DargonZine | Volume 11, Number 8 |

artin arrived home with the first bell of evening. The rain now
poured in a slow, steady deluge, and he looked forward to drying himself
in the warmth of the kitchen. Letting himself into the darkened front
room, he surmised that his apprentice must have gone out. He was almost
at the rear of the shop before he noticed the boy sitting in the far
corner of the room. The torch had long since burned out, and there was
little but a glimmer of light on the boy's eyes to give him away.
"Evening Jason. A bit dark in here, don't you think?" he inquired,
as he passed through, expecting the comment to be acted upon. Flinging
his cloak onto a workbench in the kitchen, Martin cursed as he noticed
the dying embers of the cooking fire, and moved to rekindle it. On
returning to the shop, he was surprised to find that Jason had not
moved.
Martin crossed the floor towards him, brow creasing with concern as
the boy's features became visible. A glazed, mournful expression showed
on Jason's face, and his stare was fixed on a point somewhere on the
ceiling before him. Martin placed a hand on the boy's forehead, checking
for fever, then stepped in front, sending something skidding across the
floor as he moved to break the boy's gaze. Martin tried waving, then
slapping him, then bent to pick up the debris when there was no
reaction.
Closer inspection revealed it to be a piece of copo tree leaf,
folded and rolled to keep its contents fresh. Flattening it out across
the table revealed something the netmender had never suspected of the
boy. "Cirrangill's perfect net! Weeds! Idiot boy, do you not realise what
these things can do to you?" No response. Martin started to pace the
floor, shaking his head and cursing at the stupidity of anyone who took
these poisons. As he saw it, he had two choices. One: to throw the boy
out in the street; or two: to wait until he came down from his flight
and talk some sense into him. He quickly discarded the first option; the
boy was just too proficient and had too many other skills to make
kicking him out feasible. Besides, he liked the boy.
Decision made, he grabbed the boy's arm and hoisted him crossways
over his back, taking hold of his legs for balance. Staggering slightly
under the load, he made his way to the upper floor and, kicking open the
door, dumped the boy unceremoniously on his bed. Jason's expression had
barely changed -- eyes wide in a fixed stare and mouth hanging open.
Martin looked disgustedly at him for a time, then made sure that the
chamber-pot was empty and promptly left, passing a broom through the
looped leather handle and across the door. "Let him think it over a
while," Martin muttered to himself.
Kilan Rainmaker sat, soaked and grieving, on the rocks at the mouth
of the Coldwell. He still found it hard to comprehend the stupidity of
the blunder he had made. Feeding his son a powder to strengthen his
magical abilities had seemed a wholly justified risk, but now that the
gods had dealt him a Jester, he was not so sure. Now Jason's power
seemed to come from something other than his thinking mind. He had no
real control over the weather he wielded. Rather, it came from deep
inside him. It was not hard to guess Jason's present state of mind --
the skies shared his tears.
Eventually, the mage raised himself to his feet, the cold from the
rocks forcing him to walk stooped. Fearing the onset of a cold, he
reached to his bag for the herbs which he knew would help, only to
discover them missing. Cursing their loss, he made his way back toward
the centre of Dargon in search of an inn in which to spend the night.
Tomorrow, he would see what he could do to rectify his mistake. Kilan
looked up into the darkened heavens as he walked, letting the drizzle
fall on his face and mask his tears.
It took Kilan the greater part of the following day to decide on
the best way to proceed, going over and over the options in his mind. To
find a way to reverse individual spells or the spell as a whole would
take more time than he was willing to spend, given that he did not know
what the boy was capable of. He knew of few sages nearby with the
necessary depth of knowledge in this particular field to aid him, but
more importantly, none who would condone the spell he had used. Which
left only the option of breaking the weaves he had created. At this
stage of their influence, that too was a dangerous step, but no more so
than letting loose a weatherweaver who had no control of his power.
To break the weaves, he would have to get close to Jason. Only
through physical contact could he reverse the things he had done.
However, the childish reactions Jason had showed toward any similar
attempts recently gave Kilan cause for concern. If the fool boy had
allowed him close in the first place, this fiasco might have been
avoided entirely. Frowning, Kilan rose to open the shutters and check on
the current weather. No change. Rain still fell in a steady drizzle from
the skies. The street below was quiet as people took the opportunity to
do any necessary indoor tasks.
Simply put, he would just have to go and see the boy. Picking up
his cloak, the accustomed frown returned to his face as he found that it
was still wet from the previous night; the damp, still air giving it no
chance to dry out. He swung it around his shoulders anyway, then grabbed
his bag before heading out of the inn.
Just after sixth bell, as Martin was reaching to tidy the nets
displayed behind the counter, a tall, scrawny man walked in, looking
absent-mindedly around the shop. He knew the man was no fisher, and
thought he was simply sheltering from the rain, but when he asked for
Jason, Martin was immediately reminded of the herbs from the previous
day.
"What do you want with the boy?" Although Martin's anger was
roused, he did not know for sure that this man had anything to do with
the incident.
Frowning, the stranger replied, "I am concerned for his welfare.
Now if you would be so kind as to bring him to me?"
Martin shifted his stance slightly, crossed his arms in front of
him and cocked his head, looking the man over in a cold appraisal.
"Concerned, you say? About what?" A mocking leer appeared on his face as
he mimicked, "If you would be so kind."
The man's moustaches twitched as he realised that he was being made
a fool of. "I believe that his emotional health may not be the best, at
present."
"So it was you, you son of a Beinison whore! You are the one who
got that boy weeded!" Martin's face twisted in rage as he jinked around
the counter, cat quick, but lacking the associated agility. His knee
banged hard into a crate of stones, and his leg died beneath him as he
reached for the stranger, who made a panicked retreat. Martin staggered
woodenly after him with no chance of catching, his hands opening and
closing as he reached the door, only to see the man dodging through the
crowd at a brisk, nervous jog.
Martin watched the man for a while, his face pinched as if from the
first taste of a Mandrakan citron. Unsure of whether he had done the
right thing or not, he sat down on the step to work some life back into
his leg.
Jason stirred slightly, the cold beginning to register as he moved.
Eventually, it broke through his fugue, and he made his slow way to the
waking world. Thoughts started to creep like rats into his mind, and he
mulled over the somewhat disconnected fact that he was stiff and cold.
Joints popping and muscles starting to tremble, he reached for the
blanket, and woke quickly when he pulled its sodden length atop himself.
Cursing, he threw the blanket back and reached up to touch the
wooden boards on the incline above him, feeling the water which ran in
slow rivulets down its rough surface. A near blasphemous prayer of
"Cirrangill, not in here, please," escaped his lips as he sat up,
shivering, on the edge of the low bed. Easing himself carefully onto
cold feet, Jason stood, and picked a tender way to the window, walking
stooped to avoid the wet ceiling.
The waxed paper was damp, and the night was deathly quiet outside.
Rain no longer fell, though it had obviously not been dry for long.
Opening the window, Jason looked down onto grey. Thick sea fog crowded
the streets, bringing a bitter tang of salt to the air. The only breaks
in the gloom were the faint, yellow hazes of lanterns which dimpled,
rather than pricked, the cloak of night.
The boy crouched awhile, comforted by the silence, and thought over
the previous evening's events. He remembered his father's entrance, his
attempts at reconciliation and friendship, then his talk of Jason's
power, and then his admission of betrayal -- that was about all that
Jason remembered. He tried to think of any time that he had shown signs
of influencing the weather since arriving in Dargon, but could think of
none. He had used none of the associated ritual needed for
weatherweaving, so it was not possible that he could have done anything
of that nature. This was something he could try today though, if Martin
allowed him some time to find a place where he would not be disturbed.
Then he could finally prove that he had no mastery over the weather. Or
maybe otherwise.
Eventually, he smoothed back the waxed paper and stood, as false
dawn lent the night a bluish tinge. Hunger quietly complained in his
belly, so he made his way to the kitchen -- or rather, he tried to. The
door to his room was stiff at the best of times, but tonight it was
immovable. His first attempt at opening it ended with a stubbed toe and
nearly a broken nose as he wrenched himself bodily into the door rather
than pulling it open. Trying again, he tugged harder, thinking that it
was merely the dampness which had swollen the wood, until the looped
leather handle snapped in his hand and he landed on the floor.
Jason cursed and stood up to examine the handle. The leather was
snapped clean through at the furthest point from the door. He tried
grabbing the remains, but found that the door was still stuck, no matter
how much he pulled. Wind whistled mournfully somewhere outside as Jason
gave up his labours, panting, and started to shout for his master.
"Martin!" he yelled. "Martin," he tried again. This time, though,
there was some response. In the room next door, noises were being made
as Martin arose. Jason quieted as he waited for the door to be given a
boot from the outside. His wait was shorter than expected.
"Might as well go back to bed, kid," came a voice through the wall.
"You're not getting out of that room for a while yet." A creak could be
heard as the bed next door once again took the strain.
Jason stood a while, waiting for Martin to open the door, despite
his words. When nothing further was forthcoming, Jason started to pound
on the wall between the two rooms.
"I told you, I'm not letting you out for a good while yet!" Martin
sounded annoyed. Jason felt much the same way, and continued to pound,
adding shouts to the dull thud of fist on wood.
"Get to bed!" Martin was shouting now, and the words were loud
through the wooden walls. "I'm not letting you out until you sweat that
scrud out, so you might as well quit your moaning and go back to bed!
There's water on the dresser if you're thirsty; that might clean out
your head faster too. Now shut your mouth and leave me in peace!"
Jason stood back from the wall, angry and confused at Martin's
response. He had done nothing to deserve this. All he had wanted was
help in opening the door, nothing more, yet Martin was acting like it
was some terrible crime to be woken early. Jason gave one last tug on
the door handle, then groped his way back toward his bed, pulling out
his blanket as he did so and trying to calculate just how wet it was.
Sensing that it was not as bad as he had first feared, Jason pulled
the blanket over himself and settled in. He heard the delicate patter of
rain once again, drumming on the wooden roof above him -- he would need
to get that waxed and sealed at some time, but he knew that if he
mentioned it, he would end up having to do the entire roof; a prospect
which he dreaded.
Jason shuffled his way to the side of his bed furthest from the
ceiling and closed his eyes. He tried without success for some time to
get to sleep, but only succeeded in annoying himself further as he
thought over Martin's responses, the fact that he had no real room to
stretch cold muscles, and that he had nothing to do until Martin
bothered rousing himself in two bells time. It had started to rain
harder too -- occasional splashes were landing directly on one of the
cracks above his face and showering him in cold droplets.
Eventually, shivering more from impatience than cold, Jason heard
the sounds of Martin getting out of bed and arose himself, making his
way once more to the window. The rain still beat heavily upon the town,
spattering in a haze from the waterlogged streets. "Gods," he thought
disgustedly, and closed the window again.
Shortly after, he heard Martin leave his room, and made his way to
the door to await its opening. The sound of Martin's footsteps on the
landing made their creaking way toward the door -- then continued past.
Jason rolled his eyes in disbelief.
Jason spoke in his most pleasant tone. "Martin, can you help me
open this door, please?" The footfalls paused a short while before the
simple answer came.
"No."
Jason was dumbstruck. Cirrangill's blood, what was the matter with
the man? If Jason had considered himself annoyed before, it did not even
begin to compare with his feelings at that moment. He was hungry, cold
and damp. He had been betrayed by his father, he was stuck in a leaky
room, the rain was beating down harder by the mene, and a rising wind
was starting to drive water through the side of the window. "Gods damn
you, Martin! Let me out of this room!" Jason started to pound on the
door, not only with his fists but adding feet, shoulders and anything
else he could think of to his efforts to separate the door from its
hinges.
Outside, lightnings crashed and thunder boomed. Rain sheeted down
and the winds howled. Jason continued hammering and yelling, oblivious
to all else.
As the day wore on, Jason grew more and more resigned. The only
good thing to happen this day was that the weather had slowly improved,
and by eighth bell murky blue sky was starting to show in places, though
the outlook was still rather grey. It was about this time that Jason
heard a scraping of wood on his doorframe as he sat looking morosely out
of the window. He was still getting to his feet as the door opened
towards him, with only the barest rub against the frame or floor. Jason
gaped at Martin, who looked blankly in on him.
"You ready to come downstairs yet, boy?"
Jason looked between door, floor and frame a mene before
commenting, "I don't believe this. I pull hard enough to break the
handle, then you come along and just push the door open." His master
shifted slightly and threw a broom into the room. It clattered on the
floor before sliding halfway under the bed.
"Tends to be easier if one of those isn't looped through the
handle." His face still showed no trace of emotion. Jason just laughed.
"You had me shut in here? Why? Had you nothing better for me to do
today?"
"Let's get one thing straight. I won't have any apprentice of mine
losing his head to drink or weed. If I ever again find that you have
been using ... whatever that stuff was, not only will I put you out on
the street, I'll do my best to make sure that no fisher in Dargon will
have anything to do with you. Seafarers are a group who know the
necessities of keeping a head on their shoulders while they work."
Jason puzzled over this a while. "What stuff? I don't much like
ale, and I haven't been taking anything else." Came his eventual reply.
"Sure, Jason. Well whatever it was that sent you on that trip three
nights back. The stuff that I found wrapped up in the leaf."
Jason looked blankly at him. "Nothing to do with me. I don't
remember too much after my father coming in, though."
"Your father was here?" Martin looked surprised. "I thought he was
dead, or unknown to you. I never asked in respect for your feelings,
since either fact can prove a tender point. What is he, a healer or
something?"
Jason laughed shortly. "You couldn't be much further from the
truth. My father is Kilan Rainmaker, a weatherweaver from Armand, and he
appeared with the news that he had set a spell on me to speed my
progress as his apprentice. This after I told him that he shouldn't try
any of his magics on me. My mother died because of ..." Jason broke off,
uncertain of whether to mention the fact that magics similar to those
used on him had killed his mother. He was saved from his dilemma by
Martin interrupting.
"Gods, a runaway apprentice." Martin shook his head, in disgust or
disbelief, Jason could not tell. "So you were bespelled? Is that why I
couldn't rouse you three nights back?"
"Well, being perfectly honest, I'm not sure. I think I might just
have been so shocked when he told me what he had done that I got a bit,
you know, knotted up." Jason shrugged an apology, then looked sharply
toward Martin. "Hold on, when did you say you found me like that?"
"The seventh," Martin replied, after a pause.
"So, what's today?"
"The tenth."
"Cirrangill's perfect net!" Jason replied. He had thought that
rainwater was all that had soaked his bed that morning. He must have
taken care of his bodily needs though -- he had just assumed that he had
forgotten to empty the chamber pot the previous night when he arose this
morning. No wonder he was famished. "And you couldn't wake me for two
whole days?"
"I didn't even try. As far as I was concerned, I was just going to
let you come down yourself, then leave you a while to stew." Martin
looked contemplative for a moment. "Speaking of which, I take it you're
hungry."
Jason let out a moan, and smiled. "Hungry? Oh, you've got to be
joking. My stomach thinks my throat's cut."
Martin let out a weak laugh. "Guess you'd better come downstairs
then."
As Jason ate, the skies continued to clear. Day waned to evening,
and as he and Martin talked about the situation, a hubbub could be heard
arising from the surrounding streets. It seemed that this night,
everyone had something to talk about. Jason and Martin ate in the
kitchen, the twin torches providing more light by night than the tightly
packed buildings allowed through by day. That there was something
unusual in the sky was brought to their attention by a passing drunk who
announced the coming of Da'athra'a. It took a while for the significance
of the war god's name to sink in, but the increasing volume of the
furore outside was cause enough for the pair to check on the front of
the building and the state of the street outside.
On leaving the shop, they both looked around in disbelief. The
street was approaching roughly one third of the capacity of the daytime
crowd who bought and sold goods on the dockside -- a number unheard of
for this time of night. It seemed that everyone had come out of their
homes or off their boats to see the sight from solid ground.
Attempting to follow the gazes that pointed toward the heavens,
Jason saw nothing until Martin pulled him out from under the
storefront's wooden canopy, holding out his arm as a guide so that Jason
saw the silvery star which left its mark on the heavens. It looked
immobile, yet the thing left a trail across the sky behind it. His eyes
narrowed in worry as the star -- or whatever it was -- continued to
hover like a bright, white falcon over their heads. He glanced around,
open mouthed, at the crowd, and saw some praying, some weeping, some
proclaiming the coming of doom, some who simply stared, and some who
discussed the matter with companions or passing strangers, just sharing
the experience. Martin and Jason stood together, looking in worry and
wonder at this apparition which hung above them, beautiful and terrible
in the night sky.
Kilan also looked to the heavens for answers that night -- magic
had provided him with none. It was from the window of the inn that he
first saw the new star cutting its way toward Makdiar. Normally, he
would dismiss such things for priests and scholars -- the stars were out
of reach of his magics. Now, though, it seemed that his son's power was
further reaching than he had previously believed possible. Could it be
that Jason's influence stretched beyond the realms of this planet and
into the domain of the gods? He whispered an answer to his own, unspoken
question. "Can I afford to doubt it?"
Kilan knew that he had to do something, and fast. He did not know
what this thing in the sky was, how long it had been hidden behind the
clouds, what would happen when it arrived, or how long it would take to
do so.
Breathless and pale faced, he walked to the bed and emptied the
contents of his bag on top of it. He withdrew a dagger from the debris
and placed it carefully in his belt, then repacked and made his way
downstairs, filling his bag with provisions bought from the innkeeper.
Paying his due, he left to collect his horse from the stables.
Kilan tried to make his best possible speed towards the docks,
though getting the populace to make way for his horse was harder than
usual this night. However, since his horse was never inclined to run
anyway, his journey was only slightly faster than it would have been on
foot. When he reached the harbour area, he tied the beast to the rail in
front of a sailwright's shop, then hefted his bag over his shoulder.
Turning, he started to walk smartly through the gathered crowd, his eyes
jumping from face to face as he searched for his son. He soon saw the
boy, standing by the water with the violent one beside him, occasionally
turning to talk to each other while continuing to look skyward. Kilan
made his way intently toward him, stepping deftly through the throng of
muttering people.
As he came within a few paces of the boy, Kilan slowed to utter a
short prayer for forgiveness to any gods who may have been listening,
then grabbed the sheath and drew the dagger silently from it. Tears
started to run freely down his face as he neared, but he knew what had
to be done. Somehow, though, the boy sensed his approach, and turned
toward him, just in time to let out a yell as he jumped back and
defended against the dagger which sliced toward his face.
Taking a gash on the hand, the boy danced backwards, fear and shock
showing openly on his face as he staggered back toward the dock's edge.
Kilan lunged forward, reaching for his son, and knocked him off balance.
Trying again, he grabbed a handful of shirt, and sank the blade under
Jason's ribs before taking them both over the edge, crushing the boy
brutally against a ship's prow on their trip down to the shockingly cold
water.
It had been Kilan's intention to make sure his son was dead, but as
he sank beneath the icy outflow of the Coldwell, natural survival
instincts took over, and he made his way with spastic strokes to the
surface, desperate for breath as another body hit the water nearby.
Kilan took some splinters in his head from the hull of a berthed boat as
he surfaced, and swallowed water as he immediately went under again. He
came up coughing, only to find himself thrown against the dockside by
the large swell that had seemingly come out of nowhere. The boats tossed
at their berths, stretching their mooring ropes and crashing roughly
into each other as Jason died beneath them.
Winds whipped around the dock, sending whitecaps and breakers
hammering into the dock wall and putting further strain on the mooring
lines. Kilan looked around for a ladder, then decided quickly that he
should make his way as far as possible up the dock before climbing out.
However, his initial energy was fading, and he was finding it
harder and harder to stay afloat. He wondered briefly about just
sinking, and joining his son in Cirrangill's watery peace, but knew that
would render his life pointless. He went under again, briefly, and
surfaced once more into the keel of the fishing boat, adding further
splinters to his cheek as he struggled to keep his head above water.
Quickly, he realised the problem he was having keeping afloat with
cloak, bag and boots on, and struggled his way out of them as the crowd
above shouted vague directions of search to the other swimmer. More
buoyant now, Kilan waited, shivering and grieving, and tried to
determine his next course of action.
Shouts from above broke through his grief and he realised that the
boy had been found. The end of a net hit the water some distance away,
and Kilan saw the outline of boy and man being hefted up the net by the
crowd above. He dared to hope for an instant that the boy still lived,
then resolved himself to the fact that even if it were true, it could
not be allowed.
Kilan turned and paddled back into the flow of the river, trying
all the while to keep quiet and out of sight from above. Though he may
have wished he could put an end to his life there and then, he still had
work to do. Breathing shallow breaths in order to keep his lungs full,
he pulled his way back along the pilings as one of his calves started to
cramp up. Not stopping to work it out, he eventually reached the end of
cover, then swam jerkily for the next ladder and hauled himself up,
stretching his calf as he did so, and checking carefully for any passing
watch members before scrambling onto the dock.
Though he would have been happy to just lie and shiver a while,
Kilan forced himself to his feet, and found that his horse was only a
short distance down the street. The crowd had all gathered to watch the
resuscitation attempt, so he was safe for the present. Staggering from
cold, he made his way to his horse and untethered it, as someone gave a
cry behind him.
He attempted to leap onto the horse's back, but the cramp returned
to defeat him, and he had to pull himself up by saddlehorn and stirrup
instead as the horse decided to start walking away from him. The mob
were charging his way now, and he pulled the horse's head viciously
around, digging his bare feet hard into its ribs. The baulky animal
started to trot away from the crowd, but broke into an unaccustomed run
as both rider and horse started to receive the impact of well aimed
stones. Kilan wailed and grabbed his arm as the rocks pelted into him
before a crack to the back of his skull sent him tumbling from his
mount.
The street came fast toward him, and his arm broke as he attempted
to save his head from the ground. The breath was knocked from his lungs
before the horse stamped hard on his foot as it ran past, pulping it
into the wet cobblestones. Kilan tried to draw breath to scream as his
body registered intense pain, then someone grabbed him from behind and
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