Authors: Michael A Stackpole
things, but nothing quite matched the Wastes. He found all of it hauntingly familiar, as if he
were half-remembering dreams.
The western reaches seemed to be full of places apart from the world. It took them a day
to get through a lush valley carpeted with maroon plants that bore massive blue blossoms.
The stems and roots throbbed, and none of the horses would eat them or the flowers.
Tyressa had picked one blossom, and a whole swath of flowers had snapped shut in a
rippling wave. Keles had dug into the ground and, as nearly as any of them could make
out, the plants shared a network of roots.
Even more interestingly, the valley began to shift. The land itself moved, deepening the
valley and urging them forward. Things never got to the point where they were in danger
of being crushed, for the land’s swelling came gently. Moraven just felt as though the
valley was nudging them along the way a finger might nudge a caterpillar off a leaf.
He’d looked over at the Viruk trotting alongside them. “This valley can’t possibly be alive.”
“No more so than the
gyanrigot,
but that does not prevent them from moving.”
Things continued to get more strange, as if each valley or plain had been shaped
according to a plan. One meadow they rode through caused Rekarafi to stop dead and
just crouch amid the flowers. Moraven wasn’t sure why, but Ciras offered a quiet answer.
“On Tirat there are scrolls. They are very old and on them are pictures of plants that no
longer exist.” He looked around. “They look like these.”
The swordmaster rode over to the Viruk. “We can linger here, if you wish.”
“And allow me to wallow in a past that will never return?”
“Let you refresh memories that once brought you joy.”
Rekarafi looked at him carefully. “Even happy memories hurt. It’s the separation.”
Moraven had ridden off to allow the Viruk some peace. The ancient one’s words had
found resonance in him. There was something about the Wastes he did not like. He
wanted to ascribe it to constantly feeling the tingle of magic, but that had never been an
unpleasant experience before. Still, he was so used to controlling magic that the sensation
had him constantly on guard, and that did wear him down.
But as unsettling as he found the land of wild magic, Ciras clearly found it more so, and
this bothered Moraven. He had not been as young as Ciras when he first felt the tingle
of
jaedunto,
and had been more fortunate in having had training in a variety of schools prior to that. He couldn’t remember that training, but it had existed and Master Jatan’s
instruction brought the skills back to him, even if he could not recover the memories.
The
serrian
experience had given him discipline and had trained him how to evaluate
experiences so he could learn from them. This he had done immediately, and learned how
to expand his access to the magic of swordsmanship. Phoyn Jatan had recognized his
potential and position. He also took measure of Moraven’s maturity and explained very
simply that he was at a crossroads in his life. If he were to view
jaedunto
as power, as some sort of right that allowed him to do as he willed, the power would twist him. Though
he would live for generation after generation, his existence would be an eternity of
torment. He would never know peace.
Taking to heart Master Jatan’s teaching, Moraven slowly learned how to harness his
power. His lessons did come slowly, however, mastered only over time. He could never
forget the haunted look in the eyes of young Matut when he’d slaughtered bandits without
a thought on the road to Moriande. From that day forward, if it were possible to avoid
combat, he did. If it were possible to avoid killing, he did. Where he had to kill, he made it
clean and quick.
Ciras had not yet reached the point where he could separate the desire to perfect his skill
from the consequences of employing that skill. Ciras did argue that the slaying of ruffians
in Asath really mattered little and, in fact, had been necessary to prevent any alarm about
Keles’ escape. Moraven agreed with both points. Had he not agreed with the latter, he
would not have slain those he faced. The former point, however, was not as clear-cut.
While the death of a ruffian had limited consequences—grief to those who loved him being
the most likely—that view failed to take into account the effect on the swordsman.
Moraven could not remember every person he’d ever slain, and believed the peace
of
jaedunto
insulated him from many of those memories. It did not save him from all of
them, however. He’d killed in battles, in roadside encounters, and in duels. He recalled
how it felt when a sword stroked a belly open, or the scream when a limb parted company
with the body. Each time he took a life, it weighed his spirit down.
In realizing my full
potential, I block others from realizing theirs.
Moraven was fully aware that one school of thought about
jaedunto
suggested this was
entirely necessary. It suggested that the way one reached that lofty position was by
assuming the potential of those slain along the way. The obvious contradiction of this was
a skilled cobbler whose skill slew no one, yet grew daily and carried him ever closer
to
jaedunto
. Perhaps there was more than one path to
jaedunto,
or just that with each masterpiece made, someone else was robbed of the chance to have created it.
Regardless of the theoretical source of the power, hard work, discipline, and patience
were all seen as vital. In their wanderings, Ciras Dejote had developed a certain
impatience which, while it had not yet entered the realm of swordplay, did bring with it a
disturbing contempt. He had no use for Borosan Gryst and his
gyanrigot
. While Moraven
had been impressed with the Naleni’s skill at creating and re-creating the devices, Ciras
harped on how quickly they broke, or how other, more simple methods could accomplish
what they did.
Moraven had tried to deflect Ciras by giving him a simple duty. In their survey they cut
across signs of a bandit company scouring the landscape. They found evidence of raids at
several small encampments.
Thaumston
prospectors had been murdered and any store of
the precious mineral stolen. Likewise they’d discovered a number of small tombs—things
from ancient cairns to tiny caves that had been walled shut—which had been opened and
the contents rifled.
To Ciras fell the duty of recording all evidence of the band’s predation. This kept him
focused. The idea of meeting and dealing with cutthroats, murderers, and defilers of the
dead fueled him. It sharpened his powers of observation and even sparked his
imagination. He watched the tracks so closely he could identify individuals based on their
horses and footprints. He gave them names and would report back on their current states
of existence.
Unfortunately, this duty also fed his impatience. Whenever they would find fresh tracks, he
would want to set off immediately in pursuit. Moraven always forbade it, citing the need to
help Keles. Ciras argued that their mission from Master Jatan demanded they intercept
the raiders and should take precedence. Moraven reminded him that the mission had
been given to
him,
not Ciras, and he would decide when the time to strike was at hand.
Finally, they had run across tracks that told a story that required investigation. Moving
through lowlands, they came to a canyon splitting the face of an escarpment. The bandits
had ridden into it, then most of them had come back and continued along the escarpment
toward the northeast. Yet three of them had not returned, and Moraven found his curiosity
piqued.
He chose to ride in the lead and studied the rock walls rising up so high the sky became
but a thin ribbon of blue. He saw no one up there, nor any signs of climbing, but he
remained alert. Moraven was fairly certain that the bandits had no idea they were being
trailed, so the chances of their setting up an ambush were minimal—and using only three
men to do so was foolish. Assuming, however, that the missing members of the group
might be dead meant that something had killed them.
Whatever or whoever that was will
present a similar threat to us.
Three miles in, the canyon opened onto a narrow valley that continued for another couple
of miles before closing in again. Moraven could not see to the far end, but found it easy to
imagine that the trail led to the top of the escarpment. It looked to be a fairly convenient
way to move to the highlands, and doubtless was used by people and animals alike.
It was not without its perils, however. Three hundred yards into the valley sat a small pool
of water roughly thirty feet in diameter. Not a ripple showed on its surface, and the sun
reflected brightly from it. Given that much of the water in the Dolosan lowlands had a
brackish quality to it, this pool looked quite inviting.
The only thing that spoiled the image was the circle of bleached skeletons and fresh
bodies around it. Most lay with their heads facing the pool but a few, including one of the
bandits, had been running from it. The circle touched the valley’s east and west walls, and
several skeletons huddled against the stone—including a couple of warriors in armor.
Moraven reined up, and the others spread out in the small safe zone nearest the canyon,
with the Viruk squatting in a thin slice of shadow to the east. The horses stamped and
shied, not wanting to linger in this place of death.
Keles patted his horse’s neck. “I don’t blame you for not liking it here.”
Ciras rode up beside Moraven and pointed his quirt at one of the bandits. “That is Pegleg
and the dead bay is his horse. The other two are Cutheel and Solehole. Pegleg went
down first, and Cutheel next, knocked out of his saddle. Solehole went down with his
horse and tried to run. He may have even dived for Cutheel’s horse—that, or fell—then
tried to crawl away before dying.”
“I think your reading is correct.” Moraven used a hand to shield his eyes from the sun and
peered more closely at the bandits. From where he sat, he couldn’t see what had killed
the horses, but Solehole had a hole in his overshirt right over his spine. It appeared to be
a burn mark, with considerable scorching around it. One of the armored skeletons also
seemed to have a hole in his breastplate, but it was too far distant for Moraven to figure
out what had caused it.
He slid from the saddle. “There definitely seems to be a perimeter. Stay back. I want to
see what happens when—”
“If I might make a suggestion, Master Tolo?”
Ciras spitted Borosan with a harsh stare. “Quiet,
gyanridin
. My Master knows what he is doing.”
Moraven laughed. “Actually, I don’t. I would welcome a suggestion.”
“It would have been easier had we not abandoned my wagon at Telarunde, but I’ll make
do.” Borosan climbed down off his horse and walked back to the packhorse he’d been
leading. He opened a pouch and pulled out the mouser. “We can use this to see what is
out there.”
The swordsman nodded. “Excellent idea.”
The
gyanridin
bowled the mouser into the circle and it snapped its legs out the instant it stopped rolling. The little metal ball scuttled forward, then left and right, slowly closing with the dead bay.
The pool reacted. As if a rock had dropped at its heart, a ripple spread out in a perfect
ring. It hit the edges, but instead of lapping over, it reversed and sped back in. It picked up speed, and when it converged at the center, a column of water shot ten feet into the air. A
spherical drop leaped up and hung there, glistening in the sunlight as the column flowed
down again.
The sphere throbbed and altered its shape. It flattened into a disk, then thickened in the
middle. Sunlight flashed through it, and suddenly the mouser began to smoke. The
little
gyanrigot
continued its dash toward the dead horse and the zigzagging course forced the disk to shift shape and reposition itself. Several black char marks dappled the
mouser’s shell, but it reached the dead horse and hid between haunch and tail.
A final puff of smoke matched the curling of tail hair. The disk became a sphere again and
floated there. Light played through it slowly and languidly. It appeared almost inviting and
certainly benign.
And had I not seen what I have just seen, my thirst might have driven me to accept the
pool’s hospitality.
The Keru crouched at the edge of the death circle. “I don’t know what it is. I don’t know if it is alive, so I don’t know if we can kill it. I don’t know if we should even try, but I’ve grown to be fond of that little mouser.”
“It would be a pity to lose it.” Moraven ran a hand over his jaw, then glanced right at Ciras.
“What are you doing?”
His apprentice neatly folded his overshirt and began to draw off his shirt, despite the chill
air. “I am the swiftest among us. I will run to the mouser and retrieve it. If I dodge as it did, the sphere will be unable to kill me.”
Sacrificing yourself for something you despise? Perhaps there is hope for you,
Ciras.
Moraven held a hand up. “That may be a bit premature. Master Gryst, can you not recall your mouser?”