DargonZine | Volume 4, Number 3 |
imee held her breath when she heard more crashing from outside.
Were the Be-innyson soldiers coming again? She wished that she was in
the castle with Daddy and Grandfather. She closed her eyes and wished
harder, so hard that she could feel her fingernails digging into her
hands. She opened her eyes and saw she was still in Grandfather's shop.
Wishing never worked by itself-- you had to go and make it work for even
the littlest things.
She'd been here since yesterday, when the Be-innyson soldiers
started throwing rocks at the city walls. She'd been taken to Old Town
with the other children and put near the castle--but she had left
something very important behind. When Grandfather picked her up and put
her in the wagon to Old Town her puppy Karl had jumped out of her arms
and run into Grandfather's home.
Grandfather told her that he'd make sure to bring Karl if he had to
go to Old Town too. Then she'd heard that the Be-innysons had made holes
in the New Town wall and were coming in. She was smart enough to know
that Grandfather would be too busy to find Karl, so she sneaked out--it
was easy enough with so many children around--to find Karl.
When she got to Grandfather's, Karl was there--but Grandfather
wasn't. The puppy was upstairs in Grandfather's rooms. He had tipped
over a jug of Grandfather's awful, bitter drink and was lapping at it.
Aimee had to laugh at the way the puppy staggered and yelped--like
Grandfather did during the Melrin festival. Aimee had gathered the puppy
in her arms and was about to leave when she heard marching, clanking
feet.
She ran to a rope hanging over a table and pulled her feet up,
dangling with one hand while the other held Karl. Slowly, the stairs to
the attic came down, and Aimee climbed them. She sat on a projecting
board she had fastened to the stairs (when Grandfather was away once)
and pushed them closed. Then she pulled the rope up through its hole.
She carefully made her way around the holes in the floor to the attic
window. There she lay down to watch the street.
Soldiers were coming from her left. They marched in straight rows,
making a terrible noise. She could tell that they weren't Dargon's
soldiers. They had square shields and carried an ugly banner with a big
metal bird on top of it. They had to be Be-innysons!
Aimee was nervous, but not really scared. She'd remembered hearing
Grandfather tell Goodman Corambis that the attic had been made by
smuggil-ers to hide in and see down below. (The next day she sneaked
into the attic to see. Grandfather was right--she could see everything
through the holes in the floor. Best of all, Grandfather couldn't see
her. The ceiling was built very high with rough logs and painted to make
the holes look like parts of a pattern.)
Then she saw Thomas Redcap. He had been sleeping in a doorway.
Thomas was always drunk and he smelled bad, so Aimee stayed away from
him. But nobody ever did anything to him because he never hurt anyone.
Two of the soldiers had picked him up and were shaking him awake. Thomas
woke up and the head soldier--did Be-innysons have captains?--said
something to him. Aimee suppressed a laugh--Be-innysons were stupid
people! Everybody knew that Thomas couldn't say his own name just after
he woke up.
Thomas just stared at the soldier. When the soldier started to
yell, Thomas tried to run. The soldier took his sword and stabbed Thomas
in the back. Thomas kept trying to run, but the soldier kept stabbing
him. Finally, Thomas fell down and the soldier stabbed him in the neck.
Aimee started shaking--these were terrible men! They were demons
like Mother Clariss the Priestess had told her about! She watched the
men pick up Thomas and toss him in the gutter. Some of them actually
laughed! Then the captain shouted something Aimee didn't understand and
the men went into buildings.
Aimee froze, clutching Karl. Three of them had come into
Grandfather's place! If they would kill harmless old Thomas Redcap, what
would they do to her? She inched over to a smaller peephole and looked
into the rooms below. Karl squirmed and whimpered.
"Be quiet, Karl!" she whispered.
Karl tried to lick her face. He began to wriggle more, and Aimee
was afraid that he would start to bark. She couldn't let him go--he
might fall into one of the larger holes and start to yowl. What could
she do?
Karl then belched, softly. Aimee grimaced. he smelled just like
Daddy and Grandfather did at the Melrin festival--of course! Grandfather
kept some of his jugs up here in the winter so they would be cold when
he drank them. Maybe he'd forgot to take some down this spring. Aimee
looked around until she spied a pile of earthen jugs.
"Will you be quiet if I give you a drink?" Aimee whispered as she
crawled over to the jugs. The clay stopper was fastened with wax, and
she had to dig at it with her fingernails. Karl, smelling the beverage,
was whining in anticipation.
Aimee pulled the stopper out and poured some of the brown contents
into a depression on the floor. Karl lapped fast and furious. Aimee then
went back to the peephole.
The soldiers had come up the stairs from the public rooms and were
searching Grandfather's rooms, turning over everything that could move.
Aimee was glad that the table was heavy oak, or she would have to jump
from the bottom of the stairs when she left. Finally, one of the
soldiers found Grandfather's jugs he kept by the table. They laughed and
stuffed them into their packs. Then they left.
Aimee went back to the attic window and looked at the street. The
soldiers were gathering together. The captain yelled something and they
went back into lines and marched away. After they were out of sight,
Aimee went to the board nailed to the stairs and lowered them. Then she
scampered down and went immediately to a cupboard that had been ripped
open. She ran her fingers on the top of the bottom shelf, along the
outside rim, until she found a catch. She pulled the catch and a small
door on the opposite wall swung ajar. This was another thing made by
smuggil-ers, according to Grandfather. She ran to the secret cupboard
and looked--it was there.
Grandfather had once been a soldier, and he had kept a few
souvineers. One was a big greatsword, too heavy for Aimee to lift.
Another was a decorated crossbow that Grandfather had gotten as a gift
for helping in some battle or another. The greatsword was
gone--Grandfather took it with him probably, but the crossbow was still
there, hidden with Grandfather's other treasures. She knew that she
couldn't wield it, but she would still feel safer if she had it with
her. She grabbed the weapon and a handful of silver-inlaid bolts and ran
back into the attic, withdrawing the stairs behind her.
"I know what I'll do." She thought, "I'll wait here until I see
some Dargon soldiers march by, and then I'll come down and tell them I'm
Aimee Taishent and they'll take me to the castle because Daddy's in the
guard."
She lay down by the attic window and watched the street. After a
while, Karl staggered next to her and collapsed in a heap.
"Did you have enough?" Aimee whispered.
Karl emitted an enormous belch and went to sleep.
"Karl, you smell worse than Thomas Redcap." Then she
remembered--Thomas lay on the street, dead, holes poked into his body by
the Be-innysons. Softly, Aimee began to cry. The tears flowed smoothly
down her cheeks until they dripped on the floor. Then she began to sob,
trembling. Her throat started hurting, but still she cried. Her head
started hurting--still she cried. Aimee wept until after sundown. Then
she slept.
She woke the next morning to the sounds of battle. She looked out
the attic window to see a mob fleeing down the street. Behind them were
more Be- innysons. They were hitting people, not even chasing them. Just
running over them and killing them. Aimee suddenly felt terribly guilty.
"I'll never knock over another anthill. I promise." She whispered.
"Just please, Bright Cahleyna, don't let the soldiers come in here."
The mob passed and the soldiers followed them, not stopping to look
in any buildings. Aimee breathed a sigh of relief. How long would it be
before the Dargon soldiers came by? Would they ever? There were so many
Be-innysons, what if they won? Would they come and kill her like they
did Thomas Redcap? She started to cry again.
She stopped when she heard Karl whining. The puppy was lying on his
belly, forepaws over his ears, eyes tightly shut.
"It serves you right, Karl." Aimee whispered. "Now you'll remember
how awful that stuff is to drink." Aimee then realized how terribly
hungry and thirsty she was. She also needed to go outside--badly. But
the Be-innysons were out there! She looked around until she saw some old
junk in a corner. Maybe there was a chamber pot in the pile!
Desperately, she climbed into the castoffs and began to dig. The pile
was huge--Grandfather never threw anything out. She began to tunnel into
the heap, which nearly touched the roof.
"There's my toy cart!" Aimee stated.
Karl stood at Aimee's exclamation and dragged himself to the pile.
He whimpered at his mistress.
"Karl, I was going to pull you around in this, but a wheel fell
off. Grandfather said he would fix it, but I guess he just lost it in
this mess. I'll make him put it together when he comes back." Aimee
stopped digging. Would Grandfather come back? Would anyone? She started
to cry, but her sobbing breaths reminded her of a lower call. She
quested further into the heap. Finally, she caught at glimpse of glazed
clay. Tossing small bits of junk aside, she found a cracked chamber pot.
After she relieved herself, she had a terrible thought--"How do I
get rid of this?" she asked herself. Aimee decided that she would have
to leave it here until she could think of something.
She was still thirsty, though. Aimee grit her teeth and picked up a
jug. She pried it open and took a drink. Yak! It was even more awful
than she remembered. But it helped her throat, so she drank more. She
put the stopper on the jug and sat down next to the attic window,
watching the street for Dargon soldiers. Karl wobbled over and lay down
beside her. Aimee picked him up.
"Karl, I wish you were a great knight like the old Duke Clifton,
then you'd put me on your horse and we'd ride straight to the castle.
And if any Be- innyson soldiers tried to stop us, you'd take your sword
and kill them." Aimee thought about the Be-innysons; she thought about
Thomas Redcap; she thought about the people running away, killed like
ants; and a strange feeling started inside her. It was cold, but somehow
comforting. The more she felt it, the better she felt.
"I hate you, Be-innysons." she said, and for the first time in her
life, she knew what that meant.
Aimee watch the street until she had to relieve herself again. She
went over to the chamber pot--it stank. Aimee sighed, there was no
helping it. Grandfather would understand about the smell. She walked to
the chimney and unlatched a metal door. Grandfather had put it in
himself so he wouldn't have to hire a sweep to clean the flue and he
wouldn't have to go on the roof to clean it himself. The special bendy
brush Grandfather used was on the floor beside the chimney.
She opened the door and poured the contents of the chamber pot down
the chimney. Grandfather kept the flue closed unless he had a fire, so
she knew it wouldn't splatter in the fireplace and give her away. She
would have to remember to warn him before he opened the flue next time.
Again she relieved herself and emptied the pot. That was when she heard
the crash.
She crept to a peephole and looked down. A Be-innyson soldier had
chased an older girl into the building and up the stairs to the rooms
below. He had a terrible grin on his face. He grabbed the girl and threw
her onto the floor. Then he ripped her skirts and petticoats off and
opened his codpiece. Aimee immediately knew that the man wanted to sex
(or s-e-x, as Grandfather always said around her. She was six
already--she'd heard what grownups did! Anyway, she'd seen Karl get
born.), but the girl didn't want to--the soldier was going to hurt her!
A flame started in Aimee's heart and crept up her throat. She was
going to stop him! He was a Be-innyson, and all they ever did was hurt
people. She didn't care how big he was or what weapons he had. Aimee
Taishent was going to stop him! She scampered to the attic window--no
one was on the street. At least it was only him. The girl had started
screaming. Aimee went to a peephole and looked down. She saw the man
forcing the girl onto the floor. Desperate, Aimee caught the crossbow on
a nail jutting from a pillar and pulled back the string with both hands.
"Please, Father Ol, keep the string from breaking."
Aimee pulled, leaning away from the crossbow. The string dug into
her fingers, feeling like a knife. Finally, the catch clicked--the bow
was cocked.
Her fingers hurt too much to move--there was already a purple line
across them--but she forced herself to drop the bolt into its slot, like
she had seen the guards do in practice. Then she started running toward
the stairs.
On her way, a flash caught her eye. The soldier was right under one
of the larger holes in the floor--Grandfather called them murder holes.
It was very big, Aimee had almost caught her foot in it. She looked down
and saw the soldier's back, right below her. She carefully aimed into
the hole and and gasped as the bolt slid out of the crossbow and through
the hole below. You had to hold the bow straight! She'd heard Daddy tell
that to his men, but had forgotten. She remembered now.
Aimee heard the soldier shout and then a crash. What would he do?
He couldn't get to the stairs, she knew that, but what would he do? She
looked down through the hole. The soldier wasn't there, but the girl
was. Her head bled and she lay in a ball, quaking. Where was the
soldier?
Aimee ran to another murder hole and looked down--no soldier! Had
she scared him away? She ran to the stairs to lower them, but stopped
dead as she saw them come down by themselves. Frozen with fear, she
watched as the Be- innyson soldier came up the stairs, holding a
pole-arm with a hook upon it. He smiled at Aimee and approached her,
weapon held low.
Aimee stared at the soldier as he walked toward her. He was
talking, saying something she couldn't understand. When he had cleared
half the distance between them, Karl charged the foreigner with a
squeaking snarl. The soldier batted the pup aside with his polearm.
As soon as Karl took to the air, yelping, Aimee awoke. The soldier
wanted to hurt her! She ran around the soldier, trying to make for the
stairs, but he just turned and swung his polearm in front of her. She
tried to duck around the weapon, but the soldier just stepped and hit
her with the haft.
She fell over, bruised, and heard the soldier laugh. She looked up
and saw him heft his weapon, then he swung it. The blade descended upon
her like a foot upon a beetle. Aimee tensed herself for the blow, her
last, when she heard a thump beside her. The soldier had missed! Was he
too drunk to hit her? She looked at him and her hopes died as she heard
him start to laugh. He aimed another blow at her, missing by inches. He
was playing with her-- just like boys played with rats!
Aimee scrambled backwards on all fours; the soldier advanced,
smirking. He said something in his own tongue and laughed. Aimee still
went back. The soldier stopped to watch her. Finally, Aimee hit
something--it was the junk heap. She started to climb into it and froze
as the soldier yelled and charged toward her, weapon lowered.
Desperate, she grabbed at the pile below her. Her hands came up
with a piece of wood. It was the shaft from Grandfather's old cloak
tree. She had broken it last year by swinging from it and knocking it
over. Grandfather was so mad he didn't even spank her--he just told
Daddy! She pulled up the piece of wood and held the end before her--the
top with a pointed bit. It wasn't long enough! The soldier's weapon was
easily twice as long. And she couldn't even pick it up besides, the
other end was tightly wedged in the pile.
"I'm sorry, Daddy." she whispered.
At that moment, the soldier discovered one of the murder holes. His
right foot came down exactly upon a larger one and went in. The bones of
his ankle ground against each other and cracked. Yet the momentum of his
charge was too great to be halted by this minor setback. Instead, his
body flew the last few yards through the air and landed upon Aimee. His
polearm entered the pile, headfirst, catching Aimee's skirts upon the
hook.
Aimee opened her eyes. Above her lay the soldier. Why wasn't he
doing anything? Then she noticed that her hands were warm. She looked
down to wher she had been holding up the end of the cloak tree and
gasped when she saw it go into the soldier. She looked up at the young
man. He was a youth, with a light mustache beginning to form. Aimee
noticed that his hair was reddish and looked very soft. He was
motionless, breath coming in ragged gasps. Tears poured from his eyes.
Aimee watched the final spasm shake the soldier before he stopped
breathing. Then she looked at his face. He had the same look that Thomas
Redcap did when the soldiers cut him down.
Aimee went limp on the pile, sobbing. She was as bad as the
Be-innysons! She thought that killing the soldier would make her feel
better, but it didn't. She felt awful, even worse than the time she had
been throwing stones to knock down apples and accidentally hit a
squirrel. She dragged herself out of the pile, tearing her skirt on the
hook. Sobbing, she ran down the stairs.
More than anything she had to get away--she'd killed somebody. That
was the worst thing you could do! Grandfather had taught her that Ol and
Cahleyna valued all life, and now she had killed someone. She had to
hide--go where no one could find her. She ran for the stairs to the
street level when she collided with a soft form.
"Where did you come from?" Aimee heard someone say.
Aimee looked up and saw the face of the girl. Unable to speak,
Aimee pointed up.
"You say you came from heaven?" The girl's eyes were wide. "Were
you an angel sent by Cephas Stevene to rescue me?"
"No." Aimee was finally able to say. "I came from the attic. I
tried to shoot the bolt at him and he--" Aimee burst again into tears.
"I killed him!"
The girl held Aimee tighter. "It's all right, honey. He was going
to hurt me, and you only wanted to stop him." Aimee felt a hand on her
chin, lifting her face.
"I am Marta, what's your name?"
"Aimee, Aimee Taishent." Aimee said.
"Are you related to the mage?"
"He's my grandfather!"
"No wonder you're so brave. Living around magic must be very
exciting. I bet you can even read." Marta smiled and stroked Aimee's
hair.
"It's not all that exciting." Aimee said, "Usually he just sits and
studies, except when he has a customer, but I can read."
"Where is your Grandfather?"
"He's in Old Town. He went there when the Be-innysons--when
they--when--" Aimee began crying again.
"It's all right, honey. One way or another, it will be over soon."
Aimee and Marta embraced, each comforting the other.
After a time, Aimee snuffed and said, "Go into the attic, it's not
safe to be down here."
"What about you?" Marta asked.
"I'll be right behind you." Aimee said. Yesterday she had been so
scared that she forgot Grandfather's secret stash. It was where he kept
all the wonderful things he wasn't supposed to eat at his age. She
crawled under the table and pushed a knothole--smuggil-ers had to be the
most fun people. A small trapdoor pushed up and Aimee lifted it.
Underneath were pickled sweetmeats and fish salted so heavy it
crackled. There were also some pickled plums from Bichu. Aimee liked
these, even if they burned on the way down and made her feel funny. She
put it all on the table and closed the trap door. Then she climbed on
the table and put the lot in her torn skirt. After she climbed into the
attic she sat the food on the floor and raised the stairs.
As she finished pulling up the stairs, she remembered--the soldier
was up here! She couldn't turn around, she might see him. Aimee stood,
trembling, and stared at the stairs.
"It's all right, Aimee, I covered him."
Aimee turned around. Marta had covered him with the blanket she had
taken from Grandfather's bed to cover herself up. She was trying to pull
her ruined skirts around her.
"Wait, Marta." Aimee lowered the stairs and ran down. For once she
was glad that Grandfather got cold. Sometimes she hated how he always
had two blankets--it made sleeping with him too hot. She pulled the
other blanked out from under the bed and brought it into the attic. When
she returned, Marta had already started on the sweetmeats.
"I haven't eaten since before yesterday." she said.
"Neither did I." Aimee replied. "I'll get something to drink." She
walked to the jugs and got one. The two began to feast, only pausing to
drink the over-warm beer.
When they had finished eating, Aimee went to the attic window.
"What are you looking for?" Marta asked.
"I'm waiting for Dargon soldiers."
"Oh." Marta sat, quietly.
After a time, Aimee looked back at Marta. The older girl was
sitting, rocking back and forth. Tears flowed down her cheeks and
throat. Her body shook with silent sobs. Aimee ran over to her.
"What's wrong? Are you hurt?" Aimee put her arms around Marta.
"That man--he wanted to..." Marta put her head down.
"I could see that, but I stopped him." Aimee was puzzled. He hadn't
been able to hurt Marta, but Marta still seemed hurt.
"I know you stopped him, and he didn't hurt my body, but he hurt my
heart." Marta wiped her face. "He scared me and tried to do something
terrible." Marta began sobbing.
"He broke the Third Law of your Stevene, didn't he, Marta?"
"What do you know about that, Aimee? They don't teach the Third Law
to little girls."
"I can read. Mother Clariss is a Priestess for Stevene and she used
to come around and talk to me before Grandfather chased her away. One
time I sneaked one of her books out of her pouch. I kept it up here
until Grandfather found it. He was so mad--I don't know why."
"Perhaps your Grandfather is pagan...mine was."
"I don't know about that, but he made me pray all day to Ol for
that."
Marta looked Aimee in the eyes, "Then you worship Ol?..."
"Of course I do. Grandfather tells me all about him."
Marta took Aimee on her lap. "Despise not the pagan, for they may
still be good of heart." she whispered.
"What did you say?" asked Aimee.
"Just a little prayer of thanks that you were here, Aimee--What
were you saying about the Third Law?" Marta dried her eyes.
"Well, I think it goes: 'The sexyoual act is a sacrament. It is a
holy gift of pleasure...' that means good feeling, you know."
"Yes, I know, Aimee." Marta smiled, faintly. "Go on."
"...'a holy gift of pleasure from God. He who violates this gift
shall burn, but she who is violated...' Why did Seefas Stevene say 'she'
there, anyway?"
Marta sighed, "I think he had some idea what things are like in the
real world."
"Okay, anyway: '...she who is violated is as pure as before, by My
Holy Word. Let none gainsay...' That means disagree. '...this decree."
"Thank you Aimee." Marta hugged the young girl.
"Do you want to pray, Marta?"
"I would like that."
Marta recited the Plea to Stevene and the Creed of Mercy. Aimee
listened to the alian phrases. Stevene people prayed strangely, all full
of begging and pleading. Praying to Cahleyna and Ol was much easier. You
just thanked them for the good things and asked them to help with the
bad things. When Marta was done Aimee looked into her eyes. They were
brown and dark, just like Karl's fur--Karl! Where was he? She looked
around the attic and then, to her horror heard, at the same time, Karl
barking from below and a roar, like the parade at Melrin Festival,
coming down the street.
"I've got to get Karl!" Aimee cried as she ran to the stairs.
"No, Aimee, the battle's come this way." Marta grabbed Aimee and
held her tight. "Anyway, you've already proven that the Stevene looks
after brave little girls and foolish puppies very well."
"Are you sure?"
"Yes." Marta lied.
The two sat by the attic window to watch, fearfully.
"They're coming." Marta whispered.
Around the corner came a Beinison legion, banner torn, shields
broken, ranks ragged. Behind them was a veritable mob of an army. Here a
soldier in fine armor hacked at a Beinison shield; there three street
toughs pelted a lone Beinison with cudgels. Old men threw rocks; young
men wielded spears. It was a rabble, but it drove the foreigners back.
Behind this line were ranks of ill-matched soldiery. Dargon personal
guard mixing with town militia. Noblemen marching alongside common
thugs.
The two girls watched the foreigners get pushed down the street,
almost as if the stones of the city had risen against them. Then there
was quiet.
"Do you think we should go out?" Aimee asked.
"We ought to wait for our soldiers to look for us. Things could
change."
Aimee nodded, and the two waited, breathlessly.
Hours later, after sundown, the girls heard noise from below.
"She's got to be here!" They heard a man yell, "It's the only place
she'd go!"
Aimee ran to the stairs and lowered them as fast as she could.
"Aimee, stop, it could be a trick!" Marta called.
Aimee, heedless, ran down the stairs, one word on her lips.
"Daddy!" She ran into her father's arms.
"I guess we found her, Lieutenant." a soldier in sergeant's livery
said. "Anything else you want?"
"No, thank you sergeant." Jerid Taishent replied. "You can go now."
"Right!" The sergeant saluted. "All right, you crowmeat, we've got
Beinison cowards to mop up! Move yer asses!"
The soldiers left at a trot.
Marta walked down the stairs, blanket wrapped around her. Jerid
looked up at the sound of her. The first thing he saw were her eyes.
Somehow he couldn't look away.
"Who is this, Aimee?" Taishent asked.
Marta blushed and pulled at the blanket.
"That's Marta, Daddy." Aimee said. "Some man tried to hurt her so I
killed him."
Jerid winced at his daughter's words.
"Beggin' yer pardon, sir," the Sergeant had returned, "but we'll be
needin' ye to help wi' the moppin' up."
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