
| DargonZine | Volume 11, Number 3 |
ish Vogel walked into the gong chamber, arched his back and
grunted with satisfaction at the popping of his stiff vertebrae. After
hunching over his desk all day, it felt divine to walk around and
stretch. He carefully placed a worn leather scroll tube beside the
garderobe bench and took from under his arm a fur pelt with a hole
sliced from its center which he spread out over the wooden waste-chute
seat. With a few yawns and some general old man grunts he eased gently
onto the seat and sighed.
As nature took its course, Rish picked up the tube, pried off the
cap and with slow patience and care pulled out a tightly wound scroll.
He smoothed out the precious parchment in smooth, practiced strokes with
a bony hand as dry and browned as the crinkled old paper. He squinted at
the neat, precise writings upon the scroll, blinked his eyes rapidly a
few times and pulled the paper up close to his thin nose. Whispered
curses slipped between his tight lips as he looked up high on the wall
opposite him at the stingy hole of a window. A dull haze of light was
all that could get through the head-sized opening; nowhere near enough
for a pair of aging eyes like Rish's to see by.
He tried to read some again anyway. Duke Dargon had stirred up a
whirlwind of activity ever since returning from fighting naval battles
in the recent war. The Duke's activity had blown like gale winds through
Rish's office. The Chroniclers' scribes had been scribbling up documents
and researching information at a pace even more feverish than before the
war started. The duke's latest request concerned some farming
territories out east. He had wanted some historical references on land
ownership, crop production and a slew of other facts and figures. Rish
had spent the morning tearing through everything he had, but had trouble
locating the land owners' lineages;
information that was important to the issue of land ownership. He
had been fairly sure he had what he was looking for when the urge for
"physical relief" hit him like a runaway apple cart. He knew he
shouldn't have had Salamagundi's sunsweet stew earlier today, but it was
the only thing his idiot of a new apprentice had brought him for the
noon meal. As Rish sat painfully on the gong chamber bench, he thought
of a few particularly long, boring scrolls that would need copying by the
new boy this evening.
He finally gave up reading the parchment and set it down beside him
in frustration. It took many slow, agonizing moments to do his business,
but he finally finished and stood with a protesting pop from each knee.
He quickly arranged his robes, gave his bald head an invigorating
scratch, and snatched up the fur seat covering, eager to be on his way.
But he then gasped in horror as his scroll, which had been sitting on
the edge of the fur, was launched into the waste chute. With a speed
spurred on by sudden fear, Rish lunged for it. His stiff fingers brushed
the paper just as it floated out of reach, but failed to grasp hold.
The horror of this unthinkable event kept Rish rooted to the spot,
arm outstretched, his mind as numb as his rear. He just stared into the
chute. He put a shaking hand to his forehead, closed his eyes and willed
himself to think. It was like trudging through a swampy mass of
cluttered thoughts. What would Duke Dargon say if he was told this
precious, important scroll was lost? Better not to think of such horrid
thoughts just yet. Maybe the scroll could be recovered. How far down was
it? What was down there? Where did the chute wind up?
After a few more moments of nervous contemplation, Rish decided the
best course of action was to find the sewers. If he just kept in mind
the layout of the Keep, he should be able to figure out where the chute
would empty into the sewer. With any luck he would find the scroll there
in a legible condition. Rish sighed uneasily as the sarcastic thought
ran through his mind -- "And when handwritten copying was no longer
needed, I will become a master fisherman." The chances of finding that
scroll intact were slim, but slim was all he had.
Rish had an idea where the sewer entrance might be, but wasn't
exactly sure as he had never been to that section of the Keep. There was
never any reason to go there before. He first tried to find a direct way
from the gong chamber into the lower levels. However, there was no
obvious straight route for the waste chute under the chamber. He
completely lost track of where the chute was; it seemed to head off at
strange angles that made no sense to him. He gave up on that search
method and decided to head over to the kitchen area. It was on a lower
level and Rish reasoned its waste chutes would be closer and head more
directly into the sewers.
Cooks and servants were bustling madly about preparing the evening
meal when Rish arrived. No one paid the old man any heed as he dodged
through the commotion. He studied the waste chutes carefully and even
stuck his head into one of the larger ones for clues as to where it
headed. Long years of dealing with disasters helped keep him steady even
though the beginnings of a headache pulsed in his forehead and a
persistent gnawing in his stomach which had been eating at him for the
past few years picked up a more intense burning than usual. He set aside
his personal discomforts, though, and refused to acknowledge fear or
despair. He focused his sharp mind on the task and plowed on.
In the back of the vast kitchen behind crates of vegetables he
found a disused doorway, which he walked through to find a set of stairs
leading down. Three rats scattered from underfoot while a fourth one
just hunkered down against the wall on a step and looked up at Rish in
defiance. Rish pointedly ignored the rodent and strode confidently down
the steps until they ended at a perpendicular hall. Rish looked left and
right and despite the lack of clues as to which way to go, he turned
left only to be stopped by unwelcoming darkness. He retreated to the
kitchen, grabbed a torch from its holder on the wall, and without a look
around to see if anyone noticed headed back through the door.
With the torch thrust out determinedly before him, Rish pushed
through the darkness until his light revealed another stairway. He stood
for a few moments at the top of the stairs and peered down into the
darkness. The blackness seemed to hang about him thickly, as if it
resented his torch light. The clangs and shouts from the kitchen were
gone, leaving absolutely nothing in their place. Rish shook his head and
plunged an ear with his finger; the silence seemed unnatural to him and
he felt his ears had maybe somehow failed him. He stood there for
another moment, for the first time wavering in his resolve to reclaim
his scroll. The torch shook a little and Rish’s eyes pierced the bony
hand holding it as if it betrayed him by letting his inner nervousness
show through. He relieved the guilty hand of duty with the other and
clenched it tightly in punishment. He set his jaw in renewed resolve and
stomped down the steps with determination, all the while inwardly
cursing himself for fearing the dark silence.
The farther down he went, the muggier it got. The walls sweated a
slime that kept Rish solidly in the center of the stairs. Repugnant
smells wafted up causing Rish to gag. He had to stop a few times to
clamp his teeth and fight back the nausea lurching up his throat. The
stench was thicker and stronger than any he had previously experienced.
Waste and rot were nothing new to Rish, but this was a mixture of all
the vile smells he knew with a few unidentified ones thrown in. He had
definitely found the sewers.
He reached a landing and paused yet again, but this time couldn't
fight back his natural reaction to the stinking cloud around him. His
throat went numb and the vomit spilled out of him in a rush. He doubled
over, nearly dropping his torch. Eventually his stomach emptied, but
kept lurching in painful dry heaves. He could swear his stomach was
going to climb out his mouth and run back up the stairs on its own.
He finally regained control of himself, shook his head to clear it,
and with slow steps he turned around to go back up to clearer air. No
scroll in Dargon was going to propel Rish any further down those steps.
Suddenly a voice rang out behind him, causing Rish to slip on the
first step and stumble backward onto the landing. His hand brushed the
slimy walls and he snatched it back in revulsion.
"Hold where you are, stranger! Your torch light gives you away. For
what purpose do you tread through my land?" The voice was deep, loud and
dramatic.
Rish eased around carefully; he was lightheaded from vomiting and
unsure of his balance. He thrust the torch out before him unsteadily and
peered into the darkness below. The stairs curved downward to the left
and about ten steps down from the landing was a dark figure standing
back against the inner wall.
Rish tried to clear his throat, and with a hoarse voice said,
"Who's there?"
"You are confronting none other than Knight Commander of the
Underkeep Armies." Then the dramatic tone dropped to a more normal
voice. "Shut up! Get back! I'm in charge here," he said in a frantic
whisper. Rish could see the figure move as if shoving someone behind
him.
Rish's brow furrowed. "Underkeep Armies?" he whispered to himself.
The man turned back to Rish and resumed his formal tone. "Name
yourself, intruder, so that I may determine friend or foe."
Rish took a moment to answer. All he wanted to do now was get out
of here. This strange "Knight Commander" piqued his curiosity, but the
stench billowing through the stairway was threatening to make Rish retch
again.
"I'm Lord Chronicler Rish Vogel," he finally replied.
"What brings you into my domain, Sir Chronicler?"
"I've lost something of value. Now if you'll excuse me, I --"
"Hold Sir Chronicler! It may be that I can be of assistance." There
was a short pause and the mysterious knight added, "My spies inform me
there are evil things lurking about the keep. Accept my services and I
shall be your protector on your quest."
"I really should be on my --" Rish was overwhelmed by the stench
once again and he bent over to dry heave some more.
Rish heard the knight move forward and a sudden unreasoning fear
overtook him. He stumbled around and tried to make his way up the stairs
backwards while still gagging. His breath came in gasps. A confusing
array of bright colored cloth rushed at him and he thrust his torch out
at it. His feet betrayed him, though, and he tripped, landing with a
breath-stealing wallop on the stairs. The torch fell from his weak grasp
and rolled down a few steps. An instant later the gaily clothed skeleton
of a man thrust in close to Rish.
"Be still, Milord. You are ill." The knight then beckoned behind
him. "Come, Edgart. We have an sick man to care for."
Rish gaped helplessly as the knight took hold of his robes and
proceeded to drag him, backwards, down the steps into the horrific
darkness. "No," Rish breathed as the light from the dropped torch faded
and disappeared around the curve of the staircase.
Rish deteriorated into a hyperventilating, groping, sobbing, blind
man. His tailbone struck each step painfully as the knight dragged him
by the collar down the seemingly endless stairs. He could hear the
knight breathing heavily with the effort.
Finally, the steps ended and Rish was dragged across a smooth
floor. He clawed at the floor in futile resistance, only to come up with
fingernails full of slime, adding fuel to his hysteria as he tried
desperately tried to flick it away. His head seemed swelled with the
fierce pain of a headache. He kicked his legs fiercely but finally gave
in.
A few moments later the knight let go, causing Rish to rap his head
on the hard floor, sending a flurry of stars before his eyes. He felt
hot and sticky, his stomach boiled like a cauldron, his throat burned
and tears streamed from his eyes. The smell was horrible beyond anything
he could have ever imagined. He just lay on the floor in misery,
awaiting whatever his fate was to be. Any mene now he knew the strange
knight was going to stab him, or beat him, or maybe even dump him in the
sewer. His imagination soared through the multitude of gruesome deaths
sure to come.
Suddenly, Rish realized he could see. It was faint at first, but a
green glow softly illuminated the room and gradually intensified. He
tilted his head to the side and saw his kidnapper rubbing some type of
moss coating the walls. As he rubbed it, it started to radiate light.
He was in a small cave, apparently empty. His head hurt too much to
look around. He could see the trail of ooze he had tracked in leading to
a tall, narrow opening, beyond which was a terrifying darkness.
Rish watched the thin man work. He wore a tattered cape that
dragged the floor as he scooted around. A hodgepodge of clothing hung
from his skeletal frame in a multitude of colors muted by the green
illumination of the room. Various bits of cloth, coins, and
unidentifiable metals adorned his chest and softly clattered a
disjointed tune as the man hopped hurriedly about. The outfit was like a
child's rendition of the regal uniforms worn by the knight commanders of
Baranur.
The knight finished rubbing the last bit of moss within his reach
and headed to a corner of the cave where Rish was surprised to see a
flower bed of sorts flourished. The man yanked up a handful of
pansy-like flowers and brought them over to Rish and thrust them in his
face.
"Take these, sir scribe."
Rish just raised an eyebrow and stared at the man with a mixture of
disbelief and distrust.
The knight waved the flowers a little bit and a sweet aroma was
released. "By holding them to your nose, the sickly smell of the beast
will be warded off."
Rish hesitantly took the bouquet, held it close to his nose and
breathed deep, all the while keeping an eye on his kidnapper. The aroma
was wonderful and Rish immediately felt a little better.
A few moments of uncomfortable silence passed.
"What?!" hollered the knight in a sudden rage. Rish jerked
reflexively and winced in expectation of a blow. The knight instead
whirled to confront someone Rish could not see. The knight cocked his
head as if listening then replied, "I was getting to that you fool. Shut
up and attend to your duties!"
Rish couldn't figure out who the man could be talking to as he and
the knight were the only ones in the cave.
"Pardon me for my squire's intrusion, Sir Scribe. He means well but
can be rather rude at times." The knight then turned and wagged a finger
at thin air while scolding, "A few pops with the flat of my blade ought
to help him mind his manners, though."
Rish quickly deduced that the man was strange in the head, as if
his mother had not given him all his proper due at birth. He sat up and
though his head felt unsteady, he thought about escape. The situation
was hopeless, however, seeing as how the space beyond the cave opening
was darker than a moonless night in a deep forest.
The knight turned back to Rish and smiled pleasantly. It came
across as gruesome, though, in the weird green glow of the moss. "You
mentioned losing something of value which caused you to venture into my
domain. Is there anything I can do to help?"
Rish eyed the scarecrow of a man warily. He had yet to pass
judgment as to whether or not the knight was dangerous. He ignored the
knight's question and asked one of his own. "Why did you bring me here?"
he asked through the pansies.
"You were ill and weak, good Sir. I could not leave you in such a
condition for the beast to find. Oh no, it was my duty to bring you to
safety."
"What beast?"
"You know not of the beast?"
"I'm afraid not."
The knight crouched down to be level with Rish. A serious
expression hardened his thin face as he looked right in Rish's eyes as
he spoke. "A monster of evil lurks in this keep, Sir Scribe. I and my
band of fighters have been battling the foul beast for years." He
gestured around the room as if a squad of troops were present. "It
steals objects of importance from the unwary and it tries to clog the
waste chutes in an effort to drive the residents here out of the keep.
It's a sly thing to be sure. I have fought it many times, but it always
eludes the killing stroke in the end."
Rish was now certain the man was completely insane. He felt a
genuine fear the likes of which he had experienced only a handful of
times before in his long, active life. He refused to let the emotion get
the better of him, though. He focused on the sweet aroma of the flowers
and the pulse of pain shooting back and forth between his tailbone and
his forehead. "I will escape," he ordered himself. His nimble mind
settled on playing along with the mad knight as his only means of escape
for now.
He took a deep breath through the flowers. "I think maybe the beast
stole one of my scrolls. I could take --"
The knight leaped to his feet as if bit by a snake. "Did you see
it?" he asked wide-eyed.
Rish was jolted by the knight's sudden reaction. Despite his
thudding heart, Rish replied calmly, "Not actually. I think --"
"How long ago did this happen?"
"No more than half a bell ago. Help me up and I'll --"
"Sound the horns, Edgart! Men to arms! Men to arms! We'll have the
beast yet!" He danced about the cave like a marionette with tangled
strings and a drunk puppeteer. He shoved at imaginary troops and yelled
a quick succession of commands that echoed off the stone walls. In a
blur of movement, the man dashed out of the cave. Rish could hear him
still hollering commands and making enough noise to make Rish think an
entire army was actually on the move.
A moment later the knight burst back into the cave brandishing two
pikes and a mad leer. He thrust a pike at Rish, butt first. Rish had to
duck to avoid getting knocked on the head with the pike held in the
knight's unsteady hand. "Take it and lead the way, Sir Scribe. A
glorious battle is but a heartbeat away. Hurry so that the beast's trail
may still be fresh."
Rish grabbed the weapon, not so much because he wanted it, but
because it wobbled so much in the knight's grip that Rish was going to
end up getting whacked with it. Using the pike to pull himself up, he
held the flowers firmly to his nose and went with the excited knight out
of the cave.
Rish stumbled hesitantly through the darkness into what was
apparently a vast cavern. He could hear the knight ranging farther
ahead. His hands trembled and his knees shook. The loony knight was
going to leave him alone in the total darkness. Water lapped at an
unseen shore somewhere nearby, and an occasional splash echoed off
distant walls. The knight's belief in some horrible beast roaming the
sewers sprang foremost in Rish's mind.
"Hello?" he yelled nervously.
"Edgart, you idiot! You're supposed to be watching the scribe,"
said the knight from a distance. "Lord Chronicler, where are you?"
"Here," answered Rish and an instant later the knight was by his
side.
The knight took Rish by the arm and raced with him through the
darkness. Rish rammed his toe into something hard and grimaced in pain.
"Step up, Sir Scribe. We have reached the stairs."
They made their way up the steps and Rish could see a faint glow
ahead. As they rounded a curve, he saw his torch still sputtering on a
step. The knight paid it no heed, though, and continued impatiently up,
dragging Rish along.
They finally topped the stairs in a familiar hallway. They
continued onward and Rish eventually heard the sounds of salvation
coming from the kitchen. In just a few moments he would be safe.
The knight stopped when they came to the steps leading up to the
kitchen. He looked up and then peered straight into the gloom of the
continuing hallway. "Where to now, Sir Scribe?" asked the knight.
Rish stalled for a moment. He was indecisive as the whether he
should continue to play along now that he knew where he was. But how
would he get rid of the knight? The crazed man was dancing from foot to
foot causing his 'medals' to jingle and his face was set firmly like a
man given a mission from some higher power. Rish figured the man was
crazy and therefore unpredictable and even possibly dangerous.
The sooner Rish could get away from him, the better.
The knight tapped Rish lightly on the head with the business end of
his rusty pike. "Are you all right?"
"Yes." Rish took a deep shaky breath as if he was about to abandon
ship and plunged into an attempt to rid himself of the lunatic knight.
"Now, I'm not so sure that some beast took my scroll, sir ... um
... sir ..." Rish looked at the knight expectantly, waiting for him to
fill in a name as yet unoffered.
The knight ignored the subtle probe and stuck his face up close to
Rish's, a mere finger's width nose to nose. Rish flinched back, but the
determined man went on with his up-close examination.
Without taking his eyes off the scribe he titled his head to the
side and said to his invisible partner, "What do you think, Edgart? Pale
face. Bloodshot eyes. Acting weird. Yes, I think so as well." He nodded,
stepped back and commanded, "Disrobe, Sir Scribe. I must examine your
buttocks."
Rish gasped. "I really don't *think* so!"
"For your own well-being, I must do so. When in the gong chamber,
did you engage in a bowel movement?"
"What?!"
"Ahh. An onset of deafness as well. This could be severe, Edgart.
We may need to fetch a hot poker."
"*Hot poker*?!"
"Did you experience a numbness of the buttocks when you stood up
from your business, Sir Scribe?" the knight asked in a raised voice.
"Because if you did, it could be a sign that the evil beast sneaked up
and bit you on the rear, thus injecting a grossly debilitating poison
that will race through your body causing --"
Rish threw his pike to the floor, thrust the bouquet of pansies at
the knight, shaking it to punctuate his words. "You are insane!" Then at
a loss for anything else to say, he buried his nose back into the
flowers, turned on his heels, and stormed up the stairs.
"Give chase, Edgart! Do not let him get away! He needs our help!"
Rish looked over his shoulder to see the knight bearing down on him
like a left over spirit from the Night of Souls. His eyes were wide and
possessed. His arms were raised with ragged clothing billowing about and
the pike swinging wildly. Rish broke into a wild dash to get to safety
and hollered madly for help.
The knight was too quick for him, though. He tripped Rish with the
pike and Rish plunged headlong to the steps, scattering pansies
everywhere. Then the knight was on top of him, yanking his robes up.
Rish let loose a long, high-pitched scream that even he didn't know he
was capable of.
The knight exposed Rish's rear end and proceeded to poke and smack
the cheeks with abandon. Rish was on his stomach with the knight astride
his back. All the old scribe could do was kick and scream.
Then suddenly the knight jumped up. "He's fine, Edgart. Smoothest
buttocks I've ever seen, but he's fine." Then he whispered to his
imaginary squire, "I think he's just a little touched. Not quite armed
for combat if you know what I mean."
Just then three armed men stormed around a curve of the steps and
came to a sudden stop before the prone, half-naked scribe. A few steps
behind them came a tight-packed group of nervous servants and cooks
curious to see what the commotion was all about.
One of the armed men eyed Rish suspiciously then turned to the
knight and saluted. "Sir Knight, we heard a woman screaming. Is
everything all right here?"
Rish gasped in humiliation. These fools thought his screams sounded
like a woman's *and* they were saluting the lunatic. "Has this knight
somehow infected my spirit?" thought Rish. "Am I seeing the knight's
phantom army now?"
"No, no. Everything is fine, good sergeant. The Lord Chronicler had
sighted the beast and was leading me to it. It seems, however, that the
scribe is not feeling well."
The armed men, cooks, servants and a concerned, almost sane-looking
knight looked down at the old scribe shaking uncontrollably on the
floor.
"Maybe you should adjust your robes," offered someone to Rish in
hushed tones.
Rish summoned all his will power to control his shaking and slowly
made his way to his feet, adjusting his robes as he stood. He glared at
the onlookers and saw that the armed men were in fact real castle guards
and not the knight's apparitions. Rish could feel his own face radiating
an angry red.
"This, this ... man ... is ... is ... insane. He *attacked* me! He
... he ..."
"Maybe you should just tell me where you sighted the beast and then
get some rest, Sir Scribe. Obviously this adventure is a bit too much
for you," said the knight.
A guard looked at Rish meaningfully and said, "Yes. Just tell the
knight where the beast was and I'll see you to your quarters."
Rish couldn't believe his ears. Was he the only sane one here? He
stared uncomprehendingly at the guard and managed to stutter, "But ...
but ..."
The crowd of onlookers whispered among themselves as if conferring
about what judgment to pass upon him. The knight cleared his throat and
raised a thin eyebrow impatiently.
"The north tower," Rish finally said and buried his face in his
hands.
"Edgart, inform the troops. There is no time to lose."
Rish looked up and saw that the guards didn't seem to find it
strange that Edgart did not exist.
The knight shook each guard’s hand. "Wish me luck. A great battle
awaits."
"Good luck, brave knight," one said.
The knight then solemnly bowed to Rish and ran up the steps parting
the crowd like wheat. "Why aren't you gone yet, Edgart? I told you to
deploy the troops. You fool! We can't let the beast get away." His
scoldings were soon lost in the distance.
A guard stepped towards Rish and eyed the stained, stinking old
man. Rish jerked back and eyed the guard distrustfully.
"Relax, Milord Vogel. The gong farmer is harmless. You have to play
along to get him on with his business."
"Gong farmer?"
"Yea. He's the guy who clears out all the clogs in the waste
chutes."
"Ol's Balls, I'd hate to have his job," said another guard. "He
actually has to slide down the chutes to clean 'em out."
"But the man is clearly insane," Rish protested.
The sergeant nodded. "I think you would be insane too if you were
the gong farmer."
Rish nodded weakly and allowed the guards to lead him slowly
upwards in the same direction as the knight. The kitchen workers closed
in behind them. Rish could hear their mutterings and could only imagine
the stories that would be spread throughout the keep in just a few
bell's time. The parade made it to the kitchen where the cooks finally
took charge of the servants and got back to business. With weary steps
Rish wandered silently back to his room with the guards behind him. He
opened the door, waved off his escort and entered. Once safely inside he
collapsed almost immediately and passed out.
Rish dreamed of a huge, worm-like beast with impossibly long fangs
chasing him through dark, slimy caves. He heard a pounding that at first
he mistook for the worm slamming against the walls. As his dream started
breaking up, though, he realized he was sprawled out on the cold stone
floor of his room and the pounding was coming from his door.
He sat up and immediately regretted the sudden move. Every joint,
muscle and bone sang out in protest from being dragged and abused the
night before. He grunted and staggered miserably to his feet. A horrible
cloud of stench accosted him from his own clothes and Rish had to clamp
his hands over his mouth to keep himself under control. The steady knock
became more intense. With slow, shuffling steps, Rish made his way to
the door and pulled it open.
Standing in the hall was the gong farmer. He was drenched. A thick
liquid dripped off his clothes and creating miniature cesspools about
his feet. He held his pike firmly and proudly at his side and thrust out
something with his other hand.
Rish staggered back, covered his nose and rapidly blinked his eyes.
Before him was the human version of the beast-worm from his
just-interrupted nightmare. He grabbed the door for support and moaned.
"I am proud to present you this scroll, which I assume is the item
the beast stole from you." The knight's face beamed with pleasure.
Rish looked down at the man's extended hand and saw there a sodden,
mutilated mass of parchment. The dripping wad could very well be his
scroll, but there was no way of telling. He hesitantly took it and
smiled weakly. Rish's entire purpose right now was to be rid of this
madman. He took a step back and slowly began to close the door.
"The beast left it behind in one of the chutes as I gave chase.
Edgart here had the presence of mind to grab it for you while on the
run." The knight elbowed the air next to him.
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