<html>
<body>
<font face="Times New Roman, Times">Inchoate Carillion, Inconstant
Cuckold<br>
By Charles Matthias<br><br>
<br>
<i>March 10, 708 CR<br><br>
<br>
</i>It took almost an hour to manage the last minute arrangements, but by
mid-morning Charles, Baerle, Angus, and James departed the Glen. The sun
was hidden behind thick clouds that promised snow, if not for the Glen,
at least for the mountains. Their breath misted in the air before them as
they bundled tightly in their woolen tunics and cloaks. The dimness to
the morning leached all color from their fur, their belongings, and the
woods on every side.<br><br>
They rode together in a large wagon drawn by a team of four horses with a
stripped donkey-like horse holding the reins. Their climbing gear rested
between them, as well as the packs with the delicate charms Burris had
created. Both driver and the four horses were all Keepers, part of a
larger family of equines who all lived at the Glen. They were not family
in the conventional sense, but there was much in Metamor Valley that
could not make that claim. Until the quarantine, they had taken turns
carrying good back and forth from the Keep to Hareford, the Glen, and
even Lake Barnhardt. Now they volunteered to help Charles and his friends
reach the mountains with whatever speed they could provide.<br><br>
Charles had spent the last two weeks in the saddle and had thought he'd
be grateful for the chance to rest his legs and hips. Despite stretching
his legs and tail in the wagon bed, his eyes kept turning to the four
horses pulling that wagon and he yearned to find a saddle and climb on
their backs. Maybe Sir Saulius was making a knight of him after all. He
did his best not to dwell on that unsettling thought.<br><br>
The zebra, a a capable warrior when called upon for patrol named Lamarck,
chatted with James for a little while, suggesting in an off-hand way that
he should consider joining their herd. Judging from the way his friend
rolled his eyes at each veiled hint, it was something that he'd heard
before and said no to each time. Angus reminded the zebra twice that he
needed to keep his voice down while they rode. The second time the badger
growled. He never needed to speak up again.<br><br>
Baerle sat quietly the entire time, her eyes ever on the woods around
them. She kept her back to the middle of the wagon, turning her ears this
way and that as she listened to the birdsong filling the air. She smiled
politely to her friends, but did not let her eyes linger on any of them
fore more than a moment.<br><br>
By noon they reached the East-West road that led from Hareford. The
clouds showed no sign of abating, and if anything, were thicker than
before. The shadowless roads stretched in either directions through tall
trees whose branches overhung a somber gloom. Angus asked Charles briefly
if anything were different from when he'd been this way two days ago, but
the rat saw nothing out of place. It didn't even look as if soldiers from
Hareford had been this way since Dupré had come here four days
ago.<br><br>
They turned up the western road that rose quickly along a slope
stretching out from the mountains. After an hour the trees began to thin
out and they could see down into the valley at their left. The ground
sloped away, hugged by pine and fir, except in the barren crater where
only a few saplings bravely stood. Charles gazed at that cracked lacuna
in the earth and marveled at the power of a single small stone falling
from the Heavens. How he wished he could have been at the Glen to feel it
shake the earth. At Metamor he'd only had to contend with a stack of
fresh parchment spilling across the floor.<br><br>
The day warmed only slightly as they continued their ride. The clop of
four sets of hooves was loud enough that even in this remote corner of
the valley there was no wildlife to be seen. And despite speaking more
quietly, Charles could see that Lamarck's ever playful manner was
beginning to rankle his donkey friend. James had one hand gripping his
pack, thick fingers digging deeper and deeper into the leather, while his
tail kept smacking against the side of the wagon. Once a stand of trees
blocked the crater from view, the rat decided he couldn't wait any
longer.<br><br>
“Do you mind if I climb up here?” he asked the zebra who blinked in
surprise. Charles didn't wait for an answer as he stepped around James
and positioned himself on the buckboard with his paws resting on the
railing between him and the team of Glenners pulling them. <br><br>
Lamarck finally began to nod, his words confused but polite. “Oh, sure...
you, wait... be careful!”<br><br>
Charles couldn't content himself with sitting next to the zebra. Even as
the driver tried to grab him and pull him back, the rat scurried up onto
the front of the wagon, and deftly climbed onto the back of the pinto
closest to him. The horse swung his head back in surprise at having a
rider, stretched out his lips in query once, and then returned his
attention to the road ahead. Charles spread his legs wide so that he
straddled the pinto bareback and laughed lightly as he realized with a
wince how much smaller his pony Malicon was.<br><br>
“What are you doing?” the zebra exclaimed with a gasp.<br><br>
“Trying to get comfortable,” Charles replied. “Your friend doesn't mind.”
He patted the pinto on the neck as if he were a real horse and chuckled.
“Derrick right?”<br><br>
The pinto nodded and snorted. Charles smiled and glanced back at the
zebra who continued to gape. While he'd distracted the zebra, James had
slid all the way to the back of the wagon near to Baerle. “So, how often
do you pull the wagon?”<br><br>
Lamarck blubbered for several seconds before he could find an
answer.<br><br>
</font>----------<br><br>
<font face="Times New Roman, Times">The remainder of the trip up the
rocky slope proceeded with little conversation. None of the Polygamites
had come this way before so their eyes roved from side to side as they
mounted the hard packed earth. The wagon wheels bounced across loose
stones but otherwise had no difficulty. An older pine had collapsed
across a portion of the road in one of the last stretches where the woods
framed them on either side, and Charles was quick to slip from Derrick's
back so he could clear their path; they saw no other obstructions along
the way.<br><br>
Charles decided against riding Derrick the rest of the way up. His
purpose in getting the zebra Lamarck to leave James alone was
accomplished and the horse's back was just too wide for his legs. If he
wanted to navigate treacherous mountain paths he should avoid needlessly
straining his muscles. So he sat next to the zebra and kept a wary eye on
the road and slopes ahead.<br><br>
They reached the Gateway after only another hour and he smiled faintly as
he saw the stand of rocks rising up from the otherwise level ground that
wound between the peaks before them. Derrick and the other horses didn't
need to be told to stop; everyone knew this was the Gateway.<br><br>
“All right,” Angus said as he climbed out of the wagon. “James, hand me
the gear. This is where we part ways.”<br><br>
James helped the badger get all of their things out of the wagon while
Charles helped Lamarck unhitch the horses from the wagon to let them each
stretch. Lamarck handed each of the four equines a robe to gird
themselves with as they shifted back into a more human stance. They
stretched and walked around the upthrust granite block, their eyes taking
in the vista to the south with gaping jaws and perked ears. Baerle pulled
her fur-lined cloak more closely around her shoulders and neck as she
quietly checked the remnants of snow that clustered in shadowed
corners.<br><br>
After they had all of the packs removed from the wagon, Angus waved
everyone closer. “Now, the air is thinner up here, so don't push
yourselves. We're going to take it very easy today and we're going to
find shelter well before the sun sets. I know the paths, I helped Burris
erect the talismans. There's two dozen and it'll take us at least a week
to cover them all and get back home.”<br><br>
Charles gnawed on his chewstick furiously, heart twinging with the
thought of not seeing his family, even if only in illusion, for so long a
time. <br><br>
“Do you want us to be waiting for you in a week?” Derrick asked as he
kept the cloak firmly wrapped around his middle.<br><br>
“If you would be so kind, aye,” Angus replied. The badger stood and gave
the stallion a firm pat on the shoulder, despite being half a head
shorter than the horse. “Thank you for bringing us here. Now get home
safely. It still looks like it might snow again.”<br><br>
Derrick and the other horses nodded. “We'll be here. Artela keep you
safe.” The five equines disappeared around the upthrust rock and a moment
later they heard the familiar sound of even more hooves clopping against
the exposed rock and hard-packed dirt. Angus opened his satchel and after
some searching withdrew an elk-skin map that he stretched out between
them. Depictions of various peaks and scrawling lines connecting them
were inked into the hide. Little diamond marks were placed around the
peaks in a wide swath. Charles stared at the picture but didn't recognize
anything familiar.<br><br>
“We're here,” Angus pointed to the southeastern corner. “Off south is the
Glen, and off that way is Hareford. This section here,” he spun one claw
in a wide circle over the right-most edge of the map, “is the Gateway,
the highland meadow, and the old watchtower. There used to be a sheltered
path from here into the Giantdowns, but earthquakes have made it too
dangerous even for Lutins to try. Even so, at the northern edge of the
meadow we've placed one of the talismans. That is where we'll be headed
first. From there we proceed west. We should get a good view of the Sea
of Souls, but the path leads back into mountains where we should be safe
from freezing airs coming off the lake.”<br><br>
He drew his claw along one of the lines at the top of the map, and then
began to circle back down toward the bottom. Charles could see that this
path took them past all of the diamond symbols.”We'll be making a long
circuit through the mountains this way. This covers the passes that we
know Baron Calephas used two years ago, and a few others that Lutins
could use if they dared risk the heights. It is very difficult to reach
some of these passes, which is why we don't patrol them, but I know each
of you can manage.”<br><br>
They were distracted momentarily by the Polygamites coming back around
the stone. Four steeds plodded along on all fours, while Derrick walked
behind them now adorned with Lamarck's old clothes. The zebra was the
first secured to the rigging nearest to where Derrick would soon be
sitting on the wagon. The pinto waved to them once before securing his
remaining brothers and sisters in the rigging for the return trip. James
glanced at them and snorted almost contemptuously. Charles gave him a
curious glance, and the donkey only shrugged and muttered, “I'll never
let myself be treated like a common animal. Never again.”<br><br>
“Say no more,” Charles bade him with one paw as he noted a few equine
ears flick in their direction. He turned to the badger and asked, “What
order shall we take?”<br><br>
“I want Baerle to lead us. She's been on some of these paths before. Will
that do for you?”<br><br>
The opossum nodded and in her first words in hours said, “Aye, I can lead
us on the mountains.” She pulled her pack close to her knees as she
crouched over the map. “I have never been this far into them,” she
gestured at the western edge of the map. “Just let me know if there's
anything I need to watch out for.”<br><br>
“I will,” Angus agreed with a faint smile. “After you, I want Charles,
then James. I will keep watch over the rear.”<br><br>
“Why Charles and then me?” James asked as his ears lay back against his
spiked mane.<br><br>
“You two are going to be the anchors. Also, you can see over Charles's
head. That way the path is clear for all of us.”<br><br>
“Except you,” James pointed out with a grunt.<br><br>
“I know it already,” the badger laughed faintly. “We'll stay close
together, but I want us to see where we are going at all times. Now get
your gear. You'll need the ice shoes by the time we find the first
talisman.”<br><br>
Derrick waved one more time as he and his herdmates led the wagon back
down the road to the east. They came by close enough that Charles was
able to pat the zebra on the neck; he was rewarded with a tail swat to
the back of his head. He chuckled under his breath and then hoisted his
pack onto his shoulders, toes spreading to feel the dirt, rocks, and
lichen coating them.<br><br>
As the weight of the shoulder straps settled against his flesh, he felt a
strange loneliness come over him. Ever since the Wind Children had
planted the vine in his back over six months ago, not a day had gone by
when he hadn't allowed the vine to nourish in his flesh. It's tender
strength and devotion had kept him company through even the worst moments
in that time. But now that they were going into the freezing depths, he'd
thought it best to leave it behind and so that morning he'd fixed it
within the stones of the hearth in his bedroom; it would bloom well in
the warmth there, and be a pleasant welcome if by some miracle Kimberly
and the children were allowed to return home while he was still in the
mountains.<br><br>
Still, he sighed for its absence and shifted the pack until it was
comfortable. He glanced at the pass between the two mounts into which he
had ventured a short distance with the ram and Sir Saulius only a few
days before. “Is there anything more before we begin?”<br><br>
Angus returned the map to his satchel and then secured it against his
hip. “Just be careful. We probably won't run into any Lutins, but keep
your weapons ready just in case.” So saying, the badger patted the heavy
blade between his shoulders and his pack.<br><br>
“Will do,” Charles checked to make sure that his Sondeshike was in easy
reach within his fur-lined cloak, and then followed after the opossum
into the pass. He could hear James's hooves crunching the loose rock
behind him as they passed into the cool shadow of the mounts.<br><br>
</font>----------<br><br>
<font face="Times New Roman, Times">Jessica's wing tips cradled the stalk
lined with small purple cups radiating in every direction. Her golden
eyes bored the magical conduits that passed into each of those apertures
only to be collected in fragrant pools that she could bind to any spell
she wished. Even in the still grip of winter that teased the valley, a
flower such as this would thrive because it was more than a
flower.<br><br>
It was a hyacinth; one specially treated in the ways she had learned by
studying the arts of the Marquis, Agathe, and the rest of their enemies.
It had grown more quickly than she had expected, and already it was
proving an able solution to the challenge of keeping a Keeper transformed
by an extra curse and in a way that they desired.<br><br>
Normally Jessica tended the plant that grew in a rooftop garden on top of
the barracks where her husband-to-be and his friends were stationed in
Lake Barnhardt with tenderness and joyful care. But the flippant remark
that Charles and Misha had shared the other day had unsettled her and so
now she studied her flower more intently. Had she made a mistake in her
casting? She had never intended the hyacinth to cast a shroud of oblivion
over the Valley as Yonson's had done. She had only meant the
forgetfulness to protect the hyacinth itself to keep her friends from
destroying it out of fear.<br><br>
But if the hyacinth was making them forget then she needed to do
something about it. Jessica would not allow the hyacinth to bring anguish
to Metamor; it was to be used to help master the Curses and to that it
must restrict itself.<br><br>
And so, with her mind fresh from a good night's sleep and after a
studious review of her notes on the hyacinth, Jessica touched it with her
magic, feeling the way the weaves flowed and cascaded one over another
like water across rocks in a forest brook. There were several layers of
magic that intertwined, and like any weave it was important not to tangle
them further. Very gingerly Jessica lifted each strand of magic, peering
more deeply within the cups.<br><br>
Jessica gently let the strands back down as she saw a familiar figure
flying toward the town from the north. She would have to continue her
study another time; the woodpecker never left the Glen unless it was very
important. Once she had returned the hyacinth to its proper state, she
jumped into the air and beat her wings to go and meet the colorful
bird.<br><br>
On seeing her approach, Burris angled toward the eastern shore of the
lake where broad tracts of land had been cleared to support pastureland
for sheep as well as homes for the fishermen and shepherds. Jessica
landed and perched on an unlit lamp with crozier while she waited for the
woodpecker.<br><br>
Burris settled on the ground a short distance from the hawk and stretched
into a more human shape. Jessica joined him there and also took on her
tallest size. Her screeching voice carried well her anxious concern. “Is
everything all right, Burris?”<br><br>
The woodpecker preened his black chest feathers a moment and then shook
his head and wings. “I'm afraid not. One of the Glenners, Berchem our
chief archer, has been struck by a malady that seems magical in origin.
I've come to ask for your help.”<br><br>
“Of course I will come,” Jessica agreed readily. If Burris could not
discern the malady's cause, then it must be very serious indeed. “I need
to let Captain Dallar know where I will be and then I will fly back with
you.”<br><br>
Burris spread his wings behind him, allowing the wind to gently brush
through his feathers. “I shall wait here and enjoy this breeze. No need
for you to land, just fly overhead and I'll join you.”<br><br>
Jessica bobbed her head, shrank, and took off for the barracks. The ram
would understand, as would Weyden. But her inspection of the hyacinth
would have to wait. She must remember to leave herself a note so she
could resume it when she got back.<br><br>
</font>----------<br><br>
<font face="Times New Roman, Times">The passage through the mountains
that Charles had called the Gateway opened after an hour's hike through
snow and rock to a broad meadow of tough short grasses and lichen coated
rocks of granite, feldspar, and mica. The ground sloped downward gently
to the north and east until it met the mountains that framed the Giant's
Dike. The northern slope ended in a copse of spruce, larch, and tamarack
against which a large defile spilled between the nearest peaks. The faint
suggestion of an old road continued down the meadow just south of the
small forest before disappearing beneath the snowy slopes.<br><br>
Along this road they continued as they moved through the meadow. The air
was thinner and even after only an hour of hiking all of them felt tired
but they took only one break along their route, and that for only a few
minutes. Angus promised them that they would quickly adjust; James well
remembered how long it had taken before he'd felt comfortable in the
crossing of the Barrier Range last summer; it had taken nearly a week of
rough travel before the donkey was able to shed the out-of-breath
sensation that had clung to him ever since they'd lost sight of
Metamor.<br><br>
It wasn't the shortness of breath that bothered James. It wasn't even so
much that he felt sure Angus was keeping an skeptical eye on him just
waiting for one of his hooves to slip on a rock like the calumnious
skunk. What kept his teeth grinding together as his nostrils flared for
sweet air, was that Charles strode between him and Baerle. He could see
clearly over the rat, but he could come no closer to the opossum than his
erstwhile friend. The bell throbbed at his back in rhythm to his
indignation when it swelled, and then faded into sonorous silence when
the cool air and reason stilled his wrath.<br><br>
The road turned sharply to the east in the middle of the meadow not too
far from the edge of the wood. The rocky grasses were crisscrossed with
little trickling streams of snow-melt and once they left the harder road,
the ground sucked at his hooves with each step. James flexed his fingers
and turned his ears from side to side, one eye watching the woods and the
other looking past the rat to Baerle.<br><br>
The opossum walked confidently across the mire toward the mountain
directly ahead of them. Beyond the woods to the northeast James could see
the defile where the earthquake had sealed off any access to the
Giantdowns, and he was grateful that it did not appear they would be
journeying that way. With so many stones about, Charles would be far too
powerful to strike against.<br><br>
Mountain winds chilled them so that each of them pulled their fur-lined
cloaks tight as they walked. The squelching, almost sucking sound as
James pulled his hooves out of the damp muck that Spring was bringing to
the meadow felt like a thousand laughing voices tumbling one over another
in their ravenous will to be the one closest to the object of their
scorn. His fetlocks would be a tangled mess of knotted slime before they
reached the first talisman. James's lips quivered in irritation, but he
would not let this peat slow him. He kept pace with the rat no matter how
vile the ground became.<br><br>
Baerle led them past the copse and up the northern mountain along a
narrow track suited better to goats than to Keepers. They quickly
ascended, rising well above the meadow after only a few minutes. The rock
was slick but the ledge was just wide enough that none of them had any
difficulty in finding purchase. Though the sky was clotted with thick,
gray clouds, the face they climbed was normally in the sun and so there
was little ice or snow left, though James could see both on the upper
slopes of the peak.<br><br>
Charles was trailing his toes through the stone much as he had done in
the Barrier Range. James felt the bell tremble uncertainly as the rat
suddenly stopped and nodded. “I can feel something different up
ahead.”<br><br>
“That would be the talisman,” Angus called from behind the donkey in a
low voice. “It should be just ahead around the cleft.”<br><br>
The cleft reminded James of the crack in his bell, rising up along the
side of the mountain on their right. Everything within was dark and
shadowed. James felt his heart tighten as Baerle reached the lip and
disappeared from view. His heart relaxed a moment later when she waved a
hand-signal back around the edge of the cleft.<br><br>
“James, hold when you get to the cleft. There's not much room within,”
Angus cautioned as they approached. James felt his eyes widened and his
lips quiver as he saw the rat follow Baerle within. He took his next step
a little more quickly than he should, but he managed to keep his balance
even as he marshaled his temper again.<br><br>
When the donkey reached the cleft he saw what Angus said was true. A
small alcove was fitted between the rock, and on a small pedestal a
five-leaved wooden marker stood. The design was simple, the grain was
finely polished, and the quality as if it has just been cut. The ground
beneath was narrow but Baerle and Charles could stand almost comfortably
next to one another. James tightened his grip on the stone lip, the sharp
edges digging into the flesh of his palm.<br><br>
Charles dug one of the pouches that Burris had given them from his pack,
and handed it to Baerle. The opossum's fingers gently laid over the rats,
their eyes briefly meeting, as she took the pouch from him.<br><br>
<i>On the Future! - how it tells<br><br>
Of the rapture that impels<br><br>
</i>James glowered at the rat. There could be no doubt that Charles had
lied to him about the opossum. They only expressed their intimacy when
they didn't think they were being watched.<br><br>
His eyes bored into the rat's back as both Charles and Baerle took the
contents of the pouch, a dark paste like substance, and spread it over
the leaves. They rubbed the salve with the grain, and the wood took on
the luster of cherry, glowing briefly a vibrant red before fading away. A
hint of foul odor was in the air, but it also quickly dissipated. It took
only a few minutes for the paste to be applied, and then Charles secured
the pouch and returned it to his pack.<br><br>
“Okay, we're done here,” Charles said, smiling around his incisors first
to Baerle, and then to James. The donkey nodded and quickly pulled
himself back around the cleft to keep the rat from grasping his
expression.<br><br>
“The first one's done,” James told Angus.<br><br>
The badger nodded and carefully turned himself back around on the narrow
path. “Then it's time to really head into the mountains.” He gestured to
what looked like a passage between the two peaks framing the western side
of the meadow. “That's where were headed now.”<br><br>
James noted the passage that rose up beyond the trees, still choked with
snow and ice on every slope but those too sheer for anything to cling to.
The bell throbbed against his back. Somewhere out there in the maze of
snow-capped peaks Charles would have his accident. James smiled as he
followed the badger back down the ridge.<br><br>
<br>
</font>----------<br><br>
May He bless you and keep you in His grace and love,<br><br>
Charles Matthias
!DSPAM:4e937813268551804284693!
</body>
<br>
</html>