Entries in Steven (26)

Tuesday
Jan072014

075 – Next Steps – More Tests 

Journal of Steven Caplan: Day 115

I’ve sat through some pointless meetings before. This was not so much pointless for me as it seemed to be a contest of egos. At least we know clearly who one of our adversaries on this planet is. The rest seem to be high-minded and of sufficiently elevated ego that Caspian’s opinion of them is not entirely unfounded. I expected a bit more snootiness, for my part.

Humor them, play their game, and get on with life

 

The next morning after Roxanne left, Verigan, the elf that had been acting as the go-between for the elves and Caspian, and the evaluator for Steven, arrived with an amulet on a necklace and a bit of paper with some writing on it. He was as formal and polite as ever.

Steven let Verigan in, closed the door and turned to follow him into the suite. Caspian was already here. Cyrril was absent as usual. Also as usual Verigan started at the reason for his coming.

“Steven, it has been decided that you need to retrieve a sword. This particular sword historically was wielded by a line of kings. Our research about its’ reputed characteristics lead us to conclude that it will be a useful tool in your potential dealings in the kingdom of Krogg.”

Caspian was a moment ahead of Steven to the punch. “What’s special about it, and how will Steven recognize it, and obtain it?”

Verigan looked at his notes, and read from them. “The wielder of the sword apparently ‘could not be touched by magic. It is described as being a straight two-edge sword, simple crossbar, wire wrapped grip.’ As for obtaining it, the kingdom it is in was conquered and destroyed over four hundred years ago.”

Steven had started getting dressed once Verigan had started his briefing. Much as Caspian was of general disposition to verbally spar with the elves, Verigan in particular had ceased to rise to Caspian’s barbs. Now Caspian was apparently trying to puzzle something out.

Steven settled his coat and backpack. “How many days am I expected to be?”

Verigan turned and looked down to Steven. “It is expected you will not be more than two days. You are being sent to a ruined city to hunt through. Our last reports of the area said that things were still of good general condition, but uninhabited. The Kingdom that destroyed the city looted it thoroughly, but left it standing as a monument. It is off any current trade routes, so there are few people who travel there.”

Caspian interrupted. “You are talking about Umieswe, aren’t you?”

Verigan looked to Caspian. “No. Umieswe is to the south east of the continent, and next to the eastern inland trade routes. That was sacked two hundred and forty three years ago, during the Trades-Mans War’s. Steven is being sent to Nydecia’s capitol, east of the center of the continent, destroyed during the Charman Empire consolidation.”

Caspian had to think, this was not a name he readily recognized.

Verigan turned back to Steven. “Our research suggests that the area has some residual magic about it, but it should not be anything belligerent. Also that the sword was not among the treasures looted from the city. The published histories report that the city fell with the death-by-old age of the last king and that the remaining royal family was slaughtered and buried on site rather than taken prisoner. It is expected that this sword is still in the city, and most likely in royal possession. Therefore find The King. Take his sword as your own.”

Steven considered this. “Will I need a shovel?”

Verigan put his paper aside and held out the necklace. It was a silver link chain with a medallion the size of a large coin on it, a stone set in the center of the medallion. “We don’t know. You are being sent alone to scout as a test of your abilities. When you are ready to return, squeeze the medallion, it will activate a teleport and bring you back to where you are teleported from. On your report we can further assist you. Such as to send you with a team of diggers.”

Steven nodded, took the necklace, put it on, and tucked it under his collar. “If I can’t return of my own accord, how long until someone comes looking?”

Caspian answered before Verigan could “They give you two days, I will come on the forth.”

Verigan considered this, and then nodded at Caspian.

Steven patted himself down: belt with a few things and the sword; pack with water bag, and food for a few days; blanked tied to the pack. Coat, hat, gloves, necklace, a few sundries in his pockets. Did he want the camera? No.

Steven looked at the crossbow. He had put it aside, figuring this was a quick effort, and decided he was right to leave it behind.

“I suppose I am ready, Verigan. Where do I leave from?”

Verigan had watched, approving. Now he picked up his paper and motioned to the door. “The café across the street will do. So long as we go quickly.”

Steven got the door, and Verigan stepped out, followed by Caspian. Steven closed the door and followed. Verigan apparently chose a point at random, drew a stick of chalk from his pocket, and put a quick mark on a paving stone in the café’s courtyard.

He turned and looked at Steven. “Hold still please.”

Caspian watched as Verigan set up the teleport spell, locking its locus to the chalk on the cobble. Then with a swirl of energy and a brief puff of displaced air Steven was wrapped up and gone.

Caspian finally had a compliment to Verigan as he started to walk away. “That was very efficient. How will we know when he is returning?”

Verigan stopped and turned. “The barriers around the city warn when someone is passing through them. The spells are discriminating enough to forewarn the correct parties. I expect that you are not among that group.”

Verigan picked up a pebble from a planter. Caspian sensed him put a spell on it that connected to the mark on the paving. He then handed the pebble to Caspian.

“That pebble will vibrate when the mark is activated as the return teleport locus. Good day, Mage Caspian.”

Caspian found himself replying by polite habit. “And good day to you, Verigan.”

Caspian picked a second pebble from the planter, and put them in a pocket as Cyrril swooped in to land on Caspian’s shoulder. The little dragon looked from his master to the departing elf, curious that the usually base level antipathy was not in his master’s mood. Rather his base level mood was mostly puzzlement.

 

Shortly before Verigan arrived, Rox was met by a two-wheel horse drawn cab and taken to a small shop on the lower flats of the city. Here she was met by a young male who showed her into a work room, and then disappeared. An older male elf was bent over some apparatus. Rox opened her magic senses and identified that there were assorted objects that carried static levels of magic. It reminded her of The Sorceress’s work room.

The older somewhat wrinkly elf was doing some delicate thing, but Rox could not see what through his back, so she stood and waited for him to finish. The elf straightened and arched his back to relieve some strain, and then put a white cloth over his current workspace, and turned on his stool to face Roxanne. He looked her up and down.

Rox had worn one of the skirts she used for travel, with a tunic and vest. She had the staff with her and the chains in a pack over her shoulder.

“So you are Rodira’s descendant.” He spoke in the local language.

“Yes sir.” Rox answered him in English. If this was going to be a powers test, it could go in both directions.

Whether he understood her or not, he continued. “Rasgan was supposed to send you with a note of introduction.”

Roxanne held up the paper she had hitherto wrapped around her staff. “Right here, Master Iver. I will also need it for my introduction to Master Eklund.”

Master Iver took the note and glanced over it, then held it out to return it.

Rox noticed a change on it and stopped herself from taking it. Before she gave it over it was totally mundane, now it glowed to her magic senses. She switched to the first language she knew from this planet.

“What did you just do to it?”

The older elf almost cracked a smile. “Very good, you are magically aware, and have potential to use more than one language.” He waved a hand across the sheet and its energy evaporated.

Roxanne now reached out to it, sensing that it was now unchanged from when she had last possessed it.

Master Iver changed to the same language Rox last used. “You will need to know the local language when you deal with Master Eklund. Unless you know the local traders dialects.”

He stood up before she could take the conversation further in that direction. Standing, Master Iver was nearly half again as tall as Rox, but just as skinny, where many of the elves were proportionally heavier.

“As you should be aware, I have been instructed to determine your fundamental levels of ability and your current level of instruction. The former can be done with a spell, the latter with some time in both classroom and on a training pitch. Please follow me.”

He turned and walked with the gate of someone on their early old age, beginning to loose equilibrium but as yet too proud to use a cane. Rox followed to a work area, and quickly recognized a personal work area.

He stopped at a work table with several things in array. In the clear area before this table sat a stool and an array of items on the floor, in a chalked design of an octogram with inscribed pentacle.

Master Iver pointed at a cleared table. “Deposit all your magic imbued items there. And to your perhaps embarrassment, I mean everything.”

Rox was pleased that she had not worn the local clothes today, and so was spared the embarrassment from when The Sorceress had done the same thing to her. She left the staff and bag of chains on the table. She had not cast spells on anything else, and by her own senses could not sense any other magic on her that she knew how to remove.

“I believe I am as you require, Master Iver. Would you please check to be sure?”

The old elf looked at Roxanne first with some potential annoyance, then with his magic senses. “You are correct, child of Rodira. Step onto the stool.”

Rox looked at the pattern on the floor, and went clockwise around it to ‘north’ and then stepped right into the middle and onto the stool that had been set in the middle. Master Iver looked briefly pleased, than set about finishing his spell setup. His method was not as constrained as Rox remembered The Sorceress using. She figured it was telling in the difference in the skill level of the two casters.

Shortly he had the spell up and running. This time Rox was able to follow it, and sense the pieces of the spell being put together and into motion. When done, Rox felt she was outside herself looking in and could sense a not-quite sphere of energy that swirled around her that had its poles at points above her head and below her feet, and that there were swirls or nexus points of energy within her own body at the chakra points, with streams of energy moving through them. There were secondary points in her limbs that had lesser swirls running out to them and back to the corresponding central points. Last all the cells of her body gave off energy that were effected by and contributed affect to the swirl and overall passage of energy around her.

Rox looked at Master Iver, and for a moment, could see a similar pattern of energy in him and around him.

Then he collapsed the spell, ending it, and swiftly Rox felt her senses return to within her and to normal.

Thursday
Feb062014

078 – Steven Goes Exploring

Steven felt the world spin around him, then stabilize. As he regained his equilibrium, he took stock of where he was. He stood in the middle of a disused road at the edge of a forest. Before him stood the ruins of a city wall and gates, with a ruined city visible beyond.

The city ruins were sun bleached stone, much of it still standing, with debris scattered around. Though ruined, much was intact, and even usable and rebuildable. The most disconcerting thing was the lack of any vegetation. There was not any on the buildings, none on the ground, none where it would be expected. More so, nothing smelled as expected.

The surrounding area looked like a lush forest. Applying what he had learned of how the people on this planet built their cities, Steven guessed that this city had been in ruins for some time, not having listened fully to the conversation between Caspian and Verigan. He had landed on a road in the farmlands outside the city. But the forest went right up to the edge of the urban structures. Trees as thick around as Steven was stood about, with some of the outer structures showing the scaring of small seasonal forest fires. The forest itself smelled as a forest. Once he crossed into the line into the city, the smell changed. It was almost sour, not the rich rottenness of a swamp, for there was no excessive moisture here. It was not dry like a desert, for this climate felt like Nebraska did in the early summer, when they went for summer vacation to Rox’s grandparents. But the smell was not fresh, not living. Nor was it rotten of death and the decay prior to starting the cycle of life over. It was a stale smell, of stasis.

 

As Steven walked through the ruined city, he could come to no conclusion whether the city was ruined by both war and time. There were dried bones here and there, but anything of worth had long gone to dust or scavengers.

He looked at the sky and noticed that the sun was farther west across the sky, and higher from the southern horizon than it had been in the elf city. So he was some distance east and south of Shalaia, and had less daylight to work with for the moment. As he scanned the sky Steven noticed the moons for the first time in a while. One of the Twins was in the first half of its cycle, and on its downward arc to the western horizon, so the other would probably be rising on the eastern horizon in the waning half of its cycle, shortly after lunch time. The largest moon waning past full, and smallest one a waxing crescent, were also past their zenith, and due to set in the early afternoon. One thing this told Steven was that he would have a comparatively dark evening, and the moons would rise about and past the middle of the night.

Steven walked along the road from outside the city through the walls. The gates were missing their doors, even the hinges had been prized from the stone. The road Steven traveled continued more or less straight to the fortress castle in the center.

“Find The King. Take his sword as your own.”

Simple enough instructions, Steven thought to himself, ruefully. First: Size up the Fortress. Second: Find a place to camp.

Steven figured The King to be in one of three places: in a tomb; in the throne room; or in his chambers. Barring those it would take a methodical search of the whole place that might be better done by an archaeologist. All of which meant searching the whole castle. Steven figured he was most probably in the tomb, most likely somewhere under the fortress. But he had no idea how to get in. He did not relish the idea of searching a catacomb for a dead body, no matter how old.

 

After looking the area over, Steven decided that this dead city had been besieged and destroyed, and remembered Verigan saying something along those lines. But the fortress near the center had withstood the siege, and then surrendered. The city was in general ruins; the walls of the fortress were scarred but were hardly breached. Also the doors were again missing down to the hardware. While it marked the work of an army looting and prizing a city, it could be the work of scavengers.

After walking the circumference of the fortress, picking his way through the rubble of the city and fording the rivers that fed and drained the mote, Steven decided that other than the dead inhabitants of the city and assorted bugs he was alone here.

Skeletons were strewn about the area where they had been stacked ages ago. The victors had removed their dead and stripped the losers of anything valuable. Women and children were mixed with the men, families fighting and dying side by side.

After spending the remaining sunlight exploring the ruined city, Steven set up camp in a building facing the largest fortress gate. He built a fire using old dry rotted timbers, and broken up furniture and watched the night gather around him. When sleep finally came it was uneasy, as dreams of battle filled his rest.

                                                                                                        

He was a shopkeeper, recently married with an infant daughter. His wife came down from the rooms upstairs, carrying their daughter bundled in a sling inside her coat. The invaders were very close, but there was nowhere to run. Why had not The King surrendered, or done anything to fight the siege? That was not for answering now. There were some invaders outside on the road now, with their bloody weapons and armor. They went into the shops across the street. He grabbed the short sword the constable had given him, and started to follow his wife out the back. But it was too late. She did not have time to try to fight the soldiers coming in that way, and it was too small an area. Then a spear was protruding through his wife’s back, on the side with the baby. He screamed, and moved around her to get at her attacker as she fell lifeless. He blocked the spear aside, and drove the man back, pushing him into his companions. He shoved his sword through the shield, running the soldier through. Then they were out the back door. There were other dead and dying back here. He tried to pull his sword out of the soldier but was too late, as another spear pierced his side, right through his chest. The pain was momentary, and followed by dark.

The dream ceased.

 

He was a soldier, having been at siege and war for a long time. He was sick of it: sick of killing; sick of fighting. They had been promised that once this city fell, they could go home. He hoped she had not married by the time he got back home to her. For now his orders were to ‘kill anyone armed.’ That had turned into ‘kill everyone.’ They did not even spare the children, much as they wished to. The defenses had collapsed and his platoon was marauding toward the fortress. They were working the back alleys, to support the groups that were using the main streets. The wooden parts of many of the structures were on fire, but his group was not bothering to burn anything, as most structures in this area were stone work, and perhaps worth looting. He kicked in the back door of a shop of some kind. There was a woman with a sword. He lunged with the spear, using his shield to block her sword. But there was something under her wrap that was alive moments before he plunged his spear through it and her. The woman tried to hold the spear as she collapsed. A man yelled and charged around her. He raised his shield and the man ran into it, pushing him and his friends’ back outside. The man rammed a sword through his shield, and into his stomach. The pain was incredible, but somehow he kept on his feet. The man tried to pull it out, but the shield would not let go of the sword. The movement of it hurt, and as it slid back and forth it did mortal damage, and its blade was covered in his blood. He collapsed, not knowing why the man had suddenly disappeared. His last regret was he would never see home again.

The dream ceased.

 

Steven woke with a start. It took him several moments to remember where he was.

Now he understood the bodies that were everywhere. They were the city locals, as he figured. Slaughtered as the invaders moved in. None of the bodies were where they had died, having been looted.

Thoughts of his Marine buddies filled his memory. Steven went back to sleep, and dreamed again.

 

He stood on the fortress wall watching the carnage impassively. He knew he should be mad, but was really just sad. The Fortress had used up everything they had to fight with. All in senseless waste. The city folk that surrendered were tied up and put aside. Those that fought were given no mercy. The invaders were to the innermost parts of the city. To the mote itself. It was almost nightfall, the siege ending almost as fast as the day. Which was just as well. Troops went into building after building, sometimes coming out wounded. Sometimes not coming out. All because The King lay on his bed and in his senility was content to let the city die with him. As a guard it was his duty to protect The King. But wasn’t it also his duty to protect the people? Many of his fellow guards were asking the same thing. He looked around. It was time to do something. He looked up at the flags above the fortress. Then back at his fellow guards. The only things to do to end this were unthinkable: Kill the King, or lower the flags.

The dream faded.

 

Steven slept dreamless the rest of the night.

He awoke as the sun came over the horizon, the light bubbling across the ruins, as if hesitant to look on the scene of destruction yet again. Steven made himself some breakfast, and set about fashioning a torch from a long table leg, with oil soaked cloth he had brought with wrapped around the end. He finished the torch and went to the fortress. As he went his mind was consumed with what he had dreamed, remembering the ideas clearly even if he did not remember the images.

He crossed the bridge over the empty moat, careful to avoid the rotten timbers. Compared to the rubble of the city, the fortress was fairly clean. No bodies anywhere. No major structural damage. No rubble, save by collapse from neglect. The layout of the structure was straight forward, from a simple time and mode of thought. The front entry was a hub for the halls that led off to the left and right, and straight ahead. Stairs went up to the second and third floors of the wings. The building flowed with the hills it sat on, and a few wings had levels higher than the others.

Unlike the other places he had been to in this world, the ceilings were closer to the height he was used to. Though the place breathed well the stale smell still permeated, Steven soon acclimated to it and no longer noticed it. Digging a piece of chalk from a spare pocket, Steven started down the hall to his left, intending to conduct a ‘left hand search’ and methodically work his way around.

Wednesday
Feb122014

079 – Steven Goes Exploring 2

He found that every door he tried was either so rotten that the latch came off in his hand, was unlatched, or most often completely gone. The wind had already bashed many to pieces. The rooms looked similar to the rest of the city: the unvaluable things strewn about with a few skeletons here and there, anything of value long gone. As he left each room, he marked an ‘X” beside the door. After a morning of methodically searching corridors and checking each room, he found the throne room on the third floor. But it was also stripped bare. Not a throne on the dais, or a hanging on the walls.

Most of the walls wherever he looked were bare even of hangers. Only the fittings that held the walls together were left. The fortress had been thoroughly looted. Leaving the throne room he entered the area with guard dormitories. But these were also empty of anything but rotting debris. For a moment, Steven thought he could sense the building’s soul sagging in depression, from lack of care and use.

Turning into another hallway and sub-wing, Steven entered a series of apartments. These were different than the rest of the structure, having arched windows and doorways. The courtyard these apartments looked out onto was at ground level here, while being on the third floor from where he had entered. These were laid out with more internal walls and partitions than other sections of the building. Steven soon realized these were divided by public area, sleeping area, dressing area, and access to an indoor privy.

The first two apartments were mirrors of each other, with nothing remarkable about them. Continuing his ‘left-hand search’ Steven entered the third apartment that occupied the end of the wing. This room had a stair case on the internal wall to the immediate left of the door that went up out of the meeting area. The meeting area occupied the left corner of this area of the building and was almost square with windows the length of both outer walls, with a door out opposite the door into the hallway. The room was barren, save for debris played with by the wind over the years. Out the windows and doorway as seen from the hallway, the palace church could be seen across the courtyard. On the last internal wall to Steven’s right was an archway through which was a short hall and then the apparent dressing area. To the left was the archway into the corner room of the structure, which was the apparent sleeping chamber. Continuing around clockwise was a windowed outer wall. A door at the inner part of the last inner wall led to an indoor bathroom that compared to what Rox had in Veradale for its size. The tub, sinks, and stalls were fixed and arranged for privacy. All the doors in this apartment would have been double doors, wide enough for armored men to march through four abreast, or two flanking in escort of a third.

As Steven rounded the rooms, he noticed the courtyard outside the dressing room and privy was significantly lower than the other side of the building. And it appeared to have an entrance to an underground structure. Something about it beckoned.

After marking the wall outside this largest apartment, Steven backtracked to the closest downward staircase and went down two levels, then made his way to the one passage that went out in the direction he wanted to go.

As he went outside, Steven realized that the ground within the battlements had no vegetation on it. There was dirt over the cobblestone pathways, but these did not grow anything. This courtyard looked like it had had several trees but these had been cut and removed, the stumps just moldering piles. Steven guessed this meant the ground had probably been salted, or worse. That way nothing would grow up, and this place would stand as a memorial to the conquerors. Steven quickly found the small hill that was the entrance to the tombs.

The wall of the structure to his left went the length of the nearly square courtyard and over to join the wall of the church about a hundred paces away. On the other side of the yard, maybe a bit more than 100 paces away, was the battlement wall and unseen beyond it, the moat. Looking up at the three story structure two stories above he picked out the arched windows for the apartments, and the ones on the end told him he was in the right place. This was an area he had not seen before, as these grounds were only accessible from within the building, and none of the rooms that might look out this way in the part of the structure Steven had searched had windows facing this way.

The tomb entrance had once been surrounded by a garden. It went down into the ground like a bunker or storm cellar, toward the outer walls. He got to the doors, and found them barred by a large timber on solid hooks. This was very odd, as no other door in the place was secured, with most having been removed. He pulled the bar out and tossed it aside, and pulled the old doors open, their hinges groaning from disuse. Behind these doors a passage about six or seven paces wide went into the hill then descended to a second set of doors. These were also barred. Steven pulled the two timbers from these, and opened the doors. The pungent smell of stale air and contained decomposition assaulted his nose, and caused Steven to gag. He quickly put the timbers in place to hold the doors open, and went back up the stairs and out.

Steven took several minutes to catch his breath and let the tomb exchange fresh air for stale. In the process he tied a bandanna around his mouth and nose to as a dust mask. He readied his torch, and lit it. He then put his gloves on, and drew his sword. Something about tombs spooked Steven, and he wanted to have a weapon at hand. He wished for a battle rifle and N.V. Goggles, but the sword and torch would work. He went back down the stairs and past the second doors. The passage here was as wide as the upper one, and a bit taller than wide. It was carved into the stone of the bedrock. Braces were set into the stone at regular intervals. A wispy layer of cobwebs covered the upper surfaces.

Right past the doors Steven found a sad sight, about 20 bodies decaying like the rest, but these were dressed and still wore what had been finery. The bodies up in the city were just bones. These still had some dried flesh to them, with their clothes over that. About half were guards, still in armor. Steven looked the bodies over. They did not show any weapon marks, but appeared to have died where they had stood. None appeared to be the king, so Steven was not interested in these bodies for long. The six women still had their jewelry, so this place had not been looted.

Steven thought a moment, and then decided to leave everything be. If he wanted it, he could get it on the way out. He checked the swords of the guards. But these weapons were not what he had been told to look for. They were too ornamental. The sword he was looking for was functional.

Steven continued on, his torch in his left hand, his sword in his right. He began using the torch to burn the cobwebs from his path. He found a torch in a wall sconce, and touched his to it. Surprisingly it lit. Steven examined another opposite it, and found it to still have oil in it. So Steven quickly settled on a pattern. He would use his torch to burn the cobwebs, and light the torches as he went. But he left everything else unmolested. He found two doors opposing each other about ten paces in. These chambers were well carved and smoothed. The bodies within were of varying size, mostly adults with a few children, but very old. Steven would later conclude them to be the oldest in the complex. No grave robbers had been here. Many of the bodies were finely appointed. The next several rooms were the same, but of progressively newer age, judging by decomposition. The last room on the right was different. All the bodies here were children. The appointments were more childish in form. There were other children in the other rooms, but this one was full of them.

Again the thought came to him. The elves sent him here to learn of his heritage, as well as get the sword. Steven thought again about the warrior’s heritage: what did a warrior do that others did not? To fight and destroy indiscriminately? No. Thugs did that. To kill people and break things? No. Bandits did that. To preserve peace by preparing for war? Something stuck there but refused to come clear. But he was already a Marine, so why did he need to answer these questions? Steven decided to move on, and just let the answer come. But what did a ruined city, an empty fortress, and a tomb have to teach him?

Here he felt a pang of grief for all the children, and for the parents that had laid them here. One section alone was infants. In this room Steven remembered one reason why he had become a soldier. He had done it so that other people would have the freedom to raise their children as they chose, and not as someone else chose. He wandered the whole of this room. Thoughts of his own children came and went; as did the long dormant memory of his oldest brother. Steven had not thought of him in a long time. His oldest brother had died before Steven was out of diapers: he fell out of a window, shattering his skull. Steven had to flee the room to avoid being over come.

He left the room and it being the last room on the right, Steven turned to his right to the end of the hall furthest from the entrance. Slowly a form began to take shape in the dark. At first it spooked Steven, but since it did not move, Steven quickly regained his composure. As he lit the torches and introduced more light, the figure became more distinct. It was a statue, with three figures in heroic proportion: a man in armor, with a sword at his side; his arm was around a woman in a dress; she held a baby in her arm next to her husband. Her free hand rested on her shoulder where his rested. What did the statue mean?

The statue stood at the end of this hall, where it intersected another.

Looking at the statue, Steven realized that part of why he was a soldier was to defend a society where children did not have to die young, or go to war at the whim of some person. The heritage of a warrior, Steven concluded, was to fight the last war, and go home so that no more children would have to grow up just to go to war. Secure peace so the children won’t have to fight.

Steven put his torch to the cobwebs on the statue, and let them all burn off. Once it was clear, he turned to his left, and went down this passage, and down some stairs. The passage was as wide as the first, but did not have any doors. He went the depth of the rooms he had been in, and the passage went down some more stairs. These went down to the floor of a large hall with its roof lower than the floor of the passage and rooms above.

as tim�� o���g. He looked up at the flags above the fortress. Then back at his fellow guards. The only things to do to end this were unthinkable: Kill the King, or lower the flags. 

 

The dream faded.

 

Steven slept dreamless the rest of the night.

He awoke as the sun came over the horizon, the light bubbling across the ruins, as if hesitant to look on the scene of destruction yet again. Steven made himself some breakfast, and set about fashioning a torch from a long table leg, with oil soaked cloth he had brought with wrapped around the end. He finished the torch and went to the fortress. As he went his mind was consumed with what he had dreamed, remembering the ideas clearly even if he did not remember the images.

He crossed the bridge over the empty moat, careful to avoid the rotten timbers. Compared to the rubble of the city, the fortress was fairly clean. No bodies anywhere. No major structural damage. No rubble, save by collapse from neglect. The layout of the structure was straight forward, from a simple time and mode of thought. The front entry was a hub for the halls that led off to the left and right, and straight ahead. Stairs went up to the second and third floors of the wings. The building flowed with the hills it sat on, and a few wings had levels higher than the others.

Unlike the other places he had been to in this world, the ceilings were closer to the height he was used to. Though the place breathed well the stale smell still permeated, Steven soon acclimated to it and no longer noticed it. Digging a piece of chalk from a spare pocket, Steven started down the hall to his left, intending to conduct a ‘left hand search’ and methodically work his way around.

Tuesday
Feb182014

080 – Steven Goes Exploring 3

There were rows and columns of biers arranged across the room with a body on each one. The occasional pillar broke the pattern. There were also alcoves in the walls with slots with bodies in them. Several looked royal, but none looked kingly. The majority were men, many of them in armor. Many were women, a number of them were in armor. The difference of the armored figures was discernible by the breastplates, and how the skirt was arranged. But none were who he was looking for. He continued his clockwise pattern, starting at the relative 6 o’clock, and found some stairs in the relative 9 o’clock. Steven felt to follow these now.

These stairs descended and curved around clockwise into another hall directly below the warrior’s hall he had just passed through. The pattern of the biers was identical, all feet to the dawn, about two feet between columns and four feet between rows.

This was hall less than half full, but had more bodies in it, being a larger hall. Steven stopped as something clicked in his mind. He went back to the stairs. On either side were two guards that looked to be from the party out by the front doors. They appeared to have died here, rather than having been dragged here.

This puzzled Steven.

He abandoned his search to check on something. He went back to the upper hall. Steven then went around the room and found a clear passage at the relative 12 o’clock position for his search of this room. After leaving the hall, this passage came to another set of stairs going up. By this point Steven was sufficiently comfortable that he put his sword away. He continued to light torches as they presented themselves. Steven climbed these stairs. The passage traveled a short way, then turned from carved stone to masonry, and then was closed by large doors, barred on the other side. Steven suspected this was the way in to the tombs from the fortress, probably through the church. But why were the bodies by the front doors instead of here?

He went back to the statue, and down the right hand passage. This one swiftly dropped down a long flight of stairs and turned clockwise, coming into a larger columned chamber. On either side were individual alcoves; each with a large central bier, with two bodies, and several guards standing in recesses. Several had other bodies on other biers behind the front one. The lone bodies looked to be female, probably concubines. Steven moved through the alcoves looking for the most recent one. He continued to light torches as he went, and was vaguely wondering how much fresh air was really beginning to circulate, and what it would do for the tomb, and bodies. He found the last occupied one, but this one was arranged slightly different.

The man was laid carefully down, but the women looked like she had climbed up herself and lay down to go to sleep. The guards were not standing as the other guards in the place were. They were collapsed under their own weight. Steven stopped, and knelt to pay some respects. Then he moved in to find the sword.

He checked around the body, but had no need to search hard. There was no sword here. Steven checked the coat of arms, but it was carved, not suspended. The sword was not here.

Steven looked closely at the coat of arms. It only had one sword on it, and Steven guessed that it probably was what he was looking for. The sword had probably been passed to someone. So where would that person be? And who?

Steven turned, and looked at the guards and queen. Something else was odd. They were not dressed for duty or burial. Rather thy looked to be dressed for a funeral.

The bodies at the doors.

Could they have been a funeral procession that had been killed there, somehow?

Steven checked things over once more. Then he went back to the front doors. There was a noticeable low level inward breeze, and higher level outward one. Steven looked the bodies over more thoroughly. It was possible that they were a procession. But why here rather than elsewhere? What happened to these people, Steven thought.

He then remembered the guards in the lower hall. He picked up his torch, and went to the statue, turned left, down the stairs, left across the hall and down the next stairs. There were the four crumpled bodies. All dressed as the ones by The King and Queen, and the front doors. None wore functional swords.

Steven had to find why these guards were here. What was there to guard, or who?

He went into the room. There had to be enough spots to bury a brigade in just this one room. But was the sword here? Steven stopped.

Why was he spending so much time checking this place? Because he had already checked the fortress, and had not found anything there. Steven sat on the edge of a bier, and pulled out his water tube. He took a pull from it, and let the water wash his mouth, than spat it on the floor. He took another pull, and let the tube fall back to where it normally sat. He then pulled out some jerky and chewed a piece of this, as he thought.

The guard’s dream seemed somehow the key. The King had been dying. He had found The Kings body, so he had died. That meant that The Prince would be the next King. But The Prince was not with his parents in the other hall, and neither was the sword. The elves said the sword was here. He was not sure what this sword mattered, but they were adamant that he have this one. The Queen had got on the bier under her own power. There were four collapsed guards with her. There were four collapsed guards here. So The Prince/King was probably here. So which one was he? The one that got on a bier himself?

“They would want it to be find-able by the right person. The Prince would look like The Queen, here on his own and not placed.”

Steven got up and looked at the bodies. Which looked out of place? Where was the last one? That way. Steven went deeper into the room. He most likely would not be on the side. And the bodies would be laid out in order, with The Prince at the end. Steven could see the pattern and moved to find the end of it. Then he saw what he guessed was The Prince.

There were two bodies on the last used bier with several empty beyond it in the row. The bodies were sharing a moment that would last forever.

A woman’s dress was spread across the bier, with more clothes piled on the floor. These dead had nothing on for coverings, and the bodies were completely dried out, and shrunk to little more than skin, bones and hair. Steven guessed that the woman was on bottom, but was not interested in a detailed examination to find out for sure. Chuckling he turned to the stuff on the floor. There was a sword under the piled clothes.

Steven pulled it from the pile, careful not to stir up too much dust. The leather scabbard was stiff, and brittle. Steven pushed the scabbard off. It broke as it hit the ground. The sword was fine looking, though this light was not enough to really judge by. It was light for its size, and well balanced. The cross bar and hilt were bronze or gold, the grip a tight wrap of some kind of wire that provided a good grip. It was plain, with no ornamentation at all. The blade was long enough by local standards to be a hand and a half sword. Double edged and slim, it was purely functional. Heavier swords might give it a bit of trouble, but only for force, not for durability. The edge was well kept, the nicks having been smoothed and sharpened. It might need polishing.

Steven waved it around experimentally, and then the world changed around him.

 

He stood by the side of his father’s bed, in the King’s apartment. His senile father had lost strength through the previous night and morning. And the city was dying as fast as he was. He would be dead by nightfall.

The old king stirred. He recognized his surroundings. These were his last moments, and as his body shut down, his ghost inside had its faculties set free and at full power. The King looked at The Prince, and told him he loved him and to do his best. He then handed him the scepter in the symbol of passing the title.

The King turned to The Queen. The Prince turned away and left. He had some desperate business to conduct. His father, The King, died while he was away.

The Prince surveyed the situation. A win was hopeless. So he signaled the ceasing of the fighting by lowering the flags on the rampart. Word soon came back. The fighting would be stopped by nightfall; The King would have to surrender in the morning, and had until then to prepare for abdication.

The Prince sent back word that The King was dead, and would be buried in the morning. Then succession could happen, peacefully.

The scene shifted.

He was in the funeral line. A few priests led the way. He wished his brothers were here to help him carry the bier. But The Queen had secreted them out of the siege, unknown to The King. As it was, the heads of the personal guard were carrying The King, followed by a few more guards, The Queen and her guards, himself, and his wife, and their guards. The concubine/nurse and some courtiers, and a last set of guards followed the family. They had a brief service in the chapel, then entered the catacombs and from there the tombs. They crossed the hall and up the stairs, proceeded down the passage past the statue, and down to the Hall of Kings. They went to the last alcove, and the prepared bier. The body was set and covered. Seven previous generations of kings lay here, with their wives, honor guards, and a few concubines. A second brief service was held, and the priests retreated. The rest stayed and paid final respects.

The party reassembled, and proceeded out the way they had come. They went up to the main level, past the statue, down and across the Warrior’s Hall, into the passage to the catacombs. At the entrance to the catacombs, the doors were closed. They were barred from the other side. Nobody liked this. The party broke ranks and went back to the statue, and turned to go to the ground level entrance. The inner doors here were also closed and barred. They were trapped.

Then solid blackness seeped through the frame of the door. It snuffed out the torches, and went fast enough to grab all standing right at the doors. The royals and personal guards were at the back, and saw the Black Death spread. They knew now that escape was impossible. But they were not about to die here. The Queen, the Prince and his wife and eight guards turned and went back to the statue. Here they said their farewells and embraced. The Queen and the four oldest guards then turned and went down into The Kings Hall. The Prince, his wife and the other four guards went back to the catacomb doors, hoping to find them open.

A vain hope.

So they went back to the Warrior’s Hall. The Black Death had not filled to here yet. But it was at the top of the stairs. So they went down, and into the lower Hall. The guards took up position at the bottom of the stairs. The Prince took his wife’s arm and led her farther into the hall, to the next empty bier.

“What shall we do, My Husband?”

“We shall die in each others arms, My Queen.”

He reached for the tie of her dress at her neck.

Thursday
Mar062014

083 – Rox Learns Magic, Caspian Learns History, Steven Learns Jewelry 

Master Iver thought a moment. “You are hand fighting trained?”

Rox nodded. “Yes.” She held her thoughts in check, waiting.

“Come with me.” The elf led her out of his work room.

He led Rox to a nearby building, a gymnasium, and to one of the large rooms.

As they walked, he quizzed her. “Have you tried to couple magic with your physical moves?”

“No,” Rox answered, and then changed her mind as she thought. “Yes. While learning with the Sorceress, I would instinctively move to a still, focused mindset, as I have tried to do with you. I haven’t tried to throw any magical punches. She did try to teach me to create a magical rope and maintain it as I climbed it. I could not split my focus sufficiently to maintain the rope and climb it. Caspian has taught me some, but more practical than formal.”

Master Iver acknowledged this. “Some of our magic users initially have to discipline their minds before they are still enough to do magic. Then, as you are showing, they tend to do magic by finesse, rather than form; so ‘still and focus’.”

Rox stood to her ready stance, and focused.

The elf backed out of her line of sight. “Now, orient to the flow in the room.”

Rox opened her magic sense and then turned to her right, and stopped. She faced into the flow. Brief thoughts of feng shui went past, and then she returned to now. She felt and let the energy flow around her.

“Collect some energy,” she was instructed.

Rox again had several thoughts run through her, and let all of the cartoons slip away, and just let the energy flow into her, not just around her; to fill her, not just go past her.

She sensed the elf as an eddy behind to her left. “Find something in this room. Remembering all that I did, all the components, make that thing float without making a mess.”

Rox looked around and pointed at a rack of bo-staves. She grounded herself against surges; she pictured what she wanted to do, have a swirl of energy lift the rack up the wall, top flow balancing bottom flow; the energy nearby holding things down and as it went over the rack to hold the rack together; and the control mechanism in her hand. 

Float.” Rox put it in motion. Energy flowed from her out through her arm and hand over to the rack of staves, and around it. Rox lifted her hand and the rack lifted.

She thought about it moving toward her, but nothing happened. She set it back down, and let the energy dissipate to ambient.

Rox turned to her instructor. “What about movement in the other directions?”

He challenged her. “What do you suppose?”

Rox thought about this. “Two ways. One: tilt the column, and balance the setup in the desired direction and so forth. Two: a second column in the direction of travel. Maybe put the second on a swivel to control direction.”

He confirmed these. “Also, a third column for the third axis. As well add spin around each, and you can move things anywhere. Or, you could just use your hands”

They spent what felt like a few hours moving things around the gym. In the end, Master Iver challenged Rox to put everything back where it was. This one Rox knew, thanks to lessons from The Sorceress: the intelligence or spirit that maintained the physical form of the object also knew its proper place in the order of the world, both in space and in use. She put into the guiding matrix of the spell a node for each object to return to its home spot at a reasonable speed and without these things doing damage to each other. This resulted at first in the confused jumbling about of objects, as smaller objects moved toward larger objects, as the larger objects bumped about moving to their own spots around the room. Slowly the larger objects settled to their spots and the smaller objects settled into their spots within the larger objects.

They returned to Master Iver’s shop. Master Iver had been considering and thinking the whole way. Once in his shop, he sat down and began lecturing Rox. He prefaced by saying that much of what he had to say was already within her head, but she had not yet had the experience to order it properly. Then he started in.

“Magic is an imperfect art. Approach it wrong, and it will destroy you. The approach you are using is very dangerous. I set up and start running spells that can pickup the excess tension, one way or another, for the result that I want. That way I minimize the risk. You went straight for the result. It obviously works, but if your idea is not completely clear, you will get unexpected and dangerous side effects.” He scolded, as he instructed Rox.

“Such as lifting all the stuff, instead of the disk,” Rox contributed sheepishly.

“Precisely. Simple magic is generally safe enough to do this way. But for more complex magic, the power levels alone dictate a need for extra safety. Means to harness and bleed off excess energy.”

“So that it does not turn back and bite me.” Rox turned and pointed at a jug across the room. “Pow.”

A bolt of magic reached from her to the jug and popped it like a balloon, spilling a powder all over the floor. He gave her a scolding look for the mess. She sheepishly accepted his unspoken chastisement.

“Evidently that is your mode of choice. So we will proceed in that direction of training. Be careful that you have the end result clearly in mind; to focus the mind and clearly dictate the desired outcome. That is why most practitioners of magic use several languages, images, and bits of stuff in casting spells. As they get more practiced, they begin leaving bits out, because the end result is already clearly known.”

He looked at the shattered jug of powder. “Now, put it back how it was.”

 

Roxanne was off learning and practicing magic, and Steven was on his second day out of the city. So Caspian had gone to the library and indulged in some historical investigation.

Now Caspian sat in the café across from the hotel, passing time after his own dinner reading about the Charman Empire consolidation. He had been generally instructed about this history as a boy, but being four centuries and half a continent away, it had little direct impact on the specific history he had been instructed on. Nydecia was one of six kingdoms that had been consolidated into The Empire. The Charman Empire itself had then lasted three generations of leaders, and held the center trade routes of the continent. Then it splintered into factions that were subsequently picked off by surrounding nations. The direct remnant still existed, by a different name.

The former kingdom of Nydecia was east of the center of the continent, and now part of a kingdom that stretched further east. The elves library had little current to say on the subject. The older records had been put into storage, and were out of easy reach for Caspian’s interests.

With the sun going down, the wait-staff had lit the few torches and candles. As he read from the book, the rocks nearby that Verigan had marked and tuned to Steven’s amulet vibrated. Caspian put his book down, and watched.

First the glyph glowed, and then the dust swirled and picked up to a man-sized whirl of energy. Steven materialized and stabilized as the whirl of energy dissipated. Steven was filthy, from dust and dirt. But he had two swords. His first in its scabbard, another tucked through his belt just above the first. His bedroll had something rolled in it, and his shoulder pack was full of stuff.

Caspian followed Steven to their hotel, and ran him a bath. The bag was emptied; the clothes and bag were sent to be laundered. The large scroll was set aside, the smaller one set by the sword. Caspian was curious about the scrolls, but Steven was not yet talking about them. They lastly unrolled the bedroll. Steven let Caspian take the pack of parchment. He then rinsed the bedroll. Once all the blankets were hanging to dry, Steven set to washing himself in earnest. As Steven bathed, Caspian rinsed and set out the jewelry. By then Roxanne had shown up, having spent the last while with Master Iver. Once Steven was dry and dressed, Rox and Steven went to dinner and Caspian went to a hotel lounge to keep reading.

The next morning Caspian went with the Caplan’s to the jeweler, and had all the stuff from the tomb appraised.

Some of it was purely ornamental. The gold mail was dismissed as old artisanship. It was small rings in a one-to-six interlink pattern, but each ring was actually two as the gold would be too soft to support its own weight, so a second set of rings of another metal backed the gold. The mail dress would be worth more melted and separated. Or they could have a jeweler remake the dress, if they would give him one of the tiaras in payment. Caspian showed a heretofore hidden knowledge base when he said that for the labor involved, and the metal, if they wanted to have the dress remade the price was good.

The Caplan’s both passed on the dress. It is just to be separated and the metal recycled.

The tiaras were of good quality; most likely master-jeweler work, especially with the abundance of small gems in silver and platinum alloys.

The earrings were mostly semi-precious stones, and little more than costume. Two sets were of master-cut diamonds, matching a respective necklace each.

The rings were like the earrings, being mostly costume, but three were of significant jewel value with two matching the earring/necklace sets, four were signets for wax-seals.

The six necklaces were the real prize, only one was costume, the rest were of assorted makes with various levels of precious stones through out.

Last to be sorted were the bracelets. Nine were jeweled ladies bracelets, four matching the growing sets of jewelry; another dozen were men’s bracelets, some chains, some bands, most of costume value, some of significant value. None of it was magic. But it was worth a bit cumulatively.

All the pieces were laid out and sorted on a chamois.

After they had all been laid out and sorted Roxanne claimed one of the diamond and platinum sets for herself. This set had a necklace with herring bone base chain with diamond encrusted filigree hung from it, with some thirty individual stones dangling within the filigree. A set of bracelets, earrings, and a diamond crusted ring matched. The ring would have to be sized to fit Rox’s finger, but the rest hung comfortably. The hooks for the earrings smoothly fit the piercing in her ears.

“I’m going to keep this set,” she declared.

Steven looked at his wife, wearing the recently recovered jewelry. It looked a bit out of place compared to her current dun colored costume. “What are you going to wear it with? Looks like for our world, it would require black, or white.”

Rox interrupted Steven. “Well I will have to get a new gown, then.”

“You don’t wear gowns. Or you didn’t at home.” Steven did not bother to argue further.

�� n>����le='color:black'>Rox knelt, sensing under the disk. “I sense the column spiral out under the disk, and up around its edges. I think this is stabilizing it, keeping it level and still.”

 

She looked across the disk. “I sense some of the energy holding everything on the disk in place. Then it flows into a column that spirals up off the disk and dissipates out above head level. I am not sure what this is beyond venting the energy.”

Master Iver appeared pleased, and spoke. “Elementary physics; the energy needs a place to go. Also the upper column is pulling the disk up, to balance the pushing underneath. There are two more components you have not mentioned. One is around me, to push excess energy away past me, so that I do not get hurt by any surges. Another is within me, so I can control how high the push and pull of the columns are.”

Rox spoke as she reviewed her own immediately previous efforts. “I just wanted the disk to lift. Then was nervous as I felt I was trying to balance on a ball. It’s apparent I did not do so complex, or as safe a spell as you are.”

Master Iver lowered the disc, and the flow disbursed. For a moment Rox could sense the natural flow of energy through the room without effort. Then like a surge in a river, it was passed and the flow returned to its normal unnoticed level.