[Mkguild] To Snare a Rabbit

Logan Zoel nagolinc at hotmail.com
Mon Nov 9 04:27:40 UTC 2009


Hey all,

This is my second story, the one in which Oonsus finally arrives in Metamor Valley.  Wrote it a while ago, but finally finished editing it to fix a few minor things and promised Radioactive Toast that I'd submit it as soon as he finished Preparing for Sacrifice.  Not quite as much of an epic as Toast's, but here it is

****

To Snare a Rabbit

****

Griff Sen stared anxiously up at his lord, Baron Fredrick the Pacific.
An age regress, the ruler of the Wyrd forest often took on the form of
a bald baby to amuse himself while sitting on the throne. At the
moment, he was bouncing up and down cheerfully, shaking his royal
scepter as if it were a giant baby rattle.
 
 "Your majesty, we need to talk," Griff repeated a second time, in an effort to get the baby baron's attention.
 

"What is it this time?" the baron demanded, suddenly shifting form into
a seven year old boy, who looked down on Griff with a scowl.
 

"I think I preferred you as a baby," Griff said, recoiling a step
backwards away from the angry baron. "You were more... cheerful..."
 
 "Ever seen an angry baby?" the now thirteen-year-old baron asked, his voice growing deeper.
 

"I beg you, for the love of Velena, not that again," Griff replied,
covering his face with his wings and letting out an exasperated sigh.
"I don’t want to deal with another one of your outbursts..."
 

Ever since the battle of Three Gates Griff had been forced to put up
with Baron Fred's intermittent temper tantrums. Even with all the other
things that frequently went wrong in Wyrd Forest, dealing with the
baron's fits was still Griff's least favorite part of being the chief
of the place guard—the second most powerful person in Wyrd forest after
the Baron himself.
 
 "Oh, trust me, you don't!" Baron Fredrick
said, suddenly bursting into a fit of manic laughter. "Do you remember
last week? You were practically begging me to end your life then and
there."
 
 As he laughed, he began to shift shape. Gradually he
morphed from a teenager laughing manically into a laughing, bouncing
baby. He stared at Griff while bouncing up and down chuckling as if he
had just heard the funniest joke in the world. Griff attempted to wait
patiently for the baron's fit to subside. When the baron had been
laughing for several minutes, however, and showed no signs of stopping,
Griff was again forced to intervene.
 
 "Your majesty, I said: 'We need to talk'" Griff insisted in a tone just servile enough not to be taken for insurrection.
 

"And I said, 'don't make me angry,'" Fredrick replied, morphing into a
teenager and raising his scepter angrily--as if threatening to bash
Griff with it.
 
 "Your emotions are not within my control," Griff said, not backing down this time.
 
 "Nor, apparently, is whatever you're about to announce you've done wrong," Baron Fredrick shot back.
 
 "I'm not here to get in an argument," Griff insisted.
 
 "Well then, why must you keep screwing UP!?" the baron demanded, his voice cracking with the first signs of puberty.
 

"Because the Wyrd Forest is not a magical kingdom where things can
always be counted on to go the way you want them to and never ever go
wrong," Griff said, apparently trying to give his liege lord a lesson
on the concept of reality.
 
 "Make it so!" Baron Fred replied, not missing a beat.
 

"I'm not some sort of god who can just will things into existence,"
Griff pleaded, beginning to lose his calm. "Who do you think I am?"
 
 "Who do you think I AM?" Baron Fredrick asked instead of giving an answer.
 

"You are my lord, and I have sworn to serve you to the best of my
ability for as long as I live," Griff answered, taking the words from
his sworn oath of loyalty to the baron.
 
 Instantly Griff's grip
on his emotions was restored. Being reminded of his duties was all it
took to erase any momentary feelings of frustration he might have felt
towards the baron. Griff was, after all, his lord's servant and to
execute his duties faithfully was the highest honor he could hope for.
 
 "Now then, where were we?" Fredrick asked, seeming to have gotten over his own temper-tantrum as well.
 
 "Something is not as you would wish," Griff replied soberly.
 
 "You can fix it?" Fredrick suggested.
 
 "I will do my best," Griff answered unhesitatingly.
 

"Your best is all I can ask of you," Baron Fredrick observed. "Do what
you can, though it should cost you your life." These words were taken
from the traditional reply to the oath in which Griff had sworn to
serve and obey the baron.
 
 "As I shall, your majesty," Griff said, bowing deeply. "As I shall."
 
 * * * * *
 

As he surveyed the palace guard, Griff Sen was disappointed to be
reminded that "What he could" amounted to nine-hells of a lot less than
it once had. The palace guard consisted of a couple of fat old women,
three rat-morphs, a raccoon, an age regress that never behaved as
though he was more than six, and a three-legged cow—the forth leg
having been chopped off when it was still a limb in some ancient
battle. Himself a eagle-morph, Griff guessed that he was the equal of
any three of the other “guards” on the worst day of his life. On a good
day in his taur-form, he could whup the whole lot in time for the
Baron's--generally late--breakfast.
 
 "Who of you wants to help me hunt down the vile thief Barhat?" Griff asked, looking for volunteers from among the palace guard.
 
 "I hear he's a dragon," one of the rats said--apparently not volunteering for the mission.
 
 "Scary! Scary!" the age regress--Tommy--reacted automatically.
 
 "He is not a dragon!" Griff countered. "I'm ninety-nine percent sure that he's a rabbit-morph..,."
 

"A rabbit?" one of the old women--transgender victims--observed
sarcastically. "You need our help to hunt down a rabbit? Don't eagles
eat rabbits in the wild? Why don't you just fly out and catch the
little hopper?"
 
 "Not a rabbit, a rabbit MORPH!" Griff shouted,
releasing some of the pent-up anger from his meeting with the baron.
"He's several hells of a lot bigger and quite a bit sneakier than any
real rabbit I've ever seen..."
 
 "You need our help to catch a rabbit," the raccoon-morph noted. "It's time to face the facts, Griff, you're losing your edge…"
 

"Aren't raccoon's supposed to be sneaky?" one of the rat-morphs pointed
out. "Why don't you help him run down this 'dangerous thief'?"
 
 "Not as sneaky as RATS!" the raccoon-morph shouted back.
 

The raccoon and the rat morph started to argue and looked as though
they would soon come to blows. Griff wanted out now. The entire barony
was falling apart--so it seemed. He certainly had better things to do
than spend his time keeping the palace guards from killing one-another.
 

"Okay, listen up!" Griff announced. "I'm going to go and catch the vile
thief Barhat by myself. Try and make sure the palace doesn't burn down
and that nobody enslaves the baron while I'm gone. Do you think you
could manage that?"
 
 "Will do, boss," the three-legged
cow-morph agreed, bowing his head in subservience. "Everything'll be
just fine while you go fight this dragon-rabbit-whatever-it-is..."
 

The three-legged cow had changed into its humanoid form in order to be
able to speak, and his missing leg had now morphed back into a missing
arm.
 
 "Good!" Griff said and then stormed out of the barracks where the palace guard lived. 
 

As soon as he was outside, Griff took flight. Fredrick's barony--Wyrd
Forest, as it was known--was small enough that Griff could see the
boundary while flying above the palace. At the time of the last census,
its population had been a little over a hundred. That had been before
the Battle of Three Gates, when the curse had afflicted all of Metamor
Valley, reducing the palace guard to their present condition. Griff
suspected that the population of Wyrd forest now consisted of less than
a hundred transgenders, animal-morphs and age-regresses. 
 

Griff couldn't help but observe that for such a small place, Wyrd
Forest had a surprisingly large number of problems. Last fall, a horde
of almost fifty lutins managed to make their way all the way across
Metamor Valley and attack Wyrd forest, which was located in the
southeast corner of the valley. Now, peasants were complaining about
attacks by a "Vile Thief Barhat and his band of villainry." If he even has a band of villainry, Griff thought to himself; one villain was more than enough to cause trouble for a barony this size.
 

After flying for only a few minutes, Griff started to descend towards
the place where Barhat had supposedly last struck. Observing the dismal
condition of the peasants' garden he was approaching, he could
understand why they were worried about losing their only cow. He
carefully inspecting the cow-shed for clues--of which there were none,
of course--and then approached the peasant family's ramshackle hut.
 

Griff knocked on the door and after a few moments later it was opened
by a middle-aged beaver-morph. Behind him stood two still-human
children. Griff guessed that the older of the two was still only seven
or eight, not yet old-enough to be affected by the curse.
 
 "Sir Sen!" the beaver-morph said excitedly, bowing with difficulty.
 
 "No need for all that formality," Griff said, shaking his head. "Call me Griff. Rumor has it your cow is missing?"
 

"Sir Sen... err... Griff, you can see plainly for yourself that it's
not there," the bever-morph said, pointing at the empty cow-shed.
 
 "And you claim that the Vile Thief Barhat took it?" Griff continued.
 

"Aye," the beaver-morph agreed, nodding his head; as he did so, the
rolls of loose fur below his chin shook in a most peculiar manner.
 
 "What evidence do you have that this thief, Barhat, took it?" Griff asked.
 
 "Well, who else would take it?" the peasant reasoned. "I mean... we get along well-enough with all our neighbors..."
 

Griff sighed. The hardest part about hunting down someone like Barhat
was determining whether or not he even existed. For all Griff knew,
Barhat was just a rumor made up by the peasants to explain their
missing things.
 
 "Well, I don't know, maybe it just wandered off," Griff suggested.
 

"Oh, no!" the peasant said, his fur jiggling violently as he shook his
head back and forth. "Ol' Sally would never run away on us. Besides, I
always double-check myself that the shed is locked before I go to bed."
 
 "By locked you mean...?" Griff asked, wondering how Barhat could get through a locked door without destroying it.
 
 When he had inspected the shed, Griff had seen no obvious signs of forced entry.
 
 "I wedge I stick up against the door real tight so that it won't open," the peasant explained.
 
 All of Griff's confusion immediately disappeared.
 
 "Maybe the stick... blew away?" Griff suggested.
 
 "Real tight!" the peasant insisted. "Like this!" 
 
 The peasant made a motion as if he was leaning up against something in order to force it into place.
 
 "I see," Griff said, not feeling any less sure about his stick-blowing-away theory.
 

"Oh Sir Sen... err, Griff, please bring Sally back safe! We've been
worried about her all day. Just imagining her in the hands of that vile
thief! The things he might do to her! Torture her! Even... eat her!"
 

"I assure you, the full force of Baron Fredrick's power has been put
behind this investigation," Griff replied. "I will stop at nothing
until this vile thief has been apprehended and your dear... Sally...
returned to you."
 
 "Oh! Thank-you!" the peasant beaver said, suddenly getting down on his hands and knees and kissing one of Griff's feet. 
 

"I told you, there's no need for that," Griff said, leaping backwards
as if he had stepped on a hot coal. "After all, I'm only doing my job
to keep Wyrd Forest safe..."
 
 When the beaver-morph showed no
sign of getting up, Griff walked away to inspect the cow-shed one more
time. True to the peasant's word, there was a stick lying in the mud in
front of the open door to the cow shed. The stick, however, was broken
in two. This solved one of Griff's problems, at least; he now knew--or
felt reasonably confident--that whoever or whatever had stolen Ol'
Sally was real.
 
 Inspecting the mud closely once more, Griff
searched for any footprints or other evidence the thief may have left
behind. A short rainstorm last night, however, had washed away any
prints the thief may have made. The only footprints were his own and
those left by the peasant tromping about the cow-shed this morning.
Despite this, Griff came away from the investigation with two definite
pieces of information. First of all, Barhat--or someone the peasants
were calling Barhat--was real. Second of all, he had a cow. The second
piece of information was crucial because it meant that Barhat couldn't
have traveled far between last night and this morning. All Griff had to
do was check all of the good hiding places within a night's walk at a
cow's pace from here and the thief would inevitably show up. Griff only
hoped that Barhat would wait a little while before slaughtering Sally,
or Griff would be forced to apologize to the peasant beaver-morph
nonetheless.
 
 * * * * *
 
 After taking flight, Griff
began to fly in an ever increasing circle around the peasant's hut. As
he flew, he scanned the ground with his super-human vision, looking for
anything that seemed out of place or anywhere he thought a thief might
be able to hide. To survey everything within a night's walk of the
peasant's farm would be both time-consuming and difficult. What was
more, there was no guarantee that Griff would be able to spot what he
was looking for from the air. Even still, it was his only serious lead
on the Vile Thief Barhat in weeks, and Griff had no better alternative
then to look around nearby for more clues. Fortunately, today Griff got
lucky.
 
 He hadn't been in the air for more than a few minutes
when Griff spotted something out-of-the-ordinary. There, cavorting
about in the field below him, Griff spotted a ten-year-old boy. While
spotting a small child in and of itself was not too unusual, Griff
immediately noticed a few other details that definitely were. For one
thing, the child was carrying a sword nearly as big as he was. For
another, the way he was swinging it suggested that the boy was doing
battle against a host of invisible antagonists.
 
 Griff slowly
descended towards the boy--so as to remained unnoticed--until he was
close enough to hear the boy's shouts as he swung the sword.
 

"Ha! Take that you fiendish brutes!" the boy shouted exuberantly as he
brought down the sword for an over-the-head blow. "I smite you in the
name of the almighty patriarch! Justice will not go long unavenged! To
judgment and then to hell with your heathen ways!"
 
 Griff
watched for a full five minutes as the boy continued to curse at his
unseen foes. Griff noticed two things almost immediately. First of all,
the boy was actually a rather talented swordsman. Second, he was quite
plainly insane.
 
 "You there!" Griff called out to the boy,
landing about twenty feet behind him and shifting into his half-human,
half-eagle form. "What is your name?"
 
 "I am Oonsus, defender
of the weak, protector of the downtrodden, champion of those in need,"
the boy replied, raising his sword above his head as if saluting some
unseen crowd.
 
 Doing so nearly doubled the boys height; the
sight of the small, rather frail-looking boy hoisting such a sword
aloft brought a chuckle to Griff's lips.
 
 "And pray, Oonsus, what are you doing cavorting about in this field so freely?" Griff continued his inquisition.
 

"I was just... doing battle against a host of... demons..." they boy
said, suddenly looking around. "Perhaps... you didn't… see them?"
 
 "Can't say that I did," Griff agreed, looking around the empty field with a look of amusement.
 

"But, of course you can't see them!" Oonsus quickly covered for
himself. "I had forgotten that the demons are invisible to all but a
knight pure in heart and noble in character..."
 
 "Are you
making insinuations against my character?" Griff demanded gruffly,
cutting Oonsus off as soon as it became obvious he was about to go into
a long and probably fictional explanation of his actions.
 
 "No,
of course not," Oonsus immediately corrected himself. "I would never...
I mean.... obviously you're a man... er half-man, half-bird.... err...
whatever... of exceptional character.... It's just... perhaps you have
not the heart of a true warrior..."
 
 At this Griff's moderate
amusement with the boy immediately dissolved. It was one thing for a
ten-year-old boy to suggest that someone like him might not be
perfect... but to insult his warrior's spirit….
 
 "That is
enough!" Griff announced, suddenly morphing into his eagle-taur form.
"Now you're just asking for trouble, kid; I'll show you who has the
heart of a warrior!"
 
 Griff and the boy--Oonsus--rushed towards
one another at the same moment, instantly engaging in a deadly clash.
Sword clashed against claw and beak in a clatter of sudden blows. For a
moment, judging by the boy's small size, Griff was tempted to go easy
on him. He had no intention of actually killing the boy--which would
undoubtedly sadden whichever local peasant was his father. Instead,
Griff attempted to strip Oonsus of his weapon. By the third blow,
however, Griff was forced to abandon his thoughts of going easy on the
kid; for a ten-year-old, the boy was both remarkably tough and
surprisingly talented with a blade.
 
 "You're an age-regress, aren't you?" Griff demanded, pulling away from the boy, panting.
 

Although his beak was nearly indestructible, there were cuts on his
claws where his scales had given way to the sword's slightly dull but
still dangerous blade. There was also a cut across his chest where he
had once failed to deflect a blow. They boy, too, was worse for the
wear, with several claw marks across his arms and chest, and one long,
bloody line running from his right ear to his chin.
 
 "You fight
well for a monster," the boy shouted in reply from where he
stood--about a dozen paces from Griff. "But know this, a knight
pure-in-heart can never be defeated by a mere beast..."
 
 At
this insult, Griff realized that the boy was almost certainly not from
Metamor. No one from the valley would have the impropriety to confuse
an animal-morph with a beast. The fact that Oonsus was not from
Metamor—much less Wyrd forest—meant two things to Griff: first, Griff
felt slightly less guilt about attacking the boy, and second, Oonsus
might very well be the Vile Thief Barhat.
 
 "Out with it Vile
Thief Barhat," Griff said, hoping to evince a confession from the by
using surprise. "Where have you hidden the cow that you stole from the
peasants last night. Answer me, and I may let you live..."
 

"Tell me where this vile thief is, that I may slay him!" Oonsus
replied, apparently either not understanding or ignoring the fact that
he had been accused of being Barhat. "For I am a defender of justice,
and the enemy of all who rob from the innocent."
 
 "He attacked
a peasant hut last night," Griff answered, wondering if he could take
advantage of the boy's proclaimed affinity for justice. "I have reason
to believe he may be hiding near here."
 
 Oonsus scratched his cheek for a moment as if deep in thought, apparently not noticing the fact that it was bleeding profusely.
 

"If he's hiding, there's a cave not too far from here that would make a
great hiding-place," Oonsus observed. "Perhaps we should investigate it
together...that is... if you too are a champion of justice..."
 
 "Your cheek is bleeding," Griff said, pointing out Oonsus's blood-covered fingers. 
 
 "Oh... um..." Oonsus pressed his sleeve to his cheek in an effort to stanch the bleeding.
 

"Here," Griff offered, picking a few leaves from a plant near his feet.
"If you put yarrow on the wound, it'll sting a little, but it should
stop the bleeding and keep it from getting infected.
 
 Oonsus accepted the yarrow leafs and pressed them against his cheek.
 
 "Now, where was that cave you mentioned?" Griff asked after a moment.
 
 "Follow me," the ten-year-old Oonsus said eagerly.
 
 * * * * *
 

After a several minute walk, Oonsus and Griff arrived at the entrance
of the promised cave. Although the downward-sloping tunnel was
several-feet across, it was well-concealed in a thicket of brush, and
Griff doubted that he would have seen it from the sky even with his
super-human vision. Discovering Oonsus had proved to be quite a stroke
of luck for Griff. Not only would Griff not have spotted the cave
without the boy's aid, but having Oonsus's sword by his side could
prove quite useful should Barhat prove unwilling to surrender without a
fight.
 
 All of Griff's warm-feelings towards Oonsus were of
course predicated on the assumption that Oonsus was not in fact the
Vile Thief Barhat. Although the peasants' reports had led Griff to
imagine that Barhat was a rabbit-morph, he hadn't entirely ruled out
the possibility that he was something else entirely. "Something else,"
was a category that naturally included an age-regress pretending to be
a child pretending to be a hero. Griff made a mental note to keep one
eye on Oonsus just in case he was Barhat and had something planned for
once they got inside the cave. Griff would be keeping his other eye
open on the lookout for the real Vile Thief Barhat. This left Griff
with a distressing lack of eyes to watch for anything else that might
go wrong, since like most people he possessed only two. He had met a
spider-morph once who actually had eight eyes, but the thought of
spending the rest of his life as a giant spider more than negated
Griff’s misgivings about having only two eyes.
 
 "It's kind of
dark in there," Oonsus said, a hint of surprise in his voice, as if he
hadn't contemplated the fact that it would be dark inside a cave before.
 
 "Here, take this," Barhat commanded, producing his last flameless torch from a pouch he kept strapped under his chest.
 

Flameless torches were one of the things that were perpetually in short
supply around Baron Fredrick's palace. The last court wizard had
literally vanished after the Battle of Three Gates. Griff's own theory
was that the magician was too embarrassed of turning into a woman or
child or whatever and had simply left. The Baron--in his more lucid
moments--preferred to imagine that the wizard had died fighting Nasoj
or some such nonsense. Whatever the reason, lacking a court wizard
meant that anything magical--like flameless torches, for example--had
to be bought at great expense from Metamor Keep. With money in short
supply, flameless torches --and everything else needed to keep a palace
running properly-- tended to be as well.
 
 "Woah! This is
amazing!" Oonsus said, wielding the flameless torch as if it were a
sword made out of light. "Take that!" Oonsus said, swinging the
light-sword at some invisible enemy. "I smite you in the name of Eli
with the light of the truth!"
 
 "Careful!" Griff hissed. "Those things are fragile!"
 

The last thing Griff wanted was to explain to Baron Fred that he had
been unable to capture the Vile Thief Barhat because his last flameless
torch had been broken by a ten-year-old boy. His words, however, went
unheeded by Oonsus who had already rushed off into the tunnel. Cursing
his own foolishness in giving the boy the torch, Griff had no choice
but to follow.
 
 The cave--whose entrance would have been barely
wide-enough to accommodate Ol' Sally-- soon widened. Stretching forward
like a tunnel, the cave was now more than twelve feet in diameter--more
than large enough to let in any number of cows. Griff searched the
ground for footprints, but the rocky cave-floor left no sign of anyone
who might had recently passed by .
 
 "Oonsus, slow down," Griff commanded, worrying that they might be running headlong into a trap.
 

Oonsus slowed for a moment, but was soon hurrying along deeper into the
cave as fast as ever. For such a large cave, Griff wondered why he had
never heard of it before. Surely some peasant must have peeked their
head into the thicket of brush in which it was hidden at some point in
time. There was, of course, the possibility that the cave was in fact a
tunnel, one which had been recently hewn. Noticing strange marks on the
cave-walls, this was a theory Griff began to indulge more and more. But
who would build such a tunnel, and why? Whoever they were, their
intentions towards Wyrd forest probably weren't friendly. Griff made a
mental note to alert Baron Fred concerning the tunnel as soon as they
were done exploring it.
 
 As the cave stretched on and on, Griff
grew more and more nervous. If it was man-made, it would have taken an
army of workers years to do so. An army was not something Wyrd Forest
was prepared to resist with it's meager complement of nine palace
guards--counting Griff himself. To his relief, Griff noted that the
cave began to look more natural as they ventured further in. Only the
first part had appeared manmade. Deep as they were now, the cave
appeared truly wild. stalactites and stalagmites covered the floor and
ceiling and different tunnels ran off in various directions. With so
many possible paths, Griff wondered how Oonsus knew which way to go.
Then Griff realized that he probably didn't.
 
 "Oonsus, slow down!" Griff commanded for a second time. "We need to figure out which way we're going..."
 
 "This is the right way, I'm sure," Oonsus replied casually.
 
 "How can you possibly know that?" Griff demanded.
 

"Um..." Oonsus looked around in confusion, as if hoping for proof of
his claim to magically appear before his eyes. "Look! A hoof print!"
 

Griff rushed forward to investigate. True to Oonsus's word, there was
indeed a silt-filled puddle on the cave floor where Oonsus stood with a
remarkably well-preserved hoof print in the middle of it.
 
 "You said this thief stole a cow, right?" Oonsus reminded Griff. "Well, that is the cow's footprint."
 

Griff felt slightly annoyed at Oonsus's incredible luck. What were the
chances that he would spot a hoof-print just in time to prove himself
to Griff. Had there been other foot-prints that Oonsus had been
following the whole time? Griff realized for the umpteenth time that he
had no idea who Oonsus really was or what sorts of talents he might
possess.
 
 "Which way now?" Griff asked, staring ahead at where the cave divided into two equally-sized tunnels.
 
 "I... don't... know," Oonsus confessed, appearing just as confused now as he had seemed sure of himself only moments ago.
 

Griff and Oonsus stared down the two tunnels, as if hoping for a sign
to suddenly appear and show them which one they should go down. Peering
by the light of the flameless torch, they could only see a little ways.
Both tunnels appeared roughly equivalent. They were about the same size
and lined with the same reddish-brown rock that made up the entire
tunnel system. Griff glanced down at the floor hoping more footprints
would lead the way, but up ahead the cave-floor again became rocky and
there were almost certainly no prints.
 
 "Split up?" Oonsus suggested. "You go left, I go right?"
 

"No," Griff disagreed. "We shouldn't let ourselves get separated and we
don't have two torches. Besides, what would we do when we came to the
next split in the tunnel.. divide ourselves in two?"
 
 "You can do that?" Oonsus asked in amazement, staring at Griff with wide-eyes.
 

"Of course..." Griff cut himself before the word 'not' for no
particular reason. "Oh... well, never mind about that..." Griff said,
wondering whether it was actually possible for Oonsus to believe such a
thing. The young boy's imaginations seemed to face no bounds.
 

"Let's go this way," Oonsus suggested after staring at Griff in
amazement for a few more minutes; he pointed down the tunnel to the
right.
 
 "Why that way?" Griff asked, still seeing no reason to prefer one tunnel over the other.
 
 "Just feels right," Oonsus said shrugging his shoulders.
 

Griff saw no reason to disagree; Oonsus's intuitions had been right so
far and they really didn't have anything better to go on. Besides, it
wasn't like Griff had much of a choice. Oonsus had already run off down
the tunnel, taking the torch—the only source of light—with him.
 

Griff hurried after Oonsus, meekly resigning himself to the fate of
being led around an unknown cave by a ten-year-old boy in search of a
dangerous thief. As they pressed deeper and deeper into the cave, the
number of tunnels seemed to multiply. Several times they were forced to
pick a tunnel to follow based purely on Oonsus's intuition. Oonsus was
hurrying through the cave so fast that Griff barely even had a chance
to look for evidence that someone had recently been there. Only once
did he imagine that he spotted something vaguely resembling a
footprint. The more he thought about it, the more Griff began to wonder
if they might not be running into a deathtrap. 
 
 "Slow down!" Griff called as Oonsus veered around a corner. "We need to be more..."
 

Griff's words were suddenly cut off as he too rounded the corner and
nearly ran into the back of Oonsus. What silenced him, however, was not
so much nearly running into Oonsus as the reason Oonsus had come to a
stop. In the middle of the chamber ahead of them lay Sally the cow. Or
rather, what remained of her. Also in the middle of the room was a
large centipede-like creature tearing fist-sized chunks out of the
cow's remains with its massive jaws and swallowing them whole with a
particularly disgusting slurping noise.
 
 "Poor Sally..." Griff said, staring at the scene with a feeling of disbelief.
 
 "To hell with you, foul demon! From whence you came!" Oonsus cried out suddenly.
 

Oonsus appeared to have overcome his initial hesitation and was now
charging towards the creature with sword-raised. Upon seeing Oonsus,
the creature rose up on its back feet, easily parrying Oonsus's first
sword-blow using its jaws alone. Raised up on its back legs, the
creature was at least twice as tall as Oonsus in a fight that Griff
couldn't help but feel the boy was bound to lose.
 
 "Oonsus! Fall back!" Griff shouted, his voice blending with the echoing sounds of battle as boy and beast clashed.
 

For a moment or two, Griff merely watched as sword and jaw clashed. It
reminded him of his own fight with Oonsus only an hour or two ago.
Again Oonsus's deftness with a sword surprised Griff. With the
centipede-like creature towering at least twice Oonsus's height,
however, it was clear who had the advantage. If Griff didn't step it,
it would be only moments before the centipede managed to land a
decisive blow with its massive jaws.
 
 Morphing into his
taur-form, Griff rushed forward to join the fight on Oonsus's side.
When Oonsus stepped back for a second, Griff launched himself towards
the centipede-like monster, grappling its jaws with his two front
claws. The two struggled for a moment, locked in a battle of strength
and will. For a second, Griff dared imagine that he might gain the
upper hand, but then noticed his footing slipping on the loose-rock
covered in cow's blood that was the cave-floor. The centipede shook its
upper body violently, breaking Griff's grip and throwing him backward.
Immediately it lunged forward for the killing-blow, only to find
Oonsus's blade between it and Griff's exposed chest.
 
 Griff
scrambled to his feet and rushed towards the creature's side. Finding a
vulnerable spot between the plates of its exoskeleton, Griff dug in his
claws and tore. The centipede let out a terrifying, animalistic roar
and turned its head to snap at Griff. Griff pulled out and caught the
creature's jaw with one claw just in time to avoid having his neck cut
in two. The centipede-like creature suddenly scurried backwards, giving
Oonsus and Griff a second to breath.
 
 In that second, Griff noticed that the flickering light coming from another tunnel was growing stronger.
 
 "There's more of them coming!" Griff shouted to Oonsus. "We have to retreat!"
 
 "We can't flee from battle," Oonsus contradicted. "It's not honorable!"
 
 "We have no choice!" Griff practically screeched in reply.
 

Grabbing Oonsus with one claw and throwing into his back, Griff hurried
out of the chamber as fast as his feet would carry him, snatching up
the flameless-torch on his way out.
 
 "Why are we running?" Oonsus demanded from atop Griff's back as they ran.
 
 "I told you!" Griff replied. "There's more than one of those things... We need reinforcements!"
 
 "Where are we going to get reinforcements?" Oonsus asked. "What if they get away in the meantime?"
 
 "Right now I'm more worried about us getting away," Griff attempted to explain.
 

It was then that Griff realized that he hadn't the least idea which was
the right way out of the cave. He tried to follow what seemed like the
way they had come, but with all the twists and turns, it was hard to
tell. In addition, Oonsus's question had been a valid one and was
already pressing on his mind. He felt certain there weren't enough
fighting men in Wyrd Forest to take out an entire colony of
centipede-monsters. Perhaps he could appeal to Duke Thomas for aid from
among Metamor Keep's fighting men. Then again, Wyrd forest hadn't
exactly been good about paying tribute recently, so aid from the Duke
was not guaranteed.
 
 Griff stared ahead at two tunnels, not
sure whether he should go left or right. Behind, he imagined he could
hear the sound of someone following them.
 
 "Which way?" Griff asked Oonsus.
 
 "Right!" Oonsus said and then pointed at the left-hand tunnel.
 

Rather than wait and ask Oonsus to make up his mind, Griff decided to
simply trust Oonsus's hand and not his head. Judging from Griff's past
experience with the boy, this was the right decision. After all,
Oonsus's head had done nothing but spout nonsense from the moment Griff
had met him. His hand, however, had proved more than adept at
sword-fighting, something Griff hoped might spill over into other
useful talents as well.
 
 Taking the left-hand tunnel, Griff
told Oonsus to turn around and keep watch behind them as he ran. Oonsus
struggled for a few moments to reposition himself on the eagle-taur's
back without falling off. It was only after a minute or two that he
stopped struggling and grabbing onto Griff's neck so hard that Griff
was nearly choked. After watching for a short time, he reported that
there appeared to be nothing following behind them. Feeling ever so
grateful, Griff slowed his run to a walk.
 
 "You can get off and walk anytime now," Griff suggested to Oonsus, who was still riding on his back.
 

Obediently, Oonsus slipped off of Griff's back and started walking
alongside him. As they walked, Griff couldn't help but feel as if a
certain degree of camaraderie had developed between the two of them.
They had, after all, explored a dangerous cave and fought side-by-side,
and both had saved the other's life. 
 
 "You fought well back there," Griff said to Oonsus warmly.
 
 "You too," Oonsus agreed, giving Griff (who had morphed back into his humanoid-form) a pat on the arm.
 

The two walked wordlessly down a tunnel that was growing less and less
familiar. Griff would have felt better if the tunnel was the one they
had come from, but it was heading uphill, so he hoped it would lead to
daylight sooner-or-later. Of course it was impossible to see further
than about forty-feet by the light of the flameless torch disregarding
the many twists-and-turns that the tunnel they were in took so he had
no real way of knowing if they were headed in the right direction.
 
 Coming to a fork in the tunnel, Oonsus bent down and picked it up.
 
 "What is this doing here?" Oonsus asked, holding the fork close to the torch for inspection.
 
 "Here, let me see," Griff said, taking the fork from Oonsus.
 

One of the peasants living in Wyrd Forest had reported having a set of
silver cutlery stolen only a few nights ago. Curiously, the thief had
taken only the peasants' forks and knives, leaving them with all of
their spoons. Griff just so happened to have asked the peasants for one
of the spoons so he could compare it to any forks he might find. He now
retrieved this same spoon from the pouch attached to his chest. Holding
fork and spoon side-by-side, there was no doubting that they had once
belonged to the same set of silverware.
 
 "Barhat!" Griff cursed loudly. "So he's been using this cave as a hiding-place all-along..."
 
 "Is Barhat that monster we fought in the chamber?" Oonsus asked.
 

"I don't think so," Griff shook his head. "According to one of my
eyewitnesses, Barhat was a rabbit.... Although there are also rumors
going around that he's a dragon, I find that highly unlikely...."
 
 "Why?" Oonsus asked.
 

"Dragons are extremely rare and extremely long-lived," Griff explained.
"The chance of one of them going unnoticed in these caves for a
substantial period of time... why... it's preposterous!"
 
 "Then
what do you think's making that glow?" Oonsus asked, pointing down the
tunnel they had just come from where a faint glow was becoming visible.
 
 "Whoever or whatever we fought in that chamber back there," Griff suggested. "Hurry! Run for it!"
 

Griff transformed back into his eagle-taur form, and Oonsus leapt onto
his back. He was holding the flameless torch in one hand and the fork
and spoon in the other. Oonsus wrapped his arms around Griff's neck
tightly and Griff took off at a sprint. As they fled, Oonsus repeatedly
looked backwards over his shoulders. Occasionally he would report that
the light following them had grown dimmer, then that it had grown
brighter. Suddenly Oonsus made an announcement that induced to Griff to
run even faster than he had thought possible.
 
 "It's a dragon!" Oonsus announced excitedly. "We're being chased by a dragon!"
 

Only a minute ago, Griff had denounced the possibility of a dragon
living in these tunnels as an impossibility. Given the number of
strange events that had occurred today, however, Griff was no longer
willing to dismiss Oonsus's proclamation as pure fantasy. That morning,
Griff had gone out rabbit-hunting. Subsequently, he had fought with a
boy, a giant centipede, and he was now being chased by a dragon. As
Griff dodged down a tunnel at the end of which he felt sure he could
smell fresh air coming from he was beginning to believe that the day
could not possibly become any worse. 
 
 When he spotted
daylight, Griff hurried his pace even more, if that was at all
possible. As soon as he was outside of the tunnel, he took wing and
shot up into the air--straight into the hands of a waiting giant. Griff
had been wrong; things could get worse.
 
 * * * * *
 

Griff struggled against the crushing strength of the giant's grip. In
the distance he could hear Oonsus--who had been transferred to the
giant's other hand--screaming violently Griff fought for a moment to
break free from the imprisoning walls of the giant's fist, but soon
gave up, realizing it was almost certainly futile.
 
 Griff now
lay placidly in the giant's enormous fist and attempted to resign
himself to fate. In doing so, he reflected back on his life. It had
been a prosperous one at the beginning. Becoming the head of Baron
Fredrick the Pacific's royal guard at a young age, he and his family
held high hopes for the future. Even before the Battle of Three Gates,
however, it had been obvious that things were headed downhill. Baron
Fredrick proved not to have the genius and initiative that his father
had possessed, Wyrd forest was gradually becoming an unimportant
backwater, and short of applying for transfer to Metamor Keep, Griff
had few ways out. The Battle of Three Gates and subsequent confusion
had only hastened the decline, soon reducing Wyrd Forest to the
pathetic state in which it now languished. Griff's family, too, had
been destroyed. His father had died in the battle--one in which he was
too old to fight-- and his mother and sister had both gone insane and
were never heard of after the curse took its hold over them. After all
that, Griff thought to himself, death couldn't be much of a
disappointment. After all, it wasn't as if he had much further to fall
from where he now stood.
 
 As the giant momentarily tightened
his grip, nearly crushing Griff's ribcage, Griff decided to reconsider
the idea that he had nothing left to lose. He vaguely remembered
someone once mentioning a proverb about a live dog and a dead lion that
now came to mind. Suddenly, Oonsus's muffled voice emerged from the
giant's other fist.
 
 "Prepare yourself, foul monster," Oonsus
shouted just loud enough that Griff could hear him. "For I shall
destroy you out of my unbreakable commitment to justice!"
 

Although now was hardly the time, Griff suddenly felt an overwhelming
urge to roll his eyes sarcastically. And then, to Griff's complete
amazement, the giant responded to Oonsus's barely-audible threat.
 

"But.. but...." the giant stammered, clearly unable to control its
emotions. "But Gath don't want to be destroyed! Not Gath's fault he got
lost in the mountain passages! All Gath want is to go home! Gath no
want unbreakable juices! Gath want help!"
 
 And then the
giant--whose name was apparently Gath--dropped both Griff and Oonsus
and pressed his hands to his face to hold back a river of tears. Griff
was so surprised that he barely had time to spread his wings in order
to slow his fall before hitting the ground. Landing with a thud, Griff
slowly backed away from the giant, who was now crying so loudly that
Griff found it difficult to hear himself think.
 
 Griff now
spotted Oonsus, who had landed near Gath's left foot and appeared
substantially unharmed. Rather than running away as Griff had, however,
the boy appeared to be pounding on the giant's toe and shouting
something up at it. Griff raced over to Oonsus and attempted to drag
him away from the giant.
 
 "Let it go," Griff said. "Even if you
scared it, there's no way we could take on something this size... well,
maybe if I flew you and we went for its eyes... but... it's not worth
our time. Come on! Let's get out of here!"
 
 Griff was unsure how much of his speech Oonsus was able to hear over the giant's unbearably loud crying.
 

"Didn't... hear!?" Oonsus screamed just loud enough that Griff could
make out every other word. "We... have... hurt... we... to ...it!"
 
 "We what!?" Griff shouted back, unable to understand Oonsus.
 
 "Hell... it!" Oonsus explained.
 
 "WHAT!?" Griff demanded, not understanding the words that were coming out of Oonsus's lips.
 
 "HELP IT!" Oonsus shouted at the top of his lungs so that Griff could just barely understand.
 
 "You're crazy!" Griff shouted back and then turned to go.
 

Griff walked a few paces before turning around and realizing that
Oonsus was still pounding on the giant Gath's toe. Ignoring the
recklessly foolish boy, Griff determined to continue on his way.
Suddenly the giant reached down, and scooping up the young boy lifted
Oonsus towards his mouth. Pushing aside his reservations about fighting
a giant--and a large one at that--Griff took wing. It wasn't as though
Griff's conscience would allow him to let Gath eat Oonsus (who had
saved his life less than an hour ago) without a fight.
 
 Guess I'll go for the eyes,
Griff thought as he streaked through the air towards the giant, who was
now holding Oonsus within a hand's breadth of his mouth. A giant's
hand-breadth albeit. As he dove towards Gath's left eye, claws
extended, however, he noticed that Oonsus was not screaming in terror
as Griff would have expected. Instead, the boy was talking with the
giant.
 
 "Where are you from?" Oonsus asked in a perfectly calm tone of voice.
 

"North... me think," Gath answered in a booming voice, the force of
which pushed Griff several feet backwards as he attempted to hover in
place. "I not really sure," the giant continued. "Me got lost..."
 

"You must be from the Giantdowns," Oonsus reasoned. "I'm from the Outer
Midlands.... My name's Oonsus Koguja, by the way.... what's yours?"
 
 Griff was surprised that even Oonsus could have forgotten the giant's name already.
 
 "Me Gath Djilla," the giant boomed in reply.
 
 This time Griff had braced himself and was not blown back quite as far.
 
 "It's a pleasure to meet you, mister Gath Djilla, sir," Oonsus said excitedly.
 

Griff continued to hover a few yards away from Gath's head, not at all
sure what to make of the ongoing conversation. Only a moment ago, he
had felt quite sure that Gath was planning to eat Oonsus and now the
two of them were conversing politely.
 
 "Me glad meet you, too," Gath replied. "You help me get home?"
 

Griff was again caught off guard by the sudden excitement in Gath's
voice and was blown back several yards. Hovering at a distance, he
listened for a moment longer as the boy and giant continued to talk and
then turned to go.
 
 "Of course I'll help you," Oonsus replied without hesitation.
 
 Oonsus--or so it appeared to Griff--had already picked up a new adventure. I have to take care of Wyrd Forest, Griff thought to himself. Leave the boy and the giant to their adventures...
Neither Gath nor Oonsus seemed to notice as Griff gradually drifted
farther and farther away from the two of them. Griff shouted a distant,
unheard goodbye, and then turned towards the walls of the canyon they
were in.
 
 As he gained a better feeling for their surroundings,
Griff realized that he and Oonsus had emerged into a box-canyon. Walled
on either side by towering cliffs, a narrow valley--one just big enough
for Gath to have wandered through--lead out of the valley in the
direction of the Great Barrier Range. Gath must have wandered through
some unknown pass to arrive at this place from the Giantdowns, Griff
reasoned to himself.
 
 Rising up over the canyon walls, it took
Griff only a few minutes to orient himself. The canyon, he realized,
lay just beyond the foothills of the great barrier range that marked
the eastern boundary of Wyrd Forest. It would only be a short flight
for Griff to return to the palace and warn the baron of the menace
hiding in the cave that Oonsus had revealed to him. It would be a
simple matter to seal off the cave. Or, if that didn't work, to have a
contingent of soldiers from Metamor Keep flush it clean of whatever
terrors lay within. Griff had already battled what he now realized must
be a centipede-morph, and Oonsus had testified to seeing a dragon in
the cave as well. Although it was likely that the dragon existed only
in Oonsus's hyperactive imagination, Griff didn't think it was beyond
the ability of Metamor Keep to deal with one if it did exist. It was
hardly the sort of thing that could be handled by the Wyrd Forest
palace guard, however.
 
 On his way back to Baron Fredrick's
palace, Griff suddenly realized that he should probably stop back at
the peasant's hut and relate to them the fate of their dear Ol' Sally.
Griff spiraled downward towards the dismal shack in which the
beaver-morph and his family lived. Practically landing on the peasants'
doorstep, Griff morphed into his humanoid form and rapped on the door.
Normally he would have worried about no one being home, but it was late
enough that he reasoned the peasants should have returned home for
their supper already.
 
 After a few moments, a particularly humble-looking beaver opened the door.
 
 "Why, mister... Sen," the beaver said, stumbling over his words. "What... what'a.... surprise to see....see you... again..."
 
 "I'm afraid I have some bad news," Griff said darkly.
 
 "W--won't you come... in... and have a bit... a bit to... eat?" the beaver offered, now trembling from head-to-toe.
 
 Griff was confused by the beaver's terror. Earlier he had been overly respectful, but hadn't seemed afraid of Griff.
 

"Oh, no, I'm on my way back to the palace," Griff said. "I just wanted
to stop and tell you what I found out... about... Ol'... your cow..."
 
 "You must come in," the beaver pleaded. "I... in--insis--t..."
 

"Very well then," Griff conceded, not exactly sure how he wanted to
break the news about the cow's death. "But only for a minute... I have
some important news I must relay to Baron Fredrick."
 

"Im--important news?" the beaver said, taking Griff by the hand and
pulling him inside. "But... how important.... could it... be? It's..
only...a.. cow."
 
 Something about the beaver's trembling and
his sudden lack of care for his once beloved Ol' Sally just didn't add
up. For a moment Griff resisted the beaver's urgings to come inside,
but then the beaver--who was surprisingly strong--literally pulled him
though the door. Once Griff was inside, the door was slammed shut by an
unseen hand, leaving him surrounded by darkness. There was no fire in
the fireplace, and the only light in the shack came from the dim
evening light that filtered through holes in the home's poorly-built
walls.
 
 "Who's there?" Griff demanded and sensing danger morphed into his taur form.
 

"I think I should ask that question," an ominous voice whispered in the
darkness. "But, I think that I already know.... After all, the
investigator always returns to the scene of the crime; don't you, Griff
Sen?"
 
 "I think you mean the criminal always returns to the
scene of the crime," Griff replied and then suddenly realized who he
must be talking to. "Barhat!" he shouted. "You cannot escape the
clutches of justice forever!"
 
 "I believe it is my clutches you
will find difficult to escape," the whispering voice replied. "You did
so once, but don't think I'll let you do it again... not when you know
where my secret hiding-place is... speaking of which, were is the boy?"
 

Griff knew better than to answer the question. Instead, he bared his
claws and lunged towards the source of the whispering voice. 
 

Somehow the voice dodged and then retaliated. The Last thing Griff felt
was the heavy wooden club crashing into the back of his head.
 
 * * * * *
 

Griff Sen regained consciousness to a sharp throbbing pain in the back
of his head. His ankles and wrists also burned as if they had been
rubbed raw by constant abrasion. He also felt slightly disoriented. As
he grew more alert, Griff realized that this was because he was hanging
by his hands and feet. 
 
 Griff flailed against the ropes binding his hands and feet in an effort to break free.
 

"I wouldn't do that if I were you," an unseen voice commanded; it was
the same one as from the peasant beaver's shack. "Look where you're
hanging before you take the plunge..."
 
 Twisting his neck
around, Griff could just see out of the corner of his eye a flicker of
flame coming from under what smelled like a cauldron of boiling soup. A
second ago, Griff had been wondering if he could cut the ropes with his
claws if he morphed. Now he realized that wasn't such a good idea.
 

"Yes, you see it now, don't you?" the unseen voice said with obvious
delight in his voice. "We're making ourselves a bit of a soup... and
you're.. the main... INGREDIENT!"
 
 Panic raced through Griff's
head. He suddenly remembered the image of Ol' Sally, torn to pieces by
the giant centipede he and Oonsus had battled earlier. Was he to share
the fate of the cow he had failed to rescue earlier?
 
 "You're a monster!" Griff accused the unseen voice.
 

"Me?" the voice replied defensively. "I'm just the chef... a mere
master of the culinary arts... an artist, if I may say so myself. It's
my friend here who has a taste for rare treats, such as... eagle
soup..."
 
 "The centipede morph," Griff inferred.
 

"GIANT centipede morph," the unseen voice corrected Griff. "Surely you
noticed he was more than six inches long when you fought him, didn't
you?"
 
 "More like six feet," Griff agreed.
 
 "Six feet
of very hungry centipede that needs to be fed fairly frequently," the
voice said with a bit of an amused chuckle. "And you... will have.. to
do."
 
 "I won't do it!" Griff exclaimed.
 
 Griff
struggled against his bonds more violently than before. He guessed that
the pot below him probably wouldn't burn him instantly. If he could get
free, at least he had a fighting chance. Not much of a chance, Griff
thought grimly, as both the unseen voice and the centipede had already
bested him in a fight once already.
 
 "Oh, and good luck with
those ropes," the unseen voice said. "I'm afraid you'll find them
unlikely to break, even if you had a knife handy, which I was careful
to make sure you don't... wouldn't want my friend's meal to get away,
now would I?"
 
 Griff suddenly realized that the pack he normally kept strapped to his chest was now missing.
 

"So long as I'm not going to be living much longer, I don't suppose I
could have the privilege of seeing the face of the Vile Thief Barhat
once before I die, could I?" Griff asked. 
 
 "I suppose... I couldn't deny the dying wish of a condemned man, now could I?" the voice conceded after a moment's hesitation.
 

A second later, a creature stepped into Griff's field of vision.
Although it was difficult to see any details by firelight, the outline
of Barhat's rounded body and floppy ears were undoubtedly those of a
rabbit.
 
 "A rabbit, so I was right," Griff said upon seeing Barhat. "Didn't think your kind had much taste for meat, though..."
 

"If I've told you once, I've told you a thousand times," Barhat
replied, placing his hands on his hips impudently. "The soup... err...
you... are for my centipede friend, Munus."
 
 "Munus?" Griff
said, somewhat surprised. "He has a name? I wasn't even aware that he
could talk.... he's hardly as talkative as you, to say the least..."
 

"I'm afraid the curse has taken away his tongue," Barhat admitted. "He
does still screech furiously from time-to-time when he feels
particularly riled.... He hissed at me for almost an hour after you and
that... boy... disturbed his meal. Guess it affected his
digestion. Speaking of which, were is the boy? I rather hoped he might
come for you sooner or later... only real reason I've been keeping you
alive... although... I suppose he has no way of knowing... may as well
cook you now...."
 
 With that unceremonious speculation, Barhat
suddenly reached for a rope tied down to a large rock and loosened it,
letting out a few inches of rope. Griff felt himself plunge a towards
the bubbling vat beneath him. He could feel the steam wafting up
towards his body and felt as if he was already being cooked alive. At
the same time, Barhat reached into a jar on the floor and, retrieving a
potato from the jar, tossed it into the pot of boiling water. Griff
winced as super-hot water splashed onto his back and neck.
 

"Wait!" Griff said, suddenly feeling a desire to save his own life.
"Isn't there something you'd accept in exchange for freeing me? I'm
sure that Baron Fredrick would pay you handsomely for returning the
head of his palace guard...."
 
 "Bah!" Barhat scoffed. "If I set
you free, you'd just come back after me... probably with reinforcements
from Metamor Keep. Besides, you and I both know that our dear Baron
Fred is completely broke.... At this point, I've stolen pretty much
everything of value that remains in Wyrd Forest.... Been thinking of
moving on to more fertile pasture for weeks now."
 
 "But... you'll never get away with this!" Griff shrieked, realizing at the same time how utterly pathetic he sounded.
 

"But I already have,” Barhat pointed out. “At this point, it would be
more trouble for me to free you than to cook you…. For one thing, I’d
have to figure out how to get you down without dropping you in the pot
beneath you.”
 
 Then, as if to reinforce his point, he let out
another few inches of rope. Griff plunged precariously towards the pot
of boiling soup and then came to a sudden stop, the rope tearing at his
wrists and ankles as he did.
 
 There was nothing else left,
then, Griff was going to have to fight his way out of this. If only he
could figure out a way how. Again Griff struggled against the ropes
holding him and grasped at them with his claws.
 
 "I've told you
already," Barhat said, chuckling as he watched Griff struggle. "There's
no way short of magic you're going to break free of those ropes..."
 
 I still have one last chance,
Griff thought to himself. He must have morphed back into his humanoid
form while unconscious. If he tried morphing into his taur-form, he
would have a free pair of claws to untie the rope. If that failed, or
if Barhat dropped him into the soup before he could break free, there
was no chance for his salvation.
 
 Deciding that there was no
time like the present, Griff at once morphed into his taur form and
began slashing at the ropes with the pair of claws that appeared
between his arms and legs. Unsurprisingly, the ropes did not give way
and four of his six limbs remained as tightly bound as ever. Barhat's
promise, then, remained valid. To Griff's surprise, Barhat made no
motion to lower the rope and drop him into the soup. Instead, the
rabbit remained as he was, staring at the struggling eagle-taur and
laughing out loud.
 
 "You think I'm going to shorten your
suffering just because you kick and scream a little?" Barhat asked; the
firelight revealed a look of obvious delight on his face. “I’ll have
you know that you—and this damned valley—have given me quite a bit of
trouble. I wasn’t always like this you know. Had a home and a family.
But once I wandered into this damn valley and morphed into… this… well,
I could never go back.”
 
 Griff said nothing but continued to tear at the rope with his claws.
 

"You and this valley have taken my entire life,” Barhat continued. “So,
no, I’m not going to let you go easy. I'm going to cook you one inch at
a time until you beg for mercy.”

 "From a thief and a coward who
hides in caves and steals from peasants?" Griff said, having just
enough mental capacity to form this insult. "I'd sooner die than give
you the satisfaction..."
 
 "What about that bit earlier when you said the Baron would ransom you?" Barhat pointed out.
 
 "That wasn't begging; it was negotiating," Griff shot back.
 
 "I like to call negotiations where one party is hanging helplessly over a fire...begging," Barhat replied without missing a beat. "How about I lower the rope another inch and see if you scream?"
 

Barhat let out another section of rope and Griff again plunged
downward. This time, the back of his head--now the lowest part of his
body--came into contact with the scalding hot water. He snatched it
away instantly, suppressing a desire to scream. Barhat seemed
unimpressed by Griff's resolve, instead reaching for another potato to
throw into the pot.
 
 "Aww, did the poor little birdie get burned?" Barhat said patronizingly as the potato splashed boiling hot water onto Griff.
 
 Griff refused to give Barhat the pleasure of hearing his reply.
 

Griff gave one last frantic tug against the ropes binding his arms and
two of his legs. At the same time, Barhat reached out for the rope
again, undoubtedly to let out more rope and begin the slow process of
cooking Griff alive. Before he could let loose another section of rope,
however, he was stopped by a voice in the background.
 
 "Hold it right there, you vile fiend!" came the all-to-familiar voice.
 

"Oonsus!" Griff called out in surprise, unsure of whether to thank the
boy for coming or scold him for putting himself in such danger.
 
 "Hold what?" Barhat asked, looking at Oonsus with an appearance of supreme innocence on his face.
 
 "That's my friend!" Oonsus shouted. "Let him go!"
 
 Griff visibly winced. Oonsus's choice of words had been unfortunate, and Griff had no doubts as to what Barhat would do next.
 
 "Okay," Barhat said generously.
 

Pulling a previously unnoticed knife from is waist, he slashed through
the rope supporting Griff in a single fluid moment. Griff experienced a
single moment of panic and then searing pain as he was doused in a pot
of boiling hot soup.
 
 "AAAAAGGGGHHHH!" Griff let out a scream of pain as he clamored to grasp the edge of the pot with his two free claws.
 
 "Griff!" Oonsus said, charging towards Barhat and the pot containing Griff with sword drawn. "Don't worry, I'll save you."
 

Barhat took one look at the angry, sword-wielding boy and sprinted out
of the room as fast as his rabbit-feet would take him. Ignoring
Barhat's flight, Oonsus reached for the pot containing Griff and with
his bare hands tipped it over with a single shove.
 
 Griff,
along with the other contents of Barhat's quite possibly delicious
soup, spilled out onto the cave floor. Still bound, Griff writhed on
the cave floor until Oonsus cut through the rope binding his hands and
lower feet with his sword. Morphing back into his humanoid form, Griff
attempted to thank Oonsus.
 
 "thank... I mean... I appreciate... well... you shouldn't have... err... I'm glad you..." Griff struggled for words.
 

Oonsus seemed too enfixed by staring at his badly-burned hands to
notice anything the eagle-morph was saying. The pot being much hotter
than the soup inside, Oonsus's hands had suffered far worse than Griff,
who had been in the water for only seconds.
 
 "I have something that should help that," Griff said, noticing Oonsus's hands.
 

Looking around, Griff was relieved to see his pouch lying on the
cave-floor. Picking it up, he strapped it back onto his chest.
Rummaging through it, he pulled out a bottle of salve that had been
blessed by the Lightbringers of Metamor Keep. It was incredibly
powerful, and therefore incredibly expensive as well; Griff guessed
that it would cost about two months of his present salary to replace
the bottle.
 
 "Here, try putting some of this on your hands," Griff offered, handing the bottle to Oonsus.
 
 "Thanks!" Oonsus replied.
 

Holding the bottle by the cap he unscrewed it. Predictably, as soon as
the cap came off, the bottle fell to the ground, shattering on the
rocky cave floor.
 
 "Oops," Oonsus said, looking at the puddle of greenish-gray goo on the ground.
 
 Griff repressed an overwhelming desire to curse.
 

"Here... I can fix it," Oonsus said, kneeling down and trying to
collect most of the liquid in his hands before it seeped into the cave
floor.
 
 "Just... never mind," Griff said, pulling Oonsus away from the puddle. "Rub your hands together to soak it in a little."
 

Oonsus rubbed his hands together and smiled in apparent delight as the
healing potion took affect. Griff had forgotten that the potion also
had mild euphoric qualities. In less than a minute the burns on
Oonsus's hands were completely healed. Griff's own claws still shivered
with the pain of having recently been scalded. 
 
 "Why did you
come back in here?" Griff asked suddenly, deciding to put forth the
question that had been on his mind for the last several minutes. "How
did you know I was in danger?"
 
 "The Dragon told me," Oonsus replied matter-of-factly.
 
 "Dragon?" Griff asked, either not understanding or refusing to believe.
 
 "The same one that was chasing us before," Oonsus attempted to explain.
 
 "The dragon... that was chasing us... told you I was in danger...?" Griff asked skeptically.
 

"Yeah," Oonsus agreed. "And it even gave me directions. You see, before
I thought that it was an enemy, but it turns out that it was actually
really friendly and it even said that it knew me from somewhere..."
 

"You've meet this dragon before?" Griff said, perplexed. Oonsus’s
explanation was growing less and less probable with every word.
 
 "No," Oonsus said. "But he'd met me... well... it's hard to explain, and I don't really understand all of it..."
 

"I see..." Griff said, deciding to let the issue drop. He suspected
that the ‘dragon’ was no more real than the demons Oonsus had been
fighting that morning. "So, this... dragon... told you that I was in
danger and how to find me?"
 
 "Uh-huh," Oonsus agreed. "It was a
good thing, too, because I got really lost looking for you... that's
how I found his lair in the first place."
 
 "You were looking for me?" Griff asked. "Why?"
 

"I wanted to say goodbye," Oonsus said innocently. "You disappeared
while I was talking to Gath, so I figured you must have gone back into
the caves, didn't you?"
 
 "Well, not exactly," Griff confessed.
 
 "But then you got caught by that tricky guy, Barhat, right?" Oonsus continued, apparently ignoring Griff's statement.
 
 "Err... something like that," Griff conceded.
 
 "And then he tried to turn you into soup, but I came and rescued you just in time?" Oonsus asked.
 
 "Yup," Griff said.
 
 "Wow! Isn't it cool!?" Oonsus said.
 
 "Cool isn't exactly the word I would have used," Griff said.
 

At the same time, Griff could feel the burns all over his body. He was
moderately worried that most of his feathers might fall out.
 
 "Oh, and did I tell you about Gath?" Oonsus said, again ignoring Griff's reply.
 
 "No, you didn't," Griff said.
 

"It turns out he's not a mean scary giant after all," Oonsus said.
"He's a friendly giant. He's from the Giantdowns and he got lost and he
needs somebody to guide him back home..."
 
 "I gathered that much myself," Griff agreed.
 

"So I told him that I would help him," Oonsus continued. "But first I
had to come back and say goodbye to you. And then the dragon told me
you were in danger. And then I rescued you. And then... well, that's
now, isn't it?"
 
 "Yes," Griff smiled--as much as it was possible to smile with a beak for a mouth. "Yes it is."
 
 "So?" Oonsus said.
 
 "So... what?" Griff asked, suddenly confused. 
 
 Everything Oonsus had been saying had made at least moderate sense and yet he had somehow managed to confuse Griff again.
 
 "So do you want to help me take Gath back to the Giantdowns?" Oonsus asked..
 
 "You want... me?" Griff responded, his eyes widening in surprise.
 
 "Uh-huh," Oonsus said. "I think we make a really great team!"
 

For a split second Griff seriously considered the possibility of going
with Oonsus to help Gath. It would be nice, he thought to himself, to
go on an adventure; to get away from it all. And then he remembered his
duties as the head of Baron Fredrick the Pacific's palace guard. There
were things that had to be done. For one, this cave had to be
thoroughly cleansed of Barhat and his friend Munus (the giant centipede
morph), as well as whatever other vermin lived in here. At the very
least, the entrance should be sealed off. The more he thought about it,
the more Griff realized that the barony would probably completely fall
apart in his absence.
 
 "I'm sorry," Griff concluded. "But I have to stay here and protect Wyrd Forest."
 

"That's okay," Oonsus said, not missing a beat. "But I'll be sure to
come back and visit you if I'm ever headed this way again..."
 
 "Well, I'll look forward to it," Griff replied.
 

And then, without saying another word, Griff and Oonsus started walking
towards the exit to the cave chamber they were in. Both took a torch of
burning wood from the fire that Barhat had been prepared to cook Griff
with. After walking down the cave tunnel for some time, they came to a
split. Griff--who had regained his bearings now that he was less
panicked--recognized the split. One way led east to the valley with
Gath in it. The other led south to Wyrd Forest. Surprisingly Oonsus too
appeared to recognize the intersection.
 
 "Um... I guess this is where we part ways," Oonsus said softly.
 
 "I guess so..." Griff agreed, looking off to one side.
 

"It was nice meeting you, Mr. Griff," Oonsus said, smiling warmly. His
face looked strangely supernatural in the flickering torchlight.
 
 "It was nice meeting you too, Oonsus," Griff agreed.
 

And then Oonsus reached over and gave Griff a tremendous hug, sending
waves of pain across Griff's badly scalded skin. He winced and then
weakly returned the embrace. A moment later, Oonsus set off down his
branch of the tunnel and disappeared into the darkness. Griff stared
out into that darkness for a long time, wondering if he had made the
wrong choice. Eventually, he started off down the tunnel that led back
to Wyrd Forest
 
 * * * * *
 
 The End of "To Snare a Rabbit".
 By: Nagolinc.
 CopyNot 2009.
 		 	   		  
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