it might descend at any moment, pinning me to the cold stone floor.  This marbled flowstone would be my final catafalque, arresting me and my mission forever.  I was just a briefly animated morsel waiting to get skewered.  A foolish ‘shish-ka’ just waiting to be ‘bobbed’.  That thought struck me as funny, and nervously I laughed out loud.  In that unguarded moment, another gemstone from the Ancient Text came to my mind:

A cheerful heart is good medicine, but a broken spirit saps a person’s strength.” [Proverb17:22 NLT]

The original Hebrew word גֶּרֶם (pronounced ‘gheh’-rem’) can either mean ‘bone’ or ‘strength’ as in being ‘strong-boned’.  Translations vary but the phrase “Dries up the bones” in one translation can been interpreted as “saps a person’s strength” interchangeably.  Interestingly, drawing my mind briefly away from my present trouble into a meaningful aside, this word ‘גֶּרֶם – gerem’ is also used to describe the strength of the ‘behemoth’ creature mentioned in Job 40 verse 18 of the passage:

“15 Look at Behemoth, which I made along with you. He eats grass like cattle. 16 Look at the strength of his back and the power in the muscles of his belly. 17 He stiffens his tail like a cedar tree; the tendons of his thighs are woven firmly together. 18 His bones are bronze tubes; his limbs are like iron rods. 19 He is the foremost of God’s works; only his Maker can draw the sword against him.”  [Job 40:15-19 CSB]

Pondering the phrase “only His Maker can draw the sword against him” in that additional verse that attenuated and paused my present renewal of panic, I was struck by that thought, while holding this Honor Sword in my grasp.  Then I reflected on the first part of that phrase “only His Maker” and immediately another verse came to me, punctuating that concept and driving it home.

He who calls you is faithful; he will do it.” [1Thessalonians 5:24 CSB]

It wasn’t up to me.  Every instance where I was tempted to believe that it was, the light of the Honor Sword dimmed towards utter darkness.  This realization struck me.  I was struggling with my own lack of trust—Diminishing my faith when I conceived that this task was to be accomplished in my own strength, and under my own determination of will.  It was a fatal flaw in me.  One that both shamed me, seeing it as it was an investment in my own sense of pride.  My focus was on myself.  What I could do for The One, rather than surrendering to what He needed to accomplish through me.  Tears clouded my vision, and I wept, recognizing that seeking my own will as in fact rebellion against His call on me.

Only His Maker can draw the sword against him.  I could not defeat this monster that I hunted.  This sword was merely a toy stick in my own hand against sabers of spines, and a hungry maw that could eat through rock and dirt, crushing it as rammed through the underworld, making its own tunnels, piercing the core and heart of the surfaces we relied on to walk above it.

To defeat such a creature would require a miracle.  The odds were against me, if I solely relied on the calculus of human reasoning.  Once again, the words came to my mind:

“Don’t copy the behavior and customs of [the Surface] world, but let God transform you into a new person by changing the way you think. Then you will learn to know God’s will for you, which is good and pleasing and perfect.”  [Romans 12:2 NLT]

My mistake had been holding on to the mindset of my Surface World self.  I had often warned the others against that.  But hypocrite that I am, I ignored that admonishment that should have first convicted me.  I could not operate in this Mid-World under the assumptions of the Surface World.  The Mid-World embraced a duality, and its inhabitants recognized that physical resistance alone could not subdue an entity that posed a spiritual threat as well.  The Ancient Text affirmed this:

Don’t fear those who kill the body but are not able to kill the soul; rather, fear him who is able to destroy both soul and body in hell.” [Matthew 10:28 CSB]

What was required of me was full surrender.  This was not a call to inaction.  Far from it.  It was the call to surrender my own life to whatever I would face ahead.

For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: but whosoever will lose his life for my sake, the same shall save it.”  [Luke 9:24 KJV]

This was not fatalism—a shrug of the shoulders and saying, “whatever will be will be”.  This was choosing to leave comfort, self-reliance, the known, for risk, dependance, and facing the unknown.  Going forward and taking up a cross, headed for a death to myself, so that The Living One, could be who He needed to be through me in drawing out and using this Honor Sword against this ‘behemoth’ that ate up the very ground beneath our feet.

I wondered what damage this creature had already done.  I only had Lord Nem’s speculation as to how long this thing had been down here and did not know if its destructive rampages were caused by disorientation or by some vengeful awareness of the prey it had pursued above.  Nem had said that this creature was linked to me.  If it was, or ever had been, it was so no longer.  Those voices, first seeming to be my own, then unmasked into their guttural sibilance, had ceased.  Through my remorse and surrender my mind became quiet and focused on hearing The One alone.

I felt the wind again, but this time it seemed to draw away from me.  Fleeing in huffing breaths down that network of tunnels.  An inhale rather than an exhale.  What were those living sighs that caused temperature fluctuations?  What could I make of them?  What summoned them here to haunt these hollows?  What was their connection to this earthmoving beast?  A sword would be useless against them.  Were they spirits?  What was known about them?  I knew from the Ancient Text that supernatural entities had the ability to enter a vessel.

Luke’s gospel records the account of a father who brought his son to The One for release from a spirit that tormented him saying:

A spirit seizes him; suddenly he shrieks, and it throws him into convulsions until he foams at the mouth; severely bruising him, it scarcely ever leaves him.” [Luke 9:39 CSB]

I knew that these creatures of metaphysical origin had the capability to demoralize and weaken the soul, even if they could not possess one who had committed his own life to the secure holding of The One.  These spirits may not be able to possess me, but they certainly could and would harass me, if I was not carefully submitted to hearing only The One’s true and peace-giving voice.  That voice came from The Word.

For the word of [The One] is living and effective and sharper than any double-edged sword, penetrating as far as the separation of soul and spirit, joints and marrow. It is able to judge the thoughts and intentions of the heart.”  [Hebrews 4:12 CSB]

I had to simultaneously bear two swords to confront this beast: One of a physical nature, and one of a living and effective spiritual nature that could parry and thrust through thoughts and intentions of the heart.

In this acknowledgment, I felt a break tremor through me, followed by a piercing roar.  Deep in one of the branching tunnels, just beyond the larger pool of the basin, I saw a flash of light cast a strobic image of a claw along the walls of the deeper tunnel.  Flecks of gold sprinkled the glare, and I got the sense of seeing into a room with a shifting mound littered with round gold pieces.

I knew then, for certain, that the beast had lost its hold on me, and even though I was closer to it now, at least in my mind, it had yet to find me and it seemed confused by its inability to link to my mind again.

Not just confused.  Angry.  Extremely angry and petulantly throwing an enraged fit.  Lashing out at the foundations of the city above, unable to break through the ceiling of the cavern, or find a way up the walls to burrow through to the homes above.

It seemed drunk in its own fury, stumbling around in the darkness, its mighty tail swishing and smashing into stalactites and breaking stalagmites, and those of which had joined to form massive columns that supported the ceiling of the caverns.  Other large boulders also formed natural stanchions revealing that this cavern network was comprised of both fracture caves, talus caves, solutional caves and erosional caves.  So many forces were set to undermine the standing and security of the upper city of Azragoth.  Parts of the ancient cliffside must have fallen crushing and burying part of the older sites of this city, but they also created hollows and pits, cavities counterpoised on the stacking of sediments and underlayment of raw materials.  The area was a hidden honeycomb of tubes and runs, that one could easily get lost in; one seeking to find their own way out of a labyrinthian death trap, now inhabited by things beyond the ken of mortal man.

The ground beneath my feet shuddered and trembled, and the rumbling sound of an avalanche thundered in my ears.  The air in the tunnel was choked with swirling dust, coughing out from several tunnels before me, threatening to suffocate me with the blast of silt.  The Honor Sword flashed into brilliance, searing the darkness and causing it to shrink back, as I plunged into the shallow pool, wading through the sucking mud, thankfully finding a stony bottom that did not descend any deeper than a few feet.  I splashed through, sloshing the water and ascended to the abraded lip of the pool as it poured down the throat of the tunnel where I had witnessed the flash.  Nem had told me that these creatures were used for mining. That they had some magnetic quality about them, that drew precious metals to encrust their gargantuan bodies.  The scintillation I had seen had been of gold.  Gold coins and shaped ingots somehow making its body at least partially visible in its own greed for mammon.

I knew if I hesitated any longer, the monster might move beyond my ability to catch up.  Any further damage it might do, would further endanger those I was sworn to protect in the city above.  I could not let it go further towards the lower, outer sectors of the city for it would draw near the reservoirs of filth and disease that the people of Azragoth so assiduously and routinely to efforts to purge from their dwellings in the upper part of the city.  It was now time to charge the very gates of hell, fully yield the outcome to the providence and prerogatives of The One.  Once again the Ancient Text flared into my memory, its truth gleaming like a polished blade.

So humble yourselves before God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you.” [James 4:7 NLT]

I raised the shining blade before me holding it out in front as I plunged down through the smoke of the tunnel.  The smoke and dust parted before me, giving me a narrow hall surrounded by a miasma of swirling dust on either side that I could run through.  Hesitant no more, I muttered as my inner spirit prompted me, “As the prophet Isaiah declared against King Sennacherib (translated ‘the moon god ‘Sin’ multiplied brothers’), so I declare of you O beast of the underground, worm of the dust!  Thus says The One, who dwells in Excavatia, and in the eternity place within me as a guarantee of promise from Him whom I serve,

26 “…Have you not heard? I decided this long ago. Long ago I planned it, and now I am making it happen. I planned for you to crush fortified cities into heaps of rubble. … 28 “But I know you well–where you stay and when you come and go. I know the way you have raged against me. 29 And because of your raging against me and your arrogance, which I have heard for myself, I will put my hook in your nose and my bit in your mouth. I will make you return by the same road on which you came.”  [Isaiah 37:26, 28-29 NLT]

Then with a loud voice I cried louder, “I come against you in the name of the Lord of Hosts!  You shall not escape me, Dragon of the Dust!”

*Scene 04* – 20:27 (Raising the Stakes – Part 1 of 2 “A Wanted Man”)

Begglar, Nell, Corimanth and Maeven remained seated around the large table in Lord Nem’s council chamber along with Ezra, Azragoth’s weapons master, chief priest and scribe, Lord Nem and his brother, Hanani, Nem’s soon to be successor, and the young man named Sage, a refugee from the city of Xarm, sheltering in Azragoth, and presently domiciled in Lord Nem’s own house.

Lord Nem pressed his fingertips together and sat very still for a moment, looking thoughtful with the slightest hint of irritation furrowing his brow.  Finally, he spoke quietly in response to Nell’s confirmation that the letter Hanani had shown them was indeed drafted by the hand of Tobias—a man who had insinuated himself into sensitive positions within the counsels of the underground resistance against their Xarmnian oppressors.

Hanani leaned back into his chair, his face clouding in an inscrutable expression.

Lord Nem looked to the young man rescued by both Begglar and Nell, named Sage.  “Now that Nell has confirmed what we suspected, young man, please tell them what you know about Tobias.”

Sage spoke up, “I was present when a delegation of the Kingdom of Ammon came to visit the palace and the Son of Xarm after his coronation.  I distinctly remember seeing Tobias there.  He is an Ammonite close to the regents.  Xarm and Ammon are not as opposed to each other as you might suspect.  They are a feuding and posturing family, to be sure, but they are still family.  The Queen of Ammon is the half-sister to The Son of Xarm.  There is enough shared blood between as much as there has been blood spilled.”

Hanani added, “Tobias is an agent of the Kingdom of Ammon.”

Begglar looked up, “And I had thought he was just a local politician!” irritated with himself for his naivete.

Lord Nem laced his fingers and spoke quietly, choosing his words carefully, addressing Begglar.  “This Tobias is indeed a politician.  He is financed by Ammon but enriches himself at every opportunity.  He was first attracted to Ezra’s mission to restore the Temple in Azragoth when he heard of him boldly bringing the golden and silver temple ornaments back to the city, having no military protection along the way but that which they entreated of The One when they encamped in tents near the crossing of the river Ahava.  But there is something further you must know about him; to fully understand the danger he poses specifically to you and your family.  I understand you have a son.”

Begglar leaned forward, the muscles in his forearms tightening, his jaw clenched involuntarily at the mention of a danger to his son.  Nell whimpered, clutching Begglar’s shoulder, as he responded, “Yes, Lord Nem.  My son is a young man now.  His name is Dominic.  His name means ‘devoted to God, The Holy One’.  Nell and I gave him that name because we had given up on the chance that we could ever have children.  When Nell was discovered to be with child, we dedicated him to The One in gratitude for giving us this blessing so late in our lives.  What danger does Tobias posed to him?”

Hanani spoke up, “Has Tobias ever met your son, or had any occasion to see you with him?  Even on a supplies trip to one of the local towns?”

“Oh, Begglar, dear!” Nell’s hand trembled as she raised it to her mouth, stifling a louder worried cry of alarm.

“I am sorry to alarm, you both, but as you know Tobias has a way of seeking to enrich himself at the expense of others but being in a sensitive position he will not expose himself openly, or act directly in such a way that might lead back to his part in a treacherous scheme.  The duplicity he has shown here by even posing as this ‘Shimshai’ character in this seditious letter, shows a level of deviousness that we did not realize he possessed.  He was quite open with his ridicule when we first began our project of repairing the walls, but has since quieted down, allowing Sanballat and others to berate us and lead in the attempts to undermine all we are doing in the restoration of Azragoth.  Tobias has a particular hatred for Ezra, but I’ll let him tell you of that.”

Ezra cleared his throat and nodded, picking up where Lord Nem left off.  “You know of me as a weapons master, training fighters in the Warrior’s Court.  But I am also a man of letters, and one of the chief priests charged with the restoration project of our temple to The One, here in Azragoth.  Our principal antagonists here are not merely those loyal to the Kingdom of Xarm but also have been those among our relatives that have compromised their allegiance to The One by disregarding His decree to be separate from pagan influences and not to intermarry with the peoples who hold to detestable practices in serving other gods.  We have kept an extensive record of families that were original to the city or born therein, after its founding.  Because we knew that the planned work on the temple would attract attention, we determined to accept the workmen and the priest from only those listed in our genealogical record.  When Tobias’s family could not be found, we refuse his help, his offered funding and the help of those he had hired.  He was insulted but still offered me a bribe, which I refused.  He threatened me saying he had a lot of friends in the surrounding community and that I was a fool to refuse his help or his money.  He has despised me ever since, so we have had him watched, not knowing what he might do.  That is why Hanani has had his men keep an eye on him.  I only recently learned that Tobais was an Ammonite.  Zerub was the governor then, before Lord Nem came.  Those we denied challenged our authority to do the work we had planned in Azragoth, but Lord Zerub produced the authorization we had from King Cyr of the northern clans, and that silenced them until King Dari succeeded Cry.  Later, we heard rumors that some of the discontents even sent emissaries into the Dark Woods to entreat assistance of The Pan and his creatures, but it was thought that nothing came of it.  The emissaries, reportedly, never returned, and some think they were eaten by those monsters.  Body parts were found, cast outside of the edge of those Dark Woods, giving credence to the latter thought.  Hanani and his spies have served well bringing us this information.  But I could not risk believing that the enlistment of the Half-Men had completely proved to be a dead end.  So we had to be vigilant against threats not only of human origin, but also of those comprised of the supernatural otherness.  There are creatures here that do not respond to the threat of a blade or the piercing of an arrow.  No bludgeon can fell them, nor device of warfare bring them to submission.  That subduing power comes only from the words of The Marker Stone, telling of the might and authority of The One.  The decrees given, and the promises made there hold faithful adherents into a place where no fatal harm may come.  The very words are imbued with an authority that comes from beyond our world.  That is why so many of us train for warfare not only in the Warrior’s court, but in the temple itself.  Two swords must be borne to fight those enemies which are more than flesh and blood.  But we must also be wary of those which try to deceive us and make us think that they are only what they appear to be.”

“We have met with such before.  But what does that have to do with my son?” Begglar asked, his voice rising with impatience.

Hanani reached into his leather courier pouch once again and pulled out another rolled piece of paper that was aged and tainted with water prints and wrinkled in places.  He unrolled it out and weighed it down as he had done with the other letter document before.

“How long has it been since you’ve seen one of these?” Hanani asked.  Pulling back and inviting Begglar to come to the head of the table.

Begglar rose cautiously and approached, scanning the paper and the writing above and below a smeared image of himself showing him as he had appeared over twenty-three years ago.  The image did not look much like him now.  At the time he had been much more of a barrel-chested man, broad in the beam, big-boned and stocky.  His face bore sun-reddened cheeks, his upper lip and chin were festooned with a walrus mustache and beard that brushed his upper chest.  But the cut of his brow and shape of his head and nose bore a heritable resemblance that he had unmistakenly passed on to his son.

“This is a wanted poster, bearing an image is of you back then when Xarmni first discovered your part in piloting a ship on the fjord lakes and river of Cascale.  You have changed your appearance much in the intervening years, but without the full beard, you must admit that your son does favor you enough to raise suspicion.  Notice also that the bounty on your head has gone up.”

The last words were a statement Hanani made, not a question.  5000 Xarmnian crowns in gold.  The original bounty had been set at 500 crowns, when Begglar first heard of it.  The words below the image were ominous.  “Dead or alive.  If dead, bring the Head only.”  In the Mid-World lands and surrounds, a man and his family could easily live for a year on the equivalent value of 50 Xarmnian crowns alone.  If a man possessed 100 crowns, he was considered to be wealthy.  Begglar’s hands shook, and he tried making fists to keep them from trembling.  He had long given up living in fear for his own life, but for the life of his wife and son…that was something else entirely.

“These posters have only recently appeared in the surrounding towns.  Sorrow’s Gate in particular.  We have no doubt, Tobias and Sanballat both would have seen these.  If they believe you have any sway with us or deep connections with Azragoth, they may take any opportunity to prevail upon you, and if they cannot influence you, they may try to threaten you with the life of your son in the balance.  Think back. When was the last time you or your son visited Sorrow’s Gate?”

Begglar ran his hand through his balding hair, seeming to age further in the presence of this news.  His beard was now much more trimmed and cut closer to his face, and his cheeks, though still weathered by a former life on the sea, and hard work in the sunlit fields of the highlands, were more shallow and less full and plump as they had been before.

He looked at Nell, his eyes seeking confidence he knew he could find in his uncertainty.

Nell gasped, her eyes lighting up in surprise at some revelatory thought that had just occurred to her.

She interjected and answered the question for Begglar, “Oh, I never would have guessed it!  Thanks be to The One who works all things to the good.  It has been nearly four years!  Four years since the Xarmnians came and threatened us with conscripting our son into their army!  Remember, dear?!”

Begglar slowly nodded.  Realization coming to the surface.  Dominic was born in the latter part of the third year after O’Brian went missing and returned to the Surface World through the seaside portal, the roving oculus.  That is why O’Brian had to be introduced to Dominic.  When the boy turned fourteen, he had lied to the Xarmnian Protectorate that the boy was only thirteen, three years from when the officers of Xarm considered boys ready for conscription to their ranks at the tender age of sixteen.  Old enough to fight, yet young enough to train and discipline.  Prime years of uncertainty, with the need to prove to themselves that they could handle manhood.  His son was now eighteen.  After the threat made to conscript his son, he had kept his son out of sight when Xarmnians visited the Inn at Crowe.  He had planned to lie to them, if they came back seeking Dominic for their military that Dominic had died of an illness.  He could not risk lying to the Xarmnians that his son was dead, if others could report to them otherwise, so he insisted that Dominic not be allowed to travel on their quarterly supplies trips to supplement what could not be produced in the vicinity of the local highland fields and stock.  He had avoided Sorrow’s Gate because of the risk of recognition and had not seen or heard from Tobias or Sanballat since the selling of their Inn.  They essentially disappeared and had no contact with that faction of the resistance.  They had allied themselves with Maeven and her Lehi riders and some of the limited go-betweens from Azragoth.  Hiding Dominic had, in the end, ensured that neither Tobias nor Sanballat even knew of his existence, or the present whereabout of Begglar and Nell.  Providence did indeed work all things to the good, and Begglar told them so.

Ezra responded, “That is all well and good, but do you know why this sudden renewed interest in locating you has come about? Why the Xarmnian outrage persists?  And for that matter, why the Kingdom of Ammon also has a specific hatred for you, under your former identity as Captain Duncan MacGregor?”

Begglar grinned, “Ah! That’s the name me parents gave me in the Surface World long ago.  But I thank you not to be so free to speak it hereabouts, seeing that Xarmni and Ammon still have such a keen interest in finding me. And I like to live a few more years with me body and me head together in one piece.”

Hanani spoke up.  “The head of the leviathan, that sea beast that you and your team struck and tore asunder has been found.  Fishermen discovered it and left it in a hidden cove.  The body had decomposed, but they snagged the creature in their nets and somehow managed to drag it ashore.  The monster’s head was left there to rot.  But later when they told the story in Skorlith, some of the Ammonite fishermen overheard and pressed the men to take them to the spot where they left it.  When they arrived, they discovered footprints coming out from under the monster’s slack and gaping jaw.  They believe something or someone crawled out of it, strange as that may sound.  The Ammonite fishermen started chanting and bowing in worship to the rotting head, and the Skorlithian fishermen became terrified and quickly left the area.  It seems that the Ammonite Kingdom and to some extent, the Xarmnian Kingdom once revered the Leviathan.  The Ammonites even ritually sacrificed their children to it, when it plied the waters of Cascale as a living monster.  The Xarmnians also worshipped the thing but for different reasons.”

Ezra spoke again, “The Ammonites called the beast Molech.  The Xarmnians called it Chemosh.  The Ammonites worshipped it in fear and thought to appease its hunger by designating one of each family’s children as its sacrifice.  They observed rituals where they tossed their children into the cold waters at a particular site and watched as the beast seized them and took them under.  Meanwhile the Ammonite fishermen would sail their vessels upstream and cast their nets for fish while the beast was occupied in the lower place down river.”

“That is terrible!” Maeven spoke up visibly shaken by such a pagan ritual.  “They murdered their own children?!”

“They believed their god demanded it.  That the leviathan would grant them a better harvest in fishing, since so much of the Kingdom of Ammon relies on that trade,” Ezra continued.  “They hate you, Begglar, for in their mind, you killed their god.”

Corimanth joined, “And the Xarmnians?  What is their view of the slain monster, since they are down beyond the sea rakes?  They built a barrier to keep that monster out of their saltwater lanes.  If they revered the beast, why would they prevent it from coming along their shore as well?”

Ezra answered, “They revered their monster Chemosh for its power.  Yes, they were terrified of it, but they were fascinated with it as well.  To them Chemosh was a symbol of Xarmnian power.  A living icon.  The beast suppressed the ability of the shoreline communities of Skorlith and the Ammonites to compete with them in profiting off of the sea trade.  When Chemosh swam to Ammon, the Ammonites surrendered their children, ensuring that the Ammonites would never be able to field enough of an army generationally to ever match the numbers of fighting men under the command of Xarm.  Ammon was kept in check by their own beliefs in their monster god of Molech, and they mocked them, saying that Chemosh kept them weak.  But it was reported to the Son of Xarm from someone who overheard the account of the finding the monster’s head that they could no longer rely on Chemosh to keep the balance of powers as it was, and that there was something in human form that had been rumored to have crawled out of the beast.  They believe that Chemosh has taken a different form, and think that they must find the ones who destroyed its body, before its living essence can return again to the waters of Cascale.  This is why the renewed interest in you, Begglar.  Both kingdoms are seeking you now.  A head for a head, is what they say.”

“So, what are you suggesting?” Begglar asked, returning to his seat.

Lord Nem rejoined, “That you reconsider following O’Brian on this quest.  The road ahead could be very dangerous for you, and if not, that you consider letting your son stay behind with us.  He is a very skilled fighter.  I noted his proficiency with both a staff and a blade from our first full day of training.  We could use more young men like him.”

“No!” Nell said defiantly, “That is out of the question! We’ve not let Xarm conscript him, and we’re not going to let you either!  He’s our son!  He’s all we have.  We are not likely to have any other children at our age.  I won’t be separated from my boy! No.  I won’t.”  She shook her head.

Begglar sighed.  “Can you give us a moment?  We’ll just step outside.  No need to get up.”

Begglar turned and took Nell’s hand.  She stared at it for a moment, and then finally took his hand and stood.  Her eyes welling up with tears.  Begglar led her to the door, turning to the room as he opened it.  “We’ll just be a moment or two.”  Then, going through it, closed the door behind him.

*Scene 04* – 04:54 (Raising the Stakes – Part 2 of 2 “Deciding Dominic”)

“The boy is of age, Sweetheart,” Begglar said. “It is time we quit making decisions for him.  He has earned the right to decide this for himself.  Let’s trust him to make his own way.”
Nell wiped a tear, and sniffled, “I know. I know,” she said, trying to reconcile her mother’s heart with the undeniable fact that her little boy, was now a man.  “It is just so hard to let go, when so many other things have been taken from us.  But he is the most precious thing.  I cannot bear the thought of losing him.  D’ya not hear tha horrible things said in there?  Child sacrifice?!”

“Pagan!” Begglar agreed, “So pagan.  How man could stoop to such debasement is beyond thought.  Straight out of the Dark Woods of the Moon Kingdom!  Something that The Pan and his monsters would conceive of.  But this comes from the pit of man’s darkness.  More’s the pity!”

Nell bowed her head and released a deep sigh, “But such as it is, we do not serve a God such as these.  Surrender is hard, but it is the path The One sets for us in all things.  Of course, you are right, My Love.  Dominic would follow whatever we say.  He is a good boy, that one.  But it is time he made decisions on his own.  I cannot protect him from life, dark and as painful as it might be.  We are agreed.  Dominic must decide for himself whether to go or stay.  It is his right to choose to become the man he should be.  A man like his father.”

Begglar hugged Nell closely and then together they reentered the room.

***

The others looked up as Begglar and Nell came back in and took their seat.

Lord Nem addressed them, “We would like to offer Nell a place here with us as well, if you feel you should go on with O’Brian on this renewal of the Stone Quest, or if you would prefer to stay…”

Begglar raised his hand slightly, “Before you go further Lord Nem, while we appreciate the gesture, Nell and I have known for some time that we would both be rejoining this quest again.  We’ve discussed it many times.  Planned for it, and feel it is the right thing for us, despite the danger.  You and the people here have been more than gracious to us, and to our neighbors, Shimri and Aida.  But I’ve never been one to abandon something just because it grew difficult.  Especially when I knew for certain that what I was doing was right and in line with what The One was leading me through.  This quest is not merely an interesting side journey, it is what I was called into the Mid-World to do, as it was with all who came with us from The Surface World.  Nellus and I are partners in the good times as well as in the bad times.  It is our covenant made with each other and with The One who brought us together from two separate worlds.  Nell goes where I go, and I will go where she goes.  But as for our son, he is of age and must decide what he will do.  I am his father, but not his owner as a master to a slave would be.  I will present your offer to him, but he must be free to decide for himself.  Please give him leave to do so.”

“Very well, then,” Lord Nem conceded and placed both his hands flat on the table before him.  “Our offer stands should you ever change your mind.  The road ahead will be very dangerous for you, but we thought to warn you of the particular danger posed to you and your family specifically.”

“And I appreciate that,” Begglar said.  “Nell and I have had several years to grow less naive than we once were when we first married.  We have met with our share of duplicitous individuals, and those wearing masks for one reason or another.  We have encountered strange unnatural creatures and have taken comfort in the protective and reassuring words of The Marker Stone.  O’Brian will need us as much as we need him…”  Suddenly, Begglar looked around the room.  “Where is O’Brian?” Begglar asked, “Shouldn’t he be here to listen to this too?”

“O’Brian is handling more pressing matters, at the moment,” Lord Nem responded cryptically.

*Scene 05* – 19:11 (Eyes to See)

Ahead of me, there was a loud staccato sound as if metal tines raked, scored and skipped across rough granite, tearing loose gravel and hammering against some barrier, that cracked and filled the air with dust and falling debris.  An ululating, bass rumble came from within the noises of breaking stone, and clouding earth sloughing off the cavern walls.  The floor seemed to shake with the violence of the impacts, and there was a thudding and swirling of air as something the size of a tree trunk whizzed destructively overhead, slamming into a tunnel wall, collapsing a ceiling and partially burying the striking limb of the beast in tons of rock, gravel, and sand.  The supporting earthen pillar near the fallen shelf of ceiling rock appeared to shrug under the added weight conceded by the fallen support column, but for the present, it valiantly bore the added burden surrendered by the fall of its twin.  The tunnel was not completely buried such that it was impassable, but if the remaining column failed, that passage would immediately collapse.

The creature was, for the moment, pinned on the other side of the tunnel and it would only be a matter of moments before it might struggle free.

If I was to, at last, see and subdue this creature, or hope to kill it, now would be my best opportunity.

I brought the honor sword forward so that it illumined the ground underneath me.  Wet viscous ooze showed the path that the creature had taken, and the weight of the beast, despite the secretions, still dug a pressure furrow in the dirt that was at least five-foot-wide in under its ponderous girth.  Nem was right.  This creature was very big, and by the cracking of stone over which it had passed, I could tell that it weighed more than I had even suspected.

I scrambled up onto the hill of debris and broken rock that partially blocked the tunnel that had lost part of its ceiling.  The mount upon which I climbed lurched, and I felt the evidence of incredible strength as the buried limb of the beast stirred, flexed and curled, working its way loose of its temporary grave.  Dust and silt clouded the stale air, blanketing the shifting surfaces upon which I had ascended.  A series of small quakes threatened to topple me, and I leaped from stone to shifting stone, avoiding the sucking fissures breaking apart and refilling with dirt and gravel.  The grit and powder stirring in the air dimmed all visibility, yet the pulsing light from the honor sword seemed to sift the clouds away, allowing me to quickly find my way over the summit of the mound, and ride the sliding stones down its leeward side.  Somehow, I maintained my precarious and teetering balance, as large slabs of shale rocked and spun and jostled into one another, moving from atop the lurching ones to those with less of a spin.  A perimeter of gathering scree rimmed the bottom of the fallen ceiling and as a particularly large semi-flat stone slid down to the gathering edge, I leaped from it to the sloping tunnel floor the momentum forcing me down into a spring-heeled crouch, my arc lighted blade held before me in a guard position.  It was then that I first saw a part of the partially buried creature.

The limb, a long, massive column of rock-like plates and spines, tore free of the top of the mount, thrashing and shedding dust and debris as it writhed and twisted with fury.  Rocks broke apart beneath it as it slammed the mound, and gravel spat out like a shrapnel assault.  Its spines had a metallic luster, the polished sheen reflecting and bouncing the light back from the sword I held forth.  Furious as the creature was, the light from the honor sword seemed to burn it, such that it shrank back and moved away from each scintillation that illuminated its oiled and lustered scales.  With such movements, I moved away for cover, lest it launch itself from the mound and set another crashing of stones and earthen walls down upon us.

Another thirty feet backward, into the tunnel, I turned fully, having never looked away from the creature for more than a few seconds as I moved out of immediate striking distance.  It was then that I saw a lone beam of daylight pierce through the fogs of dust and provide a darkling silhouette of the creature’s head suffused in tanned billows of dust as it rose over the top of the mounds of broken earth.  As the dust began to settle, the creature’s horned head shook from side to side, freeing its crown of stones and loose earth.  Its head bristled with silver spines as if it was no mere creature, but an amalgam of both monstrous machine and prehistoric behemoth.  Its maw opened and coughed out a bulldozer scoop of dirt on crushed stones as if it had been chewing its way through the tunnels.  Large gill slits fanned out from behind its massive jaw spraying forth clouds of dirt backward and away from its hoary head, making the creature seem somehow akin to a large fish of sorts.  Strangely enough, as it cleared its throat of gobs of sands its teeth seemed to torque in their jaw settings, as it clenched and unclenched its massive jaws.  The idea that it chewed its way through the tunnel system, I realized, might be closer to the truth than speculation as I’d thought.  Mesmerized, I gaped and stared at it, for a moment more.  Its head was the size of a van or mini-bus.  Its fringed crown sparkled as if it had some embedded diamond coating, gilding the cutting edges of each twisted spire.  And then I saw its eyes.

They had been closed and shrouded under some nictitating membrane like a shark would have.  They were oblong and bulged outward under a set of spiny scales that formed an epicanthic fold, preventing grit from gathering under its leading corner as it moved underground digging in pursuit of its prey.  I do not know what I expected to see in those eyes.  Perhaps, irises flowered with pedals of golden flame.  Blood red pools with the black spiked talon of a pupil.  I don’t know.  But somehow these were worse than my imagination could conjure up.  They were at one moment completely obsidian, and then in a blink appeared human with an icy blue flecked iris that gave one the feeling of frosts chilling the skin.  A bright white sclera, like a cue ball, peeked around the corners of the irises, appearing in each corner below the eye-folds.  Had I just witnessed an illusion or a trick of the dim light?  These were black at first, weren’t they?  Had they changed, somehow?  The creature chuffed making a popping noise, like that of a shotgun going off.  Those flat-bladed teeth in its maw twisting with its jaw movement.  A viscous ooze gathered in a drool, wetting its maw and the leathery tongue that descended out of a cleft in the roof of its mouth.  A sound, like that of the popping of a semi-tractor trailer’s airbrakes being down-shifted, erupted from the descending blackness of its throat.  Its eyes blinked black again, and I felt it find me, standing below about and about fifty feet away from its perch above the mound.  The light shaft above it seemed to pierce glass-like through its skin in patches, where the dust had not fully settled and blanketed its form.  The creature’s body suddenly convulsed, and its scales separated in some kind of inhalation and exhalation, causing them to weep out an oily substance that cleared the dust from its skin.  It was becoming more and more translucent as if the creature was beginning to vanish before my very eyes.

The creature glared at me, its eyes strangely shifting between blinks from black to the ice blue, with a round widening pupil probing me for some kind of psychic weakness.  I could feel it reaching out, attempting to assault my mind with accusations and condemnation.  The voices were guttural and muted like sounds heard through deep water.  A prurient watery echo garbled this mental assault, and I silently prayed for the assurances of the Spirit to comfort and strengthen me in His keeping.

A mental arrow came into the bow of my mine from the words of the Ancient Text, and set its shaft into the notch of a taut and stretched string:

“1 LORD my God, I seek refuge in you; save me from all my pursuers and rescue me  2 or they will tear me like a lion, ripping me apart with no one to rescue me.  3 LORD my God, if I have done this, if there is injustice on my hands,  4 if I have done harm to one at peace with me or have plundered my adversary without cause,  5 may an enemy pursue and overtake me; may he trample me to the ground and leave my honor in the dust.  Selah  6 Rise up, LORD, in your anger; lift yourself up against the fury of my adversaries; awake for me; you have ordained a judgment.  7 Let the assembly of peoples gather around you; take your seat on high over it.  8 The LORD judges the peoples; vindicate me, LORD, according to my righteousness and my integrity.  9 Let the evil of the wicked come to an end, but establish the righteous. The one who examines the thoughts and emotions is a righteous God.  10 My shield is with God, who saves the upright in heart.  11 God is a righteous judge and a God who shows his wrath every day.  12 If anyone does not repent, he will sharpen his sword; he has strung his bow and made it ready.  … 14 See, the wicked one is pregnant with evil, conceives trouble, and gives birth to deceit.  15 He dug a pit and hollowed it out but fell into the hole he had made.  16 His trouble comes back on his own head; his own violence comes down on top of his head.  17 I will thank the LORD for his righteousness; I will sing about the name of the LORD Most High. ” [Psalm 7:1-12, 14-17 CSB]

Four components of warfare readiness clarified in my mind, telling me exactly what to do.

  1. To trust and submit myself under the keeping and protection of the Almighty.
  2. To confess anything that might stand in the way of our fellowship and the summoning of His fierce justice to this righteous cause.
  3. To place my confidence in His ability to champion this righteous cause and to empower me to be used as His instrument to do so.

And lastly, 4. to give credit where it is due for the victory to be about to be won.

I had no illusions.  To eyes unable to see anything beyond the material world, this stand looked foolish.  I may bear the middle name of the young lad who stood defiantly before a giant, unable to stand up under the panoply of battle dress.  But I knew that victory would be claimed over this terrifying beast.  This was foolhardy.  I had nothing to protect my skin from one vicious sweep of its bladed tail.  Nothing to stay the crushing power of its massive twisting jaws from closing over my mangled and bloodied body.  Nothing to keep bits of my flesh and crushed bone from being sifted and sliced and expelled out of its gill slits in a spray of wet gore.  Okay, those thoughts weren’t helping.

No telling how far or how fast the creature could move, but I knew I could neither chase it nor run from it now.  I voiced a silent prayer and confessed my doubts and failure to act to the One who had called me to stand for this moment, and I prayed for the known and unknown members of my company in the city above unaware of the conflict here below.  There was no bargaining for my life, or that I may survive this violent encounter, for like any other soldier bracing for the battlefield, I had my orders, and I knew what I was being called to do.  To lay down my life for the sake of the others and to seek honor and glory of the One.

My sword flared and blazed anew, and I was suffused in a nimbus of light.  I could sense the mental arrow of truth, command the creature’s attention as it shot forth, shutting down its attempts to take hold of my thoughts.  The invisible and spiritual missive raced through the dank air, burning and cracking with power and before the creature could flinch away, the spiritual arrow pierced its black obsidian eye between blinks and drove its shaft into its cranium.  The creature’s nictitating eyelid fluttered over the invisible shaft unable to dislodge it in the physical or spiritual plane.  Its eye clouded with an almost immediate milky cataract, as if the frost from its changing eye, finally broke through to freeze the black lake where it supernatural insight swam.

The creature lurched violently, its massive torso coming up and over the mound, tearing and crushing and leveling the top, as it roared in fury.  I launched myself forward, scrambling over the scree, clamoring up the hillside as its summit slide and broke around me.  The light shaft above the creature was brighter than it had been before and I hoped it did not signify that another portion of the city would soon collapse upon us.

I could see even more of the massive creature coiling around the mound, its body had no legs to propel it, but it did have baffles down its upper body, with mirror-like plating that seemed to swim with an oily light.  The creature could sense that I was near.  It snuffed about trying to get a fix on me, but I had deliberately moved away from its line of sight into its blind side.  But I knew that would not last for long.

Parts of its body were already fading from view, blending in chameleon-like with the colors and textures around it.  I had to find a way to pierce its armor plating and get clear of its slicing spines before they returned the favor.  From what I could still see, the beast was heaving and flexing, gathering its strength and drawing its massive coils, slowing up the mound, as if preparing to launch itself up through the ceiling.

The ceiling.  The shaft of light.  Its head was lifted, and it was studying the foggy ray that had made its way down into the dark tunnel.  It was looking upward, searching the broken ceiling above.  Preparing to make a break for this way out of the tunnel system, and violently upward, emerging right through the very heart of the hidden city of Azragoth.

Every moment was weighed out in gold—drawn from the account of a very poor man.  And as that impoverished man, what had already been wastefully paid out plunged me into deep debt.  The creature’s belly lifted, and its circulating coils pushed its ponderous body higher and higher after its straining pulsing neck.  Up till now, I had not seen any appendages from the creature, thinking that is was more serpent-like in some ways, but now I saw, behind the gills, the two massive arms, as big as the boles of a tree, that jutted backward from a shoulder and then forward on powerful forearms terminating in bird-like feet and claws with long black talons.  I had thought to get behind its head and rush in where the gills were, hoping to drive the honor sword in through the back of its neck and up into its head, but I had not known about its folded arms, because the creature alternative between snake-like motions and now that of a lizard missing its rear legs.  This creature was mostly in its element underground, but it hunted on the surface, seeking to capture and seize its prey above and then drag it screaming and fighting to devour it at its leisure in the darkness below.

As I feinted in, looking for my attack approach, the beast caught my attempt and its powerful arms reached for me, its talons almost catching the edge of my cloak.  With the blinding, it had overshot its balance with its angry swipe at me and toppled sidelong across the top of the mound.  Its head curved and it righted itself swiftly, dislodging more large slabs that tumbled down into the scree below.  Its left eye roved back and forth attempting to compensate for the loss of its right one.  Its black tongue peeked in and out from a notch below its upper lip, sampling the airborne scents it identified with me.

At each attempt to gather itself and ascend through the broken ceiling above, I feinted in, trying to keep it preoccupied with its hatred and need to eliminate me as an irritant.  With the arms now revealed and ready to claw and rip me to shreds and with its serpent-like body, I had at last decided to classify this beast as a drake…or a dragon, as our Surface World legends describe them, among those of the Asian and Oriental variety.

No matter what I classified it, I still needed some way to keep this dragon down here and subdue it.  I could not just contain it within the tunnels, for its destructive rampage would continue to destroy the foundations of the city above.  I needed to bind it, maim it, or kill it and I further knew I could not keep holding its attention for much longer.

Then something happened that I had not bargained for.  Something that took away my ability to further distract it from its intention to ascend.

*Scene 06* – 14:00 (Jalnus and Judith)

Jalnus the Weinman was a tavern owner within the city of Azragoth.  He had been a wine merchant in Azragoth’s halcyon days, before the city became overrun with rats that spread a plague throughout the city under the Xarmnian siege.

In the aftermath of the destruction, he had moved to a small vineyard on the plains of Ono that was later burned by Xarmnian Protectorate men when he would not give the men further drink without payment.  After the fire had consumed his only means of trade, he fled again to Azragoth when Lord Nem returned to it and took up residence in one of the larger structures in the upper quarter near the vicinity of the old fountains and baths just inside the interior wall.

He reasoned that where there were returning residents coming from exile, there would also be a need for a tavern and meeting hall where food and drink could be served while the city was still under repair.  Ezra and Lord Zeb had brought over forty-three thousand people with them who settled in the surrounding lands, allowing him to sell the property remaining from his burnt vineyards for a fair price.  A burnt vineyard would have been worthless otherwise, but with the large influx of people coming in, the land itself became valuable, and Jalnus’s idea of a fair price went up considerably as the new demand for property conveniently increased its value.

If the Xarmnian monarch had his way, all properties would eventually be subsumed by the state, then leased out for use to those who could still afford to pay Xarmni’s high taxes for use.  Had Xarmni succeeded during this time and the lands been no longer under the jurisdiction and protection of Capitalia, the burnt vineyard would have been his complete ruin with no chance for recovery.  Personal ownership of his property had given him an out from the inexorable path toward destitution.

When Lord Nem arrived with a Capitalian guard of army officers and horsemen three years later and the work of reconstruction of the inner wall began, the workers and their wives expressed a need for more food and drink to survive for, during the days of quarantine, they had mortgaged their fields and vineyards and homes to buy food for survival and to pay tribute taxes both to the Capitalian King of their former alliance, and now to the taxes and fines imposed by the Xarmnian monarch whose landed interests now extended to the midlands just below the highlands.

Seeing the need as an opportunity, Jalnus and his wife Judith moved back into the old city, found an ideal multi-leveled place with a large cellar and opened a tavern with the remaining barrel stock he had salvaged from the vineyard storehouse vats, and the monies he had made from the sell of his countryside property, and opened a tavern with a large hall on ground level and several small bedchambers in the upstairs rooms to accommodate both workers and visitors to the city.  The move had been a shrewd and lucrative venture and Jalnus prided himself on his good fortune to be so happily situated and profiting from the city’s rebirth and the return of the former exiles.  Jalnus had enjoyed having a steady income, without the hassle of the Xarmnian Protectorate demanding his ware and further taxes and tribute, for the Xarmnians were still unaware of Azragoth’s rebuilding efforts or proximity to the towns and properties they had subdued.

Jalnus was also proud of the fact that he remained hidden within the old city, reasoning that if the Xarmnians could not find him, they could not tax him.  He would pay his dues to the Capitalian king, but not to the greedy and brutal monarch in Xarm.  Freed from that added fiscal obligation, he was able to invest in purchasing land again.  He had acquired mortgages on several vineyard properties outside of Azragoth and was making a supplemental income from them until Lord Nem shamed him and others for the practice of usuary and indenturing the children as servants from those people who could not pay the debts.

Lord Nem had every right, under the Capitalian king’s orders, to levy a municipal tax and charge interest from those he governed in the city and surrounds, yet he refused to further impoverish his workers and their families and those who supported the effort by making daily provisions for those who had come in from the outer woods to help with the repair.  He reminded them of his right to tax as governor but also of his example in refusing to place further financial burdens on those he governed.  Jalnus was irritated but acknowledged that, perhaps, he had charged too much for his management fees of the mortgages he held, and he, like the others, promised to restore those fees and interests paid to their owners and release them from further obligations.  He also reduced his wait staff of indentured service and offered those who wanted to remain a fair wage for their duties.  Getting their consent, Lord Nem had made it clear that he would curse any of those who failed to keep their agreement, emphasizing this by shaking his robe, saying “If you fail to keep your promise, may The One shake you like this from your homes and your property!”  And so, both he and Judith had made further concessions to provide food, drink and shelter to the workers who had yet to find a berth or home inside Azragoth until the walls were fully restored and had also agreed to shelter the strange newcomers who had recently arrived in their city as guests from lands unknown, free of charge.  A condition which Jalnus and Judith both were growing tired of.  Yes, they were wealthy once more, and yes, they had made good investments and were still making a decent income above their operating costs, but the decrease in their net income rankled them, nonetheless.  However, it was not wise to incur the ire of the leadership of their city, so they pretended to be delighted and enthusiastic in their magnanimity.  Now that the walls had been completed, they were secretly relieved that they would no longer have to feed and slake the thirst of so many workers without remuneration.  The whole experience had made them irritable in their private conversations and that irritability was beginning to show.  Judith routinely snapped at Jalnus for his tendency to drink more than he should in the evenings.  And for his grumpiness and grudging reluctance to take up the slack and participate in the mundane operations of his tavern now that he had relieved part of his unpaid servant staff.  Judith was forever sending him up and down the dark stairway to the cellar.  His rotund belly did not help him in the journey up and down the sublevel stairs either.  He always emerged sweat stained and breathing heavy from the effort of trundling back and forth up and down in the basement.  “Go get another barrel of spice wine,” Judith would say, “we’re serving in the dining hall tonight.” To which he groused, “And I suppose its…”

“Free of charge!” both he and Judith mouthed silently, with a sniff of exasperation being their only giveaway about how they really felt, lest the wait staff overhear them.

He had brought fifty-five barrels of wine when he’d first established the place and was now down to only a few barrels left of his original stock.  He had tried to supplement his wine cellar with wine barrels paid to him from the mortgaged vineyards for a time to offset his losses, but to tell the truth those pathetic vintners produced an inferior product that he could barely swill much less drink.  “Too many white grapes!” he grumbled, “Not enough red!”

In his mind white wine tasted like spit.  Its better use was for making cheap champagne, once a group of celebrants had had their tanks filled with the passable reds to give them a buzz and dull their senses to anything a refined palate might notice.  Those vintners never seemed to let their reds properly age.  They sold new wines to meet their debts, but the value never increased because the quality never had the change to season the fermented bouquet.  He sighed and mumbled, “Well, that is what comes of getting wine from poor people who cannot afford to hold on to it and properly store it.”  He ground his teeth thinking of the time when one of his renters had tried to pay him with some new wine put in old wineskins that burst during the transport back to the city.  He should never have sent that ignorant Abdullah to collect payments.  He had fumed over that loss and the tenant that had tried to cheat him using the old skins and had charged the man a large spoilage fee with a high interest rate as a consequence.  When the many couldn’t pay, he had taken the man’s daughter to serve in his tavern until the debt could be paid off.  The trouble was, he had not kept track of what the girl’s wages would have been, so he had no idea when or if that debt would ever have been satisfied for her to be returned to her family.

She had been one of the ones he had released from her duties and had elected to return to her family, for she had not seen them in three and a half years.  She had been a good worker, despite her father’s attempts to cheat him.

But more people were coming to live in Azragoth, now that the wall had been restored.  And more people meant the potential for more profits again soon.  Lord Nem had encouraged many to return to the city to complete the final restorations of the interiors and establish them again.  He had even had families chosen whether to remain outside or come to live within by casting sacred lots.  With the repatriation of former Azragothians, and the completion of the wall there would be a dedication ceremony and a cause for celebration throughout the city.

Yet once again, Judith pressed him to go back down to the cellar and bring up a flagon of wine and a cask of ale to serve the outworlder guests after their day’s work out in the Warrior’s Court.  The look on his face brought a stern reprimand from Judith and she batted her hand at him.

He started to protest, but she jerked a finger over her shoulder and whispered, “Skipper’s in the other room and you know how chatty she is.  Don’t give her anything more to talk about.  I’ve heard just about all I want from her today.  Now be off with you. Shoo! And be quick about it!”

Jalnus’s brow furrowed, and he scowled, muttering, “Be quick about it, Jalnus! Be quick about it!” in a mocking tone.  “Free ale, free wine, free cheese for everyone.  Free at the cost to me!”

Judith’s smile and wink didn’t help much, but he turned to go anyway.  Irritated enough to know that if he lingered any longer, he would most certainly say the wrong thing with too much volume and it would fall on the wrong ears and spew out of the wrong mouth in the company of the guest as the overly cheerful waitress both he and Judith had nicknamed ‘Skipper’ for her tendency to hop about while she served guest would share her employer’s present disgruntled mood with no sense and no filter, giggling all the while.

As he shuffled and trundled down the stairwell he wondered if he would be expected to donate more of his food, servant help and wine to the celebration again…unpaid.  He huffed.  He longed for the days when he could just sit in his counting house looking at piles of precious coins and getting his hired “strong backs” to lug barrels up the steps.  He had fired Abdullah after the wineskin incident, but perhaps he had been too hasty in his outrage.  The young man had been ignorant and was never taught how to recognize the difference between a new and an old wineskin.  An oversight, perhaps that he should have taken the blame for, rather than casting it all on the lad.  He snuffed once more remembering that though the lad was an eager worker, he had a weakness for the taste of cheese.  That is why the young man could not be trusted with the basement key.  The waxed cheeses were stored in the basement as well.

When Jalnus finally reached the bottom of the stairs he had to put his torch in a sconce as he fumbled through the keys for the right one to open the thick wooden door.  Unlocking it, he took up the torch again already sweating in the heat from the flickering flame.  Trying not to set what little remained of the sidewalls of his hair on fire.  He had singed the ends a time or two.  And it did not help that Judith laughed at him the last time it happened, and his partially bald head was smoking unaware.  He turned the release catch, lifted the torch as the door opened swinging inward.  Nothing could have prepared him for what he saw just beyond the threshold.

*Scene 07* – 12:00 (The Shaft)

Underground Image-03

Above us, in the aperture shaft that led to the surface, where the stray beam of light descended into this underworld, we could see the suspended edge of an outside wall and the partial interior of a cellar room now missing part of its floor.

A door opened, and a man bearing a torch stopped just short of stepping perilously down into the hole that now occupied the area just beyond the threshold he had intended to enter.  Flagons were stored in wall racks, cuts of smoke-cured meat dangling from ceiling hooks hung from floor beams and the tops of barrel casks could be seen in the flickering light of his torch, as could the shocked expression on his rounded and flushed face.

Despite the danger of my own precarious situation, I could not help but commiserate with the poor fellow, standing there stunned, looking through the hole in his floor into a face of nightmarish horrors, and down further into my dirty, upward turned face.  Indecision froze him for only a second before I distinctly heard him say, “I think I shall go back upstairs now.”  And upon those words, he quickly retreated from the doorway and, for good measure, promptly locked the cellar door.  Being somewhat of a corpulent fellow, I heard his heavy footfalls as he swiftly ascended the wooden stairs beyond.  Perhaps he was seeking the solitude of another room in his domicile.  From his parting expression, that room was most likely a privy.

As I said before, the paid-out moments spent in dealing with this dust dragon were precious and I could not afford further distractions.  This momentary one almost cost me the farm, the surrounding properties and the county in which it resided.

The dragon’s tail lashed out.  Its bony-plated, diamond-pointed, razor-honed edges slicing through the air cutting towards me with dangerous precision.  I had only a fraction of a second, between being impaled upon those deadly stone cutting spines and waving a portion of my lower body a bon voyage as it was flung into the dark tunnels behind me.  The light that encompassed my sword and my body flashed, and the flat blade of the honor sword bore the brunt of the impact, sending my body airborne, end over end down the embankment to land hard upon a pile of sand and silt at the edge of the scree-ring below.  I was winded, and my ribs felt compressed into my spine, and I gasped for breath, only to find the massive tail sweeping upward again, the bony scythe-plates angled down and falling towards the place in which I had landed. I rolled away, up onto a jagged stone, which I had just missed in my previous fall, just in time before the tail slammed hard into the sand, stirring the dust clouds once again until there was no visibility or clear air in which to breathe.  I used that lack of visibility to my advantage now.  Again, using the honor sword’s supernatural sweep ability to provide me with a way through it, temporarily hidden from the roving single-eyed sight of the creature.  The dust masked my scent as well, for I could sense the creature’s angry frustration at its inability to see whether its vicious lunge had succeeded or not.

I could imagine its rapidly blinking eye, bizarrely switching from ebony to ivory and blue, hoping for the savage satisfaction of feeling my dying agony, and witnessing the broken ravages of my bludgeoned, crushed and pierced body, pinned and buried beneath the weight of its cleaving tail.  I would give it no such satisfaction.

With the swiftness of thought, another arrow of the Living Breath of Life came into my mind, its jagged and honed tip, readied to be pointed at this gargantuan denizen of death.

“24 … “If anyone wishes to follow Me [as My disciple], he must deny himself [set aside selfish interests], and take up his cross [express a willingness to endure whatever may come] and follow Me [believing in Me, conforming to My example in living and, if need be, suffering or perhaps dying because of faith in Me].” [Matthew 16:24b AMP]

I responded in my spirit to the Voice of the Truth delivered to me.

“Lord, what do you want me to do?  How can I subdue this creature of deception?”

This time a knowing came into my spirit, which summed up what I already knew in my heart.

To paraphrase it, it came down to “Love the One who called you, above everything else, and love those you are called to lead and serve by laying down your life for them if necessary.”

I verbalized my prayerful response, making it more real for me, by conversing out loud with the One speaking into my inner Spirit.

“Lord, if I die here in this battle, how will the others know of the sacrifice I made for them?  Will my life have meant nothing?  Will they think that I abandoned them?”

The response came immediately, and it was in the form of a question that unmasked my cloaked pride.

“Whose glory do you seek, in giving up your life in this secret place?  Your own?  Or Mine?”

It was clear that I sought some degree of shared recognition from the others, and being faced with the truth of that, I became ashamed of it.

“Tell me what to do.  I need no other affirmation, but Yours.”

I had a sense of His pleasure in this, and the quickening glow that infused me and the covenant sword I bore, brightened with an intensity it had not shone before.

A knowing filled my mind that expressed the key to bringing about the demise of this terrible beast, and the way of doing it shocked me and threatened to make me fear again for my own life.

My heart, mind, soul, and body had come to a crossroads at which I, within my own spirit, had to make a commitment to surrender all in what to others would seem to be a terrible choice.

Beside the waiting and invisible arrow, I could only picture with spiritual perception, there arose another verse of the Ancient Text, that formed alongside the readied arrow delivered into my spiritual arsenal, this time the verse formed the lead edge of the stretched bow where the end of the shaft and the arrow tip lay.  The arrow guide, in which I was to focus this next assault.

“2 Your tongue devises destruction, Like a sharp razor, O worker of deceit. 3 You love evil more than good, Falsehood more than speaking what is right. Selah. 4 You love all words that devour, O deceitful tongue. 5 But God will break you down forever; He will snatch you up and tear you away from your tent, And uproot you from the land of the living. Selah.” [Psalms 52:2-5 NASB]

My target and point of assault clarified and stunned me in the same instant revealing to me that this dust dragon was the mid-world embodiment of a creature I had spoken about long before.  An agent beast of Deception.  Of course.  What else would be so intent on devouring foundations and undermining every plan formed by those above?  Deception creatures gained his power through whispering lies and misleading thoughts that distracted those following his covenant calling.  It also now made sense why there would have been a cloaked Banshee embedded in our party.  And why it so hated its exposure.  These Dust Dragons consumed the soil of the land and through his gullet, he transformed the engorged dust mixed with his unique saliva into a malleable clay-like substance that could be used to form a temporary physical body for the Banshee creatures of the wind.  The Banshee we exposed and displaced was a mole, a deceiver, planted and connected to this Dust Dragon.  It fed bits of intelligence back to this Dragon as it pursued and stalked us from a safe distance.  When we routed out and exposed that Banshee from among us, we cut off its ability to sow dissension within our company and reveal our plans back to the enemy.  So, the creature was only left with one alternative.  To subtly link its mind to mine and take advantage of my self-doubt and feed my uncertainty.  I was indeed in the thrall of this dragon.  Its supernatural probing sight found an opportunity within my waning confidence.  It had used the fact and worry that I did not have the assurance that I would be equipped once more by the Spirit’s commission and subsequent Quickening power to do what I had been called to do.  These sudden revelations were like an epiphany, that further opened my perception.  Giving me the clarity to how these Beasts between Worlds had conspired to insinuate himself into our mission and undermine it at every opportunity.

Another verse came to me, assuring me again that what I sensed needed to be done was, in fact, the correct path.

“3 Who have sharpened his tongue like a sword. He aimed bitter speech as his arrow, 4 To shoot from concealment at the blameless; Suddenly he shoots at him, and does not fear. 5 He holds fast to himself an evil purpose; He talks of laying snares secretly; He says, “Who can see them?” 6 He devises injustices, saying, “We are ready with a well-conceived plot”; For the inward thought and the heart of a man are deep. 7 But God will shoot at them with an arrow; Suddenly he will be wounded. 8 So he will make him stumble; His own tongue is against them; All who see them will shake the head.” [Psalms 64:3-8 NASB]

The key to subduing and killing a dust dragon lay in piercing or cutting out its terrible tongue.  I had only to trust in and launch these supernatural arrows at this dust dragon and see what would come of it.  Perhaps it would cause this creature to open its mouth once again in angry fury.  To release its vile black tongue from the cleft in its upper jaw, exposing the dark hollow of its throat.  But the arrows alone would only provide me with an opportunity to use the honor sword as I might, with surrender and obedience to the One to do what needed to be done.  I would have to commit everything, spirit, soul, and body to this chance to get close enough to strike a blow to its vile, scent-tasting tongue.  To be able to do that, I would need to be in its terrible rock-crushing mouth, between its twisting and torquing teeth.  I would have to allow this Dust Dragon to eat me.

The Creature in The Cauldron – Chapter 25

*Scene 01* – 07:56 (Wooden Cage)

Aridam had thought his assignment would be easy.  No horse-drawn wagon could outrun unencumbered men on horseback.  It just stood to reason.  When Hadeon had given him the order to pursue the wagon headed along the northwestern trail back toward the valley of the Xarmnian stables, he was sure that he and his men would come back soon carrying the severed heads of their quarry, or at least those in the pretentious, and odious weapons convoy who had thought to make fools of them, and steal their prize.

The trail was another ridgeline track, heavily wooded, both cut and leveled out through the steep treelined march over the lip of the highland ridge, covering the head of the valley.  Aridam knew there would eventually be a bridge to cross if the trail followed the ridgeline course, for a shallow river flowed through the stable valley and wet the lowlands filling them with rich grasses that were used to range and feed the Xarmnian stable’s remudas and herds.  He was certain that if he and his men did not catch their quarry along the wooded rode, they would certainly catch up to them before they reached whatever bridge crossed the stream that poured over the lip of the highland ridge.

What he had not counted on, however, was how the trees themselves could be used against his team to entrap them and thrust them off the edge of the steep grade into the jagged ranks of the slanted woods below.

Riding fast through the tunnel of towering trees, they could just spot the fleeing wagon racing through the dappled twilight, almost a half mile ahead.  Aridam knew that wagon would have to slow for the bridge crossing, for the stone bridge was narrow gaged, and just broad enough to allow a wagon to cross, but just barely.  Crossing too fast would risk damaging the spokes and the axel and the bridge spanned about forty to fifty feet across with only about five feet above the frothy and churn of the descending falls.  Watching ahead, he almost laughed as he saw the wagon slow, feeling that his savage victory would soon come to those impudent fools who dared to think they could evade and outrun some of the best trackers in all the kingdom lands of Xarm.

And then, the trees began to fall…

Great crackling sounds echoed down the tube of the woods, causing Aridam and his team to look up and around them.  The snap and explosive crack of breaking limbs, and a rising pitch of groaning wood, lumbered forward, popping and whooshing as a massive tree over eighty feet high leaned its massive trunk across the backtrail, roots ripping and emerging out of the ground, cutting their way of retreat off.  Another tree crackled and popped, its large canopy swishing in leafy protest, as it fell down upon Aridam and his men, crushing some, and pitching others and their horses down over the edge of the road into a wet mat of pine needles that sloughed like dead skin off of a debris field of jagged scree, and broken rock.  Falling branches rained down on them, as the massive tree folded itself between lower ranks of threes, shearing off some of its branches to trade places in formation, headed downward.  Frantically, Aridam fought through the tumble of branches, his mount buried in a leafy bower below.  Suddenly he realized that he no longer had the use of one of his arms.

Ahead the way was block by other fallen trees, their trunks extending across the narrow roadway, the shade that they had once provided was speared through with shafts of sunlight and swirling dust motes, drifting leaves, and kicked up dust from ripping through the overhead canopy.  Parts of the higher shoulder sloughed down onto the roadway, spilling gravel and gouts of earth, broken by the twists and turn of the large trees.  Aridam noticed one of the trunks missing a wedge shape from its bole.  It had been angle cut, and shimmed into place only to be removed at a future opportune time, allowing the tree to fall into a directed path that would impede further movement along the trail.  Gritting his teeth, he realized that they had lured in and had ridden into a trap, set long ahead of this instance of pursuit.  They knew as well as he did, that a fleeing wagon would not last long in a chase, without some was to slow their pursuers down.  He cursed and spat, blinded with fury…and pain, as at last he got a good look at his mangled and bloodied arm.  His legs were numb, having been struck brutally by one of the spindly limbs of the large tree that had crushed several of his riders beneath its ponderous weight.  From beyond the steep lower edge of the road he heard panicky screams and flailing as others that had been swept off the roadway found themselves scrabbling, and scratching, searching for handholds or footholds to slow their descent down a dislodged and slowly moving scree and talus pile.  Large rocks, pushed ahead by the upper shift, fell over a sheer drop, popping and breaking as they bounced and skidded over the edge.  Shorter trees that had found a grappling root through the slough rocks, now lost their grip, as their crushed roots snapped and were sheered away from their tap roots.  Those smaller trees whipped and abraded the men who had no choice but to ride to their forward fate toward the precipice and spill over the edge into the jagged ranks of pines below.

As Aridam lay back on the flattened boughs, having extracted himself from the tree limbs that had pinned him down, he knew that Hadeon would wonder what had happened to him and his men, and grow more irritated by the hour when they did not show up at the pre-arrange meeting spot, down below the main road beneath the highland rim.  He sighed, feeling his body grow numb and weary from the loss of blood.  Well, Hadeon would just have to wait, Aridam sighed, releasing a long breath of exasperation.  He would be more angered by the fact that Aridam’s quarry had gotten away, rather than over the loss of Aridam’s company and their horses.  Hadeon took losses as setbacks personally.  Dead men could not serve his ambitions, so he took no thought for them.  Aridam wondered by he had ever thought to follow such a self-centered, angry man would be a good thing.  Hadeon had garnered a reputation as being a man who could get things done.  Yes, but at what cost?  Aridam questioned his own stance.  He would receive no reward for bolstering another man’s ego and brutal reputation.  But where could he go?  If he had abandoned his life as a member of the Protectorate Guard, what would he do with himself.  One was not just allowed to leave.  The others were dutybound to clear up loose ends, lest they decide to turn against the king and help those who fancied themselves part of the laughable ‘Resistance’.  But one could not be too careful.  Protectorate Guards were to be feared by those they “protected”.  Oh, the irony! Aridam almost laughed, but winced at his own pain, trying to get a torn piece of material around his mangled arm into a tourniquet to stop further blood loss.  He managed to get the bloodied material sash around his upper bicep, and fumbling, forced the end of the sash under the loop, then feeding the end up into his mouth, tasting his own blood as he did so.  He gripped the end between his teeth and then yanked the tourniquet tight, screaming as he did so, before everything went black.

*Scene 02* – 18:15 (Going to The Graveyard – Part 1 of 3 “The Disposition of One”)

Lord Nem and I had an early breakfast of small baked barley loaves with a fruit compote inside, possibly of blended figs, and berries, brushed with a fragrant coating of olive oil and honey made from dates.  It was accompanied by a poached egg, and flat potato latkes, with blueberries baked in.

I did not say anything about the disturbance during the night and Nem graciously did not bring it up.  It was still dark when we stepped out side, and I could tell that the strong winds had done some damage.  Branches and leaves were scattered down the steps from the porch and odd jointed frames had been lifted and blown off of some of the flat rooftops.

“Looks like some of the roof scaffolding were blown down during the windstorm last night.” I commended, seeing the joined wooden poles, with sheaf of thatch and leaves still clinging to them.

“Those are booths,” Nem answered.

“All the way from the marketplace courts?” I asked incredulous.  “That was some storm!”

“Not from there.  These are booths coverings.  Temporary structures we put on our roof tops.  In the seventh month, we camp under them for a week during the festival.  All families here observe this custom.  It honors our tradition from a period when we were displaced and did not have homes to shelter in.  And… they make great camoflage canopies from aerial observers.  Not every enemy of ours in the Mid-World walk on their feet.  This we do by tradition, don’t just have to serve a singular purpose, you know.”

“Huh!” I exclaimed, “I didn’t think of that.”

We made our way down through the debris and eventually arrived at a stone stairwell that descended further down toward the lower parts of the city.

As Nem had said, the region between the outer wall and the interior wall was both dead and yet alive with wildness.  The absence of people living there made it a graveyard as much as the fact that many had perished there as well.  The wild beasts and stray animals moving among the thick grasses gave the place an eerie feel.  Their rustling and bleating and occasional growling sporadically heard beneath the leafy canopy of overgrowth.

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“Walk with me.  There is something very particular I need to show you.  Something we need your help with and some private issues we need to speak about concerning your leadership.”

We walked together in silence for a bit, moving away from the hearing of the others until we reached a stone stairway that led down into the older remnants of the city.

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“This quest you are on…,” he began, “It will take one of us from here with you into unknown dangers ahead.”

Intuitively, I knew who he was speaking of, but did not interrupt.

He paused, carefully navigating the broken steps downward that had become covered with wet moss, lichen, and an ever-spreading, ever-growing carpet of vines that seemed to swallow the crumbling steps into a throat of leafy greenery.  He lifted his feet high, indicating that I should do the same, to keep our feet from being caught in the treacherous tangles.  Our footfalls, pressing on the top of the vines, crushing the leaves, and crackling thin branches underneath caused the mat to give off a sickeningly cloying custard-like odor.  A dusting of bile-yellow pollen covered our boots and legs as we carefully scrambled over the tops of the densely woven mat.

Soon, we found a partial clearing of stone again and the semblance of steps resuming downward into a thickly overgrown courtyard enveloped in leafy kudzu and gnarled branches that twisted and descended into and out of the overgrowth, dislodging stones from the walls and the ancient structure buried beneath.  It was almost as if this leafy green surface was some alien ocean in tumult, where the surface of the water had been replaced with foliage and some monstrous Kraken-like creature from the fathomless depths below extended its wooden twisted tentacles through the floating mat, seizing and tugging anything it could wrap its searching, probing and coiling appendages around.  Once standing again on a small flat island of stone, in the midst of this leafy ocean, Nem resumed his address to me.

“While we are on the precipice of war and can hardly spare anyone, we understand the vital role of these quests.  Others and I agree that it is now Maeven’s time to go with you on this one.  We knew this time would eventually come, but it is hard now that this time is upon us.”

Nem paused thoughtfully.  Reflecting on memories of her with a wistful smile.

“She has been adopted into the village of Azragoth.  We are like family to her and she to us, though we know she originally came to us from the Surface World.  She has grown much and learned far more than others of your kind who pass through here.  But she is still part of your world, and her future depends on finding for herself what your quest will offer her.  She is like a daughter to us.  One who has brought much delight to us as she grew up among us, and like doting parents, we struggle to release her into finding her own life for herself.

We continued forward, again stepping from the stone shore of the green sea, to walk across the crackling and spongy surface of its verdant and tangled waters, making for a break in the wall and another set of vine-covered steps leading upwards and beyond.

“I know why you have come, perhaps better than you do.  I can sense your uneasiness, your self-doubt, and your feelings of inadequacy.  But you should know that what you were called to is very important, and something our erstwhile daughter needs to be able to find the wholeness she has been seeking her entire life.”

I sighed involuntarily before realizing I had done so.  It seemed that he might be making more out of my calling than I was, and embarrassingly, I had the deep-down sense that he was correct.

Nem studied me a moment with disturbingly perceptive eyes that seemed to probe and unpack my secrets and my every weakness.

“For anything you set out to do, Mr. O’Brian, you must always…Always,” he emphasized, “Be able to clearly state the purpose for which you undertake the task.  If you are not clear on this point, you doom your enterprise and everyone who may hope to follow you into it.  Since you will take a daughter of this city into your particular undertaking, I cannot allow you to proceed with such uncertainty, so let me restate the purpose of your mission for you, as I perceive it to be.  Afterward, if you see it differently, I need to know it now before we commit her to go with you on this quest.”

I hesitated, but Nem did not, and like a father protecting the daughter he loves from the ill-defined intentions of a prospective suitor, he restated and clarified the essential nature of my purpose for being here, and my having been given the quest in the first place.

“You are here to bring awareness to the daydreamers who have lost who they are.  Those who have become disconnected from their own self-worth and from the memory that their stories are intertwined with our histories.  They have escaped, for lack of a better term, into the dream but have found only the nightmare because they are ungrounded.  Split between who they believe themselves to be and what they at one time wished to be.  Despair has clouded their vision and made them believe that to hope for anything else is a foolish myth.  You too were under that delusion, but I think you are finally waking up to it now.  But you have a difficult task ahead of you.  You are still groggy from the restlessness of being roused to awareness, sorting through the real and the unreal, belief and doubts.  You speak words of the Ancient Text and swiftly call them forth from your memory in warrior fashion, but you are still disconnected from the reason they come to you, and the power they offer to restore your ability to become more than you are now.  Faith without works is dead, Mr. O’Brian, and you are still shrouded in funeral garments, yet you purport to lead these others who are presently unaware of why they specifically were brought here through the portal between our worlds.  What roles they are yet to play in the discoveries yet to come.  Nell is not the only Seer here, you know.  Azragoth has others within our township who dream as well.  Some of your travelers are known through those dreams, yet your people are unaware of this.  We have kept our Seers from interacting with your people because they might recognize them and not yet know why they do.  I needed to speak with you first, before allowing those meetings.  To assess what steps have been taken to make your company a unit and a family who could survive the rigors of what is ahead of you when you leave Azragoth and prepare them for the psychological shock of finding out that all of them have been here at least once before yet have lost their memory of it.  Their stories will come back to them in time.  But you must be prepared for it.  For how it will affect each of them when they do.  But before you can do that you must first contend with who you are and come to terms with it.  Then you must come to know each of them and earn their trust.”

Something within me.  Something integral to my very soul and spirit resonated in affirmation of what Nem was saying, and I could feel the truth of it even as he spoke it forth.

“How do you know such things?  How can you…?”

“Because Mr. O’Brian, or Brian as you are known in the above world…In this world, I am the particular Seer who has dreams of what your life is in the other world.  I feel I have known of you before you even knew yourself.  Each of us, here in the Mid-world, dreams of another’s story.  It is part of the inherited connection we have with our ancestors who first came here from there.  I happen to be the one of the few persons in this world who sees you particularly and foresaw your coming back here.  It is the only reason you were allowed into the city and entrusted with its secret of existence.”

He was silent for a moment, allowing me to recover from my shock at this revelation.

“You are dreaming me?” I asked under my breath, more to myself than to Lord Nem.

He proceeded up the stone steps to the remnants of a stone structure that looked in part like a pavilion or gazebo, unaware that I had voiced a question.

I hesitated and then followed.

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When I reached the top, I could see that beneath the stone pavilion, there was what looked to be the remains of a fountain basin with a series of recessed and concentric pits gradually descending in depth until the smaller inner basin revealed a grate covered well in its center.  The fountain was dry, and no water remained in it, but its floor was strewn with the remains of dead and decaying leaves, grayed and blackened with rot over time.  Though the gazebo/pavilion was raised on a tree-shrouded hillock within the city walls, the air there felt dry and still.  Musty in some way.  As if the stone canopy were the ceiling of a cave smelling of lime, smoke, and fire-scorched earth.  The fecund and sickly-sweet smell of rotting leaves one might expect to smell from the floor of the fountain was instead replaced with the slightly coppery tang of dry dust that had aged well beyond decay until all moisture was leeched out of it.

We stood together at the raised edge of the fountain basin looking down into its waterless cavities, and into the iron-grated dark blackness of the central basin.

“What is this place?” I asked, looking around me.

“It is one of the oldest places in the city,” Lord Nem said.   “Azragoth was built upon the ruins of a much older site.  Many of the older layers are buried below under tons of crushed rock and rubble.  There are voids beneath that never filled in, but they are almost impossible to reach under so much stone.  This place was once a hot bath pavilion, known for its healing properties.  Can you tell me what is missing from this place?”

I glanced from the empty basins to the covered cabanas, now choked with crawling vines, dried and exposed roots and a fine powdered dust that covered everything.  “There are no attendants here…” I muttered.

“And why would there be?  What would they attend?  What would make this place require workers?”

I felt dense, missing the obvious answer to his question, but still he waited for my reply.  “The water?” I offered, hesitant to mention it because it seemed a too obvious answer, but Nem nodded.

“Exactly.  Natural hot water springs once filled these pools with mineral rich waters that soothed sore muscles, increased blood flow, and helped soldiers and physical laborers alike recuperate from their work in the fields or on fields of battle.  Without the underground flow of water to replenish these pools, this place becomes meaningless to attend to.  Its purpose was to contain that which filled it.  People did not come here for the basins; they came here for what filled them: healing waters.”

He let that thought sink in.  Then voiced quietly, “Without the filling, you will be ever bit as dry and hollow as anyone of these dusty bowls littered with dead leaves and bits of dry broken branches.  Whatever it is inside of you that you keep in an unfilled room, will eventually be filled with something else to occupy it.  You must let the well within you spring forth to flow into those spaces.  To wash away those things that don’t belong and cleanse it for healing to occur.”

“I am told, last night you caused quite a stir in my household.”

“There was…  I don’t know, it felt like there were presences in my room.  I must’ve been dreaming.  I heard voices and thought something might’ve been threatening little Miray.  I apologize for waking the others up.  Causing a stir.  You weren’t there?”

“After I left you, I slipped away and spent the evening in the temple, fasting and praying for you.  I noticed a change in you this morning.  A heaviness lifted.  Perhaps prayers answered, but clearing the way for you.  I only broke the fast this morning with you, before we departed, for it seemed that I was released to do so.”

I was both stunned and humbled by his admission.  I knew the power of prayer but had had very few occasions where people prayed specifically for me.   I did not know what to feel about someone who had so many other responsibilities on his mind, that he would spend so much particular time with me and thinking of my situation, even to the point of foreseeing my coming in dreams.  Who was I that my life and calling would mean so much, when it ranked so low in my own mind and thoughts?

I thought to probe a little into that question, so I asked him, “If you can see who I am back in the Surface World, and knew I would one day be coming here, leading an expedition, can you also see what will be ahead of us?”

Nem shook his head.  “It doesn’t work like that.  I could only catch glimpses of what would be up to this moment.  When the time of your journey and our times join into the present, no Seer, no matter how gifted can see beyond it.  We are not soothsayers, Brian, or fortune-tellers who can give you a sight of a future in which you are a passive player.  The desire to know the future from anyone other than The One reflects your present state of fear.  All future steps are accounted for according to your choices and actions from this moment forward.  As it is written: The just shall live by faith.  And you are justified and accountable for the choices you make.  Only The Word of The One can say what will be beyond these moments, for only He knows the end from the beginning.  It is folly to seek knowledge of the future in anything other than this.  Neither you nor any other being in all of creation from one end of the heavens to the other can get out of The Word’s permissive will.  Your safest, and the most fulfilling course is to seek the path He desires for you and experience the goodness that will certainly come of it.  If you would rather seek your own will, and your own definition of good, you will find the hard and lonely path of His provisional will.  It is your choice to make.  Either route you take, you will find always that His Will will be done in the end.”

We were silent for a time, each pondering the words spoken and the responsibility they portended.

*Scene 02* – 16:21 (Going to The Graveyard – Part 2 of 3 “Reluctant Leadership”)

“What do you think Azragoth represents to the outside world?”

“I know it was a great commercial center once.  But I am not sure that is what you are asking.”

“Death, Mr. O’Brian.  As I told you last night, it represents loss, death, and destruction.  In a way, it is the very thing you need right now because otherwise, you will be an agent of death to these followers you lead.”

“I don’t understand.”

“Every great quest begins with a kind of death.  For one who is called to lead, that death is their own.  Have you ever heard of the concept of dying to live?  That one must surrender their desire to master their circumstances, otherwise, they will become mastered by them?”

“The concept is not unfamiliar to me.  The Ancient Text speaks of such things:

If you try to hang on to your life, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it. And what do you benefit if you gain the whole world but are yourself lost or destroyed?” [Luke 9:24-25 NLT]

“Ah yes.  To my very point, which is why there is some hope for you.  You do seem to have a sense of what is the right thing to do, even if you are not grasping the way to get there.  But if you do not get there, you will still endanger everyone who follows your lead and tragically so, because you knew what you must do but failed to execute upon it.

“What do you mean?  How is my leadership endangering them?”

Nem was quiet a moment, letting my question linger between us before finally considering an approach to answering it.

“I am told you bore an honor sword when you arrived through the backwoods.  Why did you surrender it?”

“We were told to surrender our weapons, or we would not be let into the city.”

“That is true, but you are evading my question.  Why did you, personally, surrender the honor sword?”

I paused, thinking back to my conversation with Maeven, and sighed at the memory.  “I was promised I would get it back again.”

“Were you?” Nem studied me, “Was getting into Azragoth more important than the lives of the company you lead?”

“I am not following.”

“Nor are you leading, Mr. O’Brian.  You are presently in the thrall of an invisible creature, and because of it, you represent a grave danger to us all.”

“I don’t feel like I’m in the thrall of anything.”

“Yes, you are.  If you weren’t you would never have surrendered your honor sword, nor would you have allowed your people to be led blindly into a city that represents death to the outside world.  A city of a plague that even the Xarmnians have feared and let be for a season.  There are some others in this city that also know you from the before times.  The time in which you were something much different than what you are now presenting yourself to be.  Did you think we would not find out, who it was that we allowed into our confidence?”

I sighed involuntarily, feeling exposed for a fraud and a certain embarrassing shame colored my face.  I leaned across the fountain’s edge, my hands clasped together, breathing deeply, carefully thinking through my response.

Nem continued, allowing me the dignity of not being pressed to say something I might regret later.

“You have a reputation that precedes you, even if most have forgotten it because it was so many years ago.  You once were what Maeven, as the Storm Hawk, has become now.  A legend, a hero, a fierce fighter and a crusading leader against both the Xarmnians and the races of Half-men.  She has filled in the gap of what you left.”

“Then I certainly pity her for it,” I said, revealing more bitterness than I intended in my tone, “She does not know what she is in for.”

“What has happened to you to make you so different from the stories?  Were those who remember you from back then deceived?  Are they wrong?”

“As many legends are, they were exaggerated into something I could never live up to.  I felt the weight of them, and I tried very hard not to disappoint people who were inspired by them to hope.  But I failed them, and I failed those I loved in the worst way.  I was eventually captured, tortured and my family taken from me.  I betrayed them and everything I ever stood for to seek relief from the pressure of being more than I could humanly be.  The expectations of people, even well-meaning people, can become a cruel taskmaster, so eventually, I sought seclusion and withdrew into what I thought was a quiet existence.”  I let out an exasperated breath, an continued, “Until…I was found again.  By the very creatures, I unwittingly brought over from the Surface World.  My own personal demons, who bound me and drove me to the brink of utter despair.

“So here you are again.  Leading a quest with people who do not know you.  For what?  Penance over past failings?”

“I was given a second chance.  And was called out of the past darkness into which I tried to hide.  I don’t know why.  I don’t feel up to this, and I certainly didn’t want anyone to know of my past.  I cannot live up to it, so these should only know that I am called and am hoping that the equipping and the quickening power comes back to me as it did before with the calling.  I figured enough time had passed in these lands that those I knew would have forgotten me.  These travelers from the Surface World are mostly strangers to me.  Begglar and I have a history not so dissimilar to each other.  We both left the crusadership about the same time and sought a quieter life.  Though Begglar, I have since learned has not abandoned it so much as I.”

“I would’ve thought that if any of us should be called back to lead, it should have been him.  He derives a certain energy from interaction with others that I have difficulty with.  He could not escape his natural propensity for it, so, he opened a bakery and then an Inn.”

“Me, well, I found a small cabin in the mountains near a brook.  Seclusion is my natural go to when I am overwhelmed.  So, I planted a small garden and lived monk-like as much as I could, occasioning visiting Begglar and then Nell when they married and a few times later before they had Dominic.  Begglar was the only one of the old company that I have had any contact with, in the years following.  I had been to Azragoth during trade days, before the attack and plague, and have sometimes wandered the forests and hills, and lake country, avoiding heavily populated towns as much as I could.  Never staying anywhere for very long, to avoid being recognized again.  I’ve put on a few pounds here and there; this slightly greying beard is new.  No one who knew me then would easily recognize me now, …or so I thought.”

“So, how do you envision things will be different this time?  This different identity that you’ve built up around yourself as this meek and bumbling and confused leader serves what purpose, do you think?”

I shrugged, “I don’t really know.  I believed it would set the bar of their expectations lower for me.  It feels a little liberating to not carry the weight of former victories in a new company of those unaware of them.  To be underestimated.”

“It sounds like a lazy man’s way out.  It will inspire no confidence in those you are leading and will make them afraid to follow you anywhere.”

Before thinking, I blurted out, “Perhaps they should be afraid to.  Some degree of fear is wise and makes them cautious.”

“It will also make them hesitant and unsure.  Those things will get them killed in a conflict.  You want your enemies to underestimate you, not your friends.”

“For me, friendships have become a liability.  I try to maintain a distance so that I don’t lose objectivity and play no favorites.  It is hard enough to commit others to take personal risks for the benefit of the group.  It becomes extremely harder to do so if those with whom you risk their lives are personal and intimate friends.  I did that with a dear friend before and it cost him his life.  After losing that friend, I could not focus for the grief and ended up leading others into danger and near death because I could not recover from the loss to remain clear-headed in battle.  I was desperate to make amends, but worry and fear for my friends crippled my leadership.  I bore the responsibility for putting them in harm’s way, and when Caleb died, I could not take it any longer.”

Nem nodded, but countered my arguments.  “That particular distancing may work in a relation to hirelings, but not for those with whom you will lead into battle.  When the threat increases, hirelings will flee and abandon you.  Only those who respect and love you will remain by your side to stand and if need be, die fighting with you.  As painful as that might be, it is the only way to move into the kind of leadership required of the mission you pursue.”

I sighed, and nodded, knowing, as difficult as it was to reconcile with my past, Lord Nem’s words rung true.

“Have you made plain the risks that are involved in this quest to your company?”

“I have…up to a point.”

“What do you mean ‘up to a point’?”

“Somethings are hard to believe coming from a Surface World experience.  I do have to address them from their context.  Some of the dangers here have to be shown and experienced before Surface Worlders will believe them.  We, Surface Worlders have a very hard time acknowledging the dual nature of existence.  That we are both physical and spiritual beings with both being real and connected in the same instance.  We separate the possibility of the supernatural from the natural world and insist that the one we are more comfortable with, the physical being, the empirically measurable world, is the one more important when the opposite is true.  The presently reigning god of our Surface World is very astute in his pernicious ability to blind their eyes to that critical truth.  Even the called forth in the Surface World, who allow into their beliefs the truth of the supernatural rarely see it presented in their experience and are often lured back into the dual thinking of a secular and non-secular existence.  We have labels that we put on everything there.  Faith-based, non-faith based.  Religious, non-religious.  Such things were never intended by the One who created all things.  Almost everything they experience here seems both natural and supernatural.  That is an advantage of perspective that this place has over the Surface World.  The effects of the first death are not as advanced here in this younger world with its own time flow.  For all of our advances in the Surface World, we come under greater deceptions and illusions there than those living here in the dream image.  They fictionalize their faith until it seems ludicrous to rely upon it.  It is our deadly vice and a product of our age.  In their minds this place cannot exist, because they can’t measure it empirically and they must keep their image of a Creator and Purposeful God, for those that claim to believe in Him, small enough to fit into their limited experience and interpretations.”

“You do that.”

“Yes, I know.  But I am aware I am doing it, and struggle with that paradox raging within me.  Being in the world but not of the world is a very hard balance to keep.”

“A balance no one is intended to maintain alone.  Much like this waterless and dry fountain.  You will not find the quickening coming until you acknowledge and seek to clear your connection to the authority behind your calling.  For that to happen you must die to self, and let The Vine cause you to be fruitful once again.  So, I ask you once more.  Why did you surrender the honor sword that was bound to you?”

“What would have happened, if I had refused to give up the sword?  My company narrowly escaped the hunting band of the Protectorate.  We came by trails unknown to find a walled city lost in a wood.  A fortification that might provide some temporary place of refuge until we could move on to the next place.  I cannot lead them if I cannot go where they go and face whatever they face.”

“Yet even now, you are separated from them so easily.  Even now you place the care and responsibility and welfare of them into the hands of others.  You are evading leadership because it requires a death to yourself.  The mantle of leadership is a cross you are refusing to carry, to die upon so that others may live.  You underestimate the power and need for friendships among those you lead.  Friends are not so easily separated as strangers are.  Your team needs the cohesion of relationships if they are to stand together and aid in the mission of your quest.

I considered Nem’s words and the wisdom in them.  My focus had been only on my personal struggle with the responsibility of leadership, but I had failed to see how addressing my own shortcomings and uncertainties were clouding my sight to the larger vision of what needed to be done and how to help my team survive it.

“It seems our coming to Azragoth was fortuitous.  I needed to hear this before going further.”

Nem fielded another question.

“Who told you to come to Azragoth?”

“Begglar told me we needed to get there.”

“And Begglar is called to lead this quest, is he?”

“No, but a person who leads cannot follow his own counsel alone.  He must rely on and extend trust to others to provide context and experience to the decisions he makes in leadership.  I was never called to a dictatorship.”

“You are correct; however, you would be wise to remember the consequences that may come of extending trust are to be laid at your feet.  Be careful whom you place your trust in.  Especially if you have not been in contact with them for a while.  A friend of the past could come to meet you on a battlefield as an enemy.  I’ve seen it happen.”

“I trust Begglar.”

“Yes, but do you trust everyone he trusts?  Ultimately, you may need to decide on a course of action even when those you would trust in all other cases are against it.  What will you do then?  Will you defer and hesitate or be quickly decisive?  Maeven has been recommending that Nell and Begglar and Dominic all come to Azragoth, but we were against it for some strategic reasons.  But Maeven only saw the danger and feared for them.  Decisions made on fear alone are often not the best choice.  She’s the reason Begglar and Nell and Dominic were coming here to escape their former life.

“Your coming was not planned for by the others, but it seems your involvement with a Troll was the catalyst for them leaving the Inn.  Begglar’s position was tenuous, I’ll grant you, but his value as a spy and delaying agent against the Xarmnian’s forward forays for those fleeing and our agents was oftentimes the very difference between life and death.”

“But now the Inn has been burned so that no potential haven for travelers fleeing from Xarmnian oppression or others from the outside coming through our land exist in the outer reach country.  With no one running the Inn at Crowe, there will be no need to let it remain.  Xarmnians are hasty and short-sighted but they, like we, benefited from Begglar’s presence so they did not wipe him out before now.  Friends and foe alike have stayed at that Inn.  It was the only neutral ground still remaining.”

He left me to ponder that point, while he reached into his cloak, released some tie-back on his belt and brought out something I recognized…the honor sword taken from me while outside of the city, sheathed with its polished leather scabbard.

*Scene 02* – 05:46 (Going to The Graveyard – Part 3 of 3 “The Sword of The City”)

“I believe this is yours,” he said, handing it to me, lying across his open palms, its blade sheathed in a scabbard that seemed to belong to it.  I took it from him, feeling its weight only slightly made heavier by the gilded and leather scabbard.  When I had wrapped the belt of the scabbard around my waist and pulled the belt through the cinch ring, Nem had stepped back from me, and stood closer to one of the pillars of the pavilion, near a rusted wench and chain intertwined with smaller vines that had wrapped the around the column, but had been cut short of interfering with the wench mechanism, so that, for whatever purpose the wench served, it could still be operated according to its function.

I turned to face him, my back to the fountain now.

“That sword you carry,” Nem gestured at my hip, “Did you know that it has a history?”

I shook my head, “I was not made aware of it.”

“I recognized that Honor Sword immediately, for I have carried it before.”

I looked up at him, stunned. “You…you carried it?”

“It is a very special sword.  It has a special connection to Azragoth.  It is The Honor Sword that was forged and commemorated for this city, but it is more than that.”

“More?”

“I and another one you know all too well took that sword from this forgotten city.  It was secretly hidden from the Xarmnians in a lower vault, when their armies invaded this place.  The Xarmnians take a city’s Honor Sword when they invade it as plunder.  A trophy that demoralizes the city’s citizenry by the taking.  They typically break the blade publicly before the captive populace, symbolizing their contempt for our traditions and our values.  This one was preserved…supernaturally.”

“I was given specific instructions relating to its disposition, and for anyone who returned to this city bearing it,” he eyed me fixedly.

“If this sword belongs to the city, why are you returning it to me?” I asked, my voice shaking with the myriad thoughts rushing through my mind.

“I think you know well why I was commanded to return it to you.  You could not bear it now, if you were not meant to.  That fact that you carry it indicates that the waters of The Grove have reawakened.  That the Stone Quests have begun again and the hopeful promise of liberation shines once more.  And to that point, there is something else required of the one who bears that sword.  An act of honor.  You are to use it on behalf of this fallen city, before it is to be used on behalf of our world for Honor begins at home.”  Nem gestured widely to the area of ruins, and the way in which they had just come, “You may have noticed that we arrived at the location of this fountain, by means of a path untended, and untraveled.  I brought you to this place by that route so that our discussion would not be overheard.  What I have told you, I told you in confidence.  And what happens next will also require that we are not seen or overheard by any one of your company or the general citizens of Azragoth, for they will not understand what must happen next and what has been happening underneath the city since you and your band of travelers arrived.”

“What do you mean?”

“There were three of us, standing together as witnesses to a pact and covenant made, when we drove it into the crux point of The Grove.  I was there.  Jeremiah was there.  And the Ancient Walker, Hanokh.  We knew at the time, the next one to take up the Stone Quest, would be an unlikely vessel, to be used to suit the purposes of The One.  I was given the dreams of you.  Jeremiah was given visions of you, though, he rejected their import for a very long time.  And The Walker was given signs that he would see you once more and be instrumental in helping you in fulfilling your calling.  It is time for you, Brian, to remember your past, and to reconnect with those abilities you have neglected while in self-appointed exile.  To be the leader you ought to be, you must die to yourself and your own will and seek the quickening once again.  It is also time that you face and deal with the creature that holds you in thrall.  The beast you gave an entrance into this world by your own self-doubt.”

Before I knew what was happening, Nem quickly moved forward and shoved me over the edge of the fountain wall and into the ever-deepening basins that sloped down to the central well.  The edges of each concentric step were rounded and sloped so that I slid backward upon a bed of dried, dead leaves slightly jarred by each drop until I found myself sprawled across the moss-laden grating and the blackness of the pit below.  I turned back upward, seeking to understand why Nem had done this, trying to make sense of this seeming betrayal, only to find that the grating was hinged on one end and was being mechanically dislodged from its catch on the opposite end of the hinge works.  The grating canted and then tilted downward, and frantically I grasped the grating bars, only to find them caked in a brown slimy moss that felt like mud between my fingers.  Unable to gain purchase on the grating, I slid down into the darkness below.

*Scene 03* – 07:05 (The Cressets)

When the Matron Queen Delilah and the other Harpies had flown, Dellitch and her two sisters lagged behind and circled back, fluttering into the blacksmith yard, just as the rain began to fall.  Dellitch and her sisters shuffle hopped underneath the canopy that covered the central and radial furnaces. The interior was crowded with molding and dipping troughs, hammer and tong racks, freestanding anvils, and bending bars, hanging bellows, coal and fireboxes and meshed spits.  There were barrels of salts and sulfurs, drying sands and shaved slag, and large wooden, iron banded reinforced boxes of raw ire ore.  Smaller firepits also had ceramic tiled round canopies with large smelting pipes, and brick base.  Yellow flames hissed from the pits, and coals glared angrily with red and black rimmed eyes.

Dellitch peered at Smyt and then Ori, the two blacksmiths with whom she had met before.  “So, does the fire pipe blossom?” she croaked.  “Can we carry the bloom from wing or claw?”

“We thought a claw carry might be best for you,” Smyt replied.  “We did not want to restrict your wing movement in flight.  From the castings we took of your feet, we built a mold to test the fit and function.  You have a hallux claw that would give us the motion needed to cast the hinged cresset.  Let’s show them, Ori.”

Ori laid an oblong brass shanked tube, that looked like a metal torch out on the table.  The tube had a flared bulb cage on the end and a metal ring stop that could be attached to the iron shank foot collars that had been given to the other harpies at the former fitting.  “How works it?” Dellitch asked, as her two sister harpies crowded around the table gawking at the mysterious tube.

Smyt moved forward and took hold of the narrow end of the tube and lifted it.  Then with a hammer like shake, something internal to the tube, slid to the inner collar and spat a single flame out of the flared end with a hiss of sparks.  The three harpies lurched back and then bobbed their heads with approval.

Smyt explained, “Give the end a forward shake, like swinging a club, and there is an internal mechanism that with light the oiled wick on the end.  To douse the flame,” he slung the pipe back up, “pull it back as if to begin another strike.  This will ensure that the wick will only bear the flame when you need it to come forth.  There is a flint rock that creates the spark when the internal striker is slung toward this end collar.  Pulling back on it, the wick is snuffed, by a spring cap.  Since the wick is only revealed when the cresset is cast in a strike, it keeps it from getting wet or saturated when you fly into moist air.  The flared cup has flute holes to allow the flame to get enough air to burn.  The wick inside is saturated will a slow burning oil, but once the wick is used up, there will be no more flame, so use it sparingly.  The chandler will have to prepare and load in a new wick, if you use it up too soon.”

Dellitch’s head bobbed approvingly.

“Your shank collar had to be shaped to hold the spring hinge of the cresset,” Smyt said.  “Ori, bring the casting.  Let’s mount the cresset bar on the shank collar, first to show them.”

Ori went into the back of the shop and lifted a dusty apron off of a plaster cast, mounted with the cresset carry collar.  He carried it forward and set it on the table before the Harpies.  The plaster casting had been taken of Dellitch’s foot and extended up at an angle towards the back bend in the feathered thigh.  The cast was a greyish white, but it was clear that the shiny steel collar that covered the lower shank of the cast was a customized fit that could ride well.  Ori grabbed the cresset bar and fitted the end into a conical sleeved, spring hinge on back of the shank collar, and twisted it to lock it in place.  He demonstrated the mechanism which would allow Dellitch to thrust her claws forward and sling the cresset pipe down, igniting the flame.  Then, with a short kick, the cresset would douse the flame and spring backwards behind the shank collar, to allow her freedom to use her claws to grapple and hold her footing, with the cresset swept out of her way.

“What the knives?  Are they in cutting use for vines?  Nymph’s have squirrely vines, twisting, to choke and entangle,” one of the sisters, named Neenitch asked in a whiny voice.

Smyt chuffed.  “You may have noticed that the other collars had a cutting spur that would serve as well as a blade, but we thought this would weigh too much to add fins to the cresset rigs, so we added a sharp spur and hook on your wing mounts.  The forward end is a hook to catch and gouge, but the back curve is honed and sharpened to slice through any vine you may encounter.”

Both sisters hopped up and down, clapping their wings chanting, “Bring! Bring! Show! Show!”  Ori smiled thinking how odd it was seeing creatures with the faces of old women, acting so much like impatient and excited children.  From a closed box, Smyt lifted a lid and pulled out three sets of the triangular fans, each bore a sharped hook, with a smooth inner curl, but a sharpened and serrated edged outer edge, capable of creating a nasty, jagged slash with only a sharp backward thrust of the wing.

Soon, Dellitch and her sisters, Remitch and  Neenitch, were fully outfitted in the specialized battle gear.  They tested the weight of their new cresset collars, and the blade-hook barbs on fastened on the radiale, ulnare and metacarpus crown of their wings.  The triangular apparatus was surprisingly light and fully flexed with their wing thrusts.

Dellitch grinned.  Yes, yes! she thought.  These will do nicely.  Now they only had to wait for the passing of the storm.  There was still much to do before The Pan arrived in Kilrane.  Soon the waters of the awakened spring would overflow the dried pools and gulleys, and eventually pour down into the lower rivers, invigorating the woods of Kilrane and the lower valley streams to the villages, and return the greening to them.  Woods in their greening did not burn nearly as well as those in the dead, dried yellowing.  Kilrane must burn.  And burn soon!

*Scene 04* – 18:30 (The Jonah Solution)

The well was not as I thought it would be.  As I slid off the rusted and slimy grating I tumbled and smacked down on a bed of wet moss about seven or eight feet below.  The moss was moist, thick and sponge-like–sodden and very warm, almost hot, but not to the degree of scalding.

I heard Nem hail me from above and shouted back at him.

“Why have you done this to me?!”

He called back, “I have committed you to a course of action, Mr. O’Brian.”Underground Image-02

We were back to that again, I thought in annoyance.  He knows my name.

I responded in mock laughter, my irritation with him wearing no mask in the hollow, resentful chuckle.

“So, what do I do now that you’ve trapped me down here?!  And why is this moss bed so hot?!  I thought this was a well?”

“It was a hot springs bath, Mr. O’Brian.  It once was used by the women of the city and had large thick curtains that hung from these surrounding columns for privacy.”

Incredulous, I called back, “You’ve locked me in the drain of a bathtub?!  Is there sewage down here?! Why on earth would you do something like this?  What if this hot spring had been filled with scalding water?!  You would have boiled me alive!”

“This is an intake, not a rinse basin.  The water has long since drained out of it.  Despite what you may think, I was not trying to kill you, Mr. O’Brian.  I’m trying to save Azragoth and our people from the thing that has been following you, stalking you invisibly and is now undermining the foundations of this city.”

I shook my head in amazement, his words registering with growing uneasiness.

“Do you mean to tell me, you’ve locked me down here with some sort of creature. One that I did not know was following us?”

“Mr. O’Brian, that creature has found its way into the caverns that are buried deep below the foundations of this city.  And that creature has begun to dig through the foundation walls, and will ultimately breach the reservoir of wet filth that is stored in the cavities within the front-facing walls.  When that happens, Azragoth will have lost its secret advantage against a full-frontal assault of the Xarmnian armies.  They will soon learn that Azragoth is not a dead and forgotten city as they once thought.  We believe that even now they may already suspect it.  Further, if that creature breaches those filth-filled cavities, it will contaminate and deluge our only other means of escape from the city.  Surely, you do not think that we still use the old roads to go to and from Azragoth?”

No, I did not. Like everyone else I had believed Azragoth had become a ghost town. I had no cause to believe otherwise before we were let into the inner walls. Even then, I had not considered the method in which this secret inner-city might reach the outside world without revealing themselves.  Of course, it would have to be by means of some sort of underground tunnel system.  And those of us arriving as unknown strangers into Azragoth would not be entrusted to be shown and led through the secret ways.

Pondering this, I shouted back up to Nem, “What am I supposed to do now?”

“I have returned the honor sword to you.  You must seek the answers to those questions from within yourself.  You have everything you need to face and defeat this creature.  All you lack is the will and the joining of your being into wholeness to experience the quickening once more.  You said it yourself.  You Surface Worlders struggle with dividing the components of your being.  You were given the Breath of Life.  You were designed to be expressed as a whole being and not think of yourself with double-mindedness.  Join your whole being by faith into The Vine and you will experience the quickening again.  You are body, soul, and spirit.  These are designed to function together as one.  Let your spirit guide you with knowledge of what is true.  You have been re-awakened for this purpose.  Commit your soul–your mind will and emotions—to being the leader you are called to be.  Engage it with your passions.  Set your heart upon it by faith, in the guidance that comes by the knowledge delivered to you in your spirit.  And finally, join action to these and set your body in motion to perform the tasks you are given.  In this, you will find the quickening.  When you are wholly aligned in spirit, mind, and body.  When you have done this, you will find the nature of that honor sword you bear to be imbued with a light that will shine in the darkness, and aid you in doing what needs to be done.”

I could feel the hint of something stirring within me as Nem spoke these words of guidance.  A bolstering affirmation, and the rise of memories surfacing from a past I had tried to bury under a layer of loss and grief so long ago.  These admonishments were the key to my surviving the next few hours, and I knew it.  Nem had committed me, whether I wanted to be or not, to facing this unknown, and invisible demon, so that I could not only save myself and my company and the people of the city of Azragoth but rise to become the warrior I needed to be once more.

I called out to Nem, unsure if he was still there or within hearing distance.

“Nem?”

“Yes, Mr. O’Brian.  I am still here.”

“I know I needed this.”

There was silence, but I continued.

“I know you did what you had to do for Azragoth, and for the loyalty you have for its people.”

I paused.

“I know you owe us interloping Surface Worlders nothing, and that we have brought a threat to your city that we–no I–am responsible for.  But a little warning would have been nice.”

A pause ensued and then Nem responded, “I did not have the luxury of brooking a refusal.  Both I hope you understand the true meaning that appears in the book of wisdom (Proverbs 27:6), that says, ‘faithful are the wounds of a friend’.  Despite what I have just done, I do consider myself to be a friend to you, Brian.”

“Both Ezra and I publicly received your commitment to be responsible for your people and anything done that might threaten our city and its secrets.  Take it as you may, but we considered that as much of an advanced warning as we could give to you.  Your followers and our citizens witnessed your response and we are merely holding you to that commitment.  Your former reputation and eye-witness accounts of past exploits also tell me that you once were equal to this task of ridding us of this hidden creature, so I have every confidence that you can do this for us as well.  It is why we are willing to aid you and your company.  We have served you by giving your company food, shelter, supplies, and training.  Now you will be serving us, especially since you brought this threat upon us all.”

“Fair enough,” I assented, “So where am I supposed to find this creature and how will I recognize it?”

“When you find the oneness within your being, the honor sword will guide you to it.  Follow the water tunnels of The Cauldron.  The hot vents will be on your left and the cold streams will be to your right.  These underground streams were once joined to make the scalding water bearable for bathing.  The bearing wall that once dammed up and held the water was broken through.”

“Wait a minute.  What did you call this place?”

“The Cauldron.  It is just a name the founders gave it when they were laying the foundations of the city and quarrying the rocky cliffside to bear it.  The hot spring was mineral-rich but too hot to be anything that could service the water supply to the city, so underground channels were dug to route the cold waters of the Trathorn River’s offshoot stream to blend with this natural stream and form a unique bathing fountain.  They used sluice controls to feed the cold water in and manage the temperature of the pool.  The fountain basin and pavilion were built above it, and the city then had a public bath.  The affluent of the city had access to it, but for a fee, visitors could pay to use it.”

“Surely this is not how you get in and out of the city?”

“Of course not.  This bath was the closest way in to where we think the creature might be now.”

My pulse quickened, realizing that a confrontation with the creature could be imminent.

“What does it look like?”

“None of us have seen it.  It is presently invisible.”

That bit of information did nothing to slow my pulse but rather raised my suspicious ire.

“Then how do you know there is even anything down here?!”

“We sense it.  And since I am the rebuilding architect of this city, I and my builders have noticed a pattern in the destruction happening below.  Structural cracks are appearing in the inner city wall.  The ground beneath is being undermined.  The weaknesses follow the paths of the tunnel system we have mapped for this city.  Clearly, something big is moving through them underneath us.  The damage being down is not due to a natural settling that comes over time.  It happens at irregular intervals and within hours of each other.  These started with the arrival of your company.”

He let me ponder that a moment.

“The creature would not have been able to follow you through the sally-port entrance.  The stairwell is too narrow and the door closed and was locked after the last of your company entered.  This creature would have had to have found another way in.  The inner walls are coated with pitch, so it could not have climbed over the walls without having revealed itself.  Invisible or not, the black substance would reveal its form. Light-benders can be coated and exposed.”

“What causes you to believe this creature is big?”

“Now that IS a foolish question, Mr. O’Brian.  I am surprised at you.”

“I am in an underground pit with an invisible creature about to find and devour me if I cannot get the quickening back.  Pardon me if I’m not thinking clearly here.”

“Point taken.  The creature would have to be of substantial size and have powerful arms and claws to be able to dig through as much rock and dirt as would be needed below to impact what is going on with our structures above.  Moving that volume of earth, at such a rate, could only mean that this thing is of substantial size.”

“But how can you be certain that it is invisible if it has been underground?  When would you have had occasion to see it?  We have only been in Azragoth a few days now.”

“Did you think you were not seen coming in the back way?  Did you think we were so surprised when Maeven announced that not only Begglar and his family had arrived but that a party of Surface Worlders had joined them?”

“The inner bridges that you crossed getting here were damaged by something far heavier than horses passing over them. Your company was being pursued by Xarmnian Cerberi, trained to track, sniff out, hunt down and kill anyone their masters directed them to.  That creature following you has kept them at bay.”

“We have old legends here in the Mid-World.  Stories of burrowing creatures once used in service to The Pan.  I wasn’t sure before, but when Callum, our town treasurer approached me the other day with some urgent business, I realized what this monster must be.  The thing may not be entirely invisible now, that it is underground.  If you see a scattering of coins or pieces of gleaming metal appearing to move through the darkness, beware.  These beasts attract precious metals, and can become encrusted with them in an ore rich environment.  That is what purpose they once served.  To draw out precious metals from the deep tunnels they cut through.  Legends tell that The Pan was once a forger of metals.  A blacksmith, who worked the old mines in the Iron Hills.  He hid from the light, but burned his eyes to blindness, staring into the forges, beating and hammering steel into blades to be used for war.  The sulfur and soot blackened the part of him that remained of his human skin.  His eyes were white with cataracts, but became yellowed by all of the sulfur in the mines and forges.  When he and his creatures finally quitted the mines, they moved into the northern forests where they lurk to this day.  But the burrowing beasts may or may not have followed.  Some say they were killed off because they could no longer be controlled, but that is improbable.  Greedy masters will always make allowances for the dangerous monsters that enrich them.”

“The Cerberi are killers but not stupid.  The beast may be invisible but it still has a scent those dogs recognize and associate with danger.  That thing may be the only reason you were not overtaken in the backwoods before now.”

“But wouldn’t Maeven have…”

“Maeven is a Surface Worlder.  She is family by adoption but she was not born here with the sense of this land that we know intuitively.  She is immune to some of the things that would fell us, but not to the things coming from her birth world that would naturally deceive your kind.  It seems that we both recognize and get a sense of the otherness that is different from our worlds.  That is why we allow Surface Worlders here.  They can perceive what we cannot, and we perceive what they cannot.  There is no knowing why this should be, but it is.”

Still uncertain, I could not help but ask, “How did you even come up with this idea to push me down here?!”

I heard him clear his throat.

“The Ancient Text of The Marker Stone, provides many answers.  This is why our scribes of long ago went a meticulously copied its words.  Though it records the events of your world of the surface, it has so much more value than just accounts of history.  The words contain transcendent meaning for all created life throughout time.  They offer solutions to pressing problems of the here and now.”

“What specific wisdom did they give you to put me here?” I asked, trying to keep sarcasm out of my voice.

Nem answered pointedly, “Do you think you were the first of the called to resist following the mission of The One?  Think on that.”

He paused, letting me consider.

“The One who became flesh followed His mission for the future joy set before Him. [Hebrews 12:2]  He told his followers what would happen to Him, using the example of the reluctant prophet in the gospel of Matthew [12:40].  A prophet that had to face a monster of the sea.  Three days and three nights of conflict to bring resounding victory that gives all realms the hope of joining to Excavatia.  In the book of the prophet Jonah he finally takes responsibility for the trouble he has brought to those in his company.  He tells the sailors the only solution that would cause the deadly storm to abate.”

I let out a sigh, acknowledging Lord Nem’s words, quoting aloud the verse he alluded to.

“Throw me into the sea,” Jonah said, “and it will become calm again. I know that this terrible storm is all my fault.”  [Jonah 1:12 NLT] 

“So now you understand,” Nem said quietly, and then added, “Mister O’Brian, it seems to me that you are stalling for time which you do not have.  It is far better that you attend to what you need to and then find this creature before you let it find you.”

“Nem, if I succeed in this, how will I get out of these tunnels?  How will I know how to get back into the city?”

Nem was quiet.  So quiet that for a moment I thought he had already left me.

“You have heard us speak of The Eagle, have you not?”

“I have.  I was told he and others went to the mountains to get a sense of the troop movements of the Xarmnian and Capitalian armies being mobilized because of their Builder Stones.  I was also told that your counsel expects him back any day now.”

“I am now free to tell you that they have returned, but they are being kept outside of the city.”

“Kept out? Why?”

“They are guarding the underground entrance.  Ensuring that the beast below does not escape capture.”

“Can they kill it?”

“This creature is bound to you.  You must expose it, and only then may it be subdued and killed.”

“What about Maeven, and her path forward?”

“Maeven and any others that follow you will not survive if they follow you as you are.  We only have confidence in entrusting her safety within your quest, if we know that you are being led and quickened within.  Every good leader must first become a faithful follower and earn the honor of that position.  But there is no time to discuss this further.  You have what is needed, so I will now take my leave of you, O’Brian.  I wish you all success.  Mark well what I have told you.  Find the wellspring of your spirit, abide in the One, and you will find both resolve and empowerment to do that which must be done.”

And with those words, he left me to prepare myself for what was coming.

Rome is made of marble but it’s built on a sewer.” – Roman jurist and Senator, Cicero

*Scene 05* – 20:00 (Pitch and Toss)

Being slung through the forest like a stuffed ape was not Grum-Blud’s idea of a fun jaunt through the woods.  Especially since those tossing him like a bundle of hay, were, in part, hay themselves.  Or at least some puzzling form of wild growing vegetation with the cryptic ability of being able to morph into the semblance of attractive human females.  Despite the indignation of being the target sack-of-air in a bizarre woodland rugby game, he could not help but sneer as the two onocentaurs were similarly entangled and pitched from casting vine to receiving vine as he was.  The four hoofers grunted and flailed, kicking and bawling as they tumbled through the air, almost smacking down through the ground brush to the forest floor, before they were seized and jerked aloft again.  Bray,… well, he lived up to his name, squealing and honking like a broken bagpipe, his protest at the rough handling going unheeded.  Brem kept his eyes squeezed shut, mumbling and muttering varied exclamations like “Oiy!”, “Have a care!”, “Blimey!”, “Crikey!”, “These tarts’ve gone bonkers!”, and “You almost gutted me, you gormless flower bag!”  Through it all, Shelberd slept and snored loudly, content as a baby rocking through the windy treetops.

The most terrifying plummet was the descent from the highland ridge.  Grum-Blud almost yakked up the contents of his rotund belly, his wide mouth gaping like a frog, dry heaving, eyes bulging like boiled eggs, but unable to make any sound more than a breathy squeal as the land dropped away below him.  The cliffs were shear with only spartan brushes and vegetation clinging to crevices in the gritty rock face.  The onocentaurs protested loudly as they tumbled, pell-mell honking and mewling over the cliff’s edge eight hundred feet below towards the tops of the lower canopy of trees.  In the melee, Grum-Blud twisted upward, realizing he was still tethered to one of the sirens, whose arms and legs were stretching and expanding outward with twisting roots spread to slow the descent or catch the tops of the trees below when the impact came.  Grum made the mistake of looking down again and saw the tree tops rushing toward him, causing him to cross his long arms around himself, draw his stumpy legs in and squeeze himself into a tight ball, his eyes clenched shut, his bladder emptying in anticipation of the impact.

Reaching the end of the fall, suddenly he felt the rush of leaves and branches hiss around him, and felt his body slow to a stop and then lurch backwards, the vines of the wood siren holding him fast into an elastic bounce.  At last, he coughed up his latent lunch, retching in an explosive splatter into the leafy crests of the lower woods.

The sirens holding the onocentaurs thrashed into the canopy, their wooden roots grappling the upper limbs of the trees like tentacles, but holding fast, seeming to buoyantly bounce upon a sea of leaves.  Still, through it all, Shelberd snored and sputtered, making hog-like grunts, oblivious to the world and the harrowing journey he and the others had experienced descending from the highlands to the lower wood of Kilrane in the transport of sirens.  Whatever the yellow powder Shelberd had inhaled must have been some strong stuff, Grum-Blud surmised resentfully, realizing that his annoying companion had not suffered the least bit in the travel as he and those half-wit donkeys had.

When he found, himself being lowered to the forest floor, Grum-Blud had grudgingly reconsidered his tact in dealing with these wood women, and thought it might be better, for his own sake at least, to ingratiate himself with them.  Whatever he could do or say to gain better tolerances between himself and the wood sirens, he would set his mind to, since he could no longer rely on the seeming tolerances granted him and his fellow trolls by The Pan to keep himself safe, and decidedly “grounded” as much as possible.  There had been very few things that he had considered to bring him particular dread in his relatively short life: One had been slithering things such as serpents stemming from an incident in his life where he had mistakenly sought shelter in a small cave, only to find it to be a snake pit.  The other, he made a mental note, was now a fear of heights, having suffered the imposition of being flung in aerial somersaults from high cliffs by tree crawling plant women who seemed to make sport of his newly acquired acrophobia.  There were advantages to being short, Grum-Blud thought: it allowed him to duck under low brush, crawl into smaller spaces and was closer to the ground giving him the low advantage to slash at ankles, sever tendons, and pounce upon a crippled or hobbled victim and finish him off with a rock to the skull.  For all of Grum-Blud’s appearance of subservience, one should never forget that he was, after all, a blackhearted troll.

When all of the group were gathered under the covering of the tall forest, they noticed a running brook passing along a footpath with fairly recent hoof prints marking the dirt path.  The trail and brook was obscured by the overhead branches and leaves that severed to conceal this backpath.  Brem and Bray were both unsteady, wobbling in their gaits now that their hooves were back on solid ground.  Brem bumped into Bray and Bray almost stumbled into the brook.  “Steady there, bub!” Bray retorted.  “I just landed and am not quit up to going for a swim.”

“I am a bit knackered, me own self.  These daft, cheeky, birds have me all unraveled.  I’m apt to lean a bit till I get my feet back.”  Bray huffed, “Well don’t lean on me, boy.  My knees are knobbed enough as it is.”

Sylvan, the siren who had carried Shelberd the entire trip from the upper shelf, put the snoring troll down on the woodland trail, puzzling over him as he snorted and snoozed.  Briar descended out of the forest, along with two of her other sirens morphing into their attractive nymph forms.

“Men, women and horses have been here recently,” Briar said, sniffing the air.  “What do you know of this, Troll?!”  Briar charged, turning her accusing green stare towards him.

Grum-Blud stammered, “I-I, we’ve not, I mean…”

“Out with it!” Briar huffed growing impatient.

“There’s not been any using this forest since…”

“Since?!”

“Since the plagues of many years.  There was a city.  A city that used to be in these woods.  There was much death there.  Much has been forgotten about it.  Much has been…”

“Babbling fool!” Briar glared, “Has Sonnezum claimed this wood?  Does he have his people here?”

Grum-Blud shook his head, “There are rumors only, but so far as I know, there is no, who you call ‘So-sneez-um’ here.  Kilrane is not presently a Xarmnian holding.”

“What of this city, you spoke of?” Briar snapped, “Where is it?”

Suddenly, Grum-Blud realized how he might partly gain some favor with this Siren queen.  “Well, if that is all you want, then follow me.  See here,” Grum-Blud pointed to the dirt path, that bore hoof prints, waddling towards it with his long arms held out as if he were a circus showman, “this is a trail a few used to find the old city.  It is mostly ruins.  Overgrown by the vines and brushes.  There have men who have claimed the old ruins are haunted.  But see here, the hoof prints lead down this path.  We had been following some suspicious folk from back near the town of Crowe.  I’m betting these were made by those we’ve been trailing.  We can take you there.  Only, I will need to walk the rest of the way to study sign.”

“Nonsense,” Briar growled.  “What are you up to, Troll?  I can smell the scents well enough to find them without you reading your signs!”

“But-but, there are parts of this you may not know.  We were to meet with our Protectorate band, but they do not know where we went for, we have yet to report back to the Hadeon our Bruel.  He may be looking for us.”

“Then we shall find them along the way.  Tell me of this ruined city.  Do your kind still live there?”

“Perhaps,” Grum-Blud offered.  “Shall we find out together?  It may be of interest to your master as well as to ours.”

Briar folded her arms and finally nodded, “Very well then.  Lead the way.”

Grum-Blud trotted down the path, turning back only to see if Briar and the others were following him.

Briar looked over at Sylvan who was prodding at the sleeping Shelberd, smiling as he snorted and waved her gentle prods away as if swatting at flies in his sleep.  Her eyes turned up and she caught Briar’s glare.  “He’s still sleeping,” Sylvan explained.  Briar bowed her forehead slightly and pointed at Shelberd.  “Well then…”

Sylvan sighed and gathered Shelberd back up into her entwining vines, slinging him over her shoulder like a toddler.  Shelberd burped loudly, as Sylvan’s legs twisted into trunks with splayed roots for feet, elongating her body to stand about ten feet tall.  Brem and Bray watched this and quickly stepped onto the beaten path, with Bray voicing a hasty “We’d prefer to walk, thank you!” before Briar could suggest otherwise.

Grum-Blud gamboled along, leading the bizarre group, until they reached the shadow of a large stone wall stretching upwards, but still below the deep shadow of the tall trees of the backwoods.

“See!” Grum-Blud pointed proudly.  “I led you straight to it.  The old city of-of…Azzzin-cough or something like.”

“Yes.” Briar said quietly, “You have indeed.  Curious.  Let us see if your travelers are within these stone walls, shall we?”

As they proceeded further, they noticed where the brook widened and curved away from the footpath, flowing along the border and base of the massive stone wall with just a narrow bank between the rise and the gurgling water.

Grum-Blud looked along one large length of the wall stretching underneath the lip of an overhand cornice of stone.  If there was another gateway beyond the wall, it would most likely be towards the front of the old city, for this was once a fortified citadel.  The back wall would be fortified against the falling rocks, but also against an attack from limited forces in the narrow backwoods, along the path that had discovered.  While the front gates and walls would have been constructed to repel an assaulting army, they would also need a wide enough entrance gate to welcome friends and commerce during times of peace.  A town could not entirely close itself off from the outside world and trace and expect to thrive.  There were necessary foods and produce that would have to be supplied by areas where open pasture lands for livestock and farmers’ fields were aplenty.  The mostly likely sources for those things would be the local towns and rural areas within the fertile plains of Ono and those trade routes coming down from the highlands and the escarpment granary back when it was in full operation.  These wood creatures, and the donkey-men would not know this, however, so Grum-Blud felt he had some level of advantage in reconnoitering and navigating through a place of men.

“If we follow this wall,” Grum-Blud pointed to the run that curved towards the east, “it should lead us eventually to one of the old gates where we can get inside.”

Briar nodded and said, “Lead the way, troll.  Show us into this man-place.”

Turning and half-grinning to himself, Grum-Blud knuckle-hopped onto the narrow strip of ground at the base of the wall with the others following.  After they had gone a little way further, Briar and Sylvan stopped short, as did the onocentaurs.  Each of these half-creature, half-human beings were sniffing the air and whispering harshly among themselves.  Grum-Blud looked back noticing that they had ceased to follow him.

He came hobbling back, “What ails you?  Come.  Come.”

Briar glared, spikes of thorns beginning to part her hair.  “You are leading us into danger, troll!  Do you think we cannot smell it?”

Grum-Blud snorted, “What danger?  What could threaten you who fly through the treetops and can descend great heights without injury?  What do you smell?”

Sylvan pointed ahead with a head-nod gesture saying, “There!  On the far bank ahead.  The signs remain.”

Grum-Blud’s head whipped around to where Sylvan had indicated.  He trotted forward along the curve of the wall finally seeing the narrow strip of earth abruptly terminate, and the stream swell into a large swirling pool before funneling further along the groove of the natural stream channel.  Then he spotted the opposite bank.  Crushed reeds, a sloped gulley and broken ground descending clearly into the swollen pool.  Beyond, the woods also showed signs that something large and violent had passed through the forest, abrading bark, slashing gouges into the trunks, snapping the spines of younger trees, and crushing the underbrush that once thrived under the shade of the taller limbs.  A dark shadowy hole deepened into the leafy foliage, clearly showing that whatever large creature had caused such destruction had emerged out of the backwoods.

“That Digger we spoked of is here!  Somewhere below.  Perhaps, it has even entered this old city.” Sylvan said.

Briar glared at the swirling pool, but spoke quietly, her voice breaking the heavy silence following Sylvan’s words, “It appears this creature is on a convergent path with those you are following, troll.  Any ideas why that might be?”

“My lady, we were only made aware of this digger when you spoke of it.  The ones we follow came from a small farm near the village I mentioned.  I have no knowledge of what may have drawn this creature from its underground hole.”  Briar nodded, sensing, at least in this instance, the troll was telling her the truth.  She folded her arms, looking down upon him with an imperious stare.  “What would you suggest we do, troll?  Since you are closest to the race of men?”

“I still say we find the gate of this city.  I will enter and come back to give a report.”

“What guarantees do we have that you will not betray us and lure us in to be destroyed by this beast?”

Grum-Blud jerked his thumb and pointed, “You have my friend there…sleeping beeyewty.” He said indicating Shelberd.  “Tuck him away on the bough of a tall tree, and if I don’t return, pitch him to his death.”

“How do we know that his death would mean anything to you?”

“He is annoying, I’ll grant you,” sniffed Grum-Blud, “But I’ve learned to tolerate him enough.  Seeing as how I’ve already lost two of my fellow kind that we set out with, Shelberd is the only companion I have left out in these wilds.  You can rely on my word, well enough.  I’d just as soon keep him, more than I’d want to be shut of him.”

“Very well, then,” Briar said.  “Since the Digger is now in Kilrane, it becomes more critical that we meet with our master, The Pan.  We cannot risk it destroying our woods before we’ve had the chance to occupy them.  You may go in, but do not stay too long.  We must proceed to meet and inform The Pan.  Tell us what you find, whether there be men or beasts inside.  Sylvan will wait with these donkey-men and your sleeper.  I will scale the wall and watch from atop the rampart to ensure you don’t get lost in there.  If you encounter the beast, you will most certainly die.  I cannot help you by intervening.  The risk you take will be yours alone.  But, if you succeed in returning, I will remember this service you provided us when we come before The Pan.  Perhaps, I can be of some influence in convincing him to provide you with more lethal companions who can assist you to rid this place of any of the residue of mankind in residence here.  The woods of Kilrane were given to us.  We are committed to eliminating any who may protest our holding by making a prior claim to it.”

And that is how Grum-Blud found himself, climbing through and over the broken doors of the old front gate, skirting under a mat of vines, peeking in and out of old empty structures, and clamoring over piles of fallen brick and stone works that had been battered and breached by the pommeling of heavy stones thrown from trebuchets and catapults in a prior assault many years before.  The old city truly did appear to be abandoned, and partially overgrown through the years by an encroachment of the wild forests.  He was almost ready to return back, when he spotted a lone figure moving through the detritus of the city ruins and approaching a long black wall with a long handled key.  When the figure opened the black stained door, Grum-Blud managed to get a quick peek inside before the figure closed and secured the portal.  The city held secrets, and Grum-Blud sneered wickedly as he scrambled back towards the old city gate.  He was about to reveal to the queen of the wood sirens, one particular secret that none of them had known or guessed before now.  This old dead city was still very much alive within, beyond an interior black wall coated with what smelled like pitch and tar.  A coating that now stuck to one of his knuckles and thumb where he had brushed against it out of curiosity.  This bit of information might also help him in his dealings with his own party and dread sovereign.  The problem was, deciding which party would be willing to pay him the most for it.

*Scene 06* – 00:00 (Entanglements)

Hadeon and his hunters spent a miserable evening getting snared and entangled in the woods of Kilrane.  A storm had drenched them, even though the forest canopy would normally have provided some degree of cover, the lashing winds shook water out of the hoary leaves saturating them with spray like the shaking of a wet dog.  Kilrane was wild–A veritable tangle of hanging vines, deadfalls, fungal fields, moss embankments, split and twisted tree limbs snaking their path upward and sideways yearning for sunlight through the sifting shadows.  The knuckles and fists of roots and ground vines threatened to lame their horses while brittle, skeletal barbs of bare branches abraded them to sinister distraction.  Years of leafy detritus masked pits and holes in the uneven forest floor.  Ground brush and wild clinging vines formed nets that impeded any hope of forward progress through the forbidding interior.  There had once been a wooded road that had been clear-cut through the forest when men had once traversed and braved the wilds of Kilrane, but men had not been seen in that place for many years.  If there was still a road through the woods, it would certainly have been subsumed by years of forest growth and disuse by now.  Even the ancient Garden of Eden was given a man to tend it, and cultivate its rapid growth and Kilrane was certainly no Eden.  Those woods might even be considered to be savage…if one did not know where specifically to look.

The rains made the hope of finding tracks or the Cerberi catching scent futile.  Hadeon ground his teeth, infuriated by the circumstances preventing he and his men and his savage canines from slashing through this impediment to get to his quarry.  Where had the wagon gone?  Where were the remainder of his team that had followed Aridam?  What of Bayek’s report of wood sirens in Rim Wood on the highland rim above?  What would his dread sovereign say if he returned to court empty handed?  Worse yet, what might the Son of Xarm do to him, if he failed?  That monarch had no patience for failures.  Many were slain finding that out.  The Son of Xarm was given to fits of rage.  But why?  Few failed him.  None dare defy him and live.  Why did he make no allowances for the limits of human frailty?  What drove his passions?  Hadeon wondered.  Could it be that the king was tormented by the memory of past rejections?  The inability to please his dread father, who grudgingly claimed him as his progeny only at the end of his life?  Living a life with no approbation could be the cause.  It made some kind of sense.  But why then turn that unreasonable standard upon his subjects?  Was he blind to the failings of his own sire that could give his sole surviving heir no encouragement, or acceptance other than that was grudging given as a final concession?  Surely the king’s mind was as twisted, choked, and nettled as these confounded woods were proving to be.  His own father was a tough bastard, but he raised his sons to be tough and hard as well and praised them when praise was due.  He had joined the king’s guard under Xarm.  He remembered the king as a stoic, and cunning man.  The very model of what a conquering man should be.  His own father gave deference to that king, and he had joined the king’s troops when they came around seeking men.  When the Capitalians invaded, Hadeon returned to find his widowed father had been brutally beaten and killed.  Hadeon took his hatred for Capitalians and used it to fuel his drive to become a brutal fighter and a leader in the Xarmnian king’s service.  But serving that king’s successor, did not prove to be the same as serving the former monarch.  Xarm rewarded his fighting men.  The Son of Xarm only gave concessions.
The Cerberi turned out to have problems getting through the woods as well.  They became ensnarled in stinging nettles, whimpering and growling, their wide three-slavering heads, slack jaws and broad muscular shoulders preventing them from plunging through the narrow spaces between the overgrowth and thick brush.  Finally, when Hadeon had exhausted all of his options of breaking through to some semblance of a wooden passage, he called for Bayek and Kathair to join him, pulling his others men out of the chase.

The tall forest hissed and spattered cold water down from the saturated crowns of the upper limbs, drizzling down the face of the men, and the wet panting dogs.  “Bayek,” he bellowed, “You’d best ride on with your message to the king.  No sense in delaying you here any further.  If those sirens are in the area, I’d hate to be caught in these woods, knowing that I delayed their communication and envoy.  If they let you survive, they will not hear any argument I could make for hindering you.  Grab some tack and food from the road camp where Tizkon’s holding the prisoner.   But make haste!  If the Son of Xarm asks you what progress we have made in tracking the scribe, tell him we are getting close to bringing them to heel if we don’t have to kill them.  I know he watched to see the man grovel as we carved up his family, but that pleasure must be delayed.”
“Kathair, you will take Bayek’s place in lead.  Bayek’s company was lost, but I may have to divide up the remaining men following my command, to serve as your subordinates.  With no word from Aridam or his company, I am shorthanded on taskmen.  Perhaps we can salvage some of this hunting trip, before too long, but we will wait to full sunup to do so.   The wagon that entered that forest will have had to leave signs of it getting through.  There is no way it could have just vanished.”

Bayek nodded, turned his horse and headed out of the brush; through the circuitous route they had used slashing their way into the woods.

Kathair sat up straighter in his saddle, “What should we do about the Cerberi?”

“Have Dagen call them back.  There’s no point in continuing through these snarls, getting them all scratched up.  The men and dogs need rest.  We’ll catch the wagon sign in the heat once the woods dry a bit more.”

Suddenly there was a shout, and one of the men came trudging up through the brush, his clothes and pants soddened with mud and clinging leaves.  “My Bruel!  We’ve found something!  It’s hard to see, but we may have located the old road that used to pass through these woods.  It was down a declivity.  Hard to see, but we stumbled upon it accidentally.”

“Good work, Samal!  Have one of the men go down it, see where it leads.  If we find where it joins the outer road, we might just be able to track that wagon, and those ‘smugs’ who thought they could get away from us.”

*Scene 07* – 13:00 (Ignition)

The air in the pit around me was hot and humid, smelling of a pungency I could not identify.  Though the warm moss hugged at my form, beckoning me into despairing oblivion, I knew I could give no more place to uncertainty.  I had to choose to fight this beast, to resist it, calling upon the authority of the One who called me to this quest.

I cleared the scabbard of the honor sword, and my feet found some degree of shaky footing upon smooth rocks below.  A weak light effused the water well, such that I could just see the broken edges of the retaining wall before me, and beyond pitch-black darkness that threatened to envelop my every sense of balance and direction should I dare to proceed further.

But like Nem said, I had no choice.  But I could not fake a feeling nor deny that part of me that needed assurances but pressing onward.  Panic threatened and I turned that dread into an outcry.

“Oh Jesus, I am scared!”

I fell to my knees shivering uncontrollably.  “Please God.  Please help me.  Give me the courage to walk through this darkness.  I am in the deepening shadow of death.  It looms over me.  Let me feel your hand holding mine again.  I am not the young man I used to be.  I feel my mortality nipping at my heels.  If I am to die here, let me make a good end in Your service.  Following Your Will.”  I felt both hot and cold at the same time.  My hands trembled, my heart throbbed its tympanic beats in the auditoriums of my ears.  Sweat streamed out of my hair, wetting my cheeks and sluicing down the nape of my neck.  The air around me smelled musty and dank with a mixture of lime, salt, fecund earth and fungi.  The steam from the residual rivulets of the hot spring rose and swirled in the gloom, making me felt like I was being slowly suffocated by a hot, moist towel.

In the deepening of my need, I realized that I had referred to The One by His name.  A name I felt pouring into my inner being.  Here in the Mid-World, those who believed in the promise of The Marker Stone, the monolithic imprint of the Divine Words, follow the older traditional reference to “The One” written in the final book of Moshe.

“Hear, Yisra’el: the LORD is our God; the LORD is one:” [Deuteronomy 6:4 HSV]

But in my need, I cried out to the name of The One in which I found most intimacy, as a child runs in either delight or fear seeking comfort and protection from their father.

As I’ve stated before, in this land and in this quest you all will see and experience things that may be beyond what you’ve come to experience as naturally occurring in the Surface World.  Sentient and malevolent creatures moving invisibly in the Surface World on a spiritual plane, take on a pernicious physicality here.

An echo may sound similar to the voice of origin, but there are differences in tone and quality as it stretches, reverberates and bounces back to the hearers.  It is the persistent expectation of sameness to the Surface World that will cause some to falter and feel unstable and insecure here.  I know.  I went through it myself many years ago.  That is why I persist in telling all of that the transcendent Truth that holds all together is the Ancient Text, the Word of the Creator.  That is why I hold so fiercely to it.  Without the study, knowledge, and remembrance of the Ancient Text, there can be no quickening.

The Koine Greek word [ζῳοποιέω], from the language in which the text was written, is pronounced, Zoe-ah-poi-A-O.  The word means to cause something to arouse to life by supernatural power.  Honor swords, unlike standard weaponry, are connected to covenant, and by that connection, it can be imbued with power so long as it serves under that covenant.  The very words of the Ancient Text are living and powerful, because of the Source from which they arose and were brought together.  They revealed the will of the One as they do the purposes of the One.  The Ancient Text, in the Psalmist’s passage states:

“I will never forget thy precepts: for with them, thou hast quickened me. … I understand more than the ancients, because I keep thy precepts. … Through thy precepts I get understanding: therefore I hate every false way. … I [am] small and despised: [yet] do not I forget thy precepts. … Consider how I love thy precepts: quicken me, O LORD, according to thy lovingkindness. … I have kept thy precepts and thy testimonies: for all my ways [are] before thee. … Let thine hand help me; for I have chosen thy precepts.” [Psalm 119:93, 100, 104, 141, 159, 168, 173 KJV]

In this mid-world, warfare is engaged with both the mind and the body and the spirit unified and battling together.  The human enemies may be fought with mind and body, but the creatures drawn from the netherworld will tear you mentally apart if you are not prepared for them.  The Surface World has a barrier that they cannot cross, and their limits are only within the power of suggestion and to the level at which a human may yield to their influence.

From the beginning of this quest, there has been a voice within me, sounding to my mind as if it was speaking in my own voice.  “Give up”, it tells me.  “You are not worthy to lead.  You are leading others to their death.  You cannot let yourself feel again.  Remember what happened last time.  You are not worthy of the sword you hold, or this place you wish to get to.  You are as much a butcher, like the ones you dare to resist.  The stories you seek to mend will no longer burn for you.  When the hosts bearing the storied flames realize who you are, there will be no forgiveness for the ways in which you abandoned and betrayed them.  There can be no forgiving what you have done.  This quest is hopeless.  Go back to your exile.  Let someone else lead.

Those voices I knew were spoken by the enemies of my mission and my calling.  If the One who called me to this journey, chose me, then no other choice could have been made.  He chooses wisely.  Who am I to resist Him?  I had allowed those voices to speak to me, and weaken my commitment, and abandon my resolve.  It was not my strength of character that I needed now.  It was His.

“Faithful is He who calls you, and He also will bring it to pass.” [1 Thessalonians 5:24 NASB]

I had often enough heard and spoken those words and admonished others with them, but I failed to let them gain purchase within me.  As weak and as inadequate as I may be, The One did not require my own might.  Only my willingness to choose to do as He asks.  To listen to the Spirit continually speaking to my spirit and allow that communion and fellowship to take place by yielding my doubts and placing confidence and trust in Him to see this through.

When my decision and release came, I found my hand moving to the hilt of the honor sword that hung by my side.

I gripped its warming handle, and with my other hand found the bloodline and uncoiled it from the cross-guard it had been wound around.  In my past, I had fought with many swords and weaponry.  I had heard of honor swords, but never had the occasion to bear one, before this quest.

I knew that the honor sword could be roused to life for two reasons.  Some unknown enemy of inhuman origin was drawing near.  And the Word being called to memory, by one connected to a covenant sword, would cause that sword to respond in the needed moment for wielding in both visible and invisible conflict.

I gathered the bloodline sash and carefully wound it around my forearm, careful not to constrict the blood flow, but secure enough to not easily lose the weapon as I drew it forth.

For so long, I lived in the Surface World in a sort of sleepwalking state, and it took me quite some time before I gained an awareness that roused me into full wakefulness.  Nem was correct, in his assessment of me.  I was like one who had slept for way too long and was only now coming to full wakefulness.  The words of the Ancient Text came to my mind unbidden, as I unsheathed the blade.

“Besides this, since you know the time, it is already the hour for you to wake up from sleep, because now our salvation is nearer than when we first believed. The night is nearly over, and the day is near; so let us discard the deeds of darkness and put on the armor of light.” [Romans 13:11-12 CSB]

As I joined these words to my thoughts, the doubts that had so plagued me began to fall away and flee.  I no longer heard them in my mind in the pitch and timbre with which I recognized my own voice, but instead spoken in some alien, guttural language, with a spitting hatred that I could feel scorching me even as it fled and dissipated from the truth displacing it.

Another verse presented itself:

“Take my yoke upon you. Let me teach you, because I am humble and gentle at heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy to bear, and the burden I give you is light.” [Matthew 11:29-30 NLT]

As I believed in and embraced the words of the truth, and permitted hope to enter, my mind began to clear, and the weight of the responsibility of finding leadership qualities within myself, seem to lift from my shoulders.

Before me, the edges of the broken cistern wall became more distinct to my eyes, as if I had been gradually gifted with some degree of night vision.  In the suffused light from the grated drain gate above me, the blade of the honor sword seemed to gleam more brightly.  Courage stirred within me.  And hope began to flower again in what I had believed to be the blighted soil of my soul.

The time for words was over.  I knew what my spirit was telling me.  I had at last chosen to put my trust in the foreknowledge of the One who called me.  It was now time to commit to wholeness and put my heart right and my hands to the plow.  He would do through me what I could not.  It was time to no longer view myself as the prey.  It was time to plunge into the darkness ahead of me and become the hunter.

“Lying creature beware!”, I said out loud to the darkness, giving voice to my commitment, as I carefully stepped across the scree and over broken stones entering the tunnels below the city, “I am coming for you.”

The naked blade of the honor sword became sheathed in a silverish light, and I knew—the quickening had returned to me once more.

The Quickening – Chapter 24

*Scene 01* – 11:27 (Bread and Broth)

When Begglar and Corimanth left O’Brian to talk privately to Nell, they walked across a glistening courtyard of foot-polished cobbled stone to one of several firepit stations serving the steamy bone broth drink.  Fire glow flickered over the sun-glazed stones giving them a coppery cast emerging from their dull grey base of grit and mortar.  Flames crackled and spit sparks and embers into the darkened sky, rising like fairies only to be doused by the evening’s moistening breeze.  Various groups of people gathered in huddles, speaking in low tones, with occasional laughter breaking up each hushed cloister into a crescendo of mirth and good-natured banter.

The broth had both a calming and warming effect, as both Begglar and Corimanth sipped gingerly at the edge of their bowl-like cups.  The vessels warmed their hands, as the hot salty broth seemed to soothe their aches and lessen the strain of their exercise weary muscles.  Corimanth had encouraged Begglar to take a few of the small hand-sized loaves of a baked hard bread and dip it into the broth, for an added savory experience.

“Oh, this right here!  Mmm-hmm,” Begglar nodded, taking his first bite of the broth-soaked hard bread, chewing with relish.  “Good, isn’t it?” Corimanth grinned, enjoying his brother-in-law’s delight.

“That’s champion, that is!” Begglar agreed.  “Who made this?”

“Some of our folks bake the bread in kilns, hereabout.  They use a wild yeast that they allow to slowly ferment when the bread grains are mixed cold.  They hand mix the batter, with a third of the amount of water, then let it set for a few hours before finishing the shaping.  The whole process takes about four days of cooling and drying letting it rise before they finally bake it.  I’ve made a few loaves myself a few times,” Corimanth said, grinning.

“Nellus never told me you knew about such things.  If I’d known you were here and could make these, I’d have had you come live with us and help me run the Inn with Nell.  We started as a bakery, y’know.”

Begglar dipped another piece of the bread into his broth, and took another bite, “Aahh, that’s good!  The broth adds the perfect blend of saltiness, to the warm buttery taste of the sopped bread.  Warms both the belly and the soul.  A harbor for the heart as well as the gut.”  Corimanth chuckled.  “Well, I’ve not always be able to eat like this.  Folks here live simple but wholesome lives.  They are hardworking, determined, yet watchful.  And with good reason.”

“Ahh, the ever-present Xarmnian threat!” Begglar quipped.  Corimanth shook his head.  “That is secondary, there is a more prominent threat we face, and that comes from some of those who despise Xarmnian rule as much as we do.”  Begglar stopped chewing, “Really?  And who are these antagonists?”

“A fellow by the name of Tobias,” Corimanth grunted.  “Works for an even shadier character named Sandballat.  Ever heard of such a name?”

Begglar almost choked, a small spritz of broth emerged from his lips, dribbling down onto his beard.  He set his broth cup down and used the remains of his bread to wipe his beard free of the spattered liquid.  “Sandballat?!  Why that is the man’s name who we ended up selling Noadiah’s Inn too.  What trouble is he making?  And who is this Tobias character that you say works for him, now?”

Corimanth’s brow furrowed, “So Nellus sold the Inn at Sorrow’s Gate?  I didn’t know that.  Well, that is disturbing news.”

Begglar grunted, “What kind of trouble are they making?”

Corimanth sighed, “Ahh, mostly threatening letters.  They’ve sent a few emissaries out here, wanting a meeting with Lord Nem.  They’ve been hot around the collar about us daring to rebuild the city of Azragoth.  Recently that wanted a meeting with Lord Nem to come out to the plain of Ono, where we share pastures for our cattle, and graze our flocks and herds in the open country.  I think they are wanting to renegotiate the bargains we have with the local stockmen, to provide us with our share of meat, wool and dairy products.  The forests here are no place to keep such animals, and the woods offer very few meadows for grazing.  We get wild goats and donkeys that break into the old city sometimes, but the old city is mostly burned out and overgrown with wild vines and such.  Nothing you’d want to feed your dairy stock.  The Ono plains are rich in grasses and have good water sources coming down from the highland shelf.  I think the suggestion of that place alone for the meeting is a veiled threat.  We are not naïve children here.  I am certain that they want whatever we are doing here to stop, and perhaps plan to even kill Lord Nem if they have to, to demoralize us.  But that is only one part of the trouble they are causing.  What worries many of us are the letters that we know they have been sending back to Capitalia, trying to characterize us all as troublemakers.”

“And this Tobias character is doing this?” Begglar growled.

“Him and Sandballat are both in on it,” Corimanth muttered, taking another sip of his broth, eyeing a man across the courtyard who seemed to be staring at them.

“But what…” Begglar started, but Corimanth put a hand on his arm, halting his question.  “Wait.  I think we are being watched,” Corimanth whispered.

“Who?” Begglar turned, scanning the clustered groups around them.

“That man over there by the north wall.  Middle-aged, short beard.  Lean angular frame.”

Begglar scanned and then spotted him, “I see him now.” Begglar nodded, “How long has he been watching us?”

“Only for a few minutes, but…,” Corimanth paused.  “Look, he’d coming our way.” Corimanth nodded forward as the man approached with some hesitancy.

Ezra emerged from one of the clustered groups and stepped toward the younger man, looking for a moment as if he might intercept him, but instead followed behind him.

The man flushed with a bit of embarrassment, as he approached Begglar and Corimanth, and both men exchanged a puzzled look.

“I’m sorry, but I think I know you…, I mean…we’ve met before.”

Corimanth, set his broth drink down on a short, raised wall next to Begglar’s cup and an additional loaf of bread.  Begglar stiffened a bit, adjusting his shoulders, leaning his head to the left and right, as if bracing, and loosening his posture for a fight.

As the young man came further into the glow of the firelight, both Corimanth and Begglar began to perceive some degree of mutual recognition to the man as well.

“I must confess, I am very surprised to see you both here.  I thought I might never see either of you again, and I wanted so much to thank you both for saving me and my family.  My wife, Corinna, is here in this place, but she is with the children.  We all own you both our lives, but I don’t know either of your names.”

Begglar’s eyes widened, “You’re not…?”

Ezra spoke up, behind the man, smiling and joining them in the glow of the cast firelight.

“This man is a fugitive from Xarm City.  His name is Sage.  His father was conscripted long ago from Azragoth, years before the plague and subsequent quarantine.  He was made a servant to the current monarch’s father, whom the city and its people are named after.  He was a chronicler, and scribe, a palace historian.  This man, his son, also followed in his father’s profession, and was given an apprenticeship under the royal guild of heralds.  He was recently sent to us by our network of agents working in the highlands for The Resistance.  He has provided us with key intelligences on the innerworkings and history of the Xarmnian courts, and of their rise to power, and the shadowy intrigues of the palace during that rise.  I am told we have you both to thank for that.”

Begglar grinned, appraising the man once again, with the connection clarified.  “Ahh!  You came to our Inn at Crowe!”

“Yes,” the man, now known as Sage smiled, “And I want to thank you for your kindness.  We have known very little of it living in Xarm City, even as prominent as my father was, it is a place of constant suspicion and posturing.  The royals are mercurial and cruel.  A dangerous lot, who rule by threat and instill fear in their subjects.  I had never known that there was another way to live, until I, my wife and children fled the city.  This place, and its people are kind to us, and I cannot remember ever seeing such kindness in others who were not of my own blood.”

“You’ve fattened up from when I saw you last!” Begglar laughed.  “I remember you being much leaner, and your children were such poor creatures, my wife could hardly stand it to have to send you on your way.”

Sage smiled, “Xarm did not feed well.  Its better food stores were reserved for the king’s banquet halls, and for its fighting men.  But here we’ve been more than taken care of.  And eaten more in a day than we would have been able to scrape together for a week back home.”

“Aye, that’s the truth!” Corimanth affirmed, “Even in the king’s guardian men, we hardly had enough fare to get skinny on!”

Sage nodded, “You were the king’s treasury guard.  I remember seeing you many times as we passed through the courtyards up to the balcony terrace of the king’s scribes.  You were the one who helped us escape the city.  We would have never been able to even approach the outer gates, if it had not been for you.  And you told us where we needed to go to find refuge.  That the journey would be long and dangerous, but if we could make it far enough to find the town of Crowe, there might be some help there from an Innkeeper who lived on the far side of town.  You gave me the keyword I needed to gain his trust.”

Begglar turned suddenly to Corimanth, “How did you know to send him too us?  How did you know to have him use my old surname?”

Corimanth raised his hands defensively, I have kept tabs on you two since you were married, brother.  I needed to be sure you were doing right by my sister.  Whatever put it into her head to marry a salty seadog from the Surface World, I’ll never know, but I wasn’t sure of anything.”

Begglar arched an eyebrow at Corimanth, “Perhaps it was my rugged, masculine charm!  Did ya think of that?”  He lightly cuffed Corimanth’s arm.  Corimanth grinned and responded, “That never crossed my mind.”

Begglar cocked his fist back playfully, “You’ve got some blarney in ya, Cori!  You better be glad, I’ve gained some restraint over the years, or you’d’ve gotten a clout fer that smart answer!”

Cori raised his hand’s defensively, giving a short breathy laugh.  “Shall we toast to this well met greeting and have another go at the bread and broths?!”

Ezra, Sage, Cori and Begglar all laughed, and gathered again around the firepit, and attendant’s serving station for another round of drink and dining, this time enhanced with the added flavor of welcomed friendship and good fellowship.

*Scene 02* – 05:24 (Night Hunters)

The sky had grown dark at the coming of the evening. Hadeon and his Protectorate entourage gathered in the grassland meadows at the lower base of the highland road.  The night breeze was moist and cool, but Hadeon restrained his men from building a fire and making a night camp.  The remaining Cerberi were anxious and restless but tired from the hurried descent down the long winding grade from the edge of the highland rim.  They panted noisily, tongues lolling and their eyes shining keenly as a hazy starfield began to prick through the purple canopy of the night sky.

By and by, Tizkon, Bayek and Kathair rode down off the lower grade as they made haste to join Hadeon’s gathered company.  They spotted dark shaped silhouettes in a field to the north side of the main road.

Seeing the approaching men, leaving the silver dusted road, Hadeon snorted and rode through the field’s deep grasses out to meet the trio as they descended into the valley, leading a team of five other horses.

“You’re late!” Hadeon barked, coming within shouting distance.

Tizkon looked over at Bayek as Hadeon approached, and muttered, “He’s not going to like this.”

Hadeon rode up, turning his snorting horse, riding across their forward path, allowing his mount to pace in front of them.  He glared and squinted through the half-light, examining the bare backed horse team, and the old man tied across one of the few saddled mounts.  He sniffed his displeasure and then stabbed his three tardy men with a razor-stropped glare of suspicion, moonlight glinting off his sweat-soaked beard.  “What is all this?!” he swept his arm at the group, “Where are all the others?!  And what’s he doing here?!”

Bayek quickly side-glanced at Kathair, and Tizkon, realizing they were expecting him to give their answer.

He sighed heavily, then raised his chin, resolved to endure the heat blast that he was sure would come.

“We had some trouble in the wooded trail.”

“Trouble?!” Hadeon growled, “What sort of trouble?!”

Bayek went on to tell him a clipped version of what he’d recounted to Tizkon, of the blockade created with the crashed wagon on the narrowing trail, of their foot pursuit of those fleeing, of finding the strange dead end and their sinister and deadly encounter with the wood siren.  He’d only been able to recover the extra horses, because they had tied them beyond the broken wagon when they’d pursued their quarry on foot through the narrowing rim trail.  He alone had been spared to deliver a cryptic message to their king.

“I don’t have time for excuses!  Those fugitives are in those woods somewhere, and we’re going after them.  Any sign from Aridam?” he growled.

“The last I saw of him, he and his team were following that other wagon to the northwest,” Tizkon answered, hoping to get some approval from Hadeon for offering additional input.  Hadeon snarled, “That is where I sent him, you idiot!  If you can’t offer more information, then shut your gob!  And further, why is this bundle of sticks packed on this mount.  Didn’t I give you an order to cut its throat?!  Have you forgotten which side of a blade to use?!  Shall I get one of these small-town smithies to give you a bloody saw, instead?!”

Though Tizkon could not see the heat reddening Hadeon’s face and the fierce furrowing of the Bruel’s brow, he could certainly feel an icy chill coming through Hadeon’s menacing voice.

Kathair spoke up, “We thought you mind find it more useful to carve this man up, as an object lesson to those others, once we catch them.”

Hadeon was silent for a moment considering Kathair’s carefully chosen words.  Finally, he sniffed and grunted, muttering, “Very well, then!”  He reined his horse back toward the meadow.  Sighting the group along the silvering billows of moonlit grass.  Bayek spoke up, when Hadeon’s back was turned to them.  “Should we wait for Aridam?”

Hadeon growled, “No!  I’ve waited long enough as it is.  We’ve got traitors to catch tonight.  We’ll get the Cerberi to track them through the woods yonder.  They seem to love the night.  They’ve not eaten much today.  Perhaps, they’ll catch the scent of blood soon.”  Hadeon spurred his horse and rode off through the grass again toward his other company of men and the remaining Cerberi.

Tizkon shrugged his shoulders and muttered, “Isn’t that the woods of Kilrane?”  Kathair answered gruffly, “The very same. Why?”  Tizkon shuttered, “Cause I heard those woods were haunted.”  Kathair started to chuckle, but Bayek spoke up, “No, Tizkon is right.  They are haunted…or at least they will be.”

Kathair paused, a slight mirth playing in his voice, “What do you mean ‘they will be’?”

“They will be,” Bayek growled, “…by us!”  And as he said this, he spurred his horse into the waving sheafs of tall grass, following after Hadeon who was now about thirty yards ahead of him.

*Scene 03* – 20:24 (Fit to Be Tied)

Clang! Clang! Clang!

The blacksmith’s hammer pounded the fired metal he held with forge tongs, flattening the orange glowing end upon his anvil.  Sparks burst and twisted upward from the piece with each loud strike.  While the hammer rang, the man’s assistant poured more molten metal into a cut mold and then ran a long file down the hardening molds, cleaning off the dross.  Another smithy operated a press, letting the molten steel cool a bit before pulling down a winch lever, that released a suspended counterweight, driving down a hinged molding plate into the trough of the mold further flattening the annealed steel to fill in the recesses of the press mold cavity that shaped the metal.  Some of the apprentices pumped the bellows of the six forges, burning down the iron in the smelters, and scraping away the bubbling dross off the top of each vat in the furnaces.  Other attendants, using ladles, dipped and poured more of the liquid metal into short vertical molds, pushing tongues of flames out of each casting sprue hole.  Others opened the pressed metal molds that had been set aside to cool and set with picks and hammers, while others dipped the newly forged pieces into cooling water tanks and then dried, rasped, filed and polished the resulting piece.  After the final tempering and polishing, each of the metal pieces were laid out on a long collection of tables and racks and then the strange, shaped pieces were linked and fastened to small metal cuffs with flared ends that had been browned to prevent rusting.

“What are we making these cressets for, Smyt?” one of the apprentice smithies asked.  “We only agreed to make the collar shanks, didn’t we?”  Smyt, the head blacksmith in charge of the king’s forges, growled, “Bes’ not to ask too many questions, Ori.  We just do what we’re paid for.  Ask too many questions and you might as well, forge your own leg irons and manacles too.” The man called Ori shrugged, “Must be king’s business. Forget I asked.”

The evening sky had already darkened to an ash purple, with luminescent clouds scuttling across the hazy moonglow.  The men working the forges were bathed in orange and yellow flashing light as the fires from the kilns and metal molds flashed under the softer firelight in the braziers.

“Locking collars are done, sir,” another attendant announced, set down a heavy box of hinged cuffs with locking cotter pins holding the flanged eye-tabs together.  “Ready for the fittings.”

Ori glanced nervously toward the paddock door, used to secure the royal foundry.  Metal implements were stacked, leaned, driven and hung all about the secured lot behind a thick wall of stone.  The men worked late on the special projects, and rarely, if every went home to their wives and families until well after dark.  But this ‘special project’ was outside the usual line of their work.  Beyond the outer door, strange winged creatures waited to be let in.  Smyt had ordered those waiting to remain outside until they were called, so that his men would not be so distracted from their work.  A sentry had conveyed his message to the head mistress of these beings, called Harpies, and had received a grudging concession.  Any one of those creatures could have flown over the wall, but for some reason they resigned themselves to wait until the blacksmiths were ready to recieve them.  Just knowing the strange, mysterious creatures were out there lurking about, gave Ori a strong sense of unease.  The creatures were not to be trusted.  They served the dark monster in the farther north woods called The Pan, and that ruler was not known to treat humanity with any sort of deference or mercy.  Many travellers were warned to stay out of the dark woods of the north, along the upper fjords of Cascale, or they would be taken and most likely eaten by that monster and his strange hybrid kinds.  Seeing those harpy creatures in daylight was disturbing enough.  Seeing them in dusk or in the darkest of hours of the evening was like haplessly stumbling upon a coven of witches, incanting and gathered around a low pit fire in a backstreet alley in the middle of the night.

Smyt ambled to the box that the attendant had set down on the table.  He huffed and picked one of the hinged tubular cuffs out of the wooden box and turned it over in his hand.  He took out a rasp file and pried open the cotter-pin out of its sheath, freeing the cuff hinge to move freely opening and closing.  He grunted, and nodded a tacit approval of the work, and then toss the assembly back into the box.  His face was stained and blacking from the smoke of the forges. The creases of his redden flesh were accentuated by the grim and blackened grit collecting in the darkened folds of each wrinkle and scar lining his grizzled visage.  “Very well, then.  Let ‘em in.  But see that they come in only two at a time.  Ugly things.”

The man who had brought the box nodded and then moved towards a heavy swinging gate, made of rivet hammered sheet iron, set in a thick, wooden frame.

The other workmen paused in their duties when the gate swung open, revealing a huddling of black feathered creatures whose most pleasant look, came off as a glowering scowl.  There were about thirty in all.  Their strange faces were that of old women, with aquiline and avian features: hooked noses prominent on their aged faces, with large avian eyes that seemed surreal in the deep, shadowy eye sockets of what might otherwise have been a human face.  They glared at the attendant standing by the door, sniffed a dismissive snort of displeasure and then hopped into the gated smithy court, their claws clicking on the cobbled stone, their feathered bodies ruffling and unruffling, as their forms bobbed up and down with each forward hop.  One of the attendants gestured at the tables and rack, with his hands, but was unsure what, if anything, he might say to these strange creatures.  The long tables were set with a narrow path between them, forcing the harpies to move along the parallel space roughly in pairs.  The strange crone heads bobbed and wobbled along the table line, their wild gray, white and black hair now muted in the orange washes of light from the fiery forges.  Their age-plowed wrinkles gave their faces a shadowy severity, afforded by the darkling night, disturbingly offset by flickering of the fiery flashes from the foundry pits.

Smyt was temporarily mesmerized by the procession, but soon regained his bearings.  He grumbled something unintelligible at his men who had stopped working to stare at the feathered creatures, hybrids of both human and large birds, each with a buxom ruffle of feathers covering gray bosoms, adding one more incongruent element of their human female origin to their present squatty feathered forms.

“Ori,” Smyt signaled.  When the man named Ori did not respond, Smyt barked his name louder. “Ori!”

“Hmmh?” Ori responded, turning away from watching the creatures, realizing Smyt had addressed him.

“Quit gawking and keep the men working!  We’ve not finished this order yet!”

Smyt wiped his soot-stained hands on a dirty piece of fleece wool and moved away from the smoking forges towards the group of creatures, now gathering along the edge of the long tables.

He looked at his attendant who had directed the creatures inside and scowled in uncertainty not knowing how to address these strange half-women half-fowl entities.  The man shrugged, offering no helpful clue either.

A taller, large creature pushed forward through the gathering of feathered fiends, moving with some degree of a limp.  Her eyes seemed larger than those of the others, owl-like in nature, but with a disturbing quality of perception in them as well.  She parted her pursed and wrinkled lips and directed her steady and unnerving gaze at Smyt.  She assesses him, looking him up and down, with some kind of sinister appraisal, her cheek twitching, jaws bunching as she did so.  Smyt returned her searching appraisal with that of his own, noticing that one of her legs appeared to be missing a clawed foot, but had been replaced with a wooden peg leg, fastened somehow with a strap that disappeared into her feathers around her avian rump.  Seeing the man looking at her leg, she raised her chin, stretching the waddled skin of her neck upward in a proud act of defiance.  Finally, she spoke in a raspy voice, with an odd cadence and warbling tone, “Are all the Son of Xarm’s men so mute that they cannot speak a word of welcome?!”  She sniffed in a derisive manner.

“Umm,” Smyt began, but that matron creature dismissed his response, before he could answer.

“Nevermind!  Collar shanks are what we are here for.  King’s promise, he did, and the service to the bargain.”

One of the hesitant men came forward to the table, suddenly solicitous.  “Yes, yes.  R-r-right this way to the fitting deck,” he stammered.  At the end of the long table was a raised platform with three broad wooden steps leading up one side and another set leading down the opposite side.  The strange group of harpies bobbed and weaved down between the long tables, eyeing the metal hardware that was soon to become part of their accoutrements.  The older, larger of the congress of Harpies, who had been the first to speak, scowled suspiciously at the steps leading up to the raised platform, and then waved one of her followers ahead to go up first to be fitted.  “Zefilah,” the matron squawked a command, “You go first! I will see how it is to be done.”

Dutifully, the harpy presumably named Zefilah, hopped up the short stair and turned stretching out a large talon with mottled gray and black pebbled skin, placing it forward.  One of Smyt’s men came forward carrying one of the hinged tubes open and fitted the metal tub around the shank of Zefilah’s leg, with the flared flange end fitting smoothly over the knuckle of her claws, raised just enough to allow her to flex the claws open and closed.  The metal tube covered her exposed shank and had a curved flare at the top allow the bird-woman to move her leg about without the top of the metal tube impeding or restricting her movement or gait.  Zefilah looked down inspecting the new installation fitting snuggly around her leg, her crone face broadening into a crooked smile.  “What about the other?” Zefilah looked up, turning to Delilah.  “They said there’d be hooks for our blades, and wing caps?”

Delilah turned, and snuffed, looking at Smyt, “Yes. Those things we want to see.”

Smyt nodded to one of his other attendants and the man came forward bringing what looked like a candle snuffer, with a curved hook on its conical point, and a thin belted strap extending from a short triangular fan, below.  The attendant approached Zefilah who eyed him imperiously.  “May I?” he asked.  To which Zefilah, simply thrust forward her wing at him.  The man mounted the steps of the platform and carefully placed the cap on the flexor radiale point of her wing, and clamped the triangular fan down between the pin feathers and secured the strap, locking the cap and wicked looking hook in place. Zefilah extended her wing and drew it back, flexing and stretching her broad wing to ensure her wing movements would not be impeded either in fight or in flight.  Satisfied, she ordered the attendant, “Do the other one.  I want to test it in flight.”  As the attendant bent to do so, the metal door suddenly pushed open again and another dark feathered form emerged, followed by two smaller harpies swooping in for a landing her.

Delilah turned and scowled, “You’re late, Delitch!  Where have you been off too?!”

Delitch chewed her lower lip, biting back a scathing reply, but bowed her head in abeyance, raising both her large wings in a genuflection in deference to her Matron.  “My Matron Queen, we have been scouting the upper highland ridges performing the duties you agreed to with this city’s sovereign.  We have much to report.”

Delitch was almost as old as her matron and was her approximate size and girth, though she bore a slightly younger visage than Delilah.  The Matron’s hair was almost fully white, yet Delilah’s still retained a bit of her ebony mixed with gray upon her head.  The Matron Queen of the harpies knew there was more to suspect than to trust in Delitch, for she knew the latter had always envied her position as lead and rule, but she had yet had nothing specific to base her suspicions of Delitch on.  Just a lingering sense that Delitch’s appearance of subservience was a cover for some scheme she was waiting to carry out whenever the future opportunity might present itself.  She knew that Delitch was irritated with her for not moving more openly against the hated nymphs and dryads, but was this outfitting of metal shank protectors and carrying hooks not enough of a sign that they were showing some degree of counter threat to those treacherous creatures?  Surely, Delitch should be pleased that she had sought audience with the Xarmnian monarch, and that it was done without the knowledge or consent of The Pan.  It was leverage needed against the nymphs and dryads should they ever convince The Pan to be rid of the Harpies and endorse open aggressions against them.  The Pan was mercurial in its moods.  One never knew just how he might move for or against any in his dark domain.  Sure, Delitch had reason to hate those nymphs and dryads, but she had not personally lost a leg over their internecine contentions.  None of the Harpies had known that when they agreed to nursing the sapling children of the nymphs that drinking water from the black pool would serve to poison the little suckling creatures.  The broken claw had sense been a mocking of her personally, whenever she saw it scrawled in the bark of a tree or formed by carefully arranged rocks on a mountainside or scratched in the dust over a barren field of hardpan.  The Pan had put a stop to any further outright acts of violence by the nymphs and dryads directed at the harpies, but had done nothing about the mocking, and giggling at her loss of the limb.  But Delilah could not be certain whether Delitch wanted to avenge her against those mocking halflings or she simply had a personal vendetta against them.  Delitch had agreed to Delilah’s plan to help the Xarmnian king keep watch for the encroachment of outworlders and provide him with vital communications about their arrival and movements within the lands of The Mid-World.  But still that did not answer her niggling questions about why Delitch had been late and secretive about where she would be flying in pursuit of that objective.  It was clear she wanted the Xarmnian smithies to provide them with armaments and protections as well, and she was anxious to be fitted for them, as soon as possible.  The other sisters’ had arrived early enough to be kept waiting, and she would’ve thought Delitch and her sisters would have been a few of the first in line on the other side of the metal door, but no…she was the last to arrive.  And something about that disturbed her.

One by one, each of the harpies made their way up onto the raised platform and we each fitted with pinion hooks, and metal shank covers locked around both of their legs and capping each of their wings.  Sure, The Pan would wonder about their new metal fittings, but he would understand why they would be reticent to turn out for the ceremonial transfer of the woods of Kilrane to the nymphs and dryads, since they could no longer live in close proximity to the dying woods where his dark water pools stirred beneath canopies of moss shrouded trees.  The waters were poisonous to them, even if the other half-men creatures sometimes partook of their mysterious living liquids.

As her subjects filed through their fittings, the Matron Queen Delilah could sense a change in the air toward the eastern sea front.  She always took special care to be aware of atmospheric flight conditions when spending any length of time on the ground.  Especially since losing her leg.  Flight was the one means whereby she might still command a lethal mastery over a threat from the ground borne.  She had developed and uncanny sense about the sky conditions.  She knew even now, what her sensory tells indicated.  Another storm was coming, and she and her subjects must take wing soon to get to some form of shelter before it hit.  There was a strangeness about the smell and feel of the air.  A heaviness, as if the coming storm was pregnant with a menace beyond mere wetness, wind and flashing spears of light.  She would speak more to Delitch, but not at this time.  She wanted to know what they had seen–the report, she alluded to.  But time was running out.  The men were working to finish up, but it was taking longer than she had expected.

The air turned moist and suddenly Delilah announced, “That is enough for now.  We must take flight. A storm is coming and I’ll not shelter in this stone city.”  She turned and realized that only Delitch and her three sisters remained to get outfitted.  She knew Delitch would not want to leave now and have to come back, but she felt pressed to get her subjects aloft.

“Come, Delitch.  You, Remitch and Neenitch can get this done later.  We’re leaving…Now.”

“But my Queen…,” Delitch began to protest, but Delilah raised her wing stopping her.  “I know you are disappointed, but you were late arriving, and this storm won’t wait.  You and your sisters may come back when the storm passes.”  Delitch’s eyes narrowed when Delilah turned her back and raised her wings to her kindred.  “Let’s fly!” she croaked and flapped forward from the platform and sailed over the wall where the metal door had been.  The others followed, flapping noisily, ascending into the sky like a cauldron of bats emerging from a dark cave starting a night of aerial hunting.

As they ascended, they did not notice that Delitch and her two sisters did not follow.  They had instead planned to stay a little longer in the city of Xarm and ride out the storm there.  They need a little more time to be outfitted with the three modified collars they had asked the blacksmith to design for them.  Leg collars capable of carrying a thing called a cresset, an iron vessel for mounting an oil and wick fired torch, crafted in conjunction and with one of the town’s chandeliers.  They would eventually follow their prior fliers, but they would have the capacity to carry something to bring a special housewarming to the woods of Kilrane, for unlike the others, they most definitely would be attending that ceremony in Kilrane…as unwelcome guests.

*Scene 04* – 10:20 (Call of The Wild Winds)

Earlier in the day, a finger of smoke rose from out of a long dark chasm running north to south along the western side of the Mid-World’s highest range of mountains.  Like the tentacles of a giant, tenebrous, sea beast the smokey fingers spread and flexed, as if searching for something to grasp along the upper rocky ledge of its shadowy abyssal trench.  The spectral finger stretched its gauzy, incorporeal limbs, reaching, searching, wetting the edge rocks with an oily touch of whispering mists.  As it moved along the edge it seemed to sigh with a thousand hushed voices, that warbled and blended into the suctorial sound of breathy winds.  The former gossamer finger was joined by a vaporous knuckle with other gaseous fingers sprouting from its reaching apparitional limb.  Another sprouting claw of sooty vapors chased after the former tendril shrouded in roiling clouds, followed by another and another, each one slithering along the edge of the long trench until it reached the estuary that flowed out into the surrounding seas, where the river of smoke turned into a flow of fogs moving along the southern cliffs and shoreline until it turned sharply following the eastern shoreline, that fell back and descended to spread out along the shallows of a sandy beach.  The long stretch of sandy beaches along the eastern seaboard, where in the past and recently, outworlders typically made landfall, was a place with a variegated history as colorful as the motley garb of a court jester.  Unknown to many, the living fogs that often plagued the eastern beaches of the Mid-World, were not actually seaborne, but were created by the strange foggy apparitions drawing in moisture from the sea as the smokey arms gathered around the outer edges of the Mid-World’s landmass, reaching through the mists with intentions that could only be viewed as malevolent.  These living fogs seemed intent on catching these interlopers into the Mid-World lands, to try and suppress their sense of themselves, and cloud memories and intentions, before a Stone mission might be undertaken.  Sometimes those fogs were successful.  Sometimes not.  For the mysterious fogs always retreated to their inlet and trench as the strange oculus portals approached the seashore.  No one knew why this was the case, but it was evident that even these mysterious fogs yielded to the roving presence of the seaborne oculus, for these strange portals were somehow linked to the mysterious will of The Marker Stone.  Newcomers to The Mid-World were always delivered by way of the eastern sea.  This fact was suspected by some, anticipated by few, and dreaded by most.  The long reach of the living fogs could not be sustained for long and often dissipated under the full heat of the overhead sun.  If an oculus appeared within sight of the long reaching fogs, the clouds would seem to shred into gauzy whisps accompanied by strange piercing shrieks and wailing noises, until they faded out of sight.  The fogs had the power to make the unsuspecting, and unfortunate soul trapped within their shroud forget, and eventually lose their mind and sense of purpose.

Mystery veiled the behavior of the living fogs and their shying and fleeing away from the oculi and those agents of the enigmatic Marker Stone, which appeared to reign over the realm of both the Mid-World land and sea.

This strange relationship between these apparitions of opposing intention created a peculiar dynamic of rulership and partitioning of holdings between the Kingdom of Capitalia and that of the Kingdom of Xarm.  For though the lands seemed to be parceled out between these two factious Kingdoms, the nature of the land and seas upon which these presumptive Kingdoms fought, were truly the subjects of another Kingdom’s prior claim—the one represented by the Mid-World’s mysterious Marker Stone.  A kingdom of ancient legend, and the pre-dawn of all time, called Excavatia.

The sea was thought of as being relegated to the eastern side of the Mid-World lands, but that was not truly the case.  Its shoreline eventually curved inland towards the north of The Mid-World lands jutting in among tall precipitous mountains of gray and black granite.  This granite channel ran north to south bifurcating The Mid-World landmass with a fjord chain of lakes and rivers through a gorge passage that emptied out into a southern outlet into what was referred to as the “eastern sea”, or more formally known as the Sea of Eustress.

The western lands of The Mid-World were principally occupied by the Capitalian clans, and with the building of their massive stone wall cutting off the only known passage, called the “Paraz Pass”, breaking through the massive mountain chain known as “The Walls of Stone”.  The far side of the ridge and pass was relatively unexplored country, for the descending lands west of The Walls of Stone, dropped off precipitously into a chasm that the people believed to be bottomless.  A river of gray clouds continually passed through that gorge and the overhead sun never cast its light down to the bottom of it.  Since the western side of the Capitalian lands were bordered by The Walls of Stone Mountains on its eastern flank, and the bottomless gorge to its far western edge, the Capitalians had to resign themselves with occupying that length of western stepped lands that curved back into the mountains and terminated in the north along the back of The Walls of Stone.  When the Capitalian peoples erected their barrier over the sole pass of The Walls of Stone, they thought only to cut their warmongering Xarmnian relatives off from attacking their lands, not knowing they were limiting themselves to a finite piece of the western Mid-World in doing so.  Eventually, they knew they would one day regret building that man-made edifice, when their people grew in population where the western lands could no longer sustain them.  This was why they had to reconsider their former desire to abandon the lands beyond the great wall and maintain some holdings and alliances with the native peoples of the highlands.  The forested citadel Azragoth was one of the primary alliances, as well as some other smaller cities and villages towards the eastern sea.  Overtime, however, since Capitalia could not easily reach those far allied cities, those places loyal to the Capitalian crown eventually fell to the Xarmnian warlords, because they could not get aid to them to counter Xarmni’s rise to power.  A war was eventually fought between the oppressive Xarmnian kingdom and the Capitalian kingdom, and it was decisively won in Capitalia’s favor, but it was soon seen by the defeated Xarmnians as a Pyrrhic victory, for Capitalia’s wall was never dismantled.  It became clear to the defeated Xarmnians that they need only bide their time, and Capitalia would lose contact with their prior alliances.  And that would allow Xarmni to eventually subdue them, pillage them, and seize and raze any town or citadel that resisted their takeover and demand for tribute to enrich that Xarmnian kingdom, or risk being consumed by them and taken by force.

As the day surrendered to the twilight, the living fog moved up the eastern shoreline, drifting in the coolness of the withering day, and rising up into floating carriages of cloud cover that were darkening into the threat of an oncoming storm.  The fogs blended and swirled into the lowering clouds, at last finding a way to leave the eastern shoreline and cloak themselves within the folds of the inland flow of stacking cumulonimbus.  The ashy color of the living fogs threaded the heart of the building storm caps like worms into apples, piercing and emerging the outer skins in a gluttonous frenzy.  Slowly, but with gaining speed, these aerial dreadnaughts plowed across the darkening sky moving like a fleet of ships over the edge of the upper highlands.  And at their current pace, it was certain they would eventually reach the city of Azragoth by nightfall.

Something bestial and throaty beckoned them.  A supernatural call that compelled them to come to it, and enter it’s grave-like tunnels honeycombed under the old city to serve a monstrous purpose only known in the malevolent mind of the monster calling them to its nefarious purposes.  Hollowed vessels awaited them.  Hundreds of bodies waiting to be filled, occupied and possessed.  An army of empty golems…  Ready to be seeded… with subservient spirits.

*Scene 05* – 21:40 (The Blind Seer)

When Nell and I joined Begglar and Corimanth at the firepot, we felt the first few wet drops of rain spatter our heads and shoulders.  The servers had set aside a few mugs of the warm broth and some loaves for us, but they were quickly packing up the main crocks and covering the warm loaves when we arrived.  The flames in the firepits began to sizzle as wet drops fell into the pits, and attendants began to smother the fires and cover the pits with hinged iron plates that protected these firepits when they were not in use.  We were directed towards a covered portico between the columns surrounding the open courtyard, where we could shelter and finish our evening repast before turning in for the night.  A low thunder rumbled in the background, coming from the mountains towards the east, as a heavy front of billowing clouds masked the light of the moon.  The sky to the east appeared dark, even as distant lightning blazed somewhere deep within its sepulchral billows, barely blooming into a faint greyish glow.  Under the shadowy colonnade, along the edge of the building, many of the huddled queues had broken up to retire, but Corimanth, Ezra, Begglar and another fellow that seemed vaguely familiar were engrossed in hearing Corimanth recount his experience during his time as a spy and a guard in Xarm City.

When first conscripted, he had expected to be promoted to serve in the Palace Guard, thinking that would best serve his secret role as a court spy, but he was instead assigned to guard the Xarmnian Treasury.  Disappointed but undeterred, he did not know if such a placement would serve to allow him to gather much if any intelligence that would be useful for his contacts within The Resistance.  The prearrangement was to meet with his contacts on an irregular schedule, never knowing when the next time one might show up to get his reports.  The Xarmnians would be alert to patterns, so there could be no discernable cadence to his meetings.  He had been told that he could not know ahead of time who his contacts might be.  Only that they would quietly identify themselves with a physical sign, gesture or code word, which changed at each meeting, to ensure that no hostile actor could pose as an informant by accident.  The risk of discovery was too high.

Every day as he stood at his designated post, he observed that there was an old, blind, beggar woman dressed in rags that always sat stationed just outside of the iron gates near the Treasury portico.  Something about her was familiar, but Corimanth could never get a good look at her, for she wore a drooping shawl over her gray head that kept her face in shadow.  He began to think about that and wondered, why a blind woman might feel the need to cast shade over her face, sitting in the shadows of a narrow alley.  Perhaps she felt the coolness on her skin.  He knew those who lost one of their five senses often compensated by experiencing a heightened sense of another, so he shrugged it off.

She never looked at him directly as he passed her, but he could still see her huddled, bowed form through the grate of the barbican and he wondered if she might be deaf too.  She never raised her head, and never seemed to pull back her shadowed cowl, even when a passer-by dropped a few coins into her old metal beggar’s cup.  He thought he might say something to her, but since Xarmnians were not known for their compassion, he wondered if he might bring suspicion to himself, so he kept quiet, but could not help but wonder about her.

Day after day, during his shifts, he found himself glancing over through the gate at the old woman.  Something about her kept drawing his attention.  Something nibbled at the back of his mind that there was something oddly familiar about her, but he laughed it off knowing that it had to be impossible.  But he kept watching her out of the corner of his eye.

She kept her walking stick close by and seemed to know when a stray dog or cat came by and approached her coin cup.  She unfailingly struck out at the stray animals, smacking the pavement, sending them scurrying down the alleyway into the shadowy side streets and refuse piles.  Well, she may be blind, but she’s not deaf, he thought in amusement.  Neither the sense of taste nor touch would’ve given her the ability to detect those animals.

Each day found her situated in the same spot, though the other guards routinely shooed her away as the day faded.  No one knew where she went each night, and none knew where she lived, but her daily routine brought her back each morning to the wall until she became recognized as a mere fixture, rather than a curiously enigmatic figure evoking suspicion.

Still there was a familiarity that Corimanth could not shake as his vigilant glances passed over her at his usual watching post.  The feeling persisted, until one day he caught her raising her head enough to expose her jawline, and the lines of her mouth and lower nostrils.  The sight triggered something that kept him unnerved even after his watch shift came to a close.

When he woke the next morning, realization clarified, and he suddenly knew who the cloaked figure reminded him of.  Someone both he and his sister had known very well.  But he was conflicted, because the one she favored was known to be dead.  Drown after falling overboard in a sea battle with the creature plaguing the waters of Cascale.  Noadiah.  She was the one who had given them a home after the loss of their parents and granted them part-ownership in the Traveler’s Inn in the town of Surrogate.

No, it couldn’t be.  But the thought persisted.  The woman did not seem to recognize him, but why would she?  He was not where she might’ve suspected him, as well.  He chastised himself for being foolish.  But Noadiah’s body was never found.  They just assumed the leviathan had swallowed her.  Could she have survived the plunge into the cold waters of Cascale?  Could she have made it to shore amid the turbulence of the sea monster’s lunging at the flotilla and the cannon fire from the ships?  He supposed it was possible, but what would she be doing here in Xarm city?  Could the cold have somehow blinded her?  Was she really and truly blind?  Her eyes, though he had only had chance glimpses at them, seemed to be occluded with cataracts.  She smelled, so few people came close to her, even if they were inclined to pity her and cast a few coins into her cup.  The secretive woman seemed to not want to be recognized and became irritable, when well-meaning persons offer to help her and encourage her to move away from her daily spot.

He realized his debate on whether to help her was risky.  But still…Why would she refuse help?  What was her true intention, remaining in the alley near the accessway to the Treasury gate?  Traffic was limited there.  If she wanted her coin cup to be filled, she’d picked a poor spot to beg.  Mostly soldiers came through there.  Her presence should have aroused more suspicion.

Hoping to gain a little more trust in his position or be advanced to another station where he might overhear more of the daily happenings, he decided to ingratiate himself with the Xarmnian brass by broaching the subject of the old woman’s suspicious behavior.  He had inquired of one of the king’s trackers, who occasionally stopped by the Treasury house, how long the old woman had been there sitting in the alley rather than occupying one of the open trafficked streets where she might get more notice and more charitable responses from the residents of Xarm City.  It puzzled him how a blind woman seemed to know where to come each day, and why she did not consider her choice of begging less fruitful than another place might be.  The tracker, Shihor by name, shrugged and said, “Maybe she expects something a little more than mere pennies dropped into her beggar cup, since the Treasury contains the more precious metal coinage.”  To which, Corimanth responded, “Well, I’ll be on the alert for anyone who decides to drop a golden ingot into her cup.”  This brought a laugh in response, and Shihor replied, “Yes, you be sure and let me know if that happens!”  And he went on his way chuckling to himself.

Shihor seemed to dismiss Corimanth’s interest with a grin and a shrug and go about his business.  That was until the Builder Stone in the Treasury was noticed to be making its way out of the locked and gated storehouse.

When the stone broke through the wall and passed through the alley, the guarding soldiers became more alert.  The old woman was driven from her post and the alley was cleared, and sentries were stationed at each end of the alleyway, preventing access to where the immovable Builder Stone was progressing.

Stone masons and plasterers were brought in to repair the broken hole where the Builder stone had punctured and pressed through the rock wall lining the alley.  The hole was sealed up, but the Builder Stone was still making slow, but inexorable progress through the city.  Guards stood around the spot where the mysterious stone rested, covering it with their regimented troops and a makeshift shroud, so that no one might see the stone causing such distress and uproar within the palace.

Corimanth told how the King Son of Xarm, and his advisers came to see the stone and were mystified by what might be causing it to move of its own accord, clearing heading towards the outer wall of the stone city.  Advisors speculated that while the Builder Stone might be able to breach the Treasury, it surely would be contained by the outer curtain wall of the city that boasted a thickness of twenty feet across, with interlocking granite boulders shaped and positioned as an impenetrable bulwark against outward assaults.

But the Builder Stone proved to be able to breach even that to the amazement and dismay of the royal counsellors.  The Builder Stone, they were reminded, had the capacity to lift, push, carve, chisel and carry large stones from the mountainside quarry, making the stonework an amazing feat of wonder.  Boulders could be dislodged and lifted weightlessly, merely by placing the conical stone up against their surface.  The potential loss of such a stone of power, angered the monarch and his royal counsel and finger pointing and dangerous accusations were recklessly hurled about.

Some thought there was some sorcery being done that was calling the stone outward, and that by merely sending a group of soldiers to follow it and cover its progress, they might eventually be led to the culprit.  Some thought that their Builder Stone might be being influenced by one of the other known Builder Stones held by their distant relatives and the clans that had once agreed to take charge of the mysterious stones at the base of the mysterious Marker Stone.

The suspicion grew, but they were hesitant to openly accuse their kinsmen, lest they reveal the present trouble they were having keeping their own stone contained and in their possession.  With the stone on the outside of Xarm City, it could no longer be protected within their massive stone citadel, and it would risk being stolen by others.

They could not predict where it might go, neither could they field a large army to follow its march, for that would draw away their military resources from their central duties and call unwanted attention to their dilemma.  When all of this began happening, Corimanth realized that he was in on the internal discussions, and right in the midst of the ideal place where a spy might serve to do the most damage to an empire who had shown little vulnerability to outside threats from rival kingdoms prior to the Builder Stone’s mysterious behavior.  His treasury assignment was strangely providential, and served whatever higher purpose was being revealed by The One who gave those stones their mysterious capabilities.  He now realized he was part of something much bigger than merely resisting and helping to thwart the Xarmnian schemes to enslave the Mid-World people.  The alarm raised by this Builder Stone was the key to deflating their arrogance and undermining their presumptions of manifest destiny.

The Xarmnians did not want to signal weakness to any of those communities, related by kinship or otherwise, that they had so often oppressed, extorted, intimidated and finally subjugated into their rule of fear and threat.  Xarmni could not appear weakened or distress to the outside.  So, they had to maintain their fearsome reputation, in spite of their difficulties with their stone.  If others were to get hold of and take possession of it, their stone city could not withstand its power that once helped to build and fortify it.  That stone could be used to weaken and dismantle it, toppling its massive walls with its mysterious power over stone.

When the Builder Stone reached the outer field and progressed into the head of the large lengthy valley, dividing the stone mountains bordering its trek towards the eastern highlands, Corimanth had been ordered to resume his post at the Treasury, rather than follow those soldiers chaperoning the moving stone across the plains into the valley.  He knew the presence of Xarmnians progressing through the valley would raise suspicion, and eventually word would reach the ears of those in The Resistance, and that would cause some from Azragoth to come to the stone city by stealth and hidden routes to provide some possible answers.  He need only wait until someone contacted him.

When the alleyway had cleared, eventually the old beggar woman returned to her usual spot, keeping up her strange vigil, so that he dismissed her presence, the same as the others who witnessed her before.

When Shihor visited again, the tracker mentioned that he would soon be dispatched to run scout patrols up in the highlands towards the east.  It was a long journey, and he expected not to return to Xarm City anytime soon.  He mentioned that the Son of Xarm was brooding again and began to wonder if there were any signs of the return of outworlders coming back into the Mid-World.  Somehow stirring up trouble and even possibly were responsible for the strange goings on with their Builder Stone.

The king wanted Shihor to ride up to the old site where The Marker Stone resided and make sure that it remained buried under the mound that they had erected over it.  He also wanted to be sure that the nonsense of Stone Quests was forgotten and that the fairy tales of the future king coming from Excavatia were not still percolating and giving the far outer land peoples hope of a renewal of the Mid-World’s troubles with the old prophecies.

As Shihor was leaving, he took another hard look into the alleyway, noticing the old beggar woman seeming to sway and rock side to side, as he exited the barbican gate.

A craggy voice of pleading inquiry issued out of the beggar woman’s cowled, and bowed head.  “Pittance of pity for an old blind beggar woman, Scout?” she said waving her tin cup with the slightest jingle of loose coins clinking against the inside of the cup.

“Get away from me, you stinking crone!” he growled under his breath. ” You reek of filth and soiled rags!”

At that, the old woman’s head came up and she carefully peeled back her head scarf from her brow, looking up at him with a broadening grin peeling away her aged and wrinkled lips.  Shihor glared down at her contemptuously, but then started, jerking involuntarily back, as he flinched at the sight.

Framed within the old chin and the crinkled brow, and bunched cheeks was the smooth skin and smile of a grinning female child, incongruently manifested and superimposed over the face where the old woman’s face should have been.

Startled, unable to believe his eyes, Shihor blinked, and, in half a second, the planes of the child’s mocking face molded back into the visage he had expected to see when she lifted the head scarf cowl.  The old woman cackled with quiet laughter, as she somehow saw the startled expression pass over Shihor’s face and then meld into a confused gaze, uncertain of what he’d just witnessed.  The old woman bowed her head again into shadow, rocking softly from side to side, as if nothing had transpired and she had not even been noticed by the man.

Shihor turned away and glanced back through the gate of the barbican, catching Corimanth’s eye.  He shook his head, unwilling to give voice to what he thought he might have only imagined.  He had to get going.  The king would want a report back in a few weeks.  It would be three weeks before he would reach the eastern coastlands, and the road would be long.

Corimanth was coming towards the gate of the barbican, and Shihor was sure the man might inquire what had caused his delay.  He wasn’t certain himself, but the old woman appeared in her hunched form, seated beside the wall, seeming unaware of him as he mounted up on his horse and peered downward, uneasy.  He cleared his throat and decided to think no more about it.  He had a lot on his mind and a long road ahead of him.  No time for such foolishness.

Corimanth watched as Shihor rode away down the alley, heading out on his mission.  He was sure he had witnessed some kind of verbal exchange between the old beggar woman and the scout, and oddly enough he realized that he’d never actually spoken to the old woman before, nor had he heard anyone else speak to her within his hearing.  The evening guards merely came up to her and lightly pushed her with their foot as if redirecting the path of a dog and told her it was evening and time for her to go.  She’d never responded to their order vocally.  She’d merely used the wall and her walking stick to brace herself as she creaked to her feet and shuffled away toward the open end of the alley, mumbling incoherently.  But this time, Corimanth was sure he’d heard her speak, and the voice was eerily similar to the voice he knew to belong to Noadiah, the seer of Surrogate, a village now rebranded as Sorrow’s Gate under the oppressive Xarmnian rule.

Finishing his account, Corimanth turned to Nell. “And what do you make of all that, sister?  Could the old woman really have been Noadiah?  I cannot seem to think back on it without seeing Noadiah under that hood.  I still don’t know how it could be possible.”

“Nor do I, dear brother,” Nell said taking Corimanth’s arm in her hands.  “But some things in this world are mysteries that only time can solve.  It may or may not have been her.  There is no way to know for certain.  Time will tell.  Right now, I think it best that we all get some sleep.  It’s been a long day, and this rain is falling harder now and with it the night chills will come.  Best we all get rested, for we never know what tomorrow might bring.”

As we all turned to leave and head back to the rooms where we had been quartered, I felt a strong hand clasp my shoulder holding me back.  I turned and was surprised to see that it was Lord Nem that had restrained me.

“O’Brian.”  Lord Nem’s voice seemed tired, His eyes and his voice’s timbre reflected a bone-weariness.  It was clear that the events of the day had taken a toll on him–both mentally and physically.  “You will be quartered in my own household tonight, for you and I must go early into the old city in the morning.  There is something I need to return to you, and something more I need to show you with respect to this hidden citadel.  We are in present danger of being exposed and perhaps worse than that.  It cannot wait any further.  We will go at first light, before the others awake.”

I looked back as my travelers filed out of the courtyard, under the long colonnade portico, and down the corridor steps.

“You need not worry about them.  They will be looked after and well taken care of.  You will be my guest this evening.  You’ll find the governor’s house to have more than adequate guest rooms.  You will need a good rest for what is ahead.”

*Scene 06* – 21:34 (The Old and The New)

The rain continued to fall as Lord Nem, and I walked together.  We ducked under covered walkways, trotted through open terraces, and passed through tunneled hallways, heading upwards toward the part of the city that backed against the overhang of the highland cliffs.  Attempting to keep dray as best as we could.  Nem was silent as he led, and I followed.  At first, seeming to debate within himself what he might say to me about what was ahead.  At last, resolved, he spoke up.  The topic was not something I could have anticipated, prior to being invited to his personal residence as a guest.

“I am in a bind.  You have brought danger to my city that you may not even be aware of, but I am not presently at liberty to tell you much more than that.  You need to be prepared for what I must reveal, and I am not sure you are ready to hear it yet.”

I was stunned.  “What danger did I bring?  We are only twenty-three people. What could we do to threaten any of you with so many of your trained warriors around us?”

“You misunderstand me.  It is not those who you brought that threaten us.  It is you personally.”

“Me?!  I assure you, I bear you no ill-will, nor do I have any nefarious intentions.  I am unarmed.  What possible danger could I be to you or your city?”

“It is not what you intend, O’Brian.  It is something you are not yet aware of. Something that you brought with you.  I cannot tell how it affects you until I have a chance to show you part of the old city.  Then you may be able to understand more.”

We walked in silence for a moment, me puzzling over what danger he could be referring to, and Lord Nem pursing his lips, troubled over whatever mystery he had yet to reveal.

Finally, he spoke again, “There is something further I must do to protect this city, but you will not understand it unless you remember what you once knew before when you first came to our world.  The foundation that will prepare you to deal with what lies ahead.”

He sighed, “I don’t know how much time I have to delay.  Every moment I delay doing what must be done, the danger to us increases.  Are you truly willing to assist me?”

“Of course,” I said. “Anything I can do to help, I will do.”

“If you truly are as willing as you say, you may gain more than you know for your team and your stone quest by remembering who you once were and drawing from that.”  He paused and then continued, “As I mentioned before, there is a gift I will return to you, when we are able to go to a place I will show you.  You will need it to help us, and you will need to remember how to use it against something far more dangerous than you have met with so far.”

Unsure of what he meant, I responded in a way I typically would in dealing with uncomfortable subjects-with ill-timed humor.  Before I could think better of it I asked, “Does this thing also have a black tongue?”

Lord Nem paused mid-stride, and I cringed at my own seeming flippancy.  I started to apologize, but before I could, he answered with no hint of the offense.

“Perhaps…” Nem said thoughtfully.  “Perhaps it does as well.  But my concern is that it may unleash the one belonging to our city,” he answered cryptically.

We had reached a covered balcony where we could overlook the city.  Though skeins of rain fell in curtains throughout the lower streets these were sheer enough to be able to see through them and catch the lighted lamps in various windows casting wet glimmers into the cobbled streets, as the washing water streamed into the side gutters and gullets.

Lord Nem turned and gestured into the city below pointing out the dividing inner way and the vestiges of the old city beyond it which stood masked in a darker contrast of deeper shadows.  No lights shone in the out rings, nor no visible signs of life retiring for an evening’s repose.

“As you can see there, Azragoth has the appearance of deadness in its outer ring.  It is choked with vines, and unchecked growth of weeds and wild animals roam the crumbling streets and abandoned houses that once extended our city to the outer gates. Anyone entering the breached walls from beyond it would think this city has no life remaining in it.  That Azragoth is, as the legends tell, cursed, abandoned and haunted by the long-dead memory of its former splendor.  From all appearances, for those entering or stumbling upon our city while wandering the wilderness and forests, that would all appear to be true.”

The rains hissed through the tangles of vines, and choking weeds in the outer perimeter, and it sent chills through me, reflecting on how different the rainfall sounded in the outer region from the inner lived-in parts of Azragoth.  The outer sounds brought forth images of piles of writhing and coiling vipers slithering over each other, hissing and intertwining with fangs bared.

Nem continued, somehow sensing my private chilling perceptions, speaking with a knowing nod and calmly drawing me back from the inner precipice of my rising fears.  “But beyond the outer deadness, there is an interior wall, separating the deadness from the life that is within.  The exterior side of that inner wall is coated with pitch and black tar.  Do you remember seeing that black wall as you were shown in to the inner courts?”

I nodded and quietly voiced a “Yes.”

“Anyone touching it or attempting to scale that wall will become coated or soiled by it.  So too, anyone attempting to enter Azragoth’s interior, without entering a gate with a key will be stained as an imposter and spy, and our guards and citizenry will easily be able to identify them on sight.”

He paused to let that idea sink in.  “Like the latent filth we routinely purge from under our city streets, that person will be marked for the death they bring upon themselves by attempting to breach the sanctity of our city.  No one comes to the inner gate without a long key.  No one puts their hand on the door without getting the dark pitch upon it, forever marking them as an enemy of the city.  Had anyone of you bore a black hand, you would have been executed by the doorway guards upon entry.  We cannot be too careful.  Azragoth is a city that has been reborn upon its ashes and is being renewed from within.  Its outer exterior is corruptible, but its interior is being strengthened and built up to endure.  The interior wall has been fortified and each family living in the outer courts has been responsible for the interior wall’s repair directly in front of their homes.  You might say, they have a very vested interest in making that portion of the wall very strong because it stands between them and the death rings beyond.  There are two key passages in the Ancient Text that read as follows:

“Don’t you understand either?” he asked, “Can’t you see that the food you put into your body cannot defile you? Food doesn’t go into your heart, but only passes through the stomach and then goes into the sewer.” (By saying this, he declared that every kind of food is acceptable in God’s eyes.) And then he added, “It is what comes from inside that defiles you. For from within, out of a person’s heart, come evil thoughts, sexual immorality, theft, murder, adultery, greed, wickedness, deceit, lustful desires, envy, slander, pride, and foolishness. All these vile things come from within; they are what defile you.” ” [Mark 7:18-23 NLT]

“And the second…

Therefore we do not lose heart. Even though our outward man is perishing, yet the inward [man] is being renewed day by day.”  [2 Corinthians 4:16 NKJV]

“These verses are essential in understanding what is being done here in our city…AND… I must add, it is what happens within the Mid-World as a whole, and within each one of us within our inner being.  Your world, and my world as echoes of these principles.  We see your people as living in the dying world of the Surface.  Our Mid-World is likened to the inner world, being renewed again.  And the hope in Excavatia is the consummation of these worlds into eternal resurrection and rebirth.  A threading back through ours and your world to connect all of it to what it should have been, if not for the death brought into it in the Ancient Garden, that caused our worlds to be separate.  To preserve them for a King that will set all things right.”

“You Surface Worlders represent a dying body to us.  That is why so many here have difficulty believing that your presence here represents anything good.”

“But there is a deeper truth that many here fail to understand.  The One came fully through each of our worlds and transcends them.  But He had to come to your world to experience death, to bring about redemption for both of our worlds.  We cannot ignore the role you and your people play, anymore that we can ignore the role that we must play in that grand design.  Designs, which we have deliberately put in place here in our rebuilding efforts.  Azragoth serves as a symbol hinted at that greater Kingdom’s purpose.”

“What do you mean?” I asked, having listened intently.

“We have a way of marking intruders from entering Azragoth without using the proper gates of entry.  The black wall covered in pitch.  For you see, in the same way, anyone unauthorized who enters will be easily made known and readily dealt with.  Outward corruption is easy enough to identify, but the corruption coming from within, not so much.  Its inevitable flowing outward must be addressed and purged.  That is why we cleanse the city and remove from us those things that might again cause disease and death on a regular basis so that what is being built on the inside may not defile us.  Azragoth represents the body, soul, and spirit of mankind.  In a real physical way, we see it as being regenerated from within.  Like the body of man, the outward is corruptible and is on a constant journey towards death under the curse of all flesh and blood.  The body dies, but the soul and spirit remain and endures to serve an even greater purpose.”

“As I told you before, the filth that drains from our city streets is pushed to the edge of the interior walls and descends below the outer walls into a deep reservoir below the courtyards and streets beneath the dead sectors of the city and they fill the hollows of the outer wall with corruption.  The outer retaining wall and the cavities beneath are full of the city waste.  It is why our people have withdrawn from it and live beyond the inner wall.  The outer wall has been repaired enough so that this filth seeping within does not flow back into the city or the protected interior.  Anyone walking in the outer rings is walking mere feet above the buried moat of filth that flows out of the city.  Should the city of Azragoth ever faces siege assault again, the attackers will be forced to contend with breaching the outer wall and in so doing will meet their death in such an attempt.  In case of a breach, the waste will spill onto the outer field and woods beyond the gates of the city creating a murky slough of disease and plague, killing all who approach it.  The black tongue of Azragoth will flow from the breach, licking them up in death as it spreads across the field beneath the grasslands and flows through the stands of trees that line its outer gates.  It is important that you remember this, for once outside of the city, when you and your company leave us, as soon you must, if you ever think of returning to Azragoth from the south, be warned that you will surely die it you approach it after seeing the black tongue upon the golden fields.  Such filth will kill the trees and grass, and all manner of man or beast which go before it.  It is only by going through the narrow way that you may ever return to this city once that terrible black tongue goes forth.”

“Why would you destroy the main route into the city?  What narrow way would there be left, if you were forced to take such drastic measures?” I asked.

“There is a way in yet to be revealed, O’Brian.  When the time comes, if it comes, I should say, it will be revealed to you.  Suffice it to say, it involves a passage through the grave.  But I can say no more.  Be patient.”

He then turned and pointed me to a stone staircase that led up to a large wooden beamed house, overshadowed by large trees with a wide canopy masking its true size.  The front porch was braced by large wooden columns, with a wide double-door entry and low-lighted candles in glass lamps.  Two sentries stood guard at the front entrance, but I had no doubt there were others guarding the perimeter of the house and terraced grounds.  The stone steps led up to the wide porch under the portico, and I could see that the structure was at least two to three stories high, with several upper rooms lining the front.

Lord Nem led me up the steps and spoke quietly to his sentries, who stepped back into the shadows, allowing us access to the front entry.

I was hesitant to enter, after all we had discussed up to this point, and Lord Nem noticed my hesitancy.  “Are you sure you want to have me as a guest in your home, considering whatever danger I pose?  We have discussed weighty subjects coming here.  I’m not sure…”

Lord Nem cut me off before I could finish, “O’Brian, I do apologize for that.  I should have waited to speak to you about such things.  I have not been a very good host this evening I am afraid.  This day has been tiring and much has been learned and discussed relating to the safety of this city.  I know I have laid some heavy subjects on you before and this evening, but I think there is someone here that might bring you a little comfort.  I do not occupy this house alone.  I must warn you, I do have regular guests, and some that come and go for a visit.  My home is open and shared with some who do not yet have a place to live in Azragoth and are temporarily domiciled here in the governor’s residence.  I have only modest needs, and to be honest this home was built far grander than I expected.  I am much away for most of the day, overseeing the rebuilding efforts and occupied building portions myself, along with several of our clergymen whose main role will be serving in the temple.  The wall has been an all-consuming project, for it is the primary reason that I left the Capitalian king’s service to come here.  Please allow me to make it up to you.”

Saying this, he opened the door and gestured for me to enter ahead of him.  In doing so, I was met with quite the surprise, as I heard a girlish squeal, and turned to see Miray running towards me with open arms.

“Mister O’Brian! Mister O’Brian!  You’re here!  Come meet my new friends!  I am visiting them here and was invited to stay the night.  Isn’t this place fancy?!  Come look!  Come see!”

I knelt and embraced her as she ran into my arms, so excited by my arrival and so delighted to be able to show me around.

“Miray!  Sweet girl.  Have you been here all this time?  What have you been up to?” I said, smiling, unable to contain my surprise at her presence here.  I marveled at how someone so young and so small could seem to fill a large room with such exuberance and delight.

She hugged me and then quickly pushed back, taking my hand and tugging me forward into the large entryway, bouncing with energy only a child could contain.  “Come meet Sarleah!  She and I are besties!  She and her brother are here with their mother and daddy.  They don’t have a house, yet, but Nem and his men are building them one.  Sarleah is gonna get a dog!  I love dogs, but my parents won’t let me have one.  Daddy says we travel too much.  It’s not fleas-able.  I told him my dog won’t have fleas.  I won’t allow it, but he says I don’t understand.  Did you ever have a dog?  Nem’s nice.  He has a good lady that cooks for him.  Makes the best breads and cakes.  Delicious.  I told Nem how you are my hero, and he said, ‘ What for?’ So, I told him how you rescued me from the poop monster.  But I don’t know if he believed me.”

She put her hand to the side of her mouth, as if to whisper conspiratorially to me.  “I don’t think he knows about poop monsters.  But I assured him that they are real, and will sneak up on you, if you’re not careful.  So, he needed to watch himself the next time he goes into any cave to go potty.  He said he will, but I think he thinks I was kidding.  You need to tell him it’s true, so nothing happens to him.  He’s been very nice.”

Miray introduced me around to the family, the staff, and those with whom she had barely made an acquaintance.  She led me through the house as if we were on parade and she was the Grand Marshall.  By the time she had finished showing me the rooms, she and her new playmates had already explored, it was well past her bedtime, and thankfully, Corinna, the children’s mother intervened shooing away into the upstairs rooms serving as their apartments.

As Lord Nem and one of his attendants led me up to my guest room, Nem grinned and said, “You have quite the admirer.  One might learn much more about a person, considering how an innocent with no guile perceives them.”

“I think she might be overselling my value.”

Nem nodded, “Still, children tend to see through the masks we put up to hide ourselves from others.  I believe her perceptions are trustworthy, no matter how you may avoid their unqualified praise.

As they opened the door to the room, I was impressed.  The room featured a large four posted bed with a gauzy canopy to keep the forest’s tiny night flyers at bay, so as not to disturb the sleeper.  A side table featured a comfortable wingback chair, with a trimmed oil lamp to provide reading light.  Another section of the room held a large double-doored wardrobe, with artful engravings, and brass fixtures of lion’s faces, holding brass pull rings in their mouths.  A polished mirror festooned one wall over a glazed wash basin set in a metal rack with side panels draped with fresh linen towels.  A large window with open shutters, fronted a padded window seat, with large pillows set aside the inset walls on either side.  The floor was partially covered with a large area rug, and a straw thatched mat, fronted the washbasin, where a large pitcher of water was kept in a glazed clay pot, with a fitted lid.  A service tray had been set out on a low table, accessible to the wingback reading chair, where a carafe of cool water waited, as well as what I took to be a teapot, with small cups on either side, and some small biscuit wafers were arranged and offered on a low service boat dish, along with a bowl of dates and figs.

“Please let Ademir know if you need anything further,” Nem said, as I entered and turned back to him, the look of surprise still on my face.  “There is a bell chime behind the carafe on the service table.  His quarters are just a few doors down.”

“Lord Nem, this is far more that I deserve…” I began.  But he raised his hand dismissively, “What you will need is rest, for we will start early.  Help yourself to the service table, and anything you might need in the wardrobe there for the night.  I will have Ademir wake you in the morning and will meet you downstairs in the dining room.  I believe young Miray served as an adequate tour guide, so you should have no trouble finding it.  Peace be with you, O’Brian.”

“And with you,” I answered as he nodded and quietly closed the door.

I placed my hands through the gauzy sheers, parting them and lowered my aching buttocks onto the side of the fluffed blanket and thick down-filled bed.  Now all I had to do was get some rest in as lavish a place as I had ever spent the night in, and I felt my prospects in that respect were quite good.

*Scene 07* – 16:11 (Fingers of The Night)

The tall trees of the woods of Kilrane were the first to feel it.  Their tops swayed and creaked, as the storm came rushing in from the eastern seafront, hectoring and tossing the upper canopy with downdrafts that popped and crackled from its frothing and grumbling throat. Smokey tendrils descended from the purpled brows of the lowering clouds seined the forest, huffing and spitting over the old walls and finally raked through the stony streets of Azragoth like dragging knuckles sloughing and hissing across wet cobblestones.  The driving winds began to pick up speed, pushing splashing gusts against the walls in the Governor’s residence.  A high-pitched ssss’ing noise whistled at the edges of the windows, seeking a way into the warm and dry interior, determined to invade and bring a wet chill into the residence to douse any dwindling flame that still remained in the hearths that still dared to heat the rooms.

At some point during the night, I do not know when, I felt the chill penetrate the edge of the bedroom windows and spear through the down blanket that covered me in the canopied bed.  My eyes were weighted so that I could barely open them, but I could feel the prick of icy splinters piercing my bare feet.  I tried drawing them up, thinking I had turned and uncovered them in the night, but I could still feel the fluffy blanket over them.  I heard something like low whispers becoming more audible as I roused myself from the twilight of slumber into a half wakefulness.  My eyelids slightly parted, my tenuous hold on getting some sleep was slipping, but I was not ready to give up the fight to keep it so easily.  Had someone entered my room while I was sleeping? I wondered. No, the house was secure.  Perhaps more so than any of the other domiciles within Azragoth. This was the governor’s residence after all.  Sentries were posted, keeping a night watch.  Nothing to worry about.  But then I heard a splash.  Sounding like something had just fallen into the wash basin.  The whispering noises grew louder.  I squinted and then opened my eyes a bit more.  I felt that the room contained several presences, standing within the deep shadows, but I could not be sure, seeing them through the gauzy haze of the sheer curtains hanging from the bed’s canopy.

I could not make out the words being whispered, nor could I be certain from which side of the room they were coming from.  The window buzzed with the wind gusts hitting it from the outside.  A weird glow passed through the wet glass, casting a miasma of shadowy patterns across the walls that stood opposite from the panes.  I blinked rapidly, trying to clear my sleep clouded vision, unable to focus clearly on anything solid.  The whispers rose in volume, some softer, some louder, as if multiple speakers hid among the corners and recesses, some speaking boldly, other more timidly in a haunting sing-song, that sounded mournful.  Some voices seemed to almost laugh, but those laughs had no joy in them.  Rather, they felt sinister, and vengeful.  The whispers divided into three-part syllables, still coming at me with a sibilance that distorted their meaning, until it finally clarified into a word I did understand.  Mur-der-errrr.  The latter part of the word ending in a rolling and extending ‘R’ sound that echoed in the small room.  Murderer.  The whispers were vicious and accusing.  My eyes opened, my body tensed, but I was still unable to focus on anything.  I felt cold and stiff as a corpse.  I heard the water in the wash basin slosh again, with loud drops, pinging the surface, as if it were positioned under a chronically leaking faucet.  Gray, translucent shapes, whisked through the shadows, and the sheer curtains around the bed stirred and flapped as a breeze fluttered through them.  Murd-er-errrr!  A strange echoing voice hissed at me, as the gauzy curtains pushed inward and ballooned outward like lungs.  Faces pressed inward and outward into the sheers, but I could see no solid forms behind them.  The impressions scowled at me, howling silently, as if in pain.  ‘Remember!’ they hissed, cleaving the air. Remember!  Remember!  Faces with no substance, pressed into the billowing sheer curtains, hovering over me.  Faces I thought I recognized.  Faces from my past.  Faces of those friends that had been tracked, hunted and seized by agents of The Pan.  The faces of those who had fallen because of my foolishness.  I was pinned down, immobilized.  My arms and legs spasmed with sudden cramps.  Above be a face appeared that I recognized all too well.  My friend Caleb.  The face appeared formed of the porous material of the sheer curtain, its voice was strained, but harsh, coming out of the translucent shroud, speaking to me from the grave.  You were supposed to protect me.  You knew I would try something foolish.  Why did you listen to me?  Why didn’t you stop me?  Why did you run from me?  Why did you leave me in the woods?  Why didn’t you come back to help me?  You abandoned me!  You let The Pan capture the Cordis Stone!  You saw it rip the stone from my hand!  You saw his fiends mob me!  Tear at my flesh!  You left me there to die!  I was young and foolish, but you knew better.  You are the reason I am dead!  Just the same as if you had murdered me yourself!  Why didn’t you come for me?  Why didn’t you stop them from tearing me apart?  The words came out in harsh whispers, but they affected me like shouts and screams might have.  My chest was compressed so that I could not answer, even if I had anything to say that could have mitigated the charges.  Deep down I knew that what Caleb was attempting was foolish, and dangerous.  But he was headstrong and determined.  He was partly to blame, but I carried most of the weight of the guilt for he had deceived himself, but had not fully deceived me into thinking his plan could work.  The Cordis Stone was not a source of its own power.  It was never meant to be used that way.  Jeremiah had told him again and again, but Caleb wouldn’t listen.  Love never fails!  He said it repeatedly to me with such personal conviction, that I was lured away from my better judgment.  I wanted to see if he might be right.  That we could use that Stone to assault the darkness of The Pan’s parasitic empire.  But we were both wrong.  Caleb was deceived, but I knew deep down this plan was suicidal.

I felt my throat tighten, as the sheers fluttered, and I gasped from breath.  Feeling hot and cold flashes pulse through my body.  I saw smoke fill the room, and then hiss out underneath the bottom of the door, and hiss down the hallway.  I heard the sibilant sound of a little girl’s laugh, and a trilling noise from the other side of the hallway door say, “Miraaay!  Where are you, Miraaay!  Becca’s back.  Come out to plaaaay!

NOOO!  I choked out!  Gasping through a desperate prayer I wheezed, “Oh, One and only, please help me!”

A voice seemed to come from within me, rising up to gentle speak into my ears.  “Remember the Quickening.  Yield and surrender and let my peace still you.  Release this guilt.  Surrender it to me.”

Tears filled my eyes, and I nodded, through gasps, “Yes.  Yes, it is Yours.  My guilt is Yours to take.  Please fill me again with your Quickening.”

My voice began to return to me, and the fluttering of the curtains ceased and stilled.  The whispering was replaced with silence.  A calm began to warm me, beginning in my feet and running up through my legs, releasing my muscles, easing the cramping.  The smoke I once perceived in the room was gone.  There had been a smoldering fire of glowing embers in the hearth, that now flickered back into flame.

“Miray!” I exclaimed, throwing back the covers, shucking on my shorts, and leaping out of bed.  I fumbled with the room’s door handle, forgetting for a moment how it worked, then finding the key turn lever and releasing the catch.  I stumbled into the hallway, panting, squinting in the gloom of the flickering candlelight sconces.

I could see no trace of smoke, but I bounded down the hallway, a little too loud for the hour.  I almost slid on a carpeted runner, realizing that I was barefoot, but I didn’t care.  Miray and the other children were down one flight of stairs in a similar hallway below.  I raced past the servant’s quarters, where I was told Ademir lodged, catching the newel post as I curved down the circular stairwell, landing heavily on the wooden treads.

Reaching the landing I vaulted down the hall, searching for any sign of smoke or vapor.

A door cracked open, and I saw a child’s hand on the door.  I rushed forward, as Miray stepped into the hallway, rubbing her sleepy eyes, yawning.  Her hair was mussed from sleep, and she blinked, as I scooped her up in my arms, hugging her closely.  Muttering a prayer, “Oh thank you, thank you.  She’s safe. Miray, are you okay?  Tell me you’re okay.”

“I am sleepy, but I thought I heard someone…,” she scrunched up her nose.  “Did someone call me?  I thought I heard…”  I hugged her, as others opened their doors up and down the hall.  Ademir, who I had just met, hurriedly came down the stairs.  “Is everything all right?”

I nodded, hugging Miray, almost breathless, answering, “Everything’s fine now.” And I repeated it again, reassuring myself that it was indeed fine.

The wind outside continued to buffet the house, spraying horizontal streams of water against the windows.  The trees overhead swayed and creaked, leaves rustling, with a few limbs snapping and swishing down the steps that led up to the governor’s house.

Gray mists drifted along the wet streets, blowing loose leaves, and other debris that the wind had snatched from various parts of the city.  The smokey tendrils had curled back into the dark clouds, twisting into a braid, and then circling back around the outer perimeter of the city.  The air currents circulated around the edge of the upper highland ridge, pull mists that heaved and huffed over the stream that ran along the edge of the eastern wall settling down into a thick fog that lingered on the outside of the tall city wall, until it reached a declivity that slanted downward into the mouth of a small cave.  The cave was choked with a mat of low-lying ground weeds, nettles, briars and bushes that had fallen into it, as it sunk into a hollow beneath the greenery.  A sucking sound preceded the vacuum that drew the mists and fog into the leafy hollow, creating surface eddies and a small vortex seining the wisps of the storm through the deep foliage.  A large ice blue iris blinked through the swirling mists, its striated orb, pulsing with an electric blue light.  A low rumble came from within the deep hollows of the cave, inhaling the mists, and huffing them beyond itself like giant bellows, stoking a flame.

The storm wind had died down and only a light rain remained as the cloud wrung out the last of their showers over the city.  Inside the governor’s house, Sage and Corinna, the mother and father of Sarleah and Sabean, stood in the doorway to their apartment, their children in their arms.  I set Miray down, assuring her that everything was alright.  She favored me with a skeptical look, not sure if I was being entirely straight with her about the situation.  Quietly she asked, “Did Becca come back?”  I knelt and gently squeezed her shoulders, trying to impart bravery to her, but I was not sure if I could.  Her eyes searched mine, as I said, “Sweetie, I honestly don’t know, and that’s the truth.  I think you will be alright tonight.  We just need to get some rest is all.”

She put her hand on my cheek, touching my beard.  “Something has happened, hasn’t it?  Something in you.”

I could not deny her perception, so I merely nodded.  “You are not as…heavy as you seemed before,” she whispered.  I patted my tummy, “Why?  Do you think I’ve lost weight?”  She knuckled my belly and said, “Not here.”  And tapping my forehead she said, “Here.”  Amazed, I nodded.  “You’re very sharp, dear.”  And she grinned, “As I told you, I am not a deer.  I’m just a Miray.  That’s all.”

“Okay, little lady.  Now its off to bed with you.”

She grimaced.  “Will you be here when I wake up?”

“I…,” I hesitated, knowing I could not promise that.  “I have to go out early with Lord Nem.  It will probably be before you get up to have breakfast.”

“Can I come with you?”

“I’m sorry, Miray.  Not this time.  I need to go into a part of the city that is not easy to get to.”

“Is it a secret mission?” Miray whispered, leaning into me conspiratorially so the others could not hear her.

“Can you keep a secret?” I whispered back.

“Yes, I’m good at keeping secrets.  Becca liked this boy on the boat, and I never told anyone about it because she made me pinkie swear.  Said if’n I told, somehow something would cut off my pinkie, and I’d never be able to play the piano probberly when I got bigger.”  Suddenly her eyes widened, and she covered her mouth, “Oops!  I just did it!  Do you think it will really happen?!”

I took her little hand in mine and said, “I won’t let that happen.  But just to be sure, make a fist!”

She made a fist, and I closed my hand around it.  “Whenever you are worried about it, make a fist and say, ‘Nothing is gonna take my fingers, or they’ll get boxed with my fist!”

She whispered, “Nothing is gonna…”  Then she nodded, emphatically.  “Got it!”

“So, you’ll keep my secret?” I asked.  And she pinched her lips, and made the sign of zipping them shut, then nodded again.

“All right. Off to bed with you now.  Keep Sarleah and Sabean safe!”

And with that, we all returned back to our rooms.  It seemed that my head had only touched the pillow for a few minutes before Ademir arrived to wake me again.  Strangely, though I felt rested.  Somehow, I did feel lighter, as Miray had said.