DargonZine | Volume 18, Number 1 |
n the darkness of a cave lit only by the rays of the setting sun
the high priest Zaladris sliced the flesh of his arm on the teeth of the
god Gow. His blood spilled into the god's throat. He sang of the glory
of Gow, and called for his divine protection, for although Gow was the
Beinison god of lovers, honorable warriors, and war, he was best known
as the protector. Zaladris stepped back from the black stone idol that
was the sacred image of his deity. The idol's fanged mouth opened wide,
allowing the high priest to insert his offering into the statue's
gullet: a freshly dead rat, wrapped in fustian leaves. He stepped back
and ended his song.
The statue closed its mouth, resuming its normal aspect. The figure
was of darkest black obsidian, mined from the heart of Mount Voldronnai.
It had eyes of ruby, and a polished silver sword, which it held in its
lap as it sat tailor style. The most striking feature of the idol was
its face. Unlike its handsome body, the face was turned up to the sky,
screaming in rage, its mouth rimmed with razor sharp ivory teeth.
Zaladris was at eye level to the statue, although it was only half a
man's height. It rested upon a polished gray stone dais, which in turn
rested upon a rough-hewn pedestal.
His ceremony completed, the priest wrapped a bandage around the
small cuts in his left forearm. He sighed. His joints were hurting, as
they often did in recent years. Usually it was a sign that the weather
was changing. So fierce was the ache in his knees that he had barely
been able to make the short climb to the shrine. "My lord," he said to
the statue, "the years are hard upon your humble servant now. The pain
grows; my eyes fail. Forgive me, lord protector; I pray thee give me
strength that I may carry out the sacrifice, that thy service may be
continued."
The high priest made his way out of the cave, looking into the
remaining bit of the setting sun. Pausing, he turned to the north. He
considered for a few moments what he recalled of the world away from his
shrine. There was a small village that might be of use, he mused. Gorod,
it was called. With a plan forming in his mind, he clutched his
red-hooded robe about himself to ward off the cool mountain breeze. His
long, gray beard flapped in the wind as he made his way down the worn
path, taking much support from his walking stick.
Elton groaned as he tossed the light blanket aside. He rubbed his
eyes and glanced out the window, noting the predawn light. When Master
Oramond had made him journeyrank stonemason, Elton had been very proud
of the honor. However, the task of being first to rise, in order to
rouse the apprentices, was less pleasing. He pulled on his tunic and
breeches, and splashed water on his face. Then he picked up his
betrothal pendant, an artfully shaped piece of polished copper on a
leather strap, which he tied about his neck.
It had only been the previous sennight that Sala had paraded the
matched set of necklaces through Gorod, signifying her desire to take a
husband. Elton had been finishing his work for the day when she had
arrived, followed by cheering villagers. He'd been delighted to drop to
his knees, so that she might present him with the token of betrothal. To
further mark the occasion, Master Oramond had chosen that evening to
raise Elton to journeyrank stonemason. Oramond had later admitted that
Sala had forewarned him of her intentions, and so he had decided to time
Elton's promotion for the same day.
Awake now, Elton pulled aside the rough cloth curtain that
separated his alcove from the apprentices, and strode out into the main
room. The apprentices lay on their mats arranged against each wall,
leaving an aisle for Elton to walk down the middle. All were still
asleep, ranging from Adnar, who was the youngest of the group, to
Quella, the eldest. At sixteen summers she was the most senior
apprentice, only three summers junior to Elton. He went to the end of
the room, where there was a large gray block of granite with an
iron-headed hammer atop it.
"Wake up! Wake up masons; it's time to greet the sun," Elton called
as he hammered the granite block. He had always hated it when Yanek, his
predecessor, had used the same method to shatter his every morning. He
had to admit, however, that it was the most efficient way to get a half
score youngsters moving.
After seeing that the apprentices were each given a small loaf of
brown bread and a draught of water, Elton marched them outside to begin
the labors of the day. He smiled, pleased at the clatter of hammers and
chisels tinkling as the young masons worked at carving their rock. The
masons' work area was less a building than a shelter to keep the beating
sun off the sweating apprentices. Rough poles at the four corners and
halfway along the sides supported a sloppy thatched roof. Arranged
within were the young apprentice masons, each carefully carving raw
stone into square blocks suitable for building. Elton checked their
work, correcting deficiencies where he saw them. Then he set up his own
tools, preparing for the finer work merited by his status.
Elton inspected the image of the pockmarked moon, Nochturon, which
he had carefully chiseled into the limestone rock. It was to be a facing
on the temple to Cahleyna that was being repaired. Just as he set tool
to stone, a voice crying out drew his attention. He stepped out of the
mason's enclosure and looked east down the street where, silhouetted by
the rising sun, he could just make out the source of the voice. With a
quick word he put Quella in charge, and trotted down the dirt avenue to
where a small crowd had begun to gather. He craned his neck to see over
them.
"My daughter! My daughter, my daughter has been taken!" lamented
Xakim, the baker, a fat, bald man wearing a white smock. The spirit in
Elton's breast froze. Xakim was the father of Sala, his beloved and
betrothed. He forced his way through the crowd to confront the baker.
"What is it, Xakim?" Elton shouted, grabbing him by the shoulders.
"What do you mean 'taken'?"
"I don't know. Sometime in the night," he said, tears rolling down
his cheeks. "Something broke its way into the house and took her. It --
it tore down the wall, and we heard nothing."
"Tore down the wall?" Elton repeated, aghast.
Xakim shuddered, "Yes, a hole so large that Yetta's cart would fit
within it."
Shocked, Elton turned from Xakim and rushed through Gorod to the
baker's home, his heart pounding with anxiety. Elton's breath was coming
in ragged gasps as his sprint ended. Located at the edge of the village,
Xakim's bakery was a large mud-brick building with the wood-fired ovens
in front, adjoining the dirt street, and with his home in the back
rooms. Elton dashed through the bakery to the family's living area.
"Sala! Sala, where are you?" he called despite knowing there could
be no answer.
In the back of the building he found the family sleeping room. It
was dominated by the immense hole rent in the rear wall. The only sign
of Sala was her empty sleeping mat, the light autumn blanket lying cast
aside. The mud bricks had been torn from their courses and were
scattered outside. Elton looked amazedly at the hole, which rose from
the floor to the roof and was wider than the span of the mason's arms.
It faced out on the fields where farmers labored over their crops. Far
in the distance he could make out the edge of the forest, and beyond
that were the rising mountains of the Darst Range.
The dirt floor near Sala's bed had some odd marks near it, where
something had disturbed the hard-packed earth. Elton followed the mess
to the breach, and saw well-defined footprints in the soft ground
outside. He crouched down for a closer look, and noted that each track
was longer than his forearm, and nearly half a hand deep. It looked like
a man's bare footprint, but one that was much larger and heavier than
the largest man he had ever seen. A small crowd of villagers gathered
around while Elton studied the scene.
"Look at the size of them," Quoll, the thatcher, muttered.
"What could it be?" asked Yetta, who had just arrived to deliver
flour from the mill.
"Kushago," breathed Fardis, the hunter, aghast. "The man-beast of
the northern woods. Covered in hair, as large as a bear. I see their
tracks sometimes."
"I've heard stories of them," Elton said with a shudder. "What
could one want with Sala, though?"
"Something vile, I imagine," said Fardis. He looked up at Xakim,
his face grave, "I'm sorry for your loss, Xakim."
"Hold," said Elton. "We don't know that she's dead. I see no blood
here. We have to go after her. She needs us!"
Fardis shook his head sadly. "No Elton, it's too late for her, and
too hazardous for us. Kushago are smarter than bears. I dare not hunt
one."
Elton looked at him, shocked. "I'm going after her then," Elton
snarled. "Who is with me?" He looked at the faces of his fellow
villagers. None would meet his gaze, not even Xakim, her father. "Xakim,
you'll help me won't you?" he pleaded.
Xakim's eyes were downcast. Slowly he brought his head up, and
looked at the young mason. "I cannot, Elton. Sala is lost. You know no
one has seen a Kushago and lived to tell of it. I must look after the
family I still do have. I must guard them against suffering." He
gestured toward the breach, "What could I do against such a beast? And
winter comes as well. How can I leave my wife now, with a bakery to run
and a home to repair? I'm sorry Elton, we must accept what is, not what
we wish it to be."
"Fark! Old man," Elton cried. He stormed away from the bakery and
made his way back to the masons' hall. Though angry, he was also worried
about what he was going to do. Xakim was right about one thing at least:
a monster that could tear down walls would be more than a match for one
man. What else could he do, though? He had known Sala ever since they
had been children playing in the mud. He fingered his betrothal pendant
as he walked. Elton's resolve stiffened. He didn't want to know life
without her now. He just had to hope fortune and Cahleyna would smile
upon him.
Quickly he gathered some of his belongings, and wrapped them in a
blanket in the manner of a traveler. He settled the pack on his
shoulders and took a look around his quarters one final time before
departing.
"Elton," a voice called, "hold a moment." Oramond, the master
stonemason, was a wide, squat man, much like the marble blocks he
carved. He was shorter than Elton, but much more massive. The light
streaming through the window lit the highlights on his bald head, and
his black beard flowed down his chest. The master grasped Elton by the
shoulder and steered him to his workroom. There he sat across from Elton
and said, "I heard about Sala. It's a terrible thing, but don't spill
your tools over it."
"She's my betrothed, Oramond. I have to go after her. I'll go alone
if I must," Elton said. "Don't consider stopping me; this is something I
must do."
"Calm down boy, I understand. All I'm saying is to keep your wits
about you." Oramond gestured to a white stone block, which sat upon a
worktable. "What is that, Elton?"
Wrinkling his brow in puzzlement, Elton answered, "It's white
marble, from our southern quarry?"
"Is it?" Oramond asked, "Perhaps it is a rearing stallion, a simple
cornice, or maybe even part of Cahleyna's altar."
"Well, yes, it could be all those things. Is there a point to this,
master? I need to depart."
"Elton," Oramond sighed, "you need to look beyond your nose."
Oramond shook his head and walked over to his workbench. "My heart is
with you in this, Elton. I cannot accompany you, but I offer such help
as I have." He moved aside a few small boxes and pulled out a sword in a
scabbard from a shelf above his workbench. He blew some stone dust off
of it, revealing the scabbard and pommel that extended out of it to be
rather plain and somewhat worn. "My great grandfather fought in the
Great Houses War. This was his sword, passed down through the
generations. I've had no use for it, but this, I think, is a noble
cause." He presented the sword to the surprised Elton, who gratefully
took it in both hands.
"But master, a family heirloom?"
"Bah, my chisels and hammers are my heirlooms. That sword is just a
memento of deeds long past. Just take care that you come back whole."
Elton clasped forearms with Oramond. "Thank you, master. I will
always remember your kindness and your wisdom." He departed the masons'
hall, and began his quest.
Elton made his way to the village's edge and briskly trotted to the
fields. At first, his sword slapped against his thigh and threatened to
tangle his legs as he jogged. He removed the sword from his belt, and
rolled it into the middle of his blanket pack, which resolved his
problem. He found that if he stretched, he could grasp the sword's
pommel and draw it. In the field he found the giant tracks in the soft
dirt and followed the broken and stomped crops up to the beginning of
the forest.
He stopped and squared his shoulders, looking into the shadows
beneath the forest canopy. The villagers of Gorod seldom ventured away
from their fields. The wilds held little allure for them, with the
exception of such hardy souls as Fardis. Like most of the people in his
village, Elton had never been more than a dozen leagues from his home.
He took a deep breath to steel his nerves and after a moment he exhaled
and said aloud, "Very well now, step forward. It's just a forest." He
made sure his sword was held fast in its scabbard, and then adjusted his
pack. "Straight, forward into the forest."
"Are ye goin' or no?" a croaky voice said.
Elton yelped and jumped backwards. His foot caught on a shrub, and
he windmilled his arms, flailing for his balance. It was to no avail;
down he went painfully on his rump. Looking wildly around, he saw a
short, squat man with snaggley teeth emerge from the brush.
"Laying about like that is no good. No, no good at all," the man
said.
"Urtose, you fool!" yelled Elton. "What in the name of blessed
Cahleyna are you doing out here? You're like to scare a year off my
life, popping out of the woods like some Shuul-damned beast."
Urtose bobbed his head and giggled. He shuffled over to Elton and
tried to help the mason to his feet. "Heh, thought ye were gonna stand
there all day, I did. Never gonna catch up like that. Heh."
Elton waved off Urtose's help and struggled to his feet. "What are
you talking about, Urtose?" he asked.
"She was taken, aye. Gotta find her. This way they went, they did.
Ye comin', or no?" Urtose answered.
Elton closed his eyes and sighed. "Blessed Cahleyna," he thought,
"I know I prayed for help, but what were you --?" Elton paused and took
a moment to clear his mind before he became blasphemous with his deity.
The mason looked at Urtose grimly. The halfwit must have heard
about Sala's being taken. Elton had asked for help in the village, but
no one had stepped forward. Now here was his volunteer: Urtose, the
village idiot. Urtose was harmless enough, though he occasionally
disappeared for months at a time. Elton knew Sala often gave the fool
scraps from her father's bakery. He supposed that must be why Urtose
fancied himself a rescuer. Elton shook his head and looked at the
scruffy vagabond, who was dressed in mismatched leathers and homespun
while carrying a long stick with the end crudely sharpened. "I think you
had better stay here, Urtose. This could be dangerous, and it will take
all my attention."
Urtose looked at Elton with a lop-sided stare, and then snickered.
"Attention? Yes, lots of attention. Ye know the forest then? Ye have
eaten worms and slept in the rain, have ye?" He bounded to the woods
with a couple of hops, and looked back at Elton. "No more talk. Further
away she's gonna get. Gotta go, gotta go." He scrambled into the forest,
following the tracks towards the Darst Range.
"Urtose, wait!" called Elton, and dashed into the underbrush after
him.
Elton, with Urtose following, carefully picked his way along a
rocky path. It wound its way through the forest as they slowly
approached the roots of the Darst Range, which cut its way through the
heart of Baranur. He and the fool had followed the trail where, away
from the soft soil of the farmlands, it had dwindled to almost nothing.
Once in a while Elton would see a clear footprint in a muddy spot, but
for the most part they were left searching for clues. Much to Elton's
surprise, Urtose had proven invaluable on this quest. Several times when
the trail had seemed to disappear entirely, Urtose had been the one to
discover minute clues: a broken stick, bent-over grass, or a few
overturned pebbles which had been enough to return them to their path.
The idiot had even been able to snare rabbits and forage tubers and
berries enough to sustain them.
Three days' hard travel, from dawn to late in the moonlight, had
brought the pair up to the foothills of the Darst Range. The trail led
to a path that curved around a high, rocky hill with a steep dropoff.
The freshly bared soil and debris below suggested that the ledge had
been wider, but had sheared off when their quarry had passed over it. It
was now much narrower.
The narrowness of the trail forced Elton to rub one shoulder
against the nearly straight wall of the hillside, while the other
dangled over open space where the land rapidly dropped away. His careful
march was interrupted when the ground he stepped on broke apart. Elton
tried to backpedal, but everywhere he stepped, his footing crumbled.
Abruptly he was tumbling down the steep slope, twisting desperately in
an attempt to avoid smashing into the larger rocks that projected from
the soil.
Elton wrapped his arm around a gnarled sapling that was growing out
of the slope and arrested his descent. The sudden stop nearly jerked his
arm out of its socket, forcing him to grunt in pain. He ducked his head
against the rain of debris that followed him down the slope. The
collapse of the path he had been using had started a small rockslide,
one that was threatening to bury him.
After several menes, he no longer felt stones pelting his back and
all fell silent. Elton tried to move, but was held tight by the weight
of the dirt and stones that had nearly buried him. He shook his head to
throw off the loose soil and blinked several times until he could see
again.
"Rock buster, are ye living?" Urtose called. "Glowin' mess this
be," he complained, and then started to gingerly climb down the slope.
"I live!" shouted the mason. "I'm here Urtose. I'm stuck fast."
Urtose reached Elton's resting place and dug furiously. A few menes
of hard work uncovered the mason's torso and arms, but his legs were
trapped under a mass of heavy boulders which were wedged tightly
together. The idiot worked for nearly a bell trying to free Elton's
legs. For every handful of dirt he scooped out, more flowed in to take
its place. Drenched in sweat and caked with dirt, Urtose finally quit
his futile task.
"Leave me," Elton said dejectedly. "Go rescue Sala; I am done for."
"Oh, a hero be ye?" smiled Urtose. "Ye be a shining knight, giving
yer life fer yer lady; just like the tale spinner's talk, eh?"
"It's ill enough that I die," Elton grumbled. "There's no need to
make sport of me for it."
Urtose threw the back of his hand to his forehead, looked to the
sky, and said, "Ooh the horror of it all! I must die so dramatically,
they shall sing songs of me." Urtose cackled as he shambled a ways up
the slope.
Elton fumed at the giggling fool. He could only hope Urtose would
find some way to help Sala. Eventually the animals would come to finish
him, he was sure. Perhaps he could fend them off for a time. Even if
Urtose went to Gorod for help, it would take him at least a sennight to
return. Surviving so long trapped here didn't seem likely.
A long, ululating wail caught his attention. "Ol's balls! What's
that fool up to now?" Elton wondered aloud. Urtose didn't return, so the
mason could do little but ponder his woes, while he heard the almost
animal-sounding wail occasionally in the distance.
Elton blinked awake. He had fallen asleep where he was trapped, as
the daylight had turned to darkness. The rocky slope was lit by the disc
of a nearly full moon. A clattering of stones drew Elton's attention to
the two figures nearing him. One he recognized as the hunched, shambling
silhouette of Urtose. The other was much larger, nearly half a man
taller than any man Elton had seen, its outline blurred by long wisps of
hair. Elton's eyes widened. "Kushago," he whispered. He tried to reach
for a rock, or a stick with which to defend himself, but none were near.
Elton struggled desperately, tugging hard against the boulders that held
his legs, while the Kushago advanced on him. "Beast!" snarled the smith.
"You took my Sala. I curse you. I will spit upon you from the heights of
Kisil-Seed, from the high tower of the gods."
"Heh heh, what are ye on about then?" laughed Urtose. "He's here to
help ye, rock buster."
"The Kushago took Sala, you fool. We've been following his trail.
Now you've brought certain death to us, and ended any chance she might
have had."
"Yer being silly. The beast-men no more want our women than ye want
to eat yer stone," Urtose replied disdainfully. He motioned the Kushago
over and demonstrated trying to lift one of the larger boulders. After a
moment it seemed to grasp Urtose's intention, and moved to help.
The rocks that had defeated Urtose and Elton earlier in the day
proved to be no match for the strength of the Kushago. The huge
man-beast gripped a boulder with both hands and, with a grunt, raised it
off the ground and tossed it away. In only a few menes the mason was
freed from his rocky prison.
Elton shook away the stinging sensation in his legs, which had gone
numb during his ordeal. They were scraped and bruised, but no bones were
broken, he gratefully noted. He decided that they should make camp right
where they were; he wanted to talk to Urtose about the Kushago. It
seemed to be friendly enough, or at least it wasn't threatening. The
beast shied away from the campfire and looked to prefer the trees to the
open. Urtose told the mason that he had encountered the Kushagos on his
frequent forays into the forest. He had, on occasion, lived among a
nomadic band of them for months at a time. He had learned the way of the
wilderness from them, and they had treated him as a member of their
tribe, something that could not be said of the villagers of Gorod.
"Can you ask him if he's seen Sala, or her captor then?" Elton
wondered.
Urtose shook his head, "Nay, they don't talk like that, they don't.
Hungry, help, hunt: things like these I can say. More than that, there
are no words."
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