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<BR> Well Murphy and his gremlins struck again. I sent to the list the WRONG
<BR>version of the scene in part 24a. Below is the correct version. My apologies
<BR>for the mistake. Part 24b is correct as is so I'm not resending it.
<BR>
<BR> Chris
<BR> The apologetic Fox
<BR>
<BR>
<BR>***
<BR>
<BR>The Lightbringer Archives were quiet, and unexpectedly warm considering
<BR>the weather. Men, women and children were curled up on the floor in soft
<BR>woolen blankets; some of them, those who were old, sick, or weak, rested
<BR>on thin sleeping mats that provided a bit more comfort for their tired
<BR>and aching bones. Most had drifted off to sleep by now, clustered
<BR>together into groups of family and friends. Others still lay awake,
<BR>praying for the protection of their loved ones outside. And one figure
<BR>paced irritably back and forth near the spiral staircase, her footsteps
<BR>making no sound but her frustration obvious in every movement.
<BR>
<BR>A second form quietly descended the stairs, touched the first figure
<BR>lightly on the shoulder, and beckoned her back the way she had come.
<BR>
<BR>"You shall arouse the others if you continue pacing down there," Merai
<BR>said when they had reached the top of the staircase.
<BR>
<BR>"If you dislike seeing me pace, then give me something useful to do,"
<BR>Daria growled. "I have no business sleeping on a night like this."
<BR>
<BR>Merai turned and clasped forearms with her warrior friend. "What good
<BR>will it do anyone for you to wear yourself out?" she asked, her voice and
<BR>eyes concerned. Her feline tail twitched behind her in silent worry.
<BR>
<BR>"What good will it do me to sit here while the battle rages outside?" the
<BR>redhead countered. "I'm a squire, Merai. My place is by my master's side,
<BR>in battle, not cowering in here behind a wall of magic." She clenched and
<BR>unclenched her fists repeatedly, looking as if she desperately wished to
<BR>be holding a sword and shield in those hands.
<BR>
<BR>Merai sighed and shook her head, her pointed ears twitching backwards a
<BR>little. "This battle is bigger than us, Daria. Going outside, alone, now
<BR>-- you would only get yourself killed. One squire will make no
<BR>difference."
<BR>
<BR>Daria's jaw tightened, but after a moment she, too, lowered her head and
<BR>sighed. "I know. And perhaps that is the more frustrating thing." She
<BR>slumped down against the wall, and the cat-woman silently moved to join
<BR>her. Daria drew her knees up close to her body, gripping her arms in her
<BR>hands as if to ward off some unseen chill.
<BR>
<BR>After a few seconds of silence, Daria turned to face Merai. The young
<BR>priestess saw that her friend's eyes were wet with tears. "Merai, my
<BR>father is out there right now," she murmured. The dread in her voice was
<BR>palpable. "He was on the wall when the alarum sounded. I wish that I
<BR>could go to him, help him in the battle ... but I could never find him
<BR>out there, and it would be wrong for me try." She fell silent again, her
<BR>hands tightening against her arms. "All my life, my father has been the
<BR>most important person in my life," she said, her eyes distant. "He has
<BR>been my inspiration, my example ... I look at him and I see a hero." She
<BR>shook her head distractedly. "I know that people die in war. But if he's
<BR>gone..."
<BR>
<BR>Her voice drifted off, as her head hung forward limply. Wordlessly, Merai
<BR>reached out and drew her into an embrace, holding her close as silent
<BR>tears rolled down. Daria fought so hard to be strong, Merai reflected --
<BR>struggled to be the brave knight and warrior she had always wanted to be.
<BR>But emotions were real and important things, and denying them could only
<BR>force them inward until they consumed you. Merai tried to help her
<BR>realize that there was no shame in expressing her feelings -- but as her
<BR>friend clutched tightly at her back, digging her fingers into Merai's
<BR>robe until she was gripping the soft fur beneath it, the priestess
<BR>reflected that she still had a long way to go.
<BR>
<BR>After some time -- Merai could not say how long -- they heard a sudden
<BR>pounding in the hallway outside.
<BR>
<BR>"What is that?" Daria asked, frowning. "Is someone trying to break in?"
<BR>
<BR>Merai perked her ears forward, listening. Someone was, indeed, banging on
<BR>the heavy bronze-covered doors of the temple -- but there was another
<BR>sound interspersed with it, fainter but still recognizable...
<BR>
<BR>"Those are Keepers," she said, getting to her feet. "They must have come
<BR>here looking for shelter."
<BR>
<BR>"Can we let them in?" Daria asked, following close behind her as she
<BR>wiped the tears from her eyes.
<BR>
<BR>"I hope so."
<BR>
<BR>Stepping out of the side passage that contained the staircase, Merai shut
<BR>the door behind them and headed for the main entrance. Two guards stood
<BR>at the door, both human, their swords drawn and ready. One was a town
<BR>guardsman from Euper named Wester, and the other a woman who called
<BR>herself a bodyguard. From the cool manner the two displayed toward each
<BR>other, they obviously had some sort of history together that had been
<BR>less than cordial. Whatever their feelings toward each other, though,
<BR>they weren't letting them interfere with their duties at the door, and in
<BR>any case Merai had more important things to worry about.
<BR>
<BR>"Is anyone in there?" a female voice shouted behind the door. "Please,
<BR>let us in! We have wounded with us!"
<BR>
<BR>Merai gripped the heavy metal handle on one of the doors. "Were you
<BR>followed?" she asked, trying to speak loudly enough to be heard while
<BR>still being considerate of those sleeping in the nearby rooms. The woman
<BR>grasped the crossbrace, handing the other guard her sword for a moment as
<BR>she prepared to haul the heavy beam up. She said nothing, watching Merai
<BR>with intense, hazel eyes, and waited.
<BR>
<BR>"No, the staircase closed behind us on the second floor," the voice
<BR>answered. "There isn't an enemy in sight."
<BR>
<BR>Nodding, Merai stepped back from the door. "Lady Kyia," she murmured,
<BR>"will you let these people come inside?"
<BR>
<BR>The answer came back like a whisper on the wind. "I shall. There is no
<BR>danger -- they have brought no darkness with them."
<BR>
<BR>"Thank you," Merai whispered. Turning to Daria, she motioned at the door.
<BR>"Would you let them in, Dari? I shall keep watch that nothing foul tries
<BR>to slip in behind them."
<BR>
<BR>The squire nodded, walking up to the large double doors as the female
<BR>guard hauled the crossbrace back. She grabbed the handle of the left one
<BR>and it opened easily. Quickly, a line of about twenty men and women of
<BR>assorted species filed into the room, carrying two more men and a young
<BR>girl along with them. As soon as the last one had passed inside the door
<BR>shut firmly behind them of its own volition, and the self-proclaimed
<BR>bodyguard rammed the crossbrace back into place. Merai beckoned to two
<BR>acolytes who silently stood guard at the far end of the hallway along
<BR>with two other armed members of the congregation.
<BR>"Take these three into the temple and tend to their wounds," she said.
<BR>"I'll be along shortly to help with anything serious."
<BR>
<BR>Without a word, the acolytes came over and examined the wounded. After a
<BR>moment, they led the men carrying them back into the main temple hall.
<BR>
<BR>"Thank you," one of the remaining women said, approaching Merai and
<BR>extending a hand. She was a skunk-morph, one of the few Merai had seen,
<BR>and her eyes were a mixture of gratitude, worry, and hardened resolve.
<BR>She also looked tired, her breathing labored from what must have been a
<BR>long, hard run from the battle lines. Surprisingly, Merai could only
<BR>faintly detect any hint of the woman's distinctive musk; traces of it
<BR>lingered on the clothes of some of her comrades, but none on the mephit
<BR>herself. Merai noticed a pendant hanging from the skunk-morph's neck; its
<BR>magic shined clearly in the priestess's aura-vision, and she realized
<BR>that this must be the device that was dampening the mustelid's aroma.
<BR>
<BR>All of which would make things much easier on everyone, especially since
<BR>they were in confined quarters. Merai clasped the woman's hand firmly,
<BR>nodding once. "Just doing our duty," she said. "Welcome to the
<BR>Lightbringer Temple. I'm Sister Merai."
<BR>
<BR>"Aye, I've seen you from time to time around the Keep," the other woman
<BR>said with a weary smile. "Kayla," she added by way of introduction,
<BR>speaking over her shoulder as she turned to the nearby cloakroom and
<BR>began pulling off her winter outer-garments and laying aside the few
<BR>weapons she'd managed to secure since the alarum sounded.
<BR>
<BR>"A pleasure," Merai said, smiling. "Though I wish it could be under other
<BR>circumstances." Her expression turned serious. "How goes the battle?"
<BR>
<BR>" 'Tis too soon to tell," Kayla said, frowning. She leaned back against
<BR>the wall, resting there for the moment, but she seemed to be recovering
<BR>from her exertion quickly. "The enemy has control of the town, and some
<BR>have penetrated the castle, but they've not gotten far within it. The
<BR>Keep seems to be frustrating their advances."
<BR>
<BR>"Good to hear. Where is Lord Thomas?"
<BR>
<BR>The skunk shook her head.. "I don't know. I was at Misha Brightleaf's
<BR>Yule party -- I've not seen the Duke since yesterday."
<BR>
<BR>Merai bit her lip thoughtfully. "I hope he is all right."
<BR>
<BR>"So do I."
<BR>
<BR>"What of the guards?"
<BR>
<BR>Merai and Kayla turned to look at Daria. The red-haired woman's
<BR>expression was earnest, and her eyes were red and just a little swollen
<BR>from her recent tears.
<BR>
<BR>"Beg pardon?" Kayla asked.
<BR>
<BR>"The guards on the curtain wall," Daria said. "What has become of them?"
<BR>
<BR>Kayla sighed. "I'm sorry, I don't know," she said again. "I would imagine
<BR>most have been killed, or at best cut off from help. There may yet be a
<BR>few in the towers, and some may have reached the entrance to the Keep on
<BR>the northeast side." She shook her head again, sadness in her eyes.
<BR>"Considering how quickly the enemy came upon us, though, I doubt that
<BR>many have survived."
<BR>
<BR>Daria leaned back against the wall, visibly shaken. "Thank you," she
<BR>whispered.
<BR>
<BR>With difficulty, Merai drew her eyes away from her troubled friend and
<BR>back to the skunk-woman. "Kyia has opened the first two levels of the
<BR>Archives to visitors," she said, gesturing at the door that led to the
<BR>staircase. "You can sleep there for the night -- we'll provide you with
<BR>blankets. One of you may stay with your wounded friends while their
<BR>injuries are treated, but no more than that. The Lothanasa will give us
<BR>further instructions in the morning."
<BR>
<BR>"Thank you," Kayla said. After a few moments of discussion with her
<BR>associates, it was decided that she would be the one to stay by their
<BR>wounded comrades. Following the directions of one of the acolytes, the
<BR>others made their way down to the Archives.
<BR>
<BR>Merai, meanwhile, entered the temple hall, with Kayla following close
<BR>behind. There were now five acolytes awake and tending to the injuries of
<BR>the men and the girl. After conversing with them for a few minutes and
<BR>looking over the three wounded, Merai decided that they were in no grave
<BR>danger and the Light-Healing would not be necessary. Kayla sat down
<BR>beside them and began speaking to them softly, as Merai went into a
<BR>storeroom and brought out a few cups and a pitcher of water. The
<BR>skunk-morph accepted them gratefully and helped her injured friends to
<BR>drink a little before pouring a cup for herself.
<BR>
<BR>"Do you have any idea what the Lightbringer is planning?" Kayla asked,
<BR>after her comrades had drifted off to sleep.
<BR>
<BR>"Not really. She said that she would 'speak with her sources', that she
<BR>would have more information in the morning, but I know not how she means
<BR>to go about it. It seems as though she intends to simply wait the battle
<BR>out, and provide whatever comfort she can to those who are trapped here
<BR>with us."
<BR>
<BR>Kayla turned to look at Daria. The young woman was still sitting in the
<BR>entrance hallway, leaning up against the plastered wall, staring numbly
<BR>off into space. "I doubt that some will be satisfied with that course of
<BR>action."
<BR>
<BR>"So do I, but what else can we do? There are only a few hundred of us
<BR>here, most of them women, children and older folk. What can we do that
<BR>would have any impact?"
<BR>
<BR>Kayla smiled. "You'd be surprised what a small group of warriors can do,
<BR>Sister Merai -- especially when they are fighting the enemy in territory
<BR>they know well. Have you ever heard of 'otrinca'?" Merai shook her head.
<BR>"It means 'little war' -- it's a term we use in Intelligence to describe
<BR>the tactics of harassing a large invading force, like a dog nipping at
<BR>their heels."
<BR>
<BR>"You work in Intelligence?" Merai asked, surprised.
<BR>
<BR>Kayla nodded. "I know something of otrinca tactics -- my grandfather was
<BR>a tactician, and I've been with Intelligence for a number of years now.
<BR>They can be very effective. In a situation like this you cannot stand
<BR>toe-to-toe with the enemy and win, but you can make their lives a lot
<BR>more difficult."
<BR>
<BR>Slowly, a smile spread over Merai's face. "Daria, come over here," she
<BR>said. "Kayla has something you'll want to hear."
<BR>=================
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