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<div> <font size="2">Cool story my friend!</font></div>
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<div><font size="2">Chris</font><br>
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<div style="font-family:arial,helvetica;font-size:10pt;color:black">-----Original Message-----<br>
From: C. Matthias <jagille3@vt.edu><br>
To: Metamor Keep <MKGuild@lists.integral.org><br>
Sent: Fri, May 15, 2020 10:11 am<br>
Subject: [Mkguild] First Day on Patrol (3/3)<br>
<br>
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Metamor Keep: First Day on Patrol<br>
by Charles Matthias<br>
<br>
3/3<br>
<br>
By mid-afternoon the old wagon-trail turned into a more obvious road as
the grasses were cleared and they entered cultivated fields again. These
fields, more distant from Lorland, were haphazard and maintained by the
poorest farmers, clearly bitten through by birds and field mice. Battle
sores and the weariness of walking all day long also bit at their
muscles. A touch of surliness at the pace Dallar set gripped Elvmere and
the others on their annual duty as the afternoon wore on.<br>
<br>
As they continued north the sun beat down on their backs and they
frequently paused in their steps for a few moments to squeeze a quick
slurp of water. Elvmere remembered days traveling with Malger and
Murikeer where he'd walked more miles, burdened with a pack on his back
and equipment for the road on his buckler. But those days were not yet a
year gone and the months of Temple life, rigorous as they were, had let
some of his old stamina falter. It would return after a few days of the
martial life, but for now the return of the familiar pains was not
welcome. Prayers and pondering all he'd done already comforted somewhat,
but he still found himself pondering more when the ram would allow them
another break or better yet a place to camp for the night.<br>
<br>
He was also disappointed when after a rest long enough only to stiffen
his muscles he was moved away from the hawks and paired next to the tokay
behind Dallar and the other ram. He was grateful to Jessica for her brief
lesson in magic, something he was sure would help when the time came for
him to receive proper tutelage at the Temple, but he'd hoped to spend
some of his time talking with Weyden and learning more about the hawk's
devotion to Dokorath. Now he'd have to wait for another day. There would
be other days, but the thought was not as comforting as he'd
hoped.<br>
<br>
Wyaert was in no better shape. The blue-red speckled tokay kept his
bright yellow eyes fixed forward along the path, long fingers of one hand
wrapped about the hilt of his sword as if he were dragging it behind him.
After a few words when they were paired, both settled into silence.
Wyaert's eyes flickered only to bare patches of rock as they walked, as
if all he wanted to do was to stretch out and bask in the sun's warm
rays. Elvmere found himself eyeing grassy patches with much the same
thought.<br>
<br>
The trail followed the river north, but the hills and slope forced them
further and further away as the hours slipped past. It was still in sight
except for when they cut around the western side of a low ridge or
cluster of homes. Farmers did not even pause in their work to watch them
troop past, and Elvmere was too absorbed in his own discomfort to notice
them either. <br>
<br>
Elvmere took to drumming his claws across the impression of the Dokorath
medallion beneath his tunic, timing the clicks with each of his steps. He
tried to recall the few stories he knew about the god of battle. Part of
being a warrior was the physical endurance; Dokorath surely understood
what Elvmere needed. Between each click of his claws and step of his
boots he prayed one word of a simple prayer, and repeated it over and
over to focus his mind and heart.<br>
<br>
<i>Dokorath. I. Trust. In. You.<br>
<br>
</i>As he continued to repeat the prayer, an image coalesced in his mind
of a tall man in a black suit of armor, garbed with a black cape bearing
a massive silver sword standing amid a smoky gray fog. His helmet was
mounted by two ram horns and only had slits for his eyes and mouth,
through which incandescent red and white radiance shimmered. He did not
move, but Elvmere knew the deity's gaze lingered upon him.<br>
<br>
The image remained with him for some minutes, sometimes very clear to his
imagination, other times, obscured and only dimly seen. Elvmere, even as
he thought on the visage of the god of battle, honor, and valor, was not
sure if this was a true vision granted him or if this was merely his
imagination bringing to mind what his studies in the Temple archives had
told him. He felt both gratitude and a deep sense of his own
unworthiness. How much of his life had he denied Dokorath and the rest of
the pantheon? He felt a burning shame and lifted the medallion from his
tunic to kiss it.<br>
<br>
The sound of grunting voices up ahead caught his ears and cleared his
mind. They could see a good distance in the farmlands of western Lorland,
but there were still hills and clefts of rock framing the road. He saw
Dallar put his hand on the pommel of his sword and both Elvmere and
Wyaert did the same a moment later after putting his medallion back. They
did not slacken their pace as the road wound around to the right of a low
hill.<br>
<br>
On the other side of the hill they saw a group of four men grasping at a
large boulder in the middle of the field. Two of them were human and
dressed as farmers; the third, a dog of some sort, was dressed as a
soldier. The fourth was large with heavy dark gray skin and a
wide-mouthed head with small ears dressed in black. As they neared,
Elvmere felt his chest tighten and the fur on the back of his neck and
tail bristle. The black-clad creature was a Patildor priest.<br>
<br>
Dallar waved to the men and called out. “Good afternoon! Do you need any
help?”<br>
<br>
The gray-skinned priest lifted his large head and waved back with stubby
fingers. “Good afternoon, and aye! A few extra strong backs should get
this boulder rolling. Can you spare a few minutes to help?”<br>
<br>
“Aye, we can.” He then turned and waved toward the rest of their patrol
before starting into the field. Sedric followed at his side, and Elvmere
and Wyaert did the same a moment later when they caught up. Elvmere
lifted his hand from the pommel of his sword and pressed it atop the
Dokorath medal. The other three men disappeared from his sight; his eyes
fixed on the large priest.<br>
<br>
When they were halfway across the field his eyes focused enough he was
able to recognize what sort of animal this priest had become. It had been
a very long time since he had seen a hippopotamus; they were native to
the rivers near Eavey in Sonngefilde and though they looked peaceful they
were often times more dangerous than the alligators. The shape of a
hippopotamus melded with a man was comical, jovial, and unsettling all at
once. Knowing this was a priest made it all the stranger.<br>
<br>
Elvmere kept behind Dallar and Sedric as they tracked through the grassy
field filled with rocks and divots. It did not seem they had used this
part of the land in years. Nor, if they were only beginning to clear the
field now, would they use it this year. The time for turning the earth
and sowing was a month or two ago. Perhaps they intended it for sheep or
cattle?<br>
<br>
The boulder was the only one in the field and must have rolled down from
the distant mountains a long time ago. It was wider than all four men
standing abreast but only a few hands taller than the hippo. All four
were trying to push it toward the road, though what they hoped to do with
it there Elvmere couldn't imagine. Dallar and Sedric reached it first
with the raccoon and tokay close behind. The hippo priest heaved with his
shoulder, thick lips split open with huge teeth visible between them.
“Where do you want this, Father?”<br>
<br>
Those large jaws opened wide as did Elvmere's eyes on seeing four
tusk-like teeth within. He could not recall having ever seen larger teeth
or a larger mouth on any of the Keepers he'd ever met. Yet despite having
a mouth large enough for Elvmere to fit his head and shoulders inside,
the priest's manner was affable and the rumbling chuckle beneath his
words almost set him at ease. “Oh, anywhere along the side of the road
will do, Captain. We'll break it apart to start a new wall next
week.”<br>
<br>
“Larssen! Tamsin! Get over here and help us move this stone. Sedric,
Wyaert, I want you on the sides. Elvmere, can you slide in beneath
Father?”<br>
<br>
“Purvis,” the hippo added, lifting one arm so the raccoon could squeeze
beneath him. “Come, son, every paw will help.”<br>
<br>
Elvmere chuffed at being called 'son' and had to brush down his neck fur
with one hand. He offered another quick prayer to Dokorath for strength,
brought the medallion to his snout for another kiss, then crouched lower
and slid beneath the hippo's bulk. He put his hands against the large
stone, digging his claws into the hard earth thrust through by grass
patched with wildflowers and little stones. Dallar heaved his shoulder
into the stone on the other side, and for a moment Elvmere was trapped
between the stone and three animal men, with only a few shafts of light
peering through.<br>
<br>
He could hear Dallar shouting to Sedric, Wyaert, and the others, and the
grunting of the men as they shoved, as well as his own breath as he
pushed, the stone digging against the sensitive skin on his palms and
fingers. He felt the dirt underneath his feet crumble and his toes and
heels sank into the loam.<br>
<br>
And then he felt a jolt through his arms as the boulder lurched away.
Elvmere almost fell onto his snout, but the thought of the hippo priest
also falling made him leap forward, a beastly chitter rattling across his
tongue and teeth. The boulder rolled, and it carried his paws up with it,
until he reached down lower and pushed more. Huge tracts of earth were
ripped apart with each turn, and his feet dragged through the earth,
including through a few patches muddier than the rest. He could feel the
grime clinging to his fur and burrowing between his claws.<br>
<br>
His heart beat faster, ever mindful of the huge stone before him and the
weighty hippo ever one moment away from collapsing on top of him. Yet he
felt excitement and a firm determination to keep as close to the stone as
he could, and a kindled flame in his chest. His strength alone was not
enough, but together with the farmers and his patrol the boulder rolled
like a pebble tossed by a child. Elvmere chuffed a harsh laugh between
breaths.<br>
<br>
“Larssen! Tamsin! Slow it down!” Dallar's shout was loud even over the
grunting animal noises and grinding stones.<br>
<br>
Elvmere stopped pushing at the stone, only moving forward to keep up with
it and keep his paws against it. The granite and muck clinging to it
slowed with each passing step. Elvmere felt the hulking shape press
closer against his back and so he pressed closer to the stone. Grime
splattered against his legs and chest, and he even felt some flick
against his whiskers and cheeks. The raccoon narrowed his eyes and hissed
in a strange satisfaction.<br>
<br>
And then just as abruptly as the boulder began to move it stopped with a
heavy thunk. Elvmere smashed against the surface, snout turning to the
side to keep from bruising his nose. The hippo backed off and Elvmere was
grateful the brute didn't crush him into a raccoon-fur pulp. The priest
let out a booming laugh. “Ah, thank you, Captain! Thank you all! Son, are
you all right?”<br>
<br>
Elvmere pushed off the boulder and blinked as the light flooded his eyes.
He felt the mud dripping in clumps off his tunic and breeches. He waved
his hands back and forth to get the filth free and then clawed at his
cheeks to straightened out his fur. It didn't do much good.<br>
<br>
“Just muddy is all.” The raccoon turned partway to offer the hippo a
toothy scowl, before stepping out of the large ditch gouged out by the
boulder's passage to find his friends. He flicked his tail from side to
side and was grateful at least one part of him wasn't a gunk-smeared
wreck.<br>
<br>
The farmers and the dog soldier also had a bit of mud on them up to their
chests, while Dallar, Sedric, Wyaert, and Tamsin only had it on their
legs. Larssen was the only one who appeared to have avoided the mess.
Tamsin lifted his snout in a boisterous laugh on seeing the raccoon.
Wyaert, who'd been brushing the mud from his breeches, stared with wide
yellow eyes at Elvmere for several seconds before resuming his own
cleansing.<br>
<br>
“Let me help you, son,” Purvis offered, stretching out a meaty hand to
brush the mud off of the raccoon's chest.<br>
<br>
Elvmere felt his tail fur bristle again and he shook his head, “No need.
I can manage.” Dallar's ears lifted in surprise and Elvmere felt chagrin
realizing how he'd bitten each word. In more measured tones, he added, “I
didn't know there was another Patildor priest in Metamor.”<br>
<br>
The hippos short ears flicked around toward the raccoon, hand
outstretched with his offer to clean the mud from the raccoon's tunic. If
he had noticed the anger in Elvmere's voice he gave no sign of it. “What
a marvelous home you have, son. 'Twas a shame only Father Hough could
enjoy these wonders. I was happily assigned here a few months ago. Are
you from the Keep?”<br>
<br>
“Aye, Father,” Dallar replied, waving Elvmere back. “On patrol in Lorland
for a few days. We may cross paths again. For now, is there any other
help we can offer you and your friends?”<br>
<br>
The hippo lowered his arm as the raccoon stepped away, snorted upward
through his nostrils, and then smiled in his affable way. “Nay, good
Captain, we can manage the rest here. You are far from Lorland here and
going the wrong way I fear! I will be offering Liturgy at the ninth bell
tomorrow morning; you and your men are welcome; I would be honored to
bless you and your men.”<br>
<br>
Elvmere pulled the Dokorath medallion from his tunic and pressed it to
his snout as he backed away. Dallar bleated, “We will not be near your
parish tomorrow morning so we will not be joining you. And most of my men
are Lothanasi, including two acolytes of Temple, but thank you for the
offer, Father. Larssen, if you, Maud, and Van would care for a blessing,
you may do so now. We'll be waiting for you.”<br>
<br>
“And I,” Wyaert the tokay announced. He stepped toward the hippo which
gave Elvmere the excuse to step further away around the boulder. “I have
heard many good things about you, Father, from my fellows of
Bradanes.”<br>
<br>
“Ah, you were of Bradanes as well? Terrible what you have suffered. I
will gladly give you my blessing, young man.” The hippo lifted one hand
over the lizard's head to trace the familiar yew.<br>
<br>
Elvmere walked back onto the road and bent over to brush the mud off his
trousers. He ended up smearing it across the few clean spots instead.
“Ach! I'm a mess.”<br>
<br>
Tamsin patted him on the shoulder. “You should keep wiping, I think you
missed a spot there.”<br>
<br>
The raccoon hissed and straightened before he made himself fit for
nothing better than being chucked into the river. He probably should do
it himself; it wasn't far away. “We're bound to get filthy on patrol
anyway.”<br>
<br>
“On your first day of patrol no less! I'm surprised the large one back
there didn't crush you.”<br>
<br>
“Indeed!”<br>
<br>
Tamsin stepped closer and flicked a bit of mud from the raccoon's
shoulder. “Do not much care for Patildor priests, eh?”<br>
<br>
“I... It's been a while since I have seen any. I have not always been
treated well at their hands.” Elvmere took a deep breath, claws tracing
the contours of the circle and arrow Dokorath claimed for his own. He
offered a prayer for strength and another to Samekkh for
understanding.<br>
<br>
Tamsin nodded and snorted, casting a glance at the hippo before turning
back to Elvmere with a bright laugh in his eyes. “Perhaps you can tell me
about it later. Time to go; Dallar's coming.”<br>
<br>
Elvmere put his medallion back beneath his tunic where it rested
comfortably against his chest. He rested his palm on the pommel of his
sword and dug the claws of his other hand against his side and the mud
clinging to him. Dallar nodded once to him as the ram rejoined the road
and without a word Elvmere fell in behind him next to the now beaming
Wyaert; Elvmere refused to look at the lizard.<br>
<br>
----------<br>
<br>
For more minutes than Elvmere could count they continued on the road,
most of the rest of the patrol laughing about the experience. Wyaert was
silent for which Elvmere was grateful. Apart from the growing discomfort
of the sticky and hardening mud caking most of his clothes and exposed
fur, he found it difficult to focus on anything be it the fields and
farms surrounding them, the sound of the other soldiers in their patrol
following him, or even the thoughts darting about his mind. A sullen
disquiet filled him. <br>
<br>
He wished he could walk beside Tamsin. The tapir and fellow acolyte was
his friend. Wyaert was a stranger to him and only here because of
Metamor's annual levy. He wasn't sure what he could say to Tamsin, but it
was a lot more than he wished to admit to the Patildor lizard.<br>
<br>
Elvmere was not even sure what he dared admit to himself. The mere sight
of a Patildor priest had set him on edge. The Patildor... the Ecclesia.
For so long he'd been part of them, even rising to the rank of Bishop, a
Bishop who'd been confidant of the Patriarch and thought by many to be
the next Patriarch. <br>
<br>
He well remembered the horrible night in the rain-soaked fields south of
Lorland when the Sondecki slaughtered the Patriarch's camp including his
mentor and friend for over a dozen years. Elvmere covered the surge of
anger by scratching at the mud on his tunic, rubbing his fingers and
claws against the impression where the medallion lay. It had not been Eli
who'd cried out a warning to him but his Lady. She had come to him and
told him precisely what to do to save himself. The blow had cracked his
ribs, but the Curse of Metamor had healed him, and given him the mask his
Lady had presented to him a few nights before.<br>
<br>
<i>I was always meant to be a raccoon. I was always meant to be
Elvmere.<br>
<br>
</i>He trudged ahead, lowering his hand to wrap about his sword hilt. The
road had widened from a pair of ruts in the ground to a hard-packed
avenue two wagons could ride abreast. They passed farms clustered
together and filled by thatch-roofed homes with wooden walls. His ears
turned at the sounds of horses and donkeys at work in the fields as well
as the crank of wheels. There were even a few wagons filled with bales of
hay, casks of foodstuffs, or barrels of wine heading south toward the
bridge to Lorland. Elvmere barely saw them.<br>
<br>
Both times he'd ventured south from Metamor they'd skirted Lorland on
their way. The first time he'd been Vinsah, and the second time he'd only
begrudgingly accepted his real name. Vinsah had not been a bad man, nor
was it a bad name. But he felt an idiot as he thought on both of those
journeys. The first time his Lady had warned him not to leave Metamor;
she'd even appeared in Akabaieth's dreams to ask him to leave Elvmere
behind. Why had he been such a fool? He'd trusted his own judgment and
sought to flee her. In the end he returned to Metamor anyway.<br>
<br>
At least he'd learned to trust his Lady and when she bid him leave
Metamor six months later he did so. But it took the wisdom of Malger and
Murikeer to keep him alive and to convince him to take a new name. Only
the name Elvmere could suffice.<br>
<br>
Elvmere ground his fangs together for a moment and kept on walking.
Wyaert did not seem to notice. His name and his past journeys through
Lorland were not what had inflamed him nor what kept his heart seething.
Even the Dokorath medallion throbbed in his chest fur.<br>
<br>
It was the hippopotamus. The Patildor priest.<br>
<br>
He'd known from the first moment he set foot in the Lothanasi temple to
serve the gods as an acolyte six months ago he would one day see Patildor
priests again. He still thought fondly on Father Hough from time to time
and hoped the boy was managing well enough. Nor had he forgotten how the
Questioners spirited him away from Yesulam when evil men from Bishop
Jothay came to kill him. <br>
<br>
But he would never forget the hammer blows. Excommunicated. Cast out. His
yew shattered. The Bishops approving and in his miserable recollection,
chanting the words in time to the blows with the Patriarch. Corrupt men
worshiping only their own power. Many of them he had called friend for
years. Once clad in fur he had become the pariah.<br>
<br>
<i>Is not this a grief even to death? But a companion and a friend shall
be turned to an enemy.<br>
<br>
</i>Elvmere ground his fangs together. He had served the Patildor for
decades, first as an altar server as a boy, then a priest for much of his
life, and finally a Bishop, traveling in the inner circle of the
Patriarch himself. Whispers and rumors abounded through his ears for the
last few years when Akabaieth passed on to his eternal reward it would be
Vinsah elevated as Yahshua's vicar. <br>
<br>
The bitter anger softened in sorrow at the memory of his kind and patient
mentor. Akabaieth, whose own thoughts had guided and comforted Elvmere in
his hour of need, had ever been reserved and quiet in managing the
Ecclesia's hierarchy. So much of what the raccoon had read in his
journals had never been voiced before, thoughts the dead man had likely
seen as too difficult for the Bishops. Elvmere, reading those journals,
living for a short time at Metamor as a raccoon, and traveling with
Malger and Murikeer, had his eyes opened to many things he'd never
considered before. Akabaieth already had made his peace with them, and by
the time Elvmere had arrived in Yesulam he had accepted them as
well.<br>
<br>
And for these things he was cast out. Akabaieth had seen it in sorrow. He
had mused upon the Lothanasi, a people he had once zealously persecuted,
attempting to convert them with sword and suffering, and had granted the
gods a place. They were real and it was not wrong to belong to them. And
Elvmere was meant to belong to them; Akabaieth had in some way seen it
too. He pressed his hand on his tunic, rubbing his claws along the edges
of the medallion beneath.<br>
<br>
The Patildor were wrong about magic being evil. They knew it too with
their multiple carved out exceptions for the Sondeckis and some of the
other Southern mage clans. The Lothanasi had no such inhibitions about
magic; his friend Tamsin was receiving instruction in its usage and soon
he would as well. Jessica's lesson was but the first step of many he
would take; the gods willing he would craft spells one day.<br>
<br>
And if they were wrong about this, what else were they wrong about? What
else had Elvmere been wrong about? Were they wrong about Eli and Yahshua
too?<br>
<br>
Elvmere recalled what he'd read in the archives, of the ancient goddess
of the arts Sakkan swearing fealty to Kammoloth. For a moment he burned
with a desire to see those proud Bishops falling on their knees before
Raven in honor of Kammoloth and the Pantheon. <br>
<br>
He ground his fangs together and tightened his grip on the medallion.
These thoughts were not like him. This anger was not who he wanted to be.
Elvmere had to think clearly and see truth for what it was. Emotions
could help, but they were not the arbiter of truth. And in truth, the
Bishops had not kindled this anger, but the smiling face of the
hippopotamus priest and how he'd called Elvmere 'son'. This Purvis may be
a kindly man, may in fact be genuine in his desire to help and to use
what the curses gave him to help, but he was still the face of those
Bishops here in Metamor. A smile before a hammer. Just as the hammer had
crushed his yew, the hippo had almost crushed his body against the
boulder. <br>
<br>
Dark eyes cast toward the lizard, and his ears backed. The tokay hissed
out through his fangs the melody of a Patildor hymn! <br>
<br>
<i>Think clearly! Anger only darkens everything!<br>
<br>
</i>Elvmere narrowed his eyes, focused on breathing in and out, stepping
one foot before the other, and brought to mind the prayers he'd learned
from his beautiful Nylene on his voyage home and of the many more he'd
learned as an acolyte. He repeated them one by one, slowly and at length,
beseeching Samekkh for wisdom, Dokorath for courage, Velena for love for
his friends and enemies, Akkala for mending the bitterness in his heart,
Artela for sure senses on the patrol, Yajiit for warmth in the night,
Dvalin for good weather, Wvelkim for safe passage upon the waters, and
Kammoloth for humility to listen and learn.<br>
<br>
His heart burned, but he still prayed and still walked. And ignored the
Patildor lizard.<br>
<br>
----------<br>
<br>
They reached the crossroads to Ellingham in the west and Lyme Regis in
the east by late afternoon. An old stone bridge spanned the river and
there they stopped long enough for Tamsin, Larssen, and Dallar to throw a
surprised and mud-smeared raccoon into the cold water and then drag him
back out again a hundred paces downstream.<br>
<br>
Elvmere dripped from clothes and fur for another hour as they continued
their patrol northward, leaving the main road behind and trekking once
more along wagon tracks and footpaths beaten through the grass and brush.
The unexpected soaking actually improved his mood and he was soon
laughing about his bedraggled state with the other soldiers. The
afternoon sun warmed him and with so few trees in the western reaches of
Lorland he was able to keep himself in its brilliant rays until evening
when the sun fell behind a swath of low clouds creeping over the Dragon
mountains.<br>
<br>
All of them, levies and soldiers alike, were showing weariness in little
ways. Everyone's steps were a little slower and they took short breaks
more often. Elvmere winced at the soreness in his legs and shoulders and
gasped in relief every time he could sling the pack off his back. Myrwyn
spent most of his time perched on the supply horse stretching and
preening his wings. Sedric groaned and made pathetic bleating noises from
time to time. Wyaert looked lethargic the moment the sun hid behind the
clouds and kept fiddling with an amulet he otherwise kept hidden beneath
his tunic. Tamsin and the soldiers gave no outward sign of their
exhaustion, but Elvmere recognized their slowness and the sullen drooping
of their eyes having seen it many times in Malger and Murikeer
before.<br>
<br>
Dallar turned them westward away from the river as the day began to wane.
The foot path meandered through mostly fallow fields and pastures up
through rising hills. Small pines pock-marked the land, nestled in clefts
and among rocks where the hills folded over. Up ahead the grasses
surrendered to the edge of a dark wood filled with grown pines, beech,
alder, and oak. Everyone grew quiet, trudging along, eyes wary and
tired.<br>
<br>
Elvmere's clothes were still damp in places and stank of the river, and
with the sun behind the clouds and soon the mountains a slight chill
crept into his fur and skin despite the general warmth of the Summer
evening. He wished the sun had been able to warm his front as well as his
back, but he thanked Yajiit all the same for what sun he
received.<br>
<br>
The day was nearly spent by the time they reached the wood. Already
twilight gloom covered the eastern mountains and the clouds began
spreading across the valley to the south, promising a cool night and
perhaps even a midnight sprinkle. They paused only long enough on
entering the woods for Dallar to reorder them one last time, remind them
to keep watch for signs of poachers, and assurances they would be
breaking for camp in another two candlemarks.<br>
<br>
Elvmere found himself up front with the ram once again. The ram gestured
to various bushes and trees and bits of dirt and rock all about. The foot
path had all but disappeared to the raccoon's eyes and even though he saw
better in the twilight gloom than he did in full daylight, he had only
the vaguest of notions what the ram meant with each gesture. He found his
mood souring from the exhaustion and the dampness in his chest which
seemed colder with every step.<br>
<br>
When ground descended into a small dell with a stream trickling through,
Dallar flashed a signal Elvmere didn't recognize to the soldiers behind
them, and then stepped off the path along the stream, waving the raccoon
to follow. The brush was thick and Elvmere kept bumping into clinging
branches. Dallar's hooves sunk into the ground along the stream, leaving
a trail even Elvmere could see; his boots did the same, though the broken
stems left in his wake were just as telling.<br>
<br>
After a minute of following the stream, presumably for clues to the
poachers, Dallar turned around and fixed Elvmere with a hard stare. The
raccoon averted his gaze, looking around for some evidence of the
poachers. All he could see were the tracks they were leaving and he
chittered to himself in annoyance, tail flicking back and forth and
fingers working over his tunic and and sword hilt.<br>
<br>
“I, uh, am not sure what I'm looking for, Sir.”<br>
<br>
Dallar crossed his arms and shook his head, his voice low. “There's
nothing here, Acolyte. You've been out of sorts since we helped the
priest. Have you calmed yourself down?”<br>
<br>
Elvmere chuffed, his tail pulling up around his legs. “I... you could
tell?”<br>
<br>
“I've been a patrol captain and a gaoler. I have seen all manner of
beasts in anger.”<br>
<br>
The flare in his heart made him tighten his claws into his palms. Just
thinking of the hippo made him burn inside. He thought of Nylene and her
hands brushing through the fur of his chest and back and managed to
relax. “Aye, I am calm.”<br>
<br>
Dallar rolled his tongue along his teeth as he stared at the raccoon. “Is
it the Patildor you do not like, or merely their priests?”<br>
<br>
Elvmere hunched his shoulders. How could he answer the questions without
revealing who he'd once been, something he was forbidden to do? Lies
offended Samekkh and they were dishonorable to Dokorath. He sighed. “I
don't think it is all Patildor priests. I... I know what it is to serve
the gods. During my travels... I encountered many who did terrible
things. I saw those things again when I saw the hippopotamus.” He tried
to say the priest's name, but bile filled him. He closed his jaws before
any spilled.<br>
<br>
Dallar let him stew in silence for more seconds than he dared count. The
ram's gaze penetrated and the raccoon, filled with shame, could not meet
them. He looked down at the hoof and boot prints in the soft earth, the
trickle of water in the stream as it burbled over rocks and roots,
tearing away at the soil on its way toward the river. He fiddled with the
Dokorath medallion at his neck. The scents of Tamsin and the others in
their patrol grew stronger in the air.<br>
<br>
The ram broke the silence when they could hear the muffled bleat of
Sedric through the trees. Dallar's voice was firm, a commander's voice.
“You don't have to see Patildor while in the Temple. Hate them all you
want then. Like you I grew up in this valley. I am Lothanasi and faithful
to the Light. But half my men are Patildor and they are fine soldiers and
very good men; they are my friends. And now they are your brothers in
arms... and sisters. You will keep your anger in check and you will come
to their aid without hesitation. I am not going to repeat this. Do you
understand?”<br>
<br>
Elvmere nodded. His behavior was not his alone, it reflected on the
Temple and Lothanasa Raven and Priestess Merai. His gritted his fangs and
nodded again, saying, “I understand, Captain. I will not let my anger at
the Patildor get the better of me again.” And if he did, he knew there'd
be months of serving in the Dove room and stinking of poop in his future.
He could already seen Raven's stern lupine glare, Merai's disappointed
eyes, Celine's trust broken, and Weiland's constant reprimands. He knew
the lectures of how rage was the domain of Revonos and the destruction it
always caused.<br>
<br>
<i>Oh Dokorath help me control my anger. Help me be a good brother in
arms. I offer you all my training and all my service. Grant me this,
Dokorath!</i> <br>
<br>
Dallar waited several more seconds before nodding. “Good. Now, let's
rejoin our friends. It is almost time to make camp.” The ram offered him
a firm grin and patted him on the shoulder.<br>
<br>
Elvmere forced a smile for his commanding officer as they walked back
along the stream.<br>
<br>
----------<br>
<br>
They selected a level stretch of forest for their camp and cleared some
of the brush in the center to make a fire began as the long day finally
dwindled to twilight. Even the experienced soldiers appeared worn out
from the long hours trekking from Metamor and across Lorland. While
Dallar and Maud kindled a fire Larssen cleared the nearby trees of dead
branches for fuel and the rest pitched camp.<br>
<br>
Tamsin and Elvmere had their lean-to steady a few minutes after
retrieving the supplies from their packs. The tapir grinned and grunted
in approval. “Great work! Now let's get this canvas secured and we can
relax. Long day, eh?”<br>
<br>
“Aye,” Elvmere agreed, offering his friend a toothy grin, “and it's not
quite over yet”. The heavy pack he'd carried along with the boots he'd
worn were already sitting atop his blanket. His grateful toes stretched
through the moss and dried leaves. He desperately wanted to shift to a
more feral form and meditate on Artela and the wonders of her forests,
but the weight of the sword still buckled to his side reminded him he was
not here for himself but for Metamor. He had to keep his promise to
Dokorath.<br>
<br>
“Not quite,” Tamsin stretched his arms and shoulders, before handing the
raccoon one end of the broad canvas. It was thin and would serve only to
keep rain and most of the wind off while they slept. It was not unusual
for many Summer nights to feature gentle rains and after his journeys
with Malger and Murikeer he knew how miserable it was to sleep in the
rain.<br>
<br>
Elvmere took his end and between them they stretched it out across the
beams of wood they'd built. He used a pair of hooked nails and threaded
them through the loops at the corners, pushing them into the ground with
his hands until they could go no further. He gave each a whack with one
of his boots for good measure.<br>
<br>
When he stood, he saw Tamsin nodding his head in approval and wiping his
hands. “Ah, good, good. Should be warm and dry tonight. Let's get a line
stretched out near the fire and hang your clothes to dry.”<br>
<br>
Elvmere nodded and undid the buckler over his shoulder, easing it and the
sword down to the ground so he could remove his tunic. “I'm not taking
the breeches off until later. But I do want this shirt off.” Tamsin
laughed, a comforting sound, as he undid the lacing of his tunic and
shimmied free. The medallion bounced against his chest and his gray fur
shimmered in the dance of firelight. <br>
<br>
A few minutes later and they secured a line of rope between two trees
passing near enough to the fire to warm their wet clothes. Elvmere draped
his tunic across the line and sighed. On the other side of the fire he
could see Wyaert and Sedric working on their lean-to with Van standing
cross-armed giving them directions. The hawks were showing Myrwyn how to
spread a small canvas between branches so they could sleep dry in a perch
above the camp. Larssen and Maud, with the fire crackling, were sorting
their food to cook. Dallar started working on his lean-to, ears lifted,
eyes ever scanning the trees around them. The pack horses grazed flowers
and weeds, relieved to be free of their burdens.<br>
<br>
“Two weeks of this... I miss the evening sacrifice.” Elvmere was almost
surprised at his own words. He'd been a Lothanasi acolyte for six months
now. Other than the nights he'd been assigned guard duty at the Temple
entrance, he had always taken part in the sacred ritual spilling of dove
blood upon the altar. The Patildor did not believe in animal sacrifices.
Yet now they were a part of him too; he had cared for and cleaned up
after the birds for three months, and even though he had a wider range of
duties, he still had to tend them at least once a week. His own prayers
and devotion was joined to the sacrifice; he belonged to the Pantheon. He
had to live up to them.<br>
<br>
“Aye, I know but we'll have time to pray at least. We can start by
thanking Dvalin for the good weather and Yajiit for the warm sun and this
warm fire.”<br>
<br>
“And asking Dvalin to give us good weather tonight and tomorrow too,”
Elvmere replied. “Is this what your life was like before you were
injured?”<br>
<br>
Tamsin nodded and stretched his legs out. “Aye, mostly. Builds good
muscles at least.”<br>
<br>
“Will you ever go back to it?”<br>
<br>
The tapir seemed to stare beyond the forest for a second. “If anyone else
in my unit had survived, probably. Bonds of blood are strong, Elvmere.
You'll understand if we have to fight. I think you'll do fine. I doubt
Captain Dallar will have us practice any more tonight, but tomorrow
definitely.”<br>
<br>
Elvmere rubbed at one of his bruises and then stretched. “Good. I need
it. I'm sure this won't be my last patrol. So, what do we do
now?”<br>
<br>
“See what the Captain wants us to do.”<br>
<br>
Dallar, after inspecting their lean-to, had them finish setting up his
own and then had them set one up for Larssen and Maud. Elvmere enjoyed
the simple work. It settled his mind and heart and cheered him. Even his
sore muscles felt good at the activity. The Dokorath medallion leaded
forward whenever he did, then bounced against his chest fur when he
straightened.<br>
<br>
When they finished Dallar allowed them to relax by the fire while Maud
and the giraffe cooked up sausages. Elvmere stretched his toes and
reclined, claws of one hand drawing through his tail fur, the other
rubbing over the medallion. Tamsin elected to check on the birds and so
for a short time the raccoon was left alone.<br>
<br>
He stared into the flames and did as Tamsin suggested, offering a prayer
of thanks to Yajiit for the fire and the warm sun they'd enjoyed. He
followed it with a prayer to Dvalin thanking him for the good weather and
beseeching him to keep it good on the morrow.<br>
<br>
As his body relaxed he found his mind wandering across the many things
he'd done since rising early in the Temple. He chittered a laugh as he
remembered zooming down the line from the watchtower, and at being tossed
into the river by his friends. He felt a bit of pride at the way he'd
comported himself when checking in with the Lorland city guard and in how
he'd sent Sedric sprawling in battle. He wondered in awe at the lesson
Jessica had tried to teach him and pondered whether he would ever be able
to cast any magic. And he felt a simmering disquiet at the memory of the
smiling hippo priest and Dallar's stern warning.<br>
<br>
<i>I don't really hate the Patildor, do I? <br>
<br>
No. No I don't. Just... they've hurt me. The Bishops lied, schemed, and
destroyed my faith and would have killed me too.<br>
<br>
Wyaert hasn't. Dokorath wants me to treat him as a brother in arms.
Kammoloth must surely want me to show him the Light.<br>
<br>
</i>Elvmere lifted the medallion and stared down his snout at it. The
fire burned behind it, giving it a bronze brilliance. This was real and
its teachings a sure guide in his life. He'd been given a new life at
Metamor in both body, age, and mind by the curses and his Lady. It was
time to stop being ashamed of it. He would serve the true gods of the
Lothanasi. For now it meant he would serve with arms in Artela's land.
Perhaps he would unlock secret mystic arts within himself.<br>
<br>
His nostrils swelled and his chest filled with warmth and excitement at
the thought. Elvmere chittered, kissed the medallion and set it back upon
his chest. He let his eyes narrow as one hand wrapped itself about the
hilt of his sword. His ears heard all his companions did, from the
sizzling of the delectable sausages, to the laughter of Tamsin and Van
helping poor Wyaert and Sedric fix their lean-to. <br>
<br>
And in his mind he sought beyond himself for the magic the black hawk
promised was there. Two weeks was a long time. Only the gods knew what he
would find.<br>
<br>
----------<br>
<br>
May He bless you and keep you in His grace and love,<br>
<br>
Charles Matthias </div>
<br>
</div>
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