
| DargonZine | Volume 11, Number 1 |
he wind tugged at Simon's grizzled hair, tossing a fine spray in
his eyes. He wrapped a scarf around his neck and closed the last of his
stew-pots. Taking the yoke on his shoulders, he pulled his vendor's cart
up the road that led from the wharfs to the town. Night had long since
fallen, all the people had gone inside for the night, and there were no
more sales to be made. It was time to retire for the evening, prepare
for the next day, and perhaps sleep a while.
As he passed from one faint circle of torchlight to the next he
sensed that he was being watched. The years had dulled his sight,
perhaps, and weakened his grip, but his ears were still perfect, and he
could sense motion before he could even hear the footfalls behind him.
Simon kept straight on -- his 'shadow' was not pursuing, merely
following. After a few more strides Simon's keen hearing noted a second
follower. Simon judged that this one had been running, by the unevenness
of the steps. The lack of sharp sounds in their tread indicated that
neither was shod, and the tenor of their breathing spoke of youth. Simon
continued on, his pace unaltered. He passed the houses and storefronts,
some showing the warmth of light, some just dark. The wheels of his cart
made a calm, familiar clunking sound as they passed from cobblestone to
dirt and back again. His destination was a small hut at the end of a
short, dark alley. That was home. By the time he reached it his two
tails had grown five more. Simon parked the cart firmly beside one wall,
and carefully drew out his small lamp. With a practiced hand he lit it
from the last dying coals of his portable stove. He walked over to the
small stone stoop and sat down, then held the lamp up and aimed the
light out.
"Come out."
Three pale faces gathered together out of the gloom. Sharp eyes
darted about, and sharp noses sniffed the air. Dirt competed with
wariness on these visages, but neither could conceal the hunger in the
children's eyes. As they stepped into the light, Simon stood perfectly
still, not wanting to startle either them or the four others that
hovered on the edge of the light.
"Good evening to you, Simon," the oldest of the boys said in a
voice both clear and polite. How was the selling today?" None of the
boys looked directly at Simon. They instead swarmed around his cart,
peering in all the nooks and crannies, smelling the aroma coming from
within, but never actually touching anything.
"Well," replied Simon, in a deprecating tone, "you know how the
folk are when it starts to get a chill in the air."
"Tighter than guard's fist," agreed the smaller of the boys. Simon
knew him to be one of the oldest ones. "Maybe we can help you. We'd like
to buy some stew off ya."
Simon nodded. This was a ancient transaction, one he had
participated in for years. Simon stepped up to the cart, and the boys
flowed like quicksilver away, slipping back into the shadows for a
moment, to reappear shyly as he hung the lamp from a hook and opened the
lids to expose his wares.
"What will you want tonight?" asked Simon, taking a tough, limp
round of bread from a basket on the side of the cart. The bread was a
new item. For years he had wanted a way to serve the stew without the
need for the bowls, which had to be washed later, but only recently had
he perfected the art of making a bread able to hold the stew without
becoming sodden.
"Just the first one, there," the tallest said, stepping back up to
the cart. Simon ladled a steaming blob onto the bread and handed it to
the boy, who carefully extended two hands to take it. Resting on the
cart was a bronze penny. Simon hadn't even seen him lay it down. The
next child stepped up and Simon repeated the gesture, receiving the coin
from the boy's hand.
"I'd like the sun-sweet," announced the next boy firmly. In his
hand lay two pennies. From the darkness stifled giggles trickled in.
Simon took the offering, and returned him a Scrod penny for change
before opening the smaller pot on the end. The odor of the fiery mix
made Simon's eyes water as he slapped it on the bread and handed it to
his diminutive patron.
Once the first few boys had taken their food safely, the remaining
children were emboldened to approach, offering their meager pay for
Simon's delicacy. They retired to the edge of the darkness to eat,
leaving a small stack of coins on the edge of Simon's cart. As the age
and condition of the children diminished, Simon's eyes grew softer and
more sympathetic, and the portions grew larger and larger. Finally all
were seated on the alley's dirt floor, and Simon retired as well, taking
a small sack of tubers and a knife over to the steps.
Simon watched the boys as he cubed roots for the next day's stew.
The boys ranged in age from ten to fifteen. They were all skinny as
rails, and their clothes were a mix of colors, styles, and quality, from
good fabric to patched rags. The older ones sported tatoos on their
arms, one that Simon recognized as Liriss' mark. All had long, matted
hair, and more than one was missing teeth, no doubt lost brawling in
back alleys. Even now their conversation took the form of challenges and
verbal jousting.
A burst of laughter drew his attention. "What are you laughing at?"
Simon asked.
"It's Josey," the tall one replied. "He took a stub from a mark
today!" This revelation brought a gale of laughter from the assembled
group. Josey, one of the younger boys, stood up and tried to take the
coin in question away from the older boy, who held it up out of reach
and danced about, to the joy and delight of the other children. Simon
got up, setting aside his bag of roots. He approached the tall boy, who
extended a small metal disk to him. Josey stood there, frowning, arms
folded, as Simon looked the artifact over.
"He said it was a real coin where he was from," Josey muttered. His
scowl was so deep it looked as if his chin were about to fall off onto
the ground.
"Did he?" Simon commented, turning the metal disk over in the
light. It was some sort of steel, but silver rather than grey, and
stamped with a fine, clear impression. The date showed the coin to be
years old, yet it showed no signs of wear. Simon had never seen its
like. Still, an unknown coin in Dargon was worth only what it could be
melted down for, and no fire in Dargon would melt this coin.
"Josey," laughed the smaller, older boy, "Josey, he, ... he can't
see too good!" His words could barely squeeze out between his chuckles.
"Josey likes the shiney coins better," volunteered one of the
younger boys.
Josey made like to say something in his defense, but the tall one
cut him off. "Josey don' know nothin'! There ain't nothin' better than
gold!" So saying he drew out from his shirt a leather necklace holding a
gold coin, or so it looked. While the other boys ooohed and aaahed,
Simon could see that it was really just a brass disk with a hole in the
middle, burnished bright, but of little value. None of the boys had
likely seen much gold, and probably just assumed that any metal that was
yellow and not bronze was gold.
"Well," Simon said, returning to his seat, turning Josey's coin
over and over before his face, "I know that some *think* that there's
nothing better than gold." A quiet fell over the boys. They watched in
silence as Simon made himself comfortable on his stoop. This too was an
ancient transaction, one even older than the first. The boys drew a
little closer, their attention riveted now on Simon. Once he was assured
that he had their attention, Simon continued.
"You see, there once was a sailor I knew, who thought that there
was nothing better than gold. Why, he *lived* for gold! There was
nothing he wouldn't do for gold. In fact, he once said that he would
sell his *right eye* for gold!!" There came an awed murmur from the
seven listeners. Simon relaxed, leaning against the door, assured of his
audience. "Well, one day, this sailor, he was a sailin' by himself, in a
little boat, out by a tropical island ..."
Sun is man's friend, when it shines on a verdant field of grain, or
on a lonely stranger, sojourning across a cold winter's landscape. It is
the friend of the soldier, who stands watch over his comrades before
battle, and the friend of the lover, who watches for her love to come up
the lane. But the sun is not the friend of the sailor who rows alone on
the flat ocean, with no fresh water to drink, and no shade to cover his
burning eyes. The sun flashes in every wavelet, blinding and
disorienting. It dazzles the eyes, masking subtle clues that can show
the way to a saving island, and creates illusions that fool the mind.
Simon had been rowing all night, and it was now noon. The sun smote
down mercilessly, uncaring. Nowhere was there relief from it -- nowhere
Simon could look to escape it. Finally Simon drew the paddles in from
the gunwales of his tiny coracle and rested. So dazzled was he by the
millions of sparkling reflections that he was no longer sure which way
he was headed. He tried to shade his eyes from the glare, but the light
came from all around. Simon was lost.
Or perhaps more lost was the best term for what Simon was. Never in
his five years of sailing had Simon been out of sight of the shore, but
today was Simon's second month without seeing the mainland. Never in his
five years had Simon not known how far from home he was, but while Simon
knew that home was a long way off, he didn't know just how far. The
storm that had dragged them off course and smashed their ship on some
tiny island had also drowned the captain, leaving the four remaining
crew rudderless and chaotic.
Of the four, Simon alone had wanted to try to continue on to
Mandraka, their destination. A young man ablaze with a lust for glory
and riches, he had heard tales of the friendly southern country, with
easy wealth awaiting any who could make the long arduous trip. Simon
knew with the certainty of the young that his fate rested in that exotic
land. His fame awaited him, dormant, restless for the touch of his eager
hand. He had hurriedly fabricated this tiny ship of thin wooden slats
and leather so as to continue his voyage. Thus it was that Simon now
found himself, alone, lost, a small man in a tiny, hand--made coracle, a
brown dot amid a glittering sea of warm salt water.
For many menes Simon just sat, despondent. He covered his eyes with
his hands, blocking out the sun, but his imagination provided unseen
dangers too large to ignore, and he had to look about. Nothing. He tried
staring into the bottom of the coracle, but that made his neck stiff. He
hung his head over the side, staring straight into the water, but even
there the sun glimmered at him feebly. Or did it? Simon stared harder.
There was something down there, just below the surface.
Simon grabbed his paddle and stuck it down into the water. It
didn't touch bottom, but Simon could now see that the bottom was only a
few hands-breadths further down. And sitting on the bottom, gleaming in
the sun, was gold. Not just gold, either, but a lot of gold, piles of
gold, mounds of gold! It was a treasure trove! The sandy bottom was just
littered with gold! Simon's heart fluttered. At last!! Here it was,
sitting before his amazed eyes! No need to continue on to Mandraka; his
wealth lay before him, requiring nothing more of him but that he put out
his hand and take it.
Simon didn't hesitate. He reached into the bottom of the coracle
and grabbed his sea-anchor. He flung it out, rising up and diving over
the side of his small craft even before the wood and cloth device hit
the water. Once over the side he swam straight to the bottom, which was
barely deeper than he was tall. He scooped up a coin, and struggled back
to the surface.
Simon flung the water from his hair and held the coin up before his
eyes, treading water hard. It was gold alright -- its weight left no
doubt about that. And there were hundreds of them down there, lying amid
the rotting fragments of long-smashed caskets. Simon swam to his craft
and tossed the coin inside. Taking a deep breath, he dove again. This
time he took two coins in each hand. His trip to the surface was slower,
but he made it, and tossed the gold inside the boat. On the next trip he
tried three coins, but that was too much -- he couldn't float to the top
with the extra weight. He dropped one from each hand, and hit the
surface with fire in his lungs. The two joined the others in the boat
while Simon panted, clinging carefully to his tipsy little ship.
Once he got his breath back, Simon went back down again. Down, up,
down, up -- a pattern quickly formed. After several trips he noted with
alarm how low the coracle was in the water. He must have tipped it
partly when he dove overboard. Leaning carefully over the side of the
craft, he grabbed the leather bucket he had tied to the side and bailed
some of the water out. After a few buckets of water, the craft floated
high enough that Simon felt comfortable going down for more gold. The
trips were getting easier, as he fell into the rhythm of it. A deep
breath, a twist and a kick, arms outstretched and hands grabbing two
coins, then a turn and a push off the bottom, bursting into the air and
tossing the coins in the boat. Four became eight, eight became sixteen,
sixteen blurred into a growing cache that dampened the little boat's
roll and stretched its thin skin. Soon he had to rest, but the lure of
the riches under his dangling feet was too much to ignore for long. Back
down he went, diving until his arms trembled and his lungs burned and he
had to stop. His rest was longer this time, but even before the ache
left his arms he returned to his labor. Diving down, Simon reached the
bottom, grabbed four coins, turned to put his feet on the bottom, and
found himself face to face with the dead, black eyes of a grey shark.
Had anyone been watching, they almost would have seen a man walk on
water. As it was Simon's knees came up above the waves on his return
trip. He arched his body and for a moment was staring straight down into
his coracle, the gleaming coins mocking him from its dark depths. Then
he landed on it, and two things happened. With barely a plop the
overloaded craft sank beneath the waves, and Simon finally realized that
he had more important things to think about than gold.
"So how did he get out of it?" Josey asked. "Did the sharks eat
him?"
"In a moment," Simon replied. "They ate him, and his boat, and the
paddles, and his anchor too. And to this day, anyone sailing across that
sand bar can see the gold lying on the bottom, and the sharks circling
about it, waiting for another bite of foolish sailor." Simon cocked an
eye at his enthralled audience. "In fact, you can still see the very
shark that ate him." A few of the older eyebrows arched a bit. Simon
continued. "It's easy to tell, because it swims like *this*," and with
that Simon got up and hunkered down in front of the boys, his cheeks
puffed out and his arms akimbo as if cradling a great, pendulous belly.
As the boys roared with laughter Simon wiggled his behind and dashed
from boy to boy, thrusting his face in theirs and acting the part of the
gravid fish. After a long mene, when the laughter started to fade he
re-took his seat. Taking the strange coin he flipped it into the air,
watching it spin in the feeble light of the flickering lamp. Josey rose
to grab it, but Simon snatched it out of the air first, eliciting
snickers from the other boys and a grin from Josey. Simon eyed the coin.
"You know, I've never seen this sort of coin before. It might just
be worth something. How much did the stranger say it was?"
"A penny and a half," Josey replied.
Simon dug a two pennies from his coin sack and flipped them to the
child. "Here. We'll call it even."
"Right." Josey pocketed the pennies rapidly, as if afraid that
Simon would take them back. Just then his head swivelled to face the
main road, as did every other small head there. Simon looked up. Two
torches were heading their way. Guardsmen. In a moment the seven boys
were gone, back into the shadows that gave them their name. Simon shook
his head, and returned to preparing his roots. After a moment the guards
finally arrived, stomping like a couple of cows.
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