Tuesday 5 December 2023

Draconic Shennanigans Episode 8

Chapter 8: Majestic Magical, Musical Mayhem

Jeremiah pulled books out at random. He had wandered far away from Elisha, into part of the library where the shelves were grey with dust and he had to be careful to not breath in too sharply. He had wound up with too many coughing fits after he'd banged down a book in frustration. The dust was becoming ever more of a nuisance. With all his high minded words surely the young upstart could spare a few moments to clean a stupid shelf. Self righteous idiots, they were all the same, so stuffed full of high ideals that they couldn't even bring themselves to pick up a duster and wipe a book. He turned his head, frowning at the shadows. For a second he that thought he'd head a knocking. For a second he had worried it was Elisha come to check on what he was up to, that or one of his freaks but then he realized it had been too quick for a big creature's steps. He turned back to the shelf he'd been studying. After all, what right did this Master Smith have to ask him his business? There were many ways of skinning a cat after all, he could discover a spell or two that he could claim were for dealing with that silly thing in the lake and they would be but afterwards.... Well there was always room in afterwards.

His head snapped round as the knocking sounded again. It was not only too fast for footsteps it was also not getting any louder, not approaching. If it was that red splotched chest weasel again it would find itself splotched with a much more... vital form of red than it had ever had nightmares about. His eyes caught movement. The first syllables were forming on his tongue before he saw that it was a book, a book bouncing up and down between its fellows, knocking on the shelf. Jeremiah narrowed his eyes. It could be another weaseling little trick but...

"Go up there and get me that bouncing book," he instructed Hat, his moth. The bug opened its wings and buzzed up into the air, trailing ribbons of faint blue glow. Its soft legs gripped on to the cover of the book, finding spots of purchase. With a clatter of wing beats Hat slowly eased the tome off the shelf, staggering in the air under its weight, wobbling back to its master drunkenly through the air. Jeremiah held out his hands and Hat dropped the volume into his waiting fingers. Jeremiah studied the cover. After a moment he looked up at the still hovering Hat.

"You, there," he stated, jabbing a finger at the point of his miter. Hat clattered down and was still. Free of the distraction Jeremiah narrowed his eyes at the book in his hands. The cover had been embossed with a stylized image of a dragon, though the gold leaf that had originally adorned it had long since worn away, and Jeremiah's hands shook as he saw that the image on this book matched the one that already sat in his pocket. A cruel and vicious smile spread across Jeremiah's features and the leather under his fingers warmed under his touch. His smile spread even wider as he realized the leather wasn't made from cow hide. Better and better. Slipping it in to his other pocket he started following his footsteps in the dust back to the main area of the library, realizing as he did so that it was dark outside the windows.

 After a night spent in decent beds, the companions met downstairs in the indoor dining room the following morning. Kaelin sniffed appreciatively at the smell of hot breakfast and then sniffed again. There was a smell she had never smelt before, hot, some how nutty but not quite, slightly bitter at the edge but somehow attractive. She peered into the the dining to see Elisha sitting at the head of the table.

"Good morning," he smiled at her over his mug, "My thanks to you Lady Kaelin."

"I'm ain't no lady," Kaelin frowned, "And what are you thanking me for?"

"Your suggestion about what Felicity could give me in exchange for my irritation," Elisha took a sip from his mug, "I have not enjoyed coffee since I left my home all those years ago. It seems our little pest can create food." 

"Glad to help," Kaelin muttered as she walked over to the serving sideboard. She wasn't sold on the coffee.

After they had eaten, Elisha pushed his plate back and steepled his fingers.

"I believe I have identified the creature that is causing the shipping issues in the lake," he stated.

"Well that's good," Thorian interrupted.

"Indeed," Elisha nodded, "And I also believe that I have discovered some ways of making it more vulnerable." He stood, went over to a side table near the fire place and brought some books back to the main table. He flipped open one and turned it so that they could all see the picture. "I believe that what it is this - a subterranean Kraken from the seas of the Underworld. How and why it has come to the surface, we can only speculate about, but it would explain its hyper-aggression to any large mass that crosses the lake - it is confused, most likely in pain and distressed by the loss of its usual habitat."

"Poor thing," Thorian mumbled, "It's not fun when you are drive out of your home."

 "Indeed," Elisha gave Thorian a look of shared understanding, "As to how we can discourage it for attacking the ships, I believe that I have discovered at least two solutions." The first diagram he showed them looked like half a barrel with a lamp inside it mounted on a very peculiar stand. The second looked like a cloth octopus that had experienced a very unfortunate accident with a job lot of recorders. "It comes from a world of darkness, that being the reasoning for its coloring and therefore it is vulnerable to the light. The light burns it, hurts it, hence why the storms begin just before it attacks. How this effect is happening I am not sure as subterranean Kraken are not noted as being able to control storms. However, it might be an instinctive ability long dormant in its bloodline due to lack of need but now that it has emerged back to the surface its ancestors left so long ago it could have rediscovered the power in its blood."

"So you are saying the Krakens of the Underworld sea are descended from surface ocean Krakens?" Jeremiah asked.

"Indeed, if what I have been able to trace in the library is correct then that is true," Elisha nodded, "The Krakens of the Underworld sea are descended from  Krakens either washed, hunted or taken into the Underworld by either accident or design."

"Considering the love of pain the... people of the Underworld enjoy then that last wouldn't surprise me," Jeremiah tugged at his beard.

"I thought you were helping Elisha in the library," Kaelin smirked, "If you were paying attention yesterday surely you would have already known about this stuff. Or where you too distracted to be a proper help at all?"

 "For your information, I have found some spells that will not only help us with the little problem in the lake, they will also help us beyond that I am sure," Jeremiah spoke but refused to turn his head in Kaelin's direction, "Please Master Smith continue."

"As I was saying, light hurts it and from what I have read so do certain frequencies of sound," Elisha nodded, "Hence this second device. I believe that it would be best for your team if both methods were available and I also believe that both of the physical components are available in the tower."

"You sure?" Thorian asked.

"Not totally," Elisha admitted, "But my predecessor was an avid collector of many things and I have found mention of these devices in the more... stable part of his journal. That leads me to believe that they are within these walls. As to where they are, again I am not sure. I have been... Duke, I believe is the title, of this land for nearly seven years and I still have not discovered everything hidden in this place."

"Well then," Jeremiah heaved himself to his feet, "As I presume you will be searching with your old friend Hartseer, then it is up to us to decide how we will search. I suggest two teams and I'll go with Thorian, he needs the extra help to keep focused on the task."

"Yeah and you need to extra help so you don't actually have to do any of the heavy lifting," Kaelin said as she stood but Jeremiah ignored her grandly.

"It's alright, Kaelin," Thorian said as he stood, "I know I'm not that bright, I'm just happy that I can be of some use."

Kaelin's face screwed up as she was going to say something about door mats and Jeremiah and being taken advantage of all in one sentence but then she looked at Hat and her teeth stayed wielded together.

"Shall we sally forth my good woman," Ulrich suggested, gallantly gesturing Kaelin to go first. After a moment of trying to bore holes through Jeremiah's head with her eyes, she turned and moved towards the door.

"Shall we try to find this most intriguing looking instrument?" Ulrich asked as they left the room. Kaelin pouted about it for a moment and then nodded.

"Yes," she agreed, "And I think I might have some idea of where to look and if that fails, then I think I might know someone who could help us out." Ulrich raised his eyebrows but didn't say anything as Kaelin lead him upstairs in one direction.

"I, on the other side, have much more direct ways of finding something," Jeremiah said, almost to himself as he flexed his fingers and limbered up his hands.

"Oh, oh is this going to have something to do with your pets?" Thorian asked, stepping back.

"More my friend on the other side," Jeremiah smiled, conscious about the weight of the books in his pockets, then he held his hands out, palms facing each other and began to speak. Hat flew up off his miter and buzzed off through the house, leaving a glowing blue trail through the air.

Thorian sniffed and nodded slowly.

"Well that's not something you see every day of the week," he observed.

"A mere trifle," Jeremiah smiled, dusting his hands off, "Shall we?" But despite asking he headed up the stair case first.

Kaelin and Ulrich soon found themselves in a tower outgrowth that was crammed with just about everything musical.. buried under a mountain of dust.

"Oh this is going to be fun," Ulrich observed, coughing through a throat full of dust as the pile he disturbed collapsed and sent sheets of dust billowing up into the air, "Shall future generations still sing the sagas of the epic dust bunny slaughter?"

"I hope not," Kaelin managed to semi climb, semi crawl over a pile of stuff to open a window and let some of the dust out, "I had my run ins with dust bunnies yesterday thanks to that chest weasel." Her eyes watered at the remembered pain being wedged up her nostril.

"Well let's see if we can add a more musical note," Ulrich noted as he rooted through the heap. Kaelin narrowed her eyes at the back of his head. Something about his tone suggested... Kaelin's mouth thinned. Well she wasn't about to stand idly by and let herself be the target for a prank. She grinned as a thought crossed her mind and she started exploring the rooms, not looking at the heaps of stuff but rather at the walls.

Hat's glowing blue trail lead Jeremiah and Thorian up a trio of stair cases that wound their way through several growths of the tower, curving back and forth on themselves until they came to a room that was stacked high with boxes and chests and lots and lots of dust. Heaps of it, mounds of it, dust fell through the air like feathers and drifted in corners.

"You would think he could spare amount to pick up a duster," Jeremiah's lip twisted as he lifted the hem of his robe out of the dust.

"He probably will once the town is all clean," Thorian yanked a ladder out of the pile of cobwebs that swathed it and shook the eight legged creepy crawlies off it.

"What do you mean by that?" Jeremiah pressed a cuff to his nose, trying not to breath too deeply.

"The town," Thorian lent his ladder on a pile of boxes and climb up to haul down the top most container, causing an avalanche of dust. Jeremiah jumped back with an oath not fit for public consumption.

"They're still trying to fill up after the last wizard emptied it out," Thorian didn't notice Jeremiah's distaste, "So the damn soul who's the cleaner is trying to keep the houses clean so people want to more in. I wonder if he's mind if I came here after we're done being the King's Special? It could be cool living somewhere where I'm not the weird looking one. I could even see about cleaning out some of the tower. It could be fun. Cyril can't be the only one who can talk, it would be cool to hear some stories."

"Cyril?" Jeremiah asked, his hands giving up on the quest to brush off his robes.

"Yeah, Cyril," Thorian grinned, "Ulrich didn't like calling the talking one Crowface all the time, said it felt dis-rest-pect-full but Crowface couldn't remember what his name was the first time he was alive so Ulrich suggested Cyril. He liked it." He wrenched the lid off the wooden box and discovered that it contained a bunch of statues packed in straw. "Well that's not what we were looking for."

He straightened and started climbing the ladder again. Jeremiah picked out one of the statues. It was only about ten inches high and the base could sit comfortably in the palm of his hand. Made of some black smooth stone, its form was difficult to understand at first. Jeremiah turned and turned it in his hands, trying to make sense of its lines as Thorian pulled the lid off of box after box. Then Jeremiah saw what it was. The upper half of a human skeleton draped in a robe of some matted, tattered substance that seemed to wrath through the air round it, its skull a snarling death's head. Then it moved.

Jeremiah stepped back but his hands wouldn't unclench from round the base of the statue as the stone flowed and the jaws of the thing distended wide, a hellish glow rising in its gullet. A voice just below the level of hearing whispered behind his back.

Then it was just a stone statue in his hands, strange and disturbing in its subject but nothing completely out of the ordinary. Jeremiah shoved it back into the box and clapped the lid back on, leaning all his weight on it. For a second, just a second, he thought he heard stony nails scratching on the underside of the lid but then Thorian was slamming another box down beside him and the spell was broken.

"You alright?" Thorian asked, frowning.

"Yes," Jeremiah straightened, dusting off his hands, "We need to be careful with some of this stuff. It might not be totally lifeless."

Thorian scratched his head for a moment, his horny nails making a rasping sound over his scalp, then he rolled his eyes with a sigh.

"Just nothing easy on this trip, is it?"

"Well if it was easy would we be a King's Special?" Jeremiah smiled, trying to ignore the feeling of the crate behind him, the feeling that a small but highly venomous thing was watching him with dribbling fangs.

"Yeah, I guess so," Thorian shrugged and turned back to the mountains of boxes.

In their part of the tower, Kaelin had found what she had been looking for.

"Hello," she said quietly as she walked up to the portrait.

"Oh hello," Charlotte glanced at her and then looked away, a sulky expression on her face. If they had but known it the family resemblance between them was more pronounced than ever as Charlotte's sulk matched Kaelin's usual sullen expression. "Still believe that I'm that uncouth chest weasel?"

"I'm not entirely convinced," Kaelin admitted, "But I'm not sure exactly how you could convince me otherwise."

"Oh well that's just so reassuring," Charlotte sniffed, "You aren't sure that I'm not that ill mannered little beast but you can't come up with a way I can convince you. It's no wonder you seem to be lacking in the friends account if this is how you usually treat them."

Seeing that Kaelin had learnt long ago that having friends was a brilliant way to be hurt, she wasn't at all disturbed by this comment, just folding her arms and waiting while Charlotte fiddled with a bunch of flowers.

"So why are you go through all this stuff any way?" Charlotte asked eventually as the noises of Ulrich's unsuccessful attempts to find what he was looking for echoed up in clouds of dust.

"Why do you want to know?" Kaelin replied.

"I'm bored," Charlotte admitted, "The scenery is all very nice this side of the canvas but there isn't a lot to do here. We don't have to wash or eat or train up to be some lord's wife when we are of age. Most of the time there is nothing and no one to look at going on so you are at least a distraction, even when you are being more rude than any peasant I've ever met."

"Charmed I'm sure," Kaelin muttered.

"So what are you doing here?" Charlotte asked again, "Nobodies come looking in on this area in ages. The new wizard and his pets haven't had a lot of time to sort through the storage things, they are usually trying to keep the town ready for people to move in or trying to make the land better, though what they mean by that I'm sure I have no idea, the Deep Forest was always the nicest area round here, its why the wizards wanted to set up the tower here, it meant that they didn't have to do a lot of work to get food."

"The Deep Forest?" Kaelin raised an eyebrow, "Is that where you think you are?"

"Of course it is where we are," Charlotte sniffed with scorn, "The wizard's never moved their tower as far as I know so we must still be where Daddy let them set it up."

"Well I hate to break it to you but it has been called the Dead Swamp for about eighty years now," Kaelin folded her arms, "Looks like the last owner of this tower wasn't the only one who mistreated the area. That is why Elisha has that Coral Dragon working with him, where ever she walks she makes things grow."

"A Coral Dragon?" Charlotte's mouth went to flap open and she shut it with a slick, "Well I never. A Coral Dragon. That is well really..." She sat in silence for a minute or two and then shook herself, "So, for the third time, what are you doing here?"

"We are looking for something that looks like a cloth octopus as had a very painful run in with a pile of recorders," Kaelin decided to give in, "I don't suppose you have any idea where it is?"

"Of course I do," Charlotte sniffed, "If I tell you will that convince you that I am not a chest weasel?"

"It might," Kaelin admitted slowly.

"Oh please," Charlotte rolled her eyes, her smooth brows furrowing into a v with her annoyance, "The fact that I'm offering you the information without asking for something in return should convince, that little boorish snitch of fur doesn't do anything for free, not a present or anything."

"Alright," Kaelin gave in, "I'm convinced you are not a chest weasel and I'm sorry that I ever did think that."

"Alright I forgive you," Charlotte stood up in her frame and brushed down her skirt, "Oh and if you ever have the chance to discover what happened to my cousin I would be most grateful. That is not payment, bare in mind, I don't need it done but I would appreciate it. Not payment mind you but I would be grateful." She gathered her skirts.

"You miss your cousin?" Kaelin asked quietly, glancing at Ulrich to make sure that he had his head in a box of stuff.

"Not particularly," Charlotte admitted, "He was a cruel boy, used to like stitching bugs on pins but it would do my heart good to know that the estate was back in family hands and not open for anyone to carve up how they like."

Glancing at Ulrich again, Kaelin softly followed Charlotte as the girl moved from painting to painting, deeper into the tower.

Ulrich rooted through the box until he met the bottom and then straightened with a groan.

"I don't know about you but this is doing my back in," he observed, turning to look at Kaelin and finding that Kaelin wasn't there to be looked at. Frowning Ulrich looked around and spotted, though an open door what looked to be a portal of purple light swirling as if someone had just stepped though it. Frowning Ulrich paced towards it, staring hard. As he approached he picked up a fair sized box. Not taking his eyes off it he hurled the box towards the portal.

The box bounced off the mirror and caromed into his stomach, knocking him off his feet and then burst. Pots, pans and skillets clattered down on him, one kettle bouncing off his forehead with a clang very well done.

With a sigh of the long put upon Ulrich climbed to his feet and straightened his clothes, glaring at the portal, the real portal, not the one in the mirror. The portal rippled at him. Bending down, Ulrich seized the handle of the kettle and drew his arm back. For a second, a second he held it and then very carefully set the kettle down on the floor before straightening and turning away. There was a noise behind him like a large drain coming unblocked and the noise of a kettle lid rolling and rattling into place. He looks back to see the kettle lid finish settling into place. The portal rippled. Stiffly Ulrich sniffed and turned away.

"Kaelin?" he called and then wished he hadn't as it made him choke on dust. He rolled his eyes fine time for the girl to disappear, just how was he supposed to make her jump if she didn't hang about in the search?

Thorian slammed another box down on the floor and yanked off the lid. His forehead was streaked with grey, there were cobwebs draped over both ears and his hands had turned from green to black.

"My dear Thorian," Jeremiah smiled his friendliest smile, "If you keep stopping like this it is going to take us far too long to find what we are looking for."

Thorian straightened and put both of his fists in the small of his back.

"Any chance your Hat could point us to the right thing?" he asked, "This is doing my back in."

"My dear Thorian," Jeremiah oozed concern, "Surely you're not telling me that you are not as strong as we all thought you were. I mean, that would be such a let down to the team, if our big strong orc wasn't as strong as you made us all believe you were. We..."

"Hey!" Thorian turned, for once something like anger in his eyes, "I'm an orc crossbreed, not an orc. Yeah I might be big and strong and dumb but it was people like you who made my people so if I'm not as strong as you would like go talk to them, seeing as between you and Ill-eye-sha you should be able to. And I took a battering to save your aft from those spiders yesterday. Where were you when the meat met the metal? Where were you when I was going up against that house sized bug? No where, that's where! No where that counted. Now I don't know what you have against Hartseer but he was the one keeping that thing's pincers out of mah neck, not hiding under a bed! If you want to find these things faster, help! If you don't want to find these things faster, don't help, just get off of mah back about it."

With a finally snort he turned away, studying the piles of boxes and crates to decide which one would be next.

Jeremiah's mouth thinned but as Thorian started walking toward the next pile he held out his hands and spoke, the words causing the blue glow that leaked from Hat to flare to new brilliance. The moth clattered up into the air and buzzed away through the towering stacks of storage, its blue glow ribboning through the air.

"Thanks," Thorian yelled, dashing after Hat. Jeremiah followed at a more sedate pace, keeping his hands held apart, concentrating on the spell. He stepped between two towering piles to find Hat clinging to the bottom most box in a pile that went all the way up to the ceiling, clattering his wings against the wood, his antenna fluttering until they disappeared as a blur of blue.

"It just had to be the bottom one," Thorian said, his shoulders drooping, "It just had to be, couldn't be the top on, oh no, it had to be the bottom one. Oh well, since you've done your part, I best do mine." He sighed and then started moving crates around to make a stair case up to the top of the stack.

Kaelin grinned as her hands uncovered the strangest looking instrument she had ever seen. Its soft body was a floppy bag made a dark red material with a crosshatching of wide dark green bands along with thin yellow and white stripes, once she'd patted the dust off of it. The picture hadn't really done justice to the trio of records that were tide together with tasseled cord, plus the wide ended recorder and the recorder that seemed to have lost both its end and its holes. It took her several minutes of fiddling to work out what was supposed to go where but her grin became even wider as she settled the baggy instrument into place. Once she was sure what she was supposed to do with it, she crept back the way she had come.

Ulrich still had his head in a box as she came up behind him. Kaelin slipped the mouth reed between her lips, puffed several times until she felt the bag strain against her arm and then she blew with all her might.

The most unearthly noise burst forth from the instrument. A cacophony of cat yowls, dog barks, the lowing and mooing of cows. Kaelin could have sworn she'd even heard a clatter of chickens clucking. It sounded as if she had an entire farmyard compressed below her arm and Ulrich... Ulrich paid it no mind what so ever, no even twitching his ear in her direction.

Kaelin dropped the reed, glared at the baggy thing below her arm, tucked the reed back into her mouth and taking an extra deep breath, blew again.

Ulrich heard her that time.

He leapt about four feet into the air and came down spinning. He'd launched himself at her before Kaelin could react. They went down as a tumbling, rolling heap of thrashing limbs and cussing, that also included some rather flatulent toots and frumps as they crashed across the floor, long and spiky records jabbing both of them every chance said recorders got. Finally, Kaelin managed to get the leverage she needed to kick Ulrich off with a roar.

"It's me, you great umpty!" she yelled.

"Well what did you expect?" Ulrich clambered to his feet, dusting himself down, "Creeping up on a chap like that with that unearthly row maker?"

Parrrrrrrrp!

Said row maker put in its two pence of the deal.

"Yes I am talking about you!" Ulrich snapped.

Purrrrrrrp!

Kaelin stared at the bag under her arm as it spoke with out her squeezing it.

"Yes well you call that music? I've heard better," Ulrich said, aggrieved.

Purp, parp, puh-puh-puh tooooooot!

"Well I have," Ulrich exclaimed, "And as to why I'm talking to a bag of wind..."

Parp, parp, parple, parp!

"Don't be mean," Kaelin stroked her new toy/pet/weapon (Ulrich couldn't be sure), "I like him, besides you can't tell me that you weren't planning to do exactly the same thing to me, so there."

"Oh alright," Ulrich rolled his eyes, "Let's take the darn thing downstairs and...."

"You mean I take it down stairs," Kaelin grinned as she turned to the stairs, "Finders keepers and all that. And oh, Ulrich?" She turned back at the top of the stairs.

"Yes?" he said sourly.

"You have a bruise, just there," she tapped herself on the forehead to show where she meant and then continued down the stairs.

Ulrich draw himself up and then kicked one of the stacks of boxes, which promptly collapsed on his foot. A half formed yell broke from him and then he bit his lip to bite the sound off. Tears welling in his eyes, he yanked his injured foot out from under the box trapping it and hopped on the other. Gritting his teeth he started limping forward and something clattered as the toe of his boot nudged it. Frowning he picked it up.

It was a slim pipe made of metal all the way down its length and a tag dangled from it. Ulrich wiped and wiped the label until he could read the words 'for dogs' in faded letters. Ulrich glanced down  the stairs and tucked it under his belt. Turning back he rooted through the rest of the spilled contents of the box. A curved trumpet that lacked any values was marked 'for dragons' and his eye fell on a fiddle that had no label at all but for some reason it held his attention. He picked it up and plucked at the strings. It seemed to still be in tune so he raised the bow and began to play. The sound was sweet and high, the bow ran smoothly over the strings and he soon found himself coaxing a jaunty dancing tune out of the wooden body of the instrument. As he turned in time with the music, he spotted the reflection of the portal. It was looking wane and feeble, almost sickly. In surprise he lifted the bow from the strings.

After a few moments the portal began to shine more brightly, its color and spin recovering. Pursing his mouth Ulrich started playing again. After about four or five bars the portal began to fade again, slowing its spin and its color drained away. Lifting the bow from the strings again, Ulrich watched the color come back and the spin speed up. He smiled and turned to find the case for the instrument. There had definitely been compensation for the days discomforts.

Thorian lifted the last box off of the stack he had been dismantling and sighed. With weary hands he pulled the lid off of the crate at the bottom. There nestled in clean straw were the lamps they were looking for, their white lacquered metal shiny in their rest.

"Well," Jeremiah stepped forward, "It took long enough but I must say you found them. They are interesting devices. Well come along, let's get them back to the others."

Thorian watched Jeremiah turn and walk away from him with Hat coming to settle down on the peak of his miter, then he sighed and picked up the crate with the lamps in.

Following Jeremiah he swayed down the first set of steps, he staggered on the second and on the third he completely lost his balance. Tumbling head over heels, he bowled passed Jeremiah who just managed to keep his footing as the unfortunate orc crossbreed crashed to the floor at the bottom of the steps.

"Oh dear Thorian," Jeremiah shook his head as he came down the last few steps, "You really are most awfully clumsy. Here let me help you." Jeremiah lent down and gave Thorian a hand up but then his fingers felt the green skin of Thorian's forearm, testing its texture and strength.

"Here," Thorian pulled away, "What are you doing?"

"You really do have amazing skin my friend," Jeremiah smiled, "An absolutely amazing hide, does it run in your family?"

"Yeah," Thorian's eyes narrowed, unsure what Jeremiah was getting at, "I guess so, that and you know, lots of fresh air and exercise, does wonders for you."

"Yes, it really does," Jeremiah smiled even more broadly as he slipped his hand into his pocket and caressed the cover of his new book. Now he knew what hide had been used to bind it and he wondered if the brainless booby had any relations that had disappeared in the past. It would be so pleasing to know that he was carrying his revenge on the lump around in his pocket and all he had to do was show it to the animal to get him to rage and be branded a monster. That would be one less to deal with and he could always work it so that Hartseer would do the putting down. That would be really good but that was for later, one should never mix business and pleasure. He turned to the scattered lamps.

"Oh dear, Thorian, you really have made a mess, haven't you?"

"Would it have hurt you to help me carry some?" Thorian muttered, rubbing his arm to get rid of the feeling of Jeremiah's fingers. The dude was becoming creepier every day and that ruddy moth was staring at him in such a strange way, as if it was weighing up how it was going to see him die. It was just plain weird.

"Well this one is not going to be working any time soon," Jeremiah turned the first one over, its lens clattering free, "Neither is this one." The second lay apart from its stand.

"This one's good, I think," Thorian picked up the third revealing that it was dented but OK. He put it back in the box, "This one..." he picked it up and the lamp fell out. Thankfully it was not far from the floor when it did so, which meant it only rolled instead of smashing. "Oh bother." He put the pieces in the box any way.

"And this one is also not going to be much use," Jeremiah turned over the mangled case, "This one however, this one is perfect." He lifted it up and reverently placed it back in the straw, "Still only two out of six really isn't a good record, my friend."

"If you'd just give a hand carrying them," Thorian muttered, putting the last of the broken pieces into the box.

"Now Thorian you know that wasn't the deal," Jeremiah smiled, "I found them, you were supposed to carry them safely back down stairs but seeing as you struggle with that, I guess I had better do all the work." He stepped back and started speaking, the words curdling the air and a deep, angry hum vibrating inside the building. Thorian looked round, hand going to his sword, as something told him the shadows were moving in ways they should not do.

Then dust and words and shadows hardened into seven creaking skeletons that wordlessly lifted the crate between then at Jeremiah's instructions and bore it off to the dining room.

Ulrich jumped up from the chair by the fire as the skeletons marched in with their load between them. Kaelin dropped the bagpipes at her feet with a sad sounding parp, her hands jumping to her sword, the bones of her face rippling in ways that bones are not meant to.

The skeletons lifted and slid the crate on to the table and stepped back, revealing the smiling Jeremiah.

"There," he beamed, "And not a single innocence hurt so that metal insect can hardly complain. You may go." He waved a hand at the skeletons and they crumbled back into dust. "And what have you managed to find, my friends."

"Well, among other things," Kaelin picked up her booty, "Haggis here."

"Haggis?" Ulrich exclaimed, "You've named it?"

"Of course," Kaelin stroked the tartan cloth, "If you are going to be working with someone, it is an idea to know their name. There is such a thing as good manners."

Ulrich closed his eyes and shook his head. Opening his eyes, he turned to Thorian.

"I found this and I think you should have it," he held out the trumpet that had no values, "If nothing else I think you are the only one likely to have the puff needed to blow it."

"What is it?" Thorian asked, taking it and turning it over while he frowned.

"A bugle," Elisha noted as he walked into the room, "A simple enough instrument but armies have been directed by them in the past."

"By this?" Thorian held it up, plainly not believing him, "Just how would you drive an army with this?"

"By the different sounds it can make, some sounds say rally to me or swing left or hold the center. May I?" Elisha held out a hand. Still puzzled Thorian handed it over but Elisha only looked at the label before handing it back, "I believe that thought that was not the instrument you were searching for, it will do you some good. Allow me also to make this a gift to you Thorian Vandervast."

"Why are you both being so nice?" Thorian seemed more than confused, now he seemed upset.

"Well I can't keep all the good stuff to myself," Ulrich shrugged, "Can't carry it for one thing so I might as well share it around."

"And I for one feel that you have not received many gifts in the past," Elisha smiled, "Please allow me to help to correct this. All men should receive a gift. After all such things can change the cause of the world." Elisha's smile broadened as if he saw a private joke in this or maybe a fond memory.

"You are all so nice," Thorian yelled and caught them both in a rib cracking hug.

"Ah," Ulrich cry out, "Yes, love you too, Thorian, ouch. Um Thorian? Um, could you, argh, put us down before you break something. Ow!"

"Oh, sorry," Thorian put them down gentle. Ulrich staggered back, gasping for breath, eyes wide with shock. Elisha also seemed taken aback by Thorian's enthusiastic gratitude, hanging on to the arm that had just nearly crashed him to keep himself from falling.

"You have strong arms my friend," his breath whistled, "I am surprised you have not visited the tribes of the Gronland. With such strength as that you would be a champion in their sport."

"Gronland? Where's that?" Thorian asked with a frown.

"It is an island across the sea to the north west of us," Elisha explained, "I was sent there by accident long ago. The people there practice a sport where you do not hit or kick your opponent, instead you grab him and try to throw him around like a rag doll. I think you would find that your strength would make you quite welcome there."

Thorian thought about it.

"What sort of weather do they have there?" he asked.

"When I was there in the depths of winter, they do not see the sun for over a month and the snow whirls across the frozen surface of the sea and the cold feels as if it is a knife come to cut you to the bone," Elisha was brutally honest about it but much to his surprise Thorian grinned.

"That sounds like mah home country," he exclaimed, "I think I might like to visit there at least. It would be fun to visit some where like home."

"Then may the Great Good guide your steps there," Elisha inclined his head and then turned to the table to have a look at the lanterns Jeremiah and Thorian had found.

"Oh dear," he said as he lifted the broken pieces of one out of the box, "I did not expect them to be in such a state of disrepair."

"Well if someone had carried them with more care," Jeremiah muttered.

"Well if someone had helped with carrying them," Thorian muttered back but Elisha didn't pay any attention to the mud slinging competition going on around him, concentrating on the state of the lanterns, picking up pieces and trying to fit them back together.

While the others were occupied, Ulrich sat back down in the fire side chair to nurse his sore ribs and pulled out the only instrument he hadn't tried yet. He looked at the label again - 'for dogs'. Slyly he looked at Kaelin where she was stood watching Elisha's careful work. After a moment he grinned, wiped the reed and put it in his mouth. The distorted note that squealed from the whistle caused the others to swing round in time to see Ulrich emerging from what looked like an explosion in a flour mill. Coughing and spluttering, Ulrich waved a hand in front of his face, trying to disperse the cloud of dust but it was too late. Seeing Kaelin's doubled up form, Ulrich looked down at himself and sighed. Patting his clothes only raised dust in quantities that would have been useful in as a smoke signal. Jeremiah looked at the ceiling and rocked on his toes. Thorian was not so reserved, rolling on the floor and howling with laughter until the tears rolled down his face.

"And after I gave you a present," Ulrich muttered but Thorian couldn't hear him through the sound of his own laughter. Ulrich settled himself back and raised the pipe to his lips again.

This time the tune was sweet and melodic but Kaelin reacted like a banshee had just screamed in through the window, clapping her hands to her ears and shrieking like a soul in torment. Her face bones cracked and rippled, the human peeling back to reveal the wolf underneath. As her hands fell from her ears the nails stretched and rounded into claws. Her eyes, burning pools of tawny fire, fixed on Ulrich and the sound that rumbled from her throat was felt more than heard. It was the only warning that he had. Ulrich threw himself out of the chair and Kaelin launched herself at him in a flat drive that had claws and teeth leading. The chair crashed backwards and Kaelin tumbled across the floor, the human returning as the last notes faded out of the air. She lay there gasping.

Elisha was the first to speak.

"It seems that the King's Special this time has move talents than most," he noted, "I had been told of those who carried a wolf within them but I did not believe that they could change during the day."

"Goes to show what you know," Kaelin spat as she brush hair out of her face, "Some of us never had a choice about what we are, some of us were born with the curse in our veins, thanks to a monster of a grandfather and father. Some of us have to fight it every day we are alive and that, Ulrich, was a damn low blow. Yes I sneaked up on you in the attic but I didn't try and drag your brain out through your ears!"

"I have to admit I didn't expect it to make such a reaction in you," Ulrich said after a moment, "It didn't seem to cause the others such pain."

"Maybe the others didn't hear this!" Kaelin lunged out, her claws reforming and then dragged them back across the marble floor. The sound of a thousand iron nails down  a hundred chalk boards grated through the air, counter pointed by a hundred forks scratching over glazed plates.

Thorian shuddered as his tusks vibrated to the noise. Even Jeremiah and Ulrich winced.

 "Alright," Ulrich inclined his head to her, "I apologize for that trick and I'll try to give you some warning in future that I'm about to pull that stunt."

"Alright," Kaelin muttered, back to being as sullen as ever but she did allow Ulrich to help her to her feet.

"Well seeing as I've shown off my lack of musical talent," he grinned self deprecatingly, "How about you give us a tune." He handed Haggis to her with a smile and after a moment Kaelin took him/it. She stroked the cloth, tucked it under her arm and blew into the mouth pipe. The building whine started and then Kaelin let rip. The sound brought the hairs up on the arms but with the power of the song. It seemed made for vast open landscapes, to echo off the sides of distant mountains and swirl through the air in time to the rattling of throbbing drums and marching feet.

"Wow!" Thorian said as the last notes faded away.

"He really is yours," Elisha inclined his head to Kaelin.

"What do you mean?" Kaelin frowned as she let the mouth pipe drop.

"Many magical instruments need their player to attune to them for the best of the instrument to be played," he explained, "If I am any judge you just attuned to Haggis here. Now he will only perform his best for you until such time that you become tired of each other."

"Really?" Kaelin looked down at the bagpipe under her arm and stroked the material again. Still smiling Elisha turned back to the collection of piece on the table.

"I think that I maybe able to make some repairs on this," he observed, "Our blacksmith also had some training as a silver smith when he was a child so he might be able to aid us in repairing them physically. As for the magic that should have infused them I believe one of my damned souls may be able to aid us in that task. Yes," he turned one piece over, noting the marks on the back of the devices, "Edur may very well be able to help with this task. I will..."

A shrieking wailing filled the air. Kaelin cried out, wanting to clap her hands to her ears but not wanting to down Haggis at the same time. The ululating scream seemed to get inside her bones and snarl there and only a dead man could have ignored it.

Elisha was already running for the door. Thorian followed without a word and Kaelin and Ulrich followed him after exchanging a glance.

"Shouldn't we think about this?" Jeremiah called but a disgusted look from Kaelin was the only reply he got. He shrugged and turned towards a chair but then realized that the book in his pocket was growing uncomfortably hot. He turned to the door and it cooled slightly. With a sigh of long suffering he waddled after the rest, muttering about unreasonable working conditions and demanding books.

Outside it was easy to see where the trouble was. On the edge between the woods and the fields Crowface/Cyril was swooping and diving, shrieking battle cries with his wing man as four of the ground based damned souls fought on the ground. The things that faced them were large, scaly and black, huge fangs snarling and snapping. Ulrich whistled and his lizard came bounding from  some where in the garden. With a whoop and a swing he was up on its back.

As they ran towards the fight something tall, lanky and white bounded over a hedge and fell into step with them.

"Who asked you to join in tin man?" Jeremiah shouted, "We don't need you."

"Really?" Hartseer actually did sneer for the first time they'd ever known, "Ever faced drakes, flesh man?"

Kaelin saw the damned souls raining blows down on the hides of the wingless dragons but none of them broke through. Then one of the drakes caught the leg of a damned soul. The animal looking face screamed with a shockingly human sound and then the drake's maw closed about its torso and shredded it to pieces, gulping down the greater portion. Elisha cried out but Thorian roared, bounding forward. The drake just had time to look up as Thorian leapt, bellowing his battle cry. The drake's maw opened, a fire glow building in its gullet... Then Thorian crashed into it, the point of his sword smashing through its eye socket in an explosion of goo.

"There!" Thorian yelled to Ulrich, "First to me! And you can't argue this time!"

"Only if we live," Ulrich yelled as his lizard piled into the next drake, snapping its jaws over the drake's mouth, holding its teeth shut before the fire could reach its mouth.

"Try the horn!" Kaelin yelled as she passed Thorian, the last words she could manage before her jaw twisted beyond human speech.

"What?" he yelled as he yanked on his sword, trying to drag it out of the beast's head. Then it dawned on him. "Oh, oh yeah!"

As Kaelin gorged her claws over the scales of the drake before her to no avail, she felt the note of the bugle shiver through her bones. For the drakes the affect was much more. They recoiled, hissing like steaming kettles, flame wasted on the grass before them, confusion in their bestial eyes. Crowface/Cyril pressed the attack, screaming the attack as the damned souls crowded in and battering the drakes but claw and fang and fist just bounced off the scaly hides.

Ulrich's lizard reared on to its back legs, jaws still clamped over the maw of the drake it held, fore claw ripping bloodlessly over the drake's chest even as Ulrich battered its head with his swords, unable to find an opening as the drake clamped its eyes shut.

"Their bloody eyelids are armored!" he shouted in frustration.

"But this isn't!" Hartseer came up on the drake's flank and as it lifted its arm to claw at the lizard wrestling it he drove a double sword into the drake's arm pit where the scales were small. The skin at the base on the other side of the drake's neck deformed as the points of Hartseer's swords pressed up from the inside of it and blood jetted from between its fangs. Ulrich's lizard staggered as the drake collapsed, Hartseer riding the motion as it rolled sideways away from him so he could set his feet on its hide and pull his sword up and out. He gave Ulrich a nod before turning to face the next drake as Kaelin struggled to keep its claws off herself.

Jeremiah finally arrived, panting and wobbling. He stood gasping for a moment before drawing himself up and beginning to chant. Elisha jerked his head up to look at the vortex of darkness forming above the battle field and only just ducked the blow aimed at his head in the next second. The damn souls continued to rake and punch and bite the drakes but barely made a mark on the thick oily scales.

Then the vortex contracted and burst groundward just as Thorian came back into the fight, giving the impression of a fountain in reverse. The last two drakes screamed in terror, lurching back and crashing into each other. The effect on the damned souls was electrifying. The part that would gave Kaelin nightmares later was the fact they went totally silent as they blurred, blows raining so thick and fast that even when hide didn't split the bones below cracked, the only punctuation their grunts of effort. One drake went down, gasping its last as broken ribs punctured its heart. A second later Elisha thrust his dagger in and red lightning burst from ground to sky for an instant. The drake's mangled body rippled, things inside cracking as bones reknit and shifted, flesh reforming and mutating. It straightened on to its back feet as its tail disappeared and its hips alerted. Scales sank into its skin and then fur erupted from every pore, marching across now flattened belly and a chest where new muscle rippled. Its arms bulged, triceps and biceps like bowling balls in a set of socks. Finally bright scarlet hair exploded from its head and neck, falling in a thick mane round its ears as it threw back lion jaws and roared its new life to the sky, towering over its maker.

"Now you don't see that every day," Ulrich was grinning as he charged the last drake. It turned to face him, fear, confusion and pain in its eyes and it opened its mouth, fire building in its gullet. Thorian reached it first.

Kaelin and the other damned souls jumped back. Thorian's eyes where glowing scarlet! His sword sheered through the air with the sound of tearing silk. The drake's body swayed as its head bounced and rolled across the ground to the feet of Ulrich's lizard, then it slumped side ways, a red flood staining the grass. Thorian stood bent over, the point of his sword buried in the turf, gasping for breath as the glow faded from his eyes.

"No one cooks mah friends," he stated as he straightened.

"And for that I'm truly grateful," Ulrich inclined his head.

"Yeah that was truly something," Kaelin nodded, "Not bad on the horn either. It kept them busy so they didn't fry us all."

"Truly you are a warrior born," Elisha said, stepping forward, "If others of your people need a place to live then tell them my land is open to them. Others may see nothing but the savage but I know loyalty when I see it and loyalty is the most perfect love."

"I, for one, was proud to have any of your people in my army all those years ago," Hartseer said as his swords folded/flicked back out of existence.

Jeremiah rolled his eyes and turned away from this display of mush. Sentimental nonsense, though knowing that the tin man had an affection for orc crossbreeds could be useful. He turned to the drake that Hartseer had killed and grinned. He mentally tugged on his power source and fold it was running low. He grinned more and snapped a line. In the distance a dog howled its last and rolled over, dead for the second time. Jeremiah began to chant and blue lined shadows writhed over the ground. After a moment the drake staggered to its feet, its unearthly eyes and a wound in its arm pit the only sign that it wasn't what it appeared to be. Jeremiah patted its head and then frowned as he felt the book in his pocket warm for a moment. He pulled it out. There didn't seem to be anything different with it but the cover did seem a little... brighter. He shrugged and tucked it back into his pocket as he turned. Hartseer was glaring at him.

"I must thank you, tin man," Jeremiah beamed, "I must say you make a  cleaner kill than many. I don't think that we will have any problems with people noticing that this one is dead. Or was this one of your precious innocents?"

Hartseer's knuckles ground.

"Must be so irritating, not having teeth you can grind," Jeremiah beamed even more.

"It was not an innocent," Hartseer made him self straighten, "But I will remember this, Lich! And Great Sess to you!" He turned away, stamping back towards the tower. The others watched him go. Kaelin looked at the still beaming Jeremiah and quietly shook her head. Some people really didn't have the brains they claimed to have.

Tuesday 21 November 2023

Draconic Shennanigans Episode 7

Chapter Seven: In A Wizard's Tower

   

As the companions walked through the stands of dead trees they noticed between the twisted, barkless branches trunks of a more healthy hue. As their steady pace brought them closer they realized that the soil was loosing its oily, diseased texture, gradually taking on the appearance of good loam.

Kalin sniffed and wiped her nose on her cuff, the faintly acrid smell of burning finally being over taken by the comforting smell of deep rotting leaves.

"I say old boy," Ulrich called to Crowface, "Is that where we are heading?" Crowface lifted his beak, seeking to follow Ulrich's gaze, then he nodded. The top of a tower of white was just visible over the trees.

"Aye," his caw was satisfied, "There's our home."

"Oh good," Jeremiah rubbed his hands together, "Soon be off our feet."

"Not as soon as you think, good Sir," Crowface corrected with an unmistakable smile, " 'Tis further off than you think."

Jeremiah deflated, "It seems that ever since I accepted this bargain I've been walking through the most ridiculous terrain this country has to offer. None of it has the decency to be flat!"

"What's the matter, flesh man, struggling to keep up?" Kaelin thought for a moment that she was the only one to hear Hartseer's quiet murmur but a glance back at Jeremiah's darkening face told her that she wasn't.

The sight of the white tower top on the horizon was gradually covered by the growing canopy of the trees and soon Ulrich was so busy admiring the scenery that he almost forgot that the Dead Forest was a real place. Then he looked round at the faces (if you were being charitable) of the creatures walking beside him and concluded that it had to have been real.

Then the canopy peeled back as they exited the wood and the tower stood before them in all its glory. The party stopped in its tracks, even the creatures with the companions seeming to drink in the wonder of it. As tall as a mesa, brilliant white in the sun, the tower seemed at once to be architecture and a living thing that had grown out of the bedrock to reach for the sun for its sides were not straight. Instead it rippled up into the sky, turning round itself like the trunk of a many boughed tree that had, over years and centuries, reunited its separate trunks into massive pillar that could have held up creation and possibly did.

"Come," Crowface said, "You are stayed for."

Now the companions walked along a defied track through fields of ripening grain and orchards hung with fruit. Jeremiah stared as people, really honest to goodness people, lifted their heads from their work to look at Crowface and his creatures but these peasants' surprise seemed to be reserved for the companions in the midst of the beasts. Certainly none of them seemed afraid of Crowface and the other monsters, a few even lifted their arm to wave, greetings that were returned, though a several of the beasts hesitated before doing so, as if they weren't sure it was the done thing. And over all the tower, well towered, gradually dominating the whole of the sky.

As they walked closer to it they reached an outer wall and Crowface croaked to his creature's in a tongue even Jeremiah doubt he could wrap his tongue around and most of them turned back towards the woods. As they passed through the gateway the companions found themselves stepping on to a gravel road but it didn't sound like a graveled road and the surface didn't shift under their feet. Leaning over the side of his lizard mount Ulrich peered down at the surface and saw that the gravel had been pressed into a strange surface that looked like black water that didn't flow. He sat up straighter as the lizard grumbled at the shift in weight and looked about him.

Though the road was passing strange, it did seem that it had its uses, the houses had a brighter, less shabby look to them as their bottom halves weren't splattered with mud, the peasant cart that rumbled passed them moved a lot more smoothy than if it had been fighting through the ruts that such wheels usually cut into dirt roads. Ulrich found himself nodding in approval. Who ever this wizard was then he certainly seemed to run a well planned town and once again the people who were moving around on their daily business did not seem afraid of Crowface nor Hartseer.

Beyond the village or town (it was hard to tell which as they traveled straight from one gate to the next through what was obviously the main square) there was another curtain wall, thick and high, surrounding the base, or was it root, of the tower. Crowface led them through the gate and up the stairs beyond in to what was obviously the tower's private gardens. Through as they walked through them Kalin did notice something about them. Through the trees were clipped and pruned into pleasing shapes they were also fruit bearers and the plants that grew in the beds, though their flowers were pleasing to the eye, were also eatable. The gardens had been designed to be both beautiful and practical and her ear twitched as she caught the hum of a bee hive in full production.

Crowface led them along broad pathways of white stone to where a flight of stone steps led up to a terrace edged with fluted pillars. In the middle of the terrace a huge table with a top thicker than Jeremiah's hand span stood. Beside it, his back to them, a man with dusky skin worked. He was stripped to the waist and Kaelin winced at the sight of his skin. His back was crisscrossed with ridged and puckered scars, some of them several inches wide. Though the scars were so old they were black it was perfectly obvious that someone had down their best to flay this man down to the bones.  On the table before him something lay, something that was very obviously dead.

Its tongue, long and pointed, lolled from between its chisel like teeth, its eyes dull and cloudy. Its face, though  larger than a dog's, reminded Ulrich of a Hare but its skin was bare and leathery, a dun creamy color, mottled with dark blue blotches and an explosion of white fluff topped its head like a firework, though now it was matted and clotted with lumps of old blood. The man with dusky skin seemed to be washing the body down, his hand holding a cloth moving back and forth from a bucket at his elbow. While he worked he murmured to the being lying before him.

"And yet through all the pain and the fear you returned to me, to my hands," he observed, "Is that not loyalty? You did not have to, I had not give you any order to return to me once your task was done. I confess that I had not thought to and yet you returned of your own free choice. Is that not love? And where there is love then surely there is redemption for a damned soul such as yourself? I confess that I am not sure. This concerns me. If you have gained your redemption, if I bring you back, then surely I have snatched you from your reward. There again, if I do not bring you back and the Great Good has decided that you have not yet earned your rest, then surely I leave you in torment. How to tell? How does a mere mortal know that his friend has earned his entry into Heaven's Gates? There again I have never claimed that my powers reach to the Holy Heights so perhaps the only way to know is to try." The rag flopped into the bucket and the man picked up a long dagger of an odd shape but before Jeremiah could have a good look at its design it had moved out of sight. A brilliant flash of blood red light reflected off the terrace stones and the body on the table jerked. Its legs kicked, its head bounced off the wood as the neck flexed and with a coughing croak the tongue was sucked back into the mouth. The jaws worked and then the eyes focused on the wizard's face. The lips parted and a chirruping version of Crowface's croaking language uttered from its lips.

"Ah, so redemption's price is not yet earned," the ducky skinned man stroked the creature's now clean mane, "Still I am... pleased to have you back."

The creature chirruped again and then started struggling to get to its feet.

"Here, let me help you," the man looped his arms underneath the creatures body and lifted it from the table top, turning and lowering it to the floor, revealing the full extent of the damage done to it. Its right front leg ended in a stump of an elbow, a long line of stitches marked where its left wing had once rooted and its right ear, which should have been long and graceful to match its partner, was a ragged stump. It took a little jumping hop forward with its remaining front leg and flung out its wing to keep from chinning itself on the paving, its horny nails clicking on the pavement.

It looked up at its master and uttered a mewing noise of distress.

"I know," the man crouched down to be on its level as he stroked its head, "Unfortunately I have never been able to master the art of regrowing that which has been lost, Taloc was always the better at that discipline, though his creations always seemed to be more dead than alive to me. I did not bring you back lightly, to know what it is to fly...."

He trailed off, man and beast holding their silence for a long moment and then the thing extended its neck and softly butted against him.

"So I am forgive," he man smiled slightly and turned to view the party standing at the edge of the terrace. He started towards them but he walked slowly, keeping pace with the creature at his side, ready to catch it as it struggled to adapt to its new form of locomotion. Crowface stiffened to attention and saluted to which the man graciously nodded. He then reached out and took Hartseer's hand in his own.

"King's Blade," he said gravely, "It is a good thing that you are here. Had you heard of our troubles or did Serendipity lead you to us? I had sent a messenger to the Capital but as you can see, she was unable to get through the ranks of our enemies." The thing at his side chirruped in emphasis of his words.

"Serendipity I think," Hartseer was equally grave and gestured to the companions, "As you can see there is a new King's Special and they need your assistance in crossing the lake to reach Nether Wallop."

"I see," the dusky skinned man turned to the companions and held out his hand, "And you are?"

"Jeremiah Maat," he took the proffered hand but something in the man's level gaze made him want to squirm, especially as the man held on to his hand slightly longer than necessary.

"You worship a dark and hungry god," the man said after a moment of holding Jeremiah's gaze, "If you ever wish to be free of his influence then I can teach you a different path... if you are willing to learn."

"Indeed," Jeremiah didn't quite suppress the sour note in his voice as he dropped the hand shake.

"And you are?" was the polite inquiry of the next.

"Ulrich Brekka," this reply was said with a lot more friendliness than the previous and Ulrich turned on the charm as he smiled but found himself subjected to the same scrutiny as Jeremiah.

"You are one who can say one thing and mean quite another," the dusky man said, "It was once ones such as you who made me wish to see the whole world dead. I think that it is a good thing for all of us that things happened to make me change my mind. After all, I think you are beginning to find your own redemption. I think I will be pleased to aid you in this."

Kaelin's eyes were flat and her mouth was pinched when the dusky man turned his gaze on her.

"And you are?"

"I don't give my name to people I don't know the name of," her voice was decidedly unfriendly.

"Ah, I apologize," the man bowed slightly from the waist, "I am Elisha, Elisha the Master Smith."

"Smith of what?"

"I keep forgetting," the man sounded genuinely surprised, "There is not the knowledge of my kind in this land. Some days it slips my mind as to how different these northern places are compared to the lands of my birth. As to what I smith? I suppose you could say that I smith.... life."

"So you are a necromancer," Kalin folded her arms, her gaze flat.

"No I am not," Elisha corrected but without irritation, "The constructs of a necromancer have to obey their master without wills of their own. My creations, through they are bound to my will, do have choice about how they... interrupt that will. Indeed, not a few Master Smiths have found their power to be a double edged sword when the very creatures they thought they controlled so tightly proved to be capable of malicious compliance."

"And your... creatures aren't capable of malicious compliance," Kaelin's eyebrow arched.

"Oh they are most capable of it, I chose to give them no reason to do so," Elisha smiled slightly, "After all, they have souls so surely they are capable of free will. Therefore the more sensible course is to give them no reason to hate me."

"They have souls?" Jeremiah exclaimed, eyes wide.

"Most certainly they have," Elisha inclined his head.

"That... that... that is magic of the darkest, most foul... That... that... is amazing," Jeremiah shook his head, the gesture a rejection of what he had just hear but there was a light in his eyes, a hungry light.

"Is it?" Elisha inclined his head slightly, "Perhaps it is dark work but the Great Good has ever needed his warriors and assassins to make his great plan work and did not the Prophet say that one day Hell would be empty and its doors left to rattle in the wind. Who can say that I do not do the Great Good's work by lifting these damned souls back to the mortal realm so they can work out their penance as my servants?"

"I see," Jeremiah nodded but he frowned at Elisha's calm tone and gentle demeanor.

"What's the matter?" Jeremiah felt the chill of Hartseer's metal form on the side of his face but not a breath for Hartseer did not breath, "Met someone who is not a priest but who is a lot more Holy than Thou?"

"And what would a Tinman like you know about Holiness?" Jeremiah snarled without turning his head.

"How do you think I was made?" Hartseer asked before stepping back. Elisha had turned his attention away from Jeremiah as if he had no real wish to witness their disagreement.

"Still," he rubbed his arms as if conscious that he wasn't wholly clean, "I can see that the journey here has been long and arduous for you. Please, Crowface can lead you to rooms for we have many spare where you can refresh yourselves and bathe."

"That's a point," Ulrich suddenly pointed out, "We are missing a companion, an orc crossbreed known as Thorian Vandervast. We did believe our orange dragon companion brought him this way after he took some damage in a fight we had against a few over sized spiders."

"That's understating it," Kaelin muttered.

"I know of who you speak," Elisha reassured, "He was more exhausted than hurt after the battle and he has already been give one of the rooms for his use while you are here. When I left him he was sleeping peacefully and I trust he will make a full recovery soon."

"Thanks awfully for that old boy," Ulrich smiled, "So Crowface, lead on old bean, lead on."

"As my master wishes," Crowface bobbed his head after receiving a nod from Elisha and turned to lead them through the surprisingly modest doors into the tower itself. To be sure the doors where still nearly two stories tall but they were narrower than Kaelin had some how expected.

The inside of the tower was just as amazing as the outside, stone sometimes shaped by the hands of men and sometimes seeming to grow in the same style as a tree. Crowface was as good as his master's word leading them to a corridor that had half a dozen rooms leading off it, rooms that were comfortably furnished and freshly clean, private bathing rooms accessible through doors on the far side of them. Kaelin wasn't sure how it was done but it seemed that the baths were supplied by a hot spring because a constant stream of water flowed into over a stone lip in the walk but the stone bath was not over flowing on to the floor. She nodded to herself. Maybe a stay here won't be too bad.

It was Jeremiah who noticed the little offering first. On the vanity table there was a book, a very valuable book that he had been looking for since his early years of studying in the monastery. He started across the room and then stopped. How would this sanctimonious foreigner know exactly what book he was looking for? How would it have come to be lying so openly in the room he just happened to be led to?

Jeremiah glared at the book and turned his back on it. Something knocked something off the table. He heard the tinkle of breaking china. He ignored it. He went to open the wardrobe to discover what, is anything, was on offer in the way of clean clothes. It wouldn't open. He glared at the door knob in his hand and distinctly heard something giggle behind him. It was a small giggle, in a childlike voice, obviously muffled. He'd not been meant to hear it. Very well, two could play at this game.

Jeremiah turned, walked away, sat down on the edge of the bed and pulled out the book he already had. Grinning he flipped open the pages and began to speak words that made the shadows in the room curdle like vinegared milk. Six skeletons with rusty swords in hands coalesced out of the writhing shadows and dust. With a wave of his hand the skeletons started advancing on the room. As the vanity table exploded into splinters under the assault there was a load pop on the top of the wardrobe. A strange creature that seemed to be a cross between a white ferret and a red monkey rolled its mismatched eyes at Jeremiah and then it opened its mouth to reveal a multitude of needle like teeth.

"You're a meanie!" it yelled in its high pitched voice, "You are then meaniest, meaniest, meaniest meanie ever!" It stuck its tongue out and rasped the loudest, rudest whizzpopper possible before it popped out of existence. Jeremiah smiled as he let the skeletons. Round one to him. He picked up his towel and headed to the bathroom.

Ulrich was relaxing in the warm water in his bathroom when it suddenly went icy cold. With a yell he leapt up, water cascading off him, only before he could scramble out over the side he realized that the water around his feet was warm again. Cautiously he laid down again. He'd just begun to relax again when.... he yelled again as the water flushed icy cold. Glaring at the liquid round his calves, he swung himself out of the bath and reached for one of the towels. It was as stiff as a board. He looked at it. It looked like a towel should, white, fluffy and inviting but under his fingers it felt no different to a sheet of wood. He frowned and dropped it at arms length, just in case it landed on his toes but it fluffed to the floor in a soft heap. He reached for the other towel, only to discover that it had done the same. It was now completely convinced that it was a piece of wood, with as much ability to bend as an iron poker. Ulrich threw it on the floor with disgust, kicking its now soft folds for good measure as the goosebumps started standing up on his arms... and heard the snigger.

That the most disconcerting thing he'd come across in quite a long while. It also stung his pride. There was something in the room with him and it was giggling at him. He grabbed the first towel off the floor again, intending to use it for modesty's sake... only to find it was as stiff as a board again. The sniggering continued as he desperately tried to find one towel in the wrenched room that would consent to be a towel. Ulrich stopped his frantic rushing around and listened to the now helpless giggling. If he was any judge it was coming from.... over.... THERE! He span and threw the towel towards the corner. It landed on something and Ulrich jumped with both feet before he could think twice about the mess that was about to happen.  Only it didn't.

There was a distinctive pop just before he landed and his feet came down on nothing but the soft folds of the towel. He cautiously lifted the corner of the towel and found nothing. He straightened and shook the towel out. It remained a towel, soft and white and inviting. He dried himself and turned to grab that clothes he'd laid out for himself. On the top of the pile was a truly lovely sword. A glance told him that it was made with the same quality of workmanship as the one he'd taken off of that bandit and it was beautifully chased in gold. He drew it fully from the scabbard and tested its weight and balance. It fitted his hand as if made for it. He found himself grinning despite his efforts not to. Now if he turned up at his father's estate with this in hand then his half siblings could hardly say that he was a cuckoo that would never amount to anything. But... But what was the catch? This hadn't been just given to him out of hand, something was decidedly odd about how this had come to him.

Regretfully but deciding to ere on the side of caution, he put the sword into the wardrobe. That way he could come back for it later, if he had the chance after asking about its origins.

Kaelin was undisturbed while she had her bath but afterwards her sharp ears picked up the fact that she wasn't alone in the room. It was a quiet snuffling, rather akin to a hedgehog that woke her first. She turned round expecting to find a bundle of prickles that had somehow made it into the room sniffling along the skirting board, only there was nothing there. She sat up slightly, frowning. The snuffling made its way round to under the wardrobe. After a moment, Kaelin slid off the bed and landed on her knees, peering under the wardrobe. The snuffling stopped in an instance. Kaelin moved forward, not taking her eyes off where she had heard the snuffling last. As she crept close to the wardrobe she started sniffing herself, drawing in long, deep breaths, trying to scent out what it was that was under there. A clot of dust rammed itself up her nose that hard her eyes watered. Kaelin lurched back on her heels, both hands clammed to her face, eyes streaming.

"Ah..." she gasped, "Ahhh... Ahhhhh......Choooooooo!"

The force of the sneeze seemed to turn her nose inside out; it certainly made it stream like a tap. Kaelin struggled to her feet as she tried to stem the flood and stumbled to the bathroom. It was a while and a lot of undignified noises later that Kaelin came back out of the bathroom, holding a cool, damp towel to her face to try and ease the ache. The towel flopped to the floor as she heard the muffled sniggering. There was something in the bedside cabinet and it was having a right good giggle at her expense. Kaelin craned her neck forward and narrowed her eyes at the cabinet. It was the sort that had a small key hole just below the little knob that opened the door. Kaelin narrowed her eyes some more and twisted her nose sideways. The thing in the cupboard seemed to be getting a grip on itself. Kaelin crouched and then leapt. She slammed her hand down on the door of the cupboard and then, by main strength and sheer narked offness, she lifted the cupboard into the air and shook it until her arms gave out. Something inside it yelped as she started and she heard a pop just before she clunked the cabinet back down and straightened to catch her breath. She swung round as another pop sounded from the bed.

There on top of the covers were a perfect set of black fingerless gloves, the sort of gloves one of her teachers had once referred to as 'climbing gloves'. After a moment, Kaelin picked them up and turned them over. They looked as if they would fit her perfectly. Kaelin pressed her mouth as she turned the gloves over and over, then she stuffed them in her belt before heading out of her room.

Thorian Vandervast stretched and turned over with a groan. He felt like many people had been at him with meat tenderizers while he was a sleep, just about every muscle in his back was an individual pain and all of them were demanding leave of absence all at once. He turned over again and then realized that he was in a bed. Despite the protests of just about all of him he sat up quickly. The room was cool and white and the bed soft, the only concerning thing was that he couldn't remember how he'd got there.

"Stupid spiders," he muttered as he reached for his trousers, trousers that had been brushed clean, "One of them must have bit me." Trousers and shirt were not difficult to put on, despite aching muscles but he only had one half of his boots on when the other half started playing silly beggars.

He reached for his second boot and it jumped out of the way. Thorian blinked and reached for it again. It jumped out of the way again. Thorian sat up and scratched his ear a moment. The boot stared back, without eyes to stare with. Thorian launched himself in a rugby tackle that jarred every aching muscle and the boot still managed to jump out of the way. Thorian had never been able to understand why people said that boots had tongues when they obviously didn't have mouths. He understood it now when this boot blew what was unmistakably a whizzpopper at him with its tongue.

Slowly Thorian stood up, frowning at his boot. He grabbed the edge of his bed and lifted it, every screaming muscle forgotten as he lifted it high and brought it down on his boot with all his strength. The frame twisted and groaned at the treatment and a joint popped but when Thorian lifted the bed again the boot wasn't there. There was a pop behind him and there was his boot. Beside it was his battered old broadsword but it wasn't how it had been. The blade had been definitely polished and resharpened and it was in a new scabbard, something Thorian knew he hadn't had.

"That's strange," he admitted and stared at the boot. After a moment he picked up the sword and buckled it on but he left the boot on the floor.

Out in the corridor they met up with Crowface, who looked at Jeremiah's frown and Thorian's lack of a boot with confusion but he none the less lead them down and out of the tower to a difference part of the terrace, part that was surrounded by roses bushes. Elisha and Hartseer were stood by the wall, quietly discussing something but Elisha turned as the companions approached and stepped forward. Hartseer remained by the wall. Elisha frowned as he noticed Thorian's lack of a boot, then he looked more closely at the others.

"Have you been disturbed?" he asked with concern.

"My boot was playing silly beggars," Thorian admitted, "And someone left me this." He displayed his repaired sword in its new scabbard.

"I have to admit that I had some issues with the bath," Ulrich cautioned, "And they also left me something of a present."

"I had something snuffling around in my room," Kaelin's sullen expression didn't give much away, "And..."

Elisha held up a hand to stop her and turned to the table. He picked up a pitcher of water and began to pour it into the glass at his place. He poured and poured and poured and poured and yet the glass did not overflow, in fact it didn't seem to be filling up at all. Elisha set the pitcher down and picked up the glass with an unreadable expression. There was a load sniggering from one of the tables around the edge terrace.

Without changing his expression Elisha's arm shot forward, hurling glass with unexpected force and the source of the sniggers. The glass shattered with the force of a bomb. There was an outright laugh and a pop and the small, red spotted, white creature that had yelled at Jeremiah appeared at the other end of the table to were the glass had exploded.

"Got you that time, didn't I?" she laughed, doing a little jig on the spot.

"Felicity, what have I told you about pestering guests?" Elisha's tone was forbidding.

"I paid 'em, didn't I?"

Ulrich frowned at the little creature, recognizing that her accent was extremely similar to a certain Dippler the pie man.

"I always pays 'em," the little thing continued, "I always pays 'em, if they plays. I don't pays 'em if they don't feed me." She stuck her tongue out at Jeremiah and made an indelicate noise at him, before switching her attention back to Elisha. "It's not my fault if I can'ts pay yah, yah won't let me know if there is anything yah needs and yah seems to want even less. How am I suppose to pays yah with nothing?"

"Enough Felicity, you have had your feed, so now you can leave us alone," Elisha stated.

"Oh alright, if yah is insisting," the little thing said, blew one more whizzpopper at Jeremiah and with a final pop, disappeared.

Elisha drew a deep breath and sighed it out.

"I apologize for her behavior and if she caused you any distress," he turned to his guests, "As far as I can tell she never means any great harm. Felicity is mischievous, not evil, but she is sometimes carried away with her own cleverness."

"Can't say I've ever seen anything like her before,"Thorian admitted.

"She is a chest weasel," Elisha smiled slightly as he explained, "A small creature of the fey that feeds on the irritation of others and therefore seeks to increase that irritation by the playing of practical jokes and small illusions."

"Turning my bath water cold on me didn't seem like a very small illusion," Ulrich interrupted.

"That one again," Elisha rolled his eyes, "Did she also turn your towels to wood?"

"How did you guess?" Ulrich's tone was dry.

"It seems that her well of creativity must be running dry if she is repeating all the old tricks," Elisha smiled again, "Though she is being truthful when she says that she always pays for the food that we give her. As for how she creates that which she pays with I have yet to understand it. At least I hope that she creates it and that she's not stealing it from some where else."

"So she's the one that left me these on the bed?" Kaelin took the climbing gloves out from under her belt and held them out.

"May I?" Elisha asked before taking them from her hand. He studied them for a long while and then nodded.

"These are of the quality that Felicity pays her debts with," he confirmed, "I would imagine that you will have many years of work out of them if you chose to keep them and that they will be resistant to many different types of damage. Just what did you do to convince her to give you such treasures?"

"Trapped her in the bedside cabinet and shook it until she rattled," Kaelin admitted.

"That is a novel approach," Elisha admitted, "And one that I will have to remember. Now, shall we eat before the cook's hard work begins to spoil?"

The food laid out on the table was mostly vegetables but there was what looked like a roast lamb laying delicately presented as the center piece. However, just about all the food was served in already bite sized pieces, a mercy for which Jeremiah was truly grateful as it meant that Kaelin didn't have an excuse to make the usual mess that she did at the dinner table. Even Thorian seemed to sense the mood of the meal and brought out his set of flat wear. 

"It's not bad," Thorian said after a few mouthfuls, "Though I'm not sure of the flavors."

"The previous owner of this house did have a generous supply of spices that he seemed to have hoarded for his own use," Elisha admitted, "Though not as varied as the spices of my home. The cook does her best to mimic the flavors of my youth and she is improving quite well."

"It's not bad," Thorian said again, nodding as more food disappeared.

"You know, there's what that chest weasel thing could give you," Kaelin looked up, "Some of the spices from your old country. Where is that by the way?"

"Far to the south from here," Elisha admitted, "And I thank you for the suggestion about Felicity. It may even stop her pestering me so much if she knows what she can pay me with, although I have never seen her create food. It will be interesting to know whether she can."

"You where also saying about your home..." Ulrich said with interest.

"Not much of a home. Not for me. Some, like your friend," Elisha nodded to Jeremiah, "Learn the ways of the Master Smith for the sake of power, though it is a dangerous path, not only because of the inherent dangers of the trade but also because of how other men view us. In the land where I come from others see the Master Smiths as threats to be put down, tools to be used, potion ingredients to be harvested and some even consider our... pieces to be aphrodisiacs. As I said, our path is a dangerous one where I come from and not one to be taken up lightly."

"So why did you take it up?" Ulrich asked.

Elisha smiled, "When your only choice is between possible death and certain death then which do you choose?"

"Ah, I see," Ulrich nodded.

"Possibly you do, possibly you do not," Elisha said, "But at least you are trying, which is more than I received from the people of my own country. It is passing strange that the people of my country believe that all north men are barbarians and heretics but I have found north men to be much more... accepting than the people of the south."

"So how did you wind up here?" Kaelin asked.

"It was an accident," Elisha admitted, "And a mercy from a dying friend. I originally intended to travel back to whence I came but having learnt what I have through my travels I decided that I'd rather stay where I can be the hand rather than just the tool that is held."

"Why tinman," Jeremiah asked suddenly, "Are you not going to join us?"

Hartseer lend back on the wall and the expression in his glass marble eyes was almost bored.

"I do not breath, I do not drink, I do not eat and my weight would probably break any seat I tried to sit upon," he said with the air of tired calm, "Therefore what need would I have to join you at the table?"

"Ah but do you not miss the joys of such simple pleasures?" Jeremiah smiled as he took a bite and chewed it slowly.

"I have walked this world for four hundred and ninety seven years," Hartseer informed him, "If I had not become accustomed to this existence then surely I would have run mad long ago? And I still have my memories of what I once had. They do not betray me. That is one of the blessings and the curses of my being what I am."

"Hartseer has been telling me of some of the troubles that have beset you," Elisha interjected, "Both on your travels and the reasons for your travels. I concur that there is a worrying pattern to these events. The damned souls are good fighting beasts, it is what they have been created for since the method was first discovered but even they have struggled against these beings that have been plaguing us."

"Giant spiders you mean?" Ulrich asked.

"Them and others," Elisha said, "Indeed the distorted creatures are not much of a threat on their own. They are, after all, only beasts that have been tampered with physically. So far I have not seen anything that suggests that their wits are anything but those of rude beasts. No, the ones that have been giving us trouble are the ones that walk as men. I am not much familiar with the beings north men call elves, they do not seem to live in the lands to the south, a fact for which I have my own theories but these new ones that have the color of dead fires seem to be a breed apart from their kin. They have a cruelty that is beyond the arrogance that is apparently common to the elves and they are making pacts with beings that I have even less knowledge of, things that look like men but fight as beasts akin to the damn souls I create."

Kaelin stopped chewing and then managed to swallow through a suddenly dry mouth.

"Are there many of these new men-beasts?" she asked.

"Unfortunately there seems to be an ever growing number," Elisha informed her, "Some seem less inclined to fight, more as if they are being driven on by a will beyond their own but others are fully committed to the battle. They are the ones that concern me most as they seem capable of matching a damned soul in open battle and I am not sure that I will be able to use their remains for my work even before decay sets in."

"You think you are going to be out numbered in this battle?" Jeremiah asked with interest.

"It is a concern," Elisha lifted one hand to his mouth, rubbing his lips with his knuckles, "What concerns me more is where they could be finding an ever growing supply of bodies to throw at us. A creature that breeds naturally needs time to grow from infancy to fighting strength. A creature that breeds unnaturally..."

"They'll be infecting people," Kaelin said, shifting in her seat as if hot ants were nipping at her tail bone, "Whole towns at a time. Don't ask me how I know, I just know, alright?"

"That was my fear," Elisha agreed, "I know that there are people who live in the mountains to our east but I believed that they were more of the Mister Thorian's people than men."

"That's true," Thorian admitted, "We had to give up the plains to you small people. You many be small but you have ways of making yourselves bigger than we are. Besides the mountains are good for making you tough. Little soft people like you lot don't live well in mountains where as we get tough on them."

"Just as north men do not do well in the desserts of my old country," Elisha nodded, "Each must fine his center in the world and not all centers need be in the same place."

"Just pray that they don't find away of infecting Thorian's people," Kaelin muttered, her eyes on her plate, "If they manage that then we're all screwed."

"That is not all that concerns me," Elisha said, "I believe that these disturbances are being sourced from one location and if I am right then the reach is very long. I believe that these disturbances are coming out of the east."

Hartseer's foot clacked down on the stones of the terrace, his whole metallic form tensing.

"That seems like an overly organic response from you, tinman," Jeremiah observed.

"If you knew what that phrase means, you would respond too," Hartseer shifted uneasily. Ulrich frowned. If he didn't know better, the end of Hartseer's braid was twitching, the ends of the cables that formed it were questing like the tendrils of a sea anemone.

"You have some knowledge of this threat, old friend," Elisha's words were a statement, not a question. Hartseer shifted uneasily.

"He was called the Domili," he admitted after a moment, "My people knew that his ambition for empire knew no bounds, we'd suffered enough for it. What we didn't reckon with was that his ambition went much further than that."

"Oh tell me more," Jeremiah grinned as he watched Hartseer squirm.

"Death," Hartseer stated, "Death on an industrial scale and the whole war was nothing but the primer. My people, his people, his family, all of them fed into the mouth of that thing. And I was NOTHING but a tool in his hand!"

Hartseer turned so fast it was hard to see him do it but what was easy to see was the creator his fist left in the pillar beside him.

"Four hundred and ninety seven years," Hartseer slumped, "Four hundred and ninety seven years. Is it not enough for trusting the wrong man? Trusting the wrong mask?"

Nobody at the table had an answer for that but after a moment Kaelin shifted in her seat.

"An old sea Captain recently told me that running from the storm, more often than not sends you on the the rocks," she said. Elisha looked at her quickly but said nothing. Hartseer gave her a long, steady look.

"You may be right," he said at last, "But I will need proof of the threat before the King will release me on that journey."

"Oh will it be a long journey?" Jeremiah turned back to his plate as if the answer was of no consequence.

"It took me four hundred years to cover the distance from there to here," Hartseer admitted, "Still I was searching at the time and I detoured often. Going back..." he hesitated for a moment but then pushed on, "Going back I will know exactly where I'll be going. And I might not necessarily have to go alone."

Jeremiah was still looking at his plate so he missed the speculative look Hartseer gave him. After a moment Elisha shifted and spoke.

"Proof I am not sure I can provide," he said, "But I believe that I can help you with your quest to transverse the lake." He turned back to the companions, "There are many secrets still within this tower that I have not had the leisure to uncover and the library is extensive. I will research this problem extensively, if any care to join me you are most welcome."

"I'm afraid I wouldn't be much use in a library," Thorian rubbed the back of his neck, "Can't say that I can read that well."

"I have to admit that I don't have the patience to research among dusty tomes," Ulrich admitted,"But I wouldn't mind having a look around the grounds of your tower and the town beyond. I admit that I find this place fascinating."

"You are most welcome explore were you will," Elisha smiled, "The tower is also open to you, though please take care if you wandered into the less frequented parts. As I said, I have not had the time to explore it all and I am not sure as to all of the collection its old master possessed."

"I wouldn't mind helping in the library," Jeremiah smiled, "I feel a lot more comfortable around books."

"Then you are most welcome," Elisha inclined his head.

After dinner, Elisha led the way to the library. It was a cylindrical room, lined with curved book shelves that covered just about every inch of wall. Free standing bookcases had been curved to match the walls and stood radiating out from the center of the room, like the spaces between spokes of a wheel. Here and there, solid looking reading and writing tables were tucked into unobtrusive nooks and reading wheels stood ready for the researcher needing to cross reference multiply works. A double helix staircase spiraled up though the levels, allowing easy assess to all the books. In the space formed by the spirals of stairs a larger than life statue of a heavy set man in scholarly robes stood in a shaft of light.

"Is that the previous owner of this house?" Jeremiah asked looking at it.

"Yes," Elisha said, "A man who believed he had the right to control everyone and everything around him, which was what made his downfall."

"Ah hubris," Jeremiah smiled, "It gets the greatest of us."

"Yes," Elisha said with a smile of his own, "Which is why I keep him; to remind me that there is a difference between a leader and a controller. It is a fine line to tread and one easily crossed as you are still the hand holding the knife. It is one of the reasons I try to give my damned souls more choices than Master Smiths usually grant their creatures." Elisha walked over to one of the bookcases and began trailing a hand over the spines of the books. "After all, that one was ended by one who could think without him."

"I'm not sure I understand," Jeremiah frowned.

"That one," Elisha pulled a book off the shelves and started leafing through it as he turned to face Jeremiah, "Sort to control everything around him, including the thoughts of others and in that he was helped by the fact that many people are willing to give up their responsibility to think for themselves. They prefer to give up their thoughts to the control of a leader, a king, a priest or even a god, rather than put in the effort of thinking for themselves. They train themselves not to think without their psycho pomp sitting there in their heads controlling their direction, whether as I had realized that my god did not want me to always think about him, he just wanted me to think. This one will be beneficial, I think."  He put the book down on the table nearest to him and went back to the bookcase.

"I will not say that it was an easy realization," he admitted, "I had to learn that my hatred of those that had made my life so painful did nothing to change them. Even if I killed them and I killed a great many of them, it did not change them. I had to learn that there are better ways to lead than fear and better ways to change men than force. Perhaps..." He turned and realized that Jeremiah was no longer there. Elisha looked around and then shrugged. "He is obviously not ready yet to listen," he said to the book in his hands, "And have I not learnt the foolishness of trying to force the unwilling to listen? Still he maybe willing to listen in time." He placed the book down on top of the one that he had already put upon the table and turned back to the book cases. "Or maybe not. Though I can create futures now it does not mean that I can create futures for every man. Now which of the rest of you maybe useful in this endeavor?"

Jeremiah shuffled down between the bookcases out of sight. Pompous, pious, judgemental young upstart. It was no wonder he got on  with that metal stick insect, the pair of them were cut from the same damn cloth. Now, he looked around at the books, there was surely something he could use in here. He rubbed his hands and reached for the nearest book.

Ulrich and Thorian wandered back out of the tower's gardens and down through the town, glancing up now and then as a winged shape banked through the sky but for the most part they were the only ones routinely disturbed by the shadows on the ground. The towns people, such as there were, seemed to be totally acclimatized to having monsters swing passed over head or even wander passed them in the streets. Going down a side street, they heard a warbling song that had more structure than bird song normally had. That and this voice had more range than a bird normally had, including base growls and tenor rumbles in its repeating phrases. They can round the corner, to see a damned soul backing out of a house, sweeping a pile of dust before it was its impossibly long and fluffy tail. It cat like face glanced up at them and it blinked its eyelids sideways, its long droopy ears perking up either side of its pointed goat horns. Thorian blinked and looked again before he accepted that it had twice the usual number of ears. After a moment it nodded to them before rearing on to its hind legs and pulling the door shut with its human like hands. It fumbled to turn the key in the lock and then turned to pad across the street, its tail waving behind it like a streamer, to unlock a door on the other side of the residences and let itself in. Ulrich and Thorian looked in behind it to see it begin a well fought battle with the cobwebs hanging from the ceiling.

"I'm still learning because a lot of you small peoples' ways are strange to me but that was... just plain freaky, right?" Thorian asked.  Ulrich just nodded.

Making their way out of the other gates, they wandered down the road, looking out over the fields of ripening grain. The fields were slightly lower than the road as they wandered along it and after a while they noticed a peasant hoeing between the rows of grain.

"Good morning," Ulrich called down, "How goes the work?" The peasant looked up at them and then lent on his hoe with the air of one glad for the excuse to stop to have a chat.

"Fair enough good master, fair enough," he said. His smile crinkled an already wrinkled face.

"You seem to have good land here," Ulrich crouched down  so they were more on a level.

"It improves good master it improves," the peasant nodded, "We gets a little bit more out of it every year, although we is having trouble this year, that we are. We just have to keep praying that the Master's beasties keep 'em from firing the crops."

"Keep who from firing the crops?" Ulrich asked.

"Them strange for-en-ers," the peasant slurred the pronunciation and then he spat reflexively, "Never did like elves much, snotty stuck ups, but this lot has to be the worse, won't leave honest folks well enough alone. I don't like elves but as long as they ain't kicking in the front door I mind mine and I'll leave them to mind theirs. This lot, though, don't know when to leave off. Hopefully the Master will work out how to drive 'em off soon."

"Speaking of the Master," Ulrich smiled to show that it was a harmless inquiry, "Just how do you get on with his... other people?"

"You mean his beasties, don't yah?" the peasant smirked, revealing a lack of teeth, "Well, I'm like a donkey, me. Yah ain't ever seen a dead donkey and there's one thing I've learnt in my life. You know what that is?"

"You'll have to tell me," Ulrich frown slightly at the peasant's cryptic answer.

"The worst monsters are the ones who look human," the peasant nodded at his own wisdom, "You want ev-i-donce? Just look at the last master of this place, just look at him. Human as I am but monster to the core and Great Sess to him." The peasant spat again.

"So the beasties don't give you any trouble?" Ulrich asked.

"Nope," the peasant shrugged, "They keeps to themselves mostly and they ain't no bother us. Thankful to have them watching my back, especially after they put pay to the last Master."

"Where you living here in the last Master's time?" Ulrich inquired.

 "Just beyond the swamp over that way," the peasant flipped an arm at the horizon, "It wasn't a big village but it was enough and we was close enough to Three Necks to have a bit of travel if we fancied. My little Mazie-Sue was going to be married to the horseman's boy there that spring." The peasant man sighed and fell silent a moment, his eyes misty.

"What happened?" Ulrich asked quietly.

"The old Master of this place, that's what happened," the peasant spat again and dug his hoe sharply into the ground, "Came in the night, he did and just about everyone they go all blue in the eyes and start following him without a sound. Right creepy it was, seeing everyone yah ever knew just go walking off behind him with the lantern and yah's the only one left behind. Guess he took one look at me and figured I was too old to be much use so he didn't bother. Great Sess to him!"

"And how did you wind up here?"

"The new Master came for a look about after he took over," the peasant wrinkled his lips, "I was getting mighty tired of trying to do everything myself, 'tis no life at all, is a batch-two-lars life, so I figured what the heck, I might as well have a look. After all, he did ask and as the King's Sword was vouching for him so I figured that if it didn't turn out so great I could always skip off again. 'Tis worked out alright."

"Well thank you for that," Ulrich straightened, "You have certainly given us a lot to think over. We won't interrupt your work any more."

"Thank'ee kindly, good master," the peasant knuckled his forehead, "And good luck to yee."

"Sounds like they is getting on alright here," Thorian observed as they walked back towards the tower.

"Ah but it also sounds as if these damned souls could be a big problem if this Elisha fellow takes it into his head that they should be," Ulrich observed quietly, "Come on, there's someone I want to talk to."

They walked back through the arch and found the steps up to the top of the walls where Crowface was bent over a dozen maps that had been weighed out over the battlements. He was rubbing his beak as winged ones came and went, delivering information.

"How goes the work?" Ulrich called as they came up on to the the battlement walkway.

"Badly," Crowface admitted rubbing his beak harder, "Just when I think that I have hammered down where these things are coming from they turn up from some where else." He banged a claw down on the maps.

"Looks like this one would feed that Chest Weasel thing without her having to play tricks on him," Thorian whispered to Ulrich.

"Well our friend the priest did say that the Underworld is quite extensive," Ulrich smiled at Crowface, "They could be coming from all over the place."

"That is a good point," Crowface glanced round but then turned back to his maps, beckoning them forward, "But it is not exactly what I mean. Today they have attacked where we found you and now they have just ambushed one of our patrols on the other side of the circle to that point. Yesterday they were in both the north east and the north west. The day before that it was east and south west, tomorrow I have no idea. The distances make no sense either sometimes close, sometimes far and no camp in between."

"Well I was taught that if you try and defend everything, you wind up defending nothing," Ulrich suggested. Crowface looked round at him and this time he looked longer.

"You have a good point," he finally nodded at last, "You have a very good point." He scratched at the tuft of feathers below his beak.

"Crowface?" Ulrich leaned on the battlements with his folded arms, "Why are you called damned souls?"

"Because that is what we are," Crowface answered still pouring over his maps, "Damned souls called back to the mortal realm to serve the will of our Master Smith."

"You're dead?" Thorian asked.

"No, not any more," Crowface replied, "That is the power of a Master Smith, to take the souls of the lost and the lonely and give them new form, new function and new purpose. Though sometimes..." Crowface went silent for a moment and then shook his head.

"So what is your new purpose?" Ulrich asked after a beat.

"To serve the will of our Master Smith," Crowface stated, "So has it been for ages passed, so will it be for ages yet."

"So if he told you to kill every human in a hundred mile radius you would do it?" Ulrich said bluntly.  Crowface looked up with a frown and it took him a few moments to speak.

"Yes," he said it slowly as if speaking it made him uncomfortable and he wasn't sure why, "Yes we would but I do not think he would give such an order."

"But if he told you to, you would?" Ulrich pressed.

"I'm.... I'm not sure we would," Crowface straightened up, his eyes fixed on some internal revelation that had struck him in that moment.

"I thought you just said that you were bound to the will of your Master Smith?" Ulrich frowned in turn.

"I did," Crowface admitted, "But... but..." He rubbed the tuft of feathers under his beak. "Destruction, desecration and despoliation, these are the things that we damned souls have always believed to be our purpose for these are the things we have always been used for. But this Master Smith, this one see us as useful for something else. This one sees us as tools, tools that can break a skull or save said skull from being broken. And sometimes, sometimes he seems to see us as something more than tools."

"How do you mean?" Ulrich frowned even deeper.

"We are damned souls, we eat of blood and flesh," Crowface explained, "But this ones offers us bread and all the memories of lives passed that come with that."

"That is.... interesting," Ulrich said carefully, "Well I thank you for your time, Crowface. That's a point, what is your name? Calling you Crowface all the time just feels disrespectful."

"My name?" Crowface seemed taken a back, "My name is... My name is..." He sighed, "This is the problem of memories, they are so fragile."

"What do you mean?" Thorian asked, "Surely you had a name when you were alive the first time?"

"That is the problem," Crowface frowned some more, "It is like I dream and remember parts of the dream but never the whole. I can remember serving as Captain and banner man to Hartseer, I can remember our war against the Paladins but I cannot remember my name."

"How about Cyril?" Ulrich suggested with a cheeky grin.

"Cyriiiiiil," Crowface rolled the name around his beak, "Cyyyyril. Cyrilllllll. I like it. It is not the name I had but it has a certain ring to it. I like it."

"Glad to help," Ulrich wasn't entirely sure he believed his ears.

 *

Kaelin wondered through the halls and up the stairs of the tower. Despite it being enclosed it was somehow light and airy, the sense of something living and growing present even inside. Gradually she came to realize that it was not just one tower but rather a whole series of towers, growing out of and into one another. She's enter one door opening off of the main stairway to find within the corner of the room revealed another smaller stair case. Sometimes that staircase would lead up to what was, to all intents and purposes a dead end, other times there would be a door that lead back to the main stair way and still other times the door would lead to yet another tower. She found herself enjoying the wandering, part of her trying to imagine what she would do if she had all this space to call all hers.

It was when she found part of the tower that had paintings on the wall that she became aware that she was being watched. She glanced back, sure she had heard someone muttering. As it didn't sound malicious she turned back to her wandering but the further she went the more she was sure that she was catching movement out of the corner of her eye.

It was when she entered a long gallery with painting on both sides that she had her confirmation that something was strange. She had noticed a painting of a rather plain girl, in a stiff green dress with a parrot on her finger who looked rather like Kaelin herself, when  the parrot turned its head underside down and sideways to look at her. The face of the girl in the painting flexed slightly, a micro expression of worry and annoyance. Kaelin stepped closer to the painting and blew gently on it. The parrot squawked and flapped its wings and the girl's shoulders slumped.

"Oh well done Rodrick," she said to the parrot on her finger, "You just couldn't hold still for five minutes. Go on with you, take yourself off else where." She flicked the bird into the air and it flew towards the edge of the frame... and disappeared. Kaelin twisted her neck as she saw it again out of the corner of her eye, flying through a woodland scene painting three frames down.

"That's strange," she said, "Though not as strange as this." She turned back to the painting.

"He has been come more bird brained since he was this side of the canvas then he ever was alive," the girl explained, "And I hope you don't think me rude but... you have some spinach between your teeth, just there."

Kaelin's hand flew to her mouth and she turned her head away in embarrassment.

"Much better," the girl said when Kaelin looked back at her.

"Well after that I think I deserve to know your name," Kaelin followed her arms.

"Charlotte Susan Darling," the girl in the painting performed a very dainty curtsy. Kaelin thought for a moment, calling up that she had heard of the family name long ago.

"Weren't you one of the noble families in these parts?" Kaelin frowned.

"Were being the major word there," Charlotte noted wryly, "There are days when I am almost glad that I died before the main bloodline died out."

"What happened?" Kaelin asked, her interest peaked.

"I unfortunately, or fortunately, depending on how you see it, went down with a case of the spotted fever," she shrugged, "I wouldn't recommend it as a way to go out of this world as it is extremely painful but at least I wasn't betrayed the way my brother was."

"Was your brother back stabbed on a battle field then?" Kaelin asked, "I know there hasn't been any really big wars in the last few years but there is always the odd board skirmish with the orcs to keep thing interesting."

"No," Charlotte went grim, "He was murdered and with his death the main bloodline went down. It should have shifted to our cousin but he had disappeared after he'd been attacked by an animal some months before I became so ill. Which makes it all the more passing strange..."

"What's passing strange?" Kaelin narrowed her eyes.

"Have you ever seen your reflection?" Charlotte asked.

"In a pool, once or twice," Kaelin felt her memories of the her special place rise up in her mind but she stamped them back down quickly, "And if you're getting at the fact that we look something alike I had noticed it but forget it. Proves nothing and trust me, my grandfather was definitely not noble born."

"Shame," Charlotte sniffed, "It would have been nice to know that the estate was finally back in the family's hands."

"So how did you end up as a painting?" Kaelin changed the subject.

"The wizard who owned this place before the last one moved in," Charlotte explained, "The current one is barable, although he is not one for conversation and his religion is passing strange but the last one..." she gave a delicate shudder, "We paintings lived in fear that he'd take it into his head to burn us all. Seeing as none of us truely understand what magic the one before that had used to make these frames we were not sure that such a thing could destroy us."

"These frames?" Kaelin asked, focusing on the least confusing part of Charlotte's explaination. 

"Yes these frames," Charlotte said, "These ones that let us see into the land of the living. They are propped up all over the place, like strange windows. It is quite strange to be walking through a forest and then just find  a frame hung up on a tree branch and the view you see through it is someones sitting room."

"Yes that could be a little strange," Kaelin muttered, trying to wrap her head around the idea that her world might just be a painting on someones wall, "So can you climb out of there?"

Charlotte sighed and stretched out her hand. "Touch me," she commanded.

"Wait what?" Kaelin stared.

"Touch me," Charlotte commanded with a roll of her eyes.

Kaelin reached out and after a moment pressed her finger tips to the painting.

"What do you feel?" Charlotte asked.

"Canvas," Kaelin replied.

"Glass," Charlotte replied, "I can no more make it into your world than you can come to mine."

"I see," Kaelin peered at the frame, "I just going to try something."

"What are you thinking...." Charlotte cried out but Kaelin had already gripped the frame and lifted it off the wall. Charlotte's eyes were wide as the painting swung round and then Kaelin rehanged it on the wall.

"Well that was a disconcerting sensation," Charlotte said, "What was it in aid of?"

"Trying to prove that you aren't another of those chest weasel thing," Kaelin admitted, "But I'm still not sure so I guess it was unsuccessful."

"Well really," Charlotte gathered up her skirts and huffed out of her painting.

"I didn't mean..." Kaelin called out but Charlotte had already disappeared beyond the frame.  "Oops," Kaelin sighed and started trying to make her way back downstairs.

Downstairs in the library Jeremiah pulled another book off the shelf and a large fat moth blunder out with it, burling round Jeremiah's head. With a quick word, sparks jumped from Jeremiah's finger tips and the fuzzy thing burst into flame and feel onto the window sill as a pile of ash. Jeremiah glanced round to see if his unwanted study buddy was coming to see what the noise was about and then he smiled as he turned back to the little pile of ash. Dark words and dark purpose curlled through the air and the ash reformed into  the moth it had once been, only then it expanded beyond what it had been. Jeremiah stared with satisfaction as the huge insect that slowly beat its wings as the patches of blue flared up its sides and filled its eyes.

He grinned at the hawk sized thing flew up and landed on his hat, then it clattered its wings at him and his grin faded.

"Stop that!" he snapped and the bug folded its wings and was still. Jeremiah went back to his studies satisfied that the day was improving.