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<font size=3>Part 6<br><br>
Metamor Keep: Keeper's Return<br>
By Charles Matthias<br><br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>After
leaving the Duke’s chambers, Jessica walked for a few minutes through the
halls of Metamor looking for a window. She never found one large
enough for her to squeeze through, but she did find a battlement from
which to leap off. She shrank to her normal hawk size in midair and
took flight to the northwest. It was snowing gently in the
afternoon, grey light suffusing everything around, but at least it was
still light.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>She found
a thermal that carried her over the town and city walls within a minute
and let herself glide upward in the cool winter air. She had never
been to Barnhardt’s Lake, but she’d seen enough maps of the Valley to
know it was to the northwest about three hours by carriage, and
unmistakable because of the large lake that provided it with its
name.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Beneath
her passed trees and fields, but mostly trees. The Dragon mountains
rose like a slumbering serpent, tall peaks the spines of its back,
thrumming in the cloudy sky with each stony exhalation.
Cross-currents buffeted her from time to time, but otherwise it was an
easy if unpleasant flight.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>And as the
many minutes trickled past, she caught sight of a white expanse in the
midst of trees, with a solitary grey tower rising from its midst. A
town clustered one side, walls set through the clearing and surrounding
the simple buildings of stone and wood. Docks lined the edge of the
lake, but no boats were to be seen. The city was divided into an
inner and outer bailey, and there even appeared to be defences ringing
the lake, watchtowers and various machines hidden from the ground whose
purpose escaped her.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>All this
she saw a good ten minutes before she arrived. She circled toward
the inner bailey where she suspected the barracks would be. The
ground was cleared of snow, but all the roofs were carpeted in a thick
blanket. Several Lakelanders pointed at her as she came down,
undoubtedly wondering if she were a true beast or merely cursed. A
few guards disappeared inside the fortifications, and then she was among
them. Her talons clattered against slippery stone work, and she
tumbled onto her chest.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>A few
people shouted around her, and all kept clear while she pushed herself
back up, shifting into her most human form. She could feel a bruise
coming on her left side, but nothing that wouldn’t heal on its own in a
few days. She shook her feathers from head to tail, errant snow
scattering around her.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Her gaze
settled on a human woman in a woolen cloak, buskins, and hood. “My name
is Jessica. I am looking for Weyden the hawk. Can you tell me
where he is?”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>The woman
smiled to her, revealing a few missing teeth. “Weyden, yes, he would be
resting in the barracks. He’s talked about you, you know. He
didn’t say you were a black-feathered hawk though...”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>“That’s a
long story,” Jessica said as her wings settled back into place along her
sides and back. “I’ve never been to Barnhardt’s Lake before. Where
are the barracks?”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>“That
building on your left. The one fronting the lakeward wall.” She
pointed and Jessica thanked her. <br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Before
she’d taken five steps, a familiar voice shouted. “Jessica!” Ducking his
head and coming out of the nearest entrance to the barracks was a giraffe
bundled with several scarfs around his tall neck.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>“Larssen!”
Jessica cawed in delight, and hopped over the rutted stonework toward
him. He rested a heavy arm on her shoulder and smiled down, his
yellow fur dotted with snowflakes. “Where’s Weyden?”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>“Van’s
getting him. He’s resting up from flying patrols all morning over
the mountains.” The giraffe put a heavy hand on her shoulder and steadied
her on the icy courtyard. “You’re looking very dangerous like this.
What happened?”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>“It’s a
long story, but I will tell you. I’m so happy to see you out of the
dungeons. How long were you there?”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Larssen
frowned and then shrugged. “About four months, then we were released and
sent here. It seems like a lifetime ago, but... at least I’m not
cramped anymore. I had a sore in my neck that wouldn’t go away for
weeks after we got out!” He laughed and firmly tapped the middle of his
neck with one hand. “At least here we don’t have to worry about anyone
connecting us with Yonson...”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Jessica
frowned, a momentary pang for the lemur who’d befriended her too. “Is
Maud here too?”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>The
giraffe seemed to stand another foot taller, his heavy hooves grinding
the stones beneath him. “Oh yes. She’s here too. Even our
gaoler decided to join us up here. I think we’re all happier this
way, but seeing you makes it even better. And unless my ears
mistake me, here comes Weyden now.”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Jessica
gazed past Larssen and saw a very handsome hawk hop out of the aperture
into the late afternoon grey. His golden eyes found her
immediately, his wings stretched, and he screeched a delighted avian
cry. The two ran and glided across the courtyard until they met,
wings wrapped about each other, beaks nuzzling and cawing laughter deep
in their throats.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>“My
Jessica!” Weyden cried with warm delight, his chest breathing heavily
into hers. “Oh my Jessica I have dreamt of this day!”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>“And I
too,” she replied. “My Weyden! My handsome hawk! My
man!”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>“I am
that,” he replied with a laugh and another screech. His golden eyes
devoured her face, eyes, and feathers. “But what happened to your
feathers?”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Jessica
stood a little taller, her hooked beak meeting his and kept it there. “Do
not fear it, my love! I killed the Runecaster who murdered my
master Wessex. What happened in that battle has left my feathers
black. Oh please, don’t shrink from me! I am still your
beautiful hawk.”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Weyden
blinked, leaning back on his talons, the hold of his wing claws on hers
faltering for a moment. And then he tipped back his head and
laughed. “Shrink from you? You are more beautiful than ever
before! A feast for my eyes and heart to adore, dark with raven
flax and gilded with golden eye! I am in awe of you my love!”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Jessica’s
beak cracked in an avian smile, and she pulled her wings in tight,
leaning into his chest, savouring the feel of his wings wrapping around
her back and tail. “Oh, Weyden!” She trembled against his feathers, warm
now despite the cold flight. “Oh I love you!”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>“And I
you, my Jessica. Welcome home.”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Jessica
nuzzled his chest and shoulders with her beak and head, allowing all the
months of travel, all the sleepless nights worrying over her hawk, he who
had promised to wed her on her return, he who had been imprisoned for
merely serving Ambassador Yonson, and he who she’d had to leave to defeat
the very evil that had been the cause of his imprisonment, all of those
worries and fears she allowed to be washed away in his strong and tender
embrace.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>“It is so
good to be home,” Jessica said when she finally drew back a pace. “Misha
has invited us both to a welcome home party. I feel like I should
go, as he’s been a dear friend to me too. Are you up to flying to
Metamor?”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Weyden’s
eyes dimmed slightly and he said, “I have duties here.”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>
“Copernicus told me they were waived for one night. Tomorrow I’ll
return with you here and stay until your tour is over.” Jessica nuzzled
his chest feathers again. “Please, my love.”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Weyden
sighed and smiled. He glanced at Larssen who had been joined by
Maud and the child Van. “All right. But there’s something we’d
hoped to ask you. Now it’ll have to wait until we get back.”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Larssen
guffawed, Van laughed, and even Maud managed a chuckle between giving
Weyden vicious stares. Jessica nudged his chest with her wing
claws. “Oh, don’t do that to me! Not after all this time!”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>But it was
Maud whose pleasant soprano cut through the mystery. “Weyden, you are
enjoying yourself far too much.” She slipped an arm around one of
Larrsen’s massive hands and then lay her cheek against the tough spotted
yellow hide covering its back. “Larssen and I are to be married this
Spring.”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Jessica’s
heart leaped inside her chest. She gave her hawk fiancé a firm
shove and he squawked as he stumbled backward. She danced over to
the two completely mismatched figures, the nine-foot tall giraffe Larssen
and the human woman who was just over five feet in height. Her head
came up to the bottom of his ribs and his hooves were larger than her
feet. He could easily carry her in one arm if he so chose.
And what is more, they’d been friends before coming to Metamor — Maud had
once been a man.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>But in all
the time Jessica had known her, she’d known a sister and not a woman
struggling with forgotten memories of masculinity. If only all
could accept the Curses as well as she. Jessica could not help but
marvel as she looked at them, delight in her heart for their happiness,
at how the touch of those triple Curses expressed themselves
differently. Even at the edge of mage sight, she could discern
subtle nuances to the manner of the curse, vague dissimilarities that
were almost recognizable as animal, child, or that most intimate of
qualities to identity, the nearly insurmountable wall between man and
woman.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>But all of
these wonders were an academic riddle she would tease out later.
For now, she rushed to her friends and did her best to wrap them in her
wings. “Oh, I’m so happy for you both! You two are so right for
each other!”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>“I agree,”
Maud said, rubbing her cheek against the back of Larssen’s hand.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Larssen
lowered his neck, bending it so adroitly it looked as if it should snap,
and brushed his lips across Maud’s dark hair. “I’m the lucky one.”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Maud and
Jessica laughed, and then Maud put her other had on Jessica’s wing. “And
I have something I wanted to ask you before you left with your
husband-to-be. Will you serve as my Bride’s Maid? I can think
of no one I’d rather ask!”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Jessica
hugged her closer, beak pressing into her hair. “Oh thank you,
Maud! I will! I will! And you must be one of
mine!”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>The woman
soldier smiled firmly, eyes wide with joy. “Let me know when and where,
and I’ll be there for you both. Now go. We’ll be here when
you get back.” She leaned into the giraffe who still nuzzled her
gently.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Jessica
turned back to her hawk and shot him a reproving look. Weyden
shrugged his wings, but accepted the reproach with good humour.
Together, they jumped into the sky, wings outstretched, and shrank into
their beastly forms as they gained the evening sky.<br><br>
----------<x-tab> </x-tab><br><br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Misha
Brightleaf trembled and beamed like his namesake. He jumped onto a
table, clasped his paws tightly, and gazed at the assembled Longs, the
many other scouts he’d invited, and the many friends of those brave souls
who’d been sent to Marzac so many months ago. For the vast expanse
of the Long House it was a modest gathering, and not a one of the heroes
was a Long. But Misha wished for them this honour and more than he
could give.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>At the
very least, they could celebrate the returned heroes. But first,
all the invited guests were expecting at least something of a speech from
him. He licked his nose, gazed quickly at Caroline who smiled back,
and then clapped his paws again.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>“Today is
a very blessed day! Today our brave friends who have trod in places
none of us are likely ever to see ourselves, and have faced dangers none
of us are likely to face, have returned triumphant!” He lifted his arms,
tail wagging, and everyone cheered. “Let us welcome them home properly
now. First, we have Kayla who killed the evil wizard who balked
Whisper by stabbing him in the back!”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>They were
all sharing the makeshift stage with Misha, and not a one of them
appeared to like the attention. Kayla, when her feat was named,
curled her tail tighter as if she could hide in it. Her paws wished
to grasp the dragon blades again, but they were safely back in Rickkter’s
quarters for now. Still, she did manage a smile and a nod to the
fox as many cheered and a few gasped. She could see Rickkter at the
front of the crowd, with her friend Murikeer surreptitiously lending him
support. She smiled to the raccoon, and he smiled back.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Misha
gestured to the next on the table. “And then there is James, a donkey
from Glen Avery and good friend to our own rat Charles, who not only has
killed a Shrieker, but also defeated the Patriarch’s murderer in
battle!”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>The donkey
shook his head, ears upright and said, “I didn’t defeat him in
battle! I just dropped some bells on him. I was lucky!”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Misha
patted him on the shoulder. “Nonsense! You used the weapons you had
around you. You defeated Zagrosek! Accept it!”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>James
wasn’t the only one who looked unsettled at the notion. Rickkter’s
eyes were wide with disbelief, and also, an exploding treasure trove of
jealousy. He’d wanted to kill that insufferable dark Sondecki!<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>But the
fox moved on to introduce the others standing with him. “Next to our
heroic donkey is Lindsey the timbersman! Only person I’ve ever
known who can make rafts out of tree bark and have the courage to ride
them down icy rapids through the mountains!” Lindsey said nothing, but
did manage a suggestion of a smile.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Misha
wasted no time in continuing. “Two of our fellow Keepers are not here
right now. Jessica should return soon. You all know Jessica
the hawk, student of the late Wessex ard’Kapler, who was able to avenge
her master’s death against one of the wizards who controlled Loriod and
murdered the Patriarch and his retinue. And I know you know Charles
Matthias, who was once living stone but has now become flesh again!
Jessica went to fetch her husband-to-be Weyden from up north, and our
dear brother Long Charles went to be with his wife and family.”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>All of the
Longs lowered their eyes at that, knowing just what it was that the rat
found at the Glen. But Misha had a few more to introduce. “And now
three you don’t know. The first is Abafouq of the Binoq. He’s
the one who gave Charles the ability to move and speak while stone.
And he helped in so many others ways on their journey I cannot begin to
recount them.” Abafouq waved one hand, clearly unused to such scrutiny or
to being made the centre of attention.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>“The
second is Jerome Krabbe, a Sondeckis like Charles, he joined their fight
in the Steppe and helped them find safe passage across that vast
land. And I’m told he has faster fisticuffs than a lightning
bolt. I haven’t asked for a demonstration, but maybe he can show us
on a practice dummy later!”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>“As long
as you don’t mind there not being a practice dummy later,” Jerome said in
a tone almost devoid of humour. The twitch at the corner of his
broad lips revealed a different story. Misha laughed, as did many
of the Longs, most hoping he was just kidding.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>“And this
is Andares-es-sebashou,” Misha said as he gestured to the last figure,
tall and alien in appearance. Neither Keeper nor Man, he bore a
regal countenance and a distant expression as if he stood before them yet
his thoughts were in the heavens. “He comes from the depths of the
Åelfwood, and now you know just as much about him as do I!” There were a
few laughs at that. Andares’s eyes narrowed in mirth.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>“And there
is a one more who is missing; one who did not return with the rest.
Zhypar Habakkuk, writer, prophet, and mean pool player, lost his life in
the battle against Marzac. I’ll miss that confusing word bender,
but his death was an honourable death. He died saving the
world. Let us all take a moment now to offer our prayers for his
soul and for those he left behind.” All of them lowered their heads and
shut their eyes quietly for several long seconds. Lindsey alone
kept his open, staring up into the roof with a hollow face.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>After
fifteen seconds of complete silence in the Long House, perhaps the first
time such a feat had been achieved in over a year, Misha lifted up his
arms and shouted, “Now let’s celebrate their triumph!” With that he
jumped off the table with a whoop. The assembled crowd cheered,
while the travelling companions climbed down as quickly as they
could.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Kayla slid
into Rickkter’s waiting arms, and after a quick kiss, she nearly dragged
him from his feet to meet her friends. Beside him, Murikeer his
onetime pupil and Kozaithy the white skunk chuckled at both her
exuberance and at the oddity of Rickkter being taxed in order to keep
up.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>“Rick,
Muri, I’d like you to meet my friends.” But others amongst the Longs also
wanted to meet with them, so she dragged them to the first one they could
reach, and that happened to be the little Binoq. Abafouq, was
dwarfed by everyone around him, but as he stood only three feet in
height, he was long used to this. The raccoon and pair of skunks
gazed down at the little leathery brown-skinned man who appeared neither
midget nor child. His dark eyes met them with curiosity.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>“Abafouq,
you know Rickkter my fiancé. And this is Murikeer, a good friend,
and his friend...”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>
“Kozaithy,” the white-furred skunk supplied as she nestled closer to
Murikeer’s flank.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>The Binoq
nodded to each in turn, his smile faint but visible. “It is a pleasure
meeting you. Kayla has spoken often of you while we journeyed.” He
turned his eyes on Rickkter. “I am relieved to see you are well.”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>“Thank
you,” Rickkter grimaced, his legs feeling a bit shaky. “I did a little
reading about your race after I woke up. You’re a very secretive
people. But I did not learn much of your magic. How long do
you intend to stay at Metamor?”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Abafouq
shrugged. “I do not know. I have no fear of your curse touching
me. Perhaps two months. We cannot return until the passes
have cleared in the mountains. If you wish to exchange magical
lore, there will be plenty of time.”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>“I’d like
to learn more as well,” Murikeer said, his one good eye fixing the Binoq
with an eager stare. “I have spent a great deal of time learning the
element of earth and stone. But never have I made stone live as you
did for Charles.”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>“That,”
Abafouq said with exasperation, “was a very special circumstance.
But I will be happy to discuss what I know.”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>The
graceful figure of the Åelf came up behind them and gently put a hand on
Kayla’s shoulder. All of them turned to him, but he gestured to
another corner of the Long House. Finbar in all his sinuous glory
was facing down Jerome who had taken a wrestler’s wide-legged
posture. Kayla gaped, “Is he nuts?”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>“He wished
to see what Jerome could do,” Andares replied with an amused lilt to his
voice, as if he found the very notion of challenging another to a fight
he would surely lose a very honourable if foolish thing.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>All eyes
in the Long House turned on the fight which had not yet begun.
Murikeer wrapped one arm about Kozaithy’s middle as he watched.
Abafouq climbed back on the table so he could see. Kayla reached
for the swords at her side, but found only empty air and grunted as she
remembered they were in Rickkter’s room now. Rickkter chuckled
softly and shook his head. Of all the Keepers in the room, he had a very
clear idea of what a Sondecki of the black could do. If Finbar wanted to
open himself up to that kind of punishment, so be it.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Finbar
circled Jerome slowly. The Sondecki moved only to keep facing
him. Finbar, as a ferret, was long in body, covered in grey fur
that changed hues as he slunk through the diffuse lighting from the
braziers above and along the walls, with short arms and legs ending in
sharp little claws. Lithe and quick, he was a natural contortionist
and was next to impossible for anyone else to pin.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Jerome
hulked like a miniature ogre, with broad arms and legs thicker than a
bear’s. Hunched over he almost appeared a bear readying to push
over a tree. His fingers flexed freely, and even if he weren’t a
Sondecki, none of the Longs present would ever want to find themselves at
the mercy of those large hands.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Finbar
continued circling Jerome for several long seconds. At first the
Longs cheered him on, but their voices quickly subsided into an excited
murmur. And once all were completely silent, Finbar leapt forward,
ducking low to avoid Jerome’s hands. But the Sondecki was just as
fast as he’d claimed, and he grabbed Finbar by the back of the neck with
one hand and just above the base of his tail with the other and pulled
them nearly together like he were trying rope.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>But from
the look of sudden surprise on Jerome’s face, the ferret was faster than
he’d expected. Taking advantage of his natural sinuous body, Finbar
curled his legs around and kicked his claws in Jerome’s chest.
Jerome staggered backward to avoid those claws, and while they tore
through his tunic, they just missed gouging his flesh.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Jerome
still had a grip on Finbar’s scruff, and he drove him down, wrapping the
ferret’s legs between his own and squeezing tight to keep them
immobile. Finbar responded by twisting his arms around to claw at
the Sondecki’s midsection. And it would have worked too if Jerome
hadn’t begun shaking the ferret’s head back and forth so fast that it
made him vomit. A moment later, Jerome had both his legs locked and
his neck wrapped between both arms.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Finbar
spat out bile and laughed. “I yield!”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>After
gaping in surprise Misha began to laugh. “Well I don’t think I’ve ever
heard those words from you before, Finbar!”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Jerome
slid the ferret down to the floor while using his sleeve to wipe some of
the slime from Finbar’s muzzle. A warm laugh echoed from his
throat. “You almost got first blood on me there. I’m very
impressed. You’re quite the fighter, Finbar.”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Finbar
coughed up a little more spit and rubbed at his neck with one paw. “I’ve
never seen anyone move as fast as you. Charles never could.”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>“He wasn’t
trained to,” Jerome replied and stretched. “And it isn’t easy to do even
for Sondeckis of the black.”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Danielle
was at Finbar’s side a second later helping to wipe up his vomit. “Don’t
you ever do something like that again!” she chided him. “If Misha says
he’s that fast, he’s that fast!”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Rickkter
shook his head and turned aside back to Kayla and the others nearby.
“Lightning fist, or so it is called in the common tongue of
Galendor. What Jerome did. I’ve heard of it but never seen it
myself. It’s not a common skill among the Sondeckis. It has a
rather potent weakness which I would’ve exploited if ever I had the
opportunity.”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>“What is
that?” Murikeer asked, his posture still one of awe at the very brief
combat.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>“He can’t
do it for long. It will drain him very quickly. Once spent, it
would be easy to finish him off.” Rickkter smiled as if he’d accomplished
in deed what he described. He then gestured to the ivory handled
blade at Andares’s side. “That sword you bear, it looks remarkably
exquisite. Might I have a closer look?”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Andares
drew the sword and lowered the tip to his other hand, revealing the full
length of the blade for inspection. It was bright and silvery,
etched with flowing symbols along its entire length. Rickkter
rubbed his finger tips across the flat of the blade and smiled in
delight. “Very impressive. What is his name?”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Andares
returned the smile, though his was more subtle than the raccoon’s which
could not fail to reveal pointed teeth beneath black jowls. “His name is
Anna-ithil-årda — He That Brings Moon to Earth.”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Rickkter
nodded in approval. “Very impressive. You are a remarkable
craftsman, Andares-es-sebashou.”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>At this,
the Åelf’s smile became tinged by a veneer of good humour. “But it was
not I who forged him. He has been handed down amongst my kind for
many generations.”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Everyone
stared more closely at the blade. Rickkter’s tail lashed in renewed
concentration. “How old is he?”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>“Not as
old as the enemy we felled,” Andares admitted. “But old. A more
venerable companion than he it would be hard to ask for.”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Rickkter
whistled in delight and shouted, “Hey Misha! I think this sword
here is older than Whisper!”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>The fox
stopped laughing at some joke made at Finbar’s expense and came over to
see. He looked at the sword in Andares’s hands, at the Åelf, and
then shrugged. “Probably. Kkart was ancient, but nobody is older
than the fair folk. Except maybe the dragons.”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>“If it is
not too much to ask,” Rickkter said with real interest, “I would like to
see what Anna-ithil-årda can do in your hands. I’m not up to a
bout, but I would like to see you move with him.”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Andares
smiled and nodded. Misha, Murikeer, Kayla, and the others all
backed away until Andares had a broad circle in which to move. He
stayed where he was for several long seconds, Anna-ithil-årda resting
flat in his hands. Jerome and the others turned to watch.
Even Danielle paused her lecturing of the still disoriented ferret.
Without moving a muscle, Andares already radiated a presence of
restrained energy that crackled like lightning in a stormy sky.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>And then
he moved, lifting the blade in one hand and twirling in quick circles, a
dance of artistry as well as deadly focus. He moved his feet only
to spin one around the other, and extended his arms only to bend
them. The ancient blade caught the light of the chamber and
reflected not the brilliant orange glow of torches but the silvery
essence of moonbeams upon a still lake. The tip shone with a
brightness that hurt their sensitive eyes. It flashed in arcs of
such deliberateness that they almost could see a picture of a woodland
vista spread before them.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>When
Andares finally stopped and ended in the same posture in which he began,
all of them who watched felt a deep sadness, as if they were glimpsing
something buried long beneath the ashes of time. There were a few
gasps in the crowd, Murikeer one of them. Rickkter’s smile grew
broad. “You truly do him justice. Might I be allowed to handle
him?”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>“One as
accomplished as you?” Andares asked, his smile still that enigmatic curl
to his lips. “He would be most honoured.”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>With that,
Andares handed the blade over to Rickkter who gripped him with the sort
of delight a boy reserves for his first blade of steel that his father
allows him after years of dashing the wooden practice staves to
splinters. The raccoon gave it a few experimental swipes before
leaping into an old practice routine from his days as a Kankoran.
While not as artistic nor nearly as precise as what Andares performed, it
nevertheless intimidated by its implied violence.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>That is,
until Rickkter missed a step and faltered, bumping against a table to
steady himself. He gasped, winded, and it took all of his suddenly
sapped strength to keep a hold of the blade. Kayla rushed to his
side and helped him to his paws, but by then he’d recovered enough to
return to Andares’s side.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>He handed
Anna-ithil-årda back, a delighted grin on his snout. “Thank you for
letting me hold him. It seems I’m still not quite up to my old
strength.” He gasped again and bowed his head respectfully.<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Andares
reclaimed his blade with far greater solemnity. “It was a pleasure to
watch you perform.”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Kayla
grabbed the raccoon by the upper arm and pulled him back. Rickkter
stumbled over his own legs and almost collapsed but for a quick whiff of
magic. “You should be more careful,” she said tenderly but with a hint of
sternness. “I just got you back! I’m not going to have you kill
yourself just to show off!”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>“I
wasn’t,” he objected after steadying himself. Her green eyes
narrowed meaningfully. “All right, I was showing off a little. I
just thought I was in better shape than that. I guess the muscles
aren’t quite back to their old strength yet.”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Murikeer
put one paw on his shoulder and frowned. “Will you be okay?”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Rickkter
nodded. “Absolutely. Now, Abafouq,” he looked around until his eyes
found the Binoq who had kept a discreet distance during the exchange,
“you were about to tell us more about stone magic. I’d be very
interested to learn more about that too.”<br>
<x-tab> </x-tab>Abafouq
nodded to the trio of skunks and single raccoon and folded his hands
before them. “When one is living in the mountains, there are two forms of
magic one is finding it wise to learn: the art of snow or stone. I
choose stone.” And as the little mage began his discourse, Murikeer’s
keen attention kept slipping inexorably back to his master who seemed to
lean far too much on Kayla for support. But each time, he’d sigh,
and listen anew to the Binoq as the party continued into the night about
them.<br><br>
----------<br><br>
May He bless you and keep you in His grace and love,<br><br>
Charles Matthias </font>
!DSPAM:4b9987d1138781804284693!
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