DargonZine | Volume 12, Number 9 |
or Bralidan, the rest of that week passed both far too swiftly and
agonizingly slowly. A small part of each day was occupied with attending
the entertainments, such as plays, concerts, tours, a hunt, that had
been arranged for the visiting delegation from the Siizhayip. The
visitors were at Plethiss to request a favor of the Duke of Grahk for
access to the Plains of Rihelbak. He had to do his duty as heir, and
that meant standing in for his father, Bralevant, who after all didn't
like the Siizhayip all that much. Except for the delegation's speaker,
the one named Kendra.
Bralidan didn't find his duty onerous, but he would rather have
been spending all of his time with Nikorah, instead of only most of it.
She was the daughter of the One of the Sun, the man who was able to
speak for the whole collection of nomad clans that made up the
Siizhayip. Bralidan had met the young woman only a month earlier, and
then only briefly. She had been in attendance at the ceremony in which
the Treaty of Rihelbak had been confirmed. She had captivated him then,
but he had not thought to see her again. Until she had turned up at the
gates of Plethiss with the other Siizhayip. And in the short time they
had had together so far, he had found that captivation turning into
love.
He was resolved to treat his time with Nikorah like a proper
courtship, and so was the perfect gentleman in her company. But he
wanted so much more. He burned with desire for her body. And even though
opportunity after opportunity arose for them to satisfy those lusts, he
passed every one by. Because he knew that he wanted more than her body.
He wanted her: all of her, forever.
What he couldn't quite work out, however, was whether she felt the
same way about him. Kendra, another Sun clan member and nominal leader
of the delegation, still preferred that Nikorah stay away from Bralidan.
But Nikorah ignored Kendra and continued to see him. So she was defying
her fellow clanswoman to be with him, but perhaps that was just because
she was bored. She certainly looked at him with desire, but what if that
was all it was?
And then there was the problem of what to do if she did love him
back. One of their favorite topics of conversation was the differences
between the way Siizhayip and Kuizhack lived. Kuizhack meant People of
the Stone, and was the Siizhayip word for people like him who dwelled in
permanent, fixed houses. No matter what he said, he couldn't convince
her that living in the same place year after year, confined inside stone
walls, was a good thing, a thing to be wished for. She felt it was a
punishment. Bralidan could certainly see her point of view much better
than she could see his, and sometimes he even agreed with her.
There was also the matter of his duty as heir to someday become the
Duke of Grahk. It was a duty that he had always feared. No matter how
hard he tried to learn, he just didn't think he had the aptitude to lead
Grahk -- a squad of teraehran perhaps, or even an army, but not an
entire duchy. Now, beyond it just being a position he felt unfit for, it
took on the aspects of a prison, keeping him from the woman he loved.
Each night, before sleeping and dreaming of Nikorah, he would spend
time contemplating his falcon-stone. He had found the jagged-edged,
intricately carved piece of sculpture in a hidden room in the catacombs,
and had immediately felt attached to it. He would trace the interwoven
ribbons of metal and glass that covered one face, and it made him feel
calm and safe. The falcon was his symbol, his standard, and it almost
seemed as though this falcon-carved stone was a piece of him, as though
it belonged to him, and had long before he had found it. He eventually
took to carrying the stone around with him as much as possible.
His dreams of Nikorah weren't just the results of the heat of his
youth, either. Yes, he had hot, sweaty dreams about her. But he also
dreamed of the two of them living in a domed, hide-covered, easily
movable ghur, or riding across endless open grassland at her side. There
was such freedom in those dreams -- not just the freedom of the open
land, but a freedom from his impending future, a freedom from walls and
servants and duty. A freedom from decisions that affected anyone other
than himself. It was a life he was coming to long for.
Kendra, senior herd-keeper of the Sun clan of the Siizhayip, found
herself still unused to living within stone walls. Even with the
practice of more than three years of living at Plethiss about
twenty-five years previously, she was still uncomfortable. She had tried
back then to adapt to the life of a Kuizhack, for her husband and then
their son, but it was just unnatural. She was Siizhayip, body and soul,
and she hated being confined like this.
Today, Kendra thought, the delegation would find out whether their
petition would be granted. She didn't hold out much hope. Duke Bralevant
had always been a grasping man, and she well knew his devotion to the
empire to which Grahk nominally belonged. She didn't think he had
changed enough in the twenty-two years since she had last seen him to
give up the Rihelbak Plains.
It was still mid-morning when the knock came at the door to her
quarters. Kendra opened the door, and found one of the mansion's pages
standing there. The boy handed her a rolled scroll, bowed, and walked
away.
She closed the door, then broke the wax seal bearing the symbol of
Grahk and unrolled the scroll. It was another invitation to the duke's
quarters. No gifts this time, just words. Bralevant had been trying to
maneuver a moment alone with her for the entire week the Siizhayip
delegation had been awaiting his decision. She wasn't sure, but she
thought that he might even have put off his decision just so he could
have this week to try to speak to her in private.
She had resisted all week, rejecting the gifts, ignoring the
letters, staying away from him at dinner and the entertainments he
deigned to attend. But this time, maybe she should go. She knew she
could resist his charm this time; she was no longer the child she had
been at that long ago confirmation ceremony, when a handsome duke with
mismatched eyes had charmed her away from the Great Steppes and her
natural way of life.
She dressed in a good tunic with a leather vest over it, beaded
with fox designs. She put on her best leather pants and her best riding
boots, and combed back her greying brown hair, tying it back with a
leather headband covered with beaded foxes. Thus prepared, she made her
way with familiarity to the duke's quarters.
She knocked on the door, and Osirek opened it. The aide smiled
neutrally when he saw it was her, and said, "Very good, Lady Kendra. I'm
glad you came this time. I will tell the duke that you have responded to
his summons."
"Never mind that, Osirek. I'm sure that Bralevant is quite prepared
for the eventuality of my visit. Why don't you go make yourself busy
elsewhere, while the duke and I converse privately?"
"As you wish, mi'lady. You *do* know the way." Osirek's smile
turned frosty with restrained disapproval, and he retreated from her
presence by leaving the duke's quarters.
Kendra went into the informal receiving room and through it to the
duke's sitting room. Bralevant was sitting in a simple wooden chair,
sipping wine from a delicate glass. When he heard the door open, he
lifted his head saying, "Yes, Osirek, did she ...?" When he saw her, he
smiled, his eyes, one blue and one brown, twinkling. "I see she did.
Welcome, Kendra." He stood, and finished, "I'm glad you decided to
accept my invitation. Won't you sit down?"
One of the seats in the sitting room was the kind of
canvas-and-poles chair that the Siizhayip commonly used. She wondered
whether she had left it here, or if Bralevant had fashioned one to try
to make her more comfortable. She was proud enough to refuse the tactic,
but she was wise enough -- not to mention, old enough -- to be able to
be comfortable without giving the duke any ground by it. So she sat in
the canvas chair and made herself appear at ease, but she didn't relax
one bit inside, where it counted.
She said, "So tell me, Duke, why have you asked me to your
quarters?"
Bralevant just smiled, and stood up. "Would you like something to
drink? I don't think I have any of that wine left you liked so much, but
this is a fine vintage. I'm sure you would like it." Kendra shook her
head, and the duke continued, "Very well. Have you and your fellow
Siizhayip been comfortable during your stay here?"
Kendra frowned, and said, "I think you know just how comfortable
any of us is likely to be, cooped up inside walls made of stone. Why
have you forced us to endure your hospitality? Why could you not give us
your answer a week ago?"
"I asked you to await my careful consideration of the situation.
You would not want me to make a mistake by acting too quickly, would
you? You know what happened the last time we acted in haste."
"If you hope to make me admit that it was a mistake to marry you,
Alev, you hope in vain. After all, you made the result your heir.
Bralidan has grown up handsome and strong, a fitting successor to the
current ruler of Grahk. That our bonding only lasted three years is
regrettable. That you tried to force me to stay with you, even as you
began to dally with that Omelli woman, is why I hate you."
"The past is the past, Kendra. Omelli died giving birth to my
second son, and I have been alone ever since. And then, you return to
me, and what can I do but hope? Hope that you forgive me, as I forgive
you leaving me. Hope that you could love me again, as I have always
loved you. Hope that you could stay again, longer than three years this
time."
Kendra shook her head in disbelief. "You spin your hopes like a
storyteller spins childrens' fantasies. You always did live in your own
little world, Alev. I tried to share it once, but I am not made for it.
You hope, once again, in vain."
Bralevant turned his back on her, walking over to the mantelpiece
and tracing a finger over the wooden sculpture of a galloping horse
Kendra had carved for him ages ago. He said over his shoulder, "Hope, as
usual, fails me. Well, then I will cease to hope and instead, attempt to
buy." He turned back to her and said, "If you stay with me, renew our
bond, become my duchess, then I will allow your people access to the
Rihelbak Plains. I will have the wall torn down, and I will tear up the
treaty. And the Siizhayip will have room to grow for another hand-score
of years."
"Alev, you know I would die if kept within these walls."
"But you would be with me until then. And isn't your life worth the
future of your people? Can you make that sacrifice?"
Kendra was silent for a while, thinking. She had a decision to
make, just as she had twenty-five years ago. But it was not the decision
that Bralevant thought.
She stood up out of the chair with the ease of long practice, and
said, "I must think, Alev. But tell me truth. Would you really return
the Rihelbak to the Siizhayip?"
Bralevant tried to look at her steadily, to convince her that he
was sincere. But his eyes flicked to the side several times before he
answered, and he tugged at his earlobe once. Finally, he steadied his
gaze and said, "Of course, Kendra. Of course."
She nodded. "I thought so." She turned and left.
Bralevant called after her, "It's only one life, Kendra!"
She muttered to herself as she walked back to her room, "You're
right, Alev. It *is* only one life."
Kendra sat on the edge of her bed and stared at the puzzle box in
her hands. Puzzle boxes weren't common to Siizhayip culture, but she had
learned of them from itinerant tinkers, and found them intriguing to
carve. And they tended to keep the things hidden within them very safe.
She remembered a similar puzzle box she had carried into this
mansion twenty-five years ago. That one had contained a charmed
fox-shaped brooch, and had been part of an elaborate plan set into
motion by the Elder Speakers to the Anhilizharnoh.
Kendra recalled the beginning clearly. It had happened several days
after the Treaty of Rihelbak confirmation ceremony where she had met and
fallen in love with Bralevant. Her continued pestering had almost
convinced the One of the Sun, Demahh's predecessor, to allow her to
leave the steppes to be with the Duke of Grahk. She had gone to sleep
that night attempting to marshal her arguments for the next day, and had
dreamed romantic dreams of her future in the stone halls of the place
called Plethiss.
She had been awakened in the middle of the night by an excessive
chill, and had been greeted by the translucent and glowing forms of four
people, two men and two women, dressed in stylized ceremonial shaman's
robes. After her initial fright had passed, she had realized that she
was being visited by the mysterious Elder Speakers who appeared to
individual clan members in that manner.
A voice that was a combination of four voices spoke. It said,
"Kendra, We have learned of your desire to live among the Kuizhack.
Ordinarily, We would caution you against this undertaking, and perhaps
even go so far as to forbid it, knowing the difficulties you have before
you. However, circumstances are different this time. We have a task that
you would be perfect to undertake for us, in return for which we will
grant you our blessing in leaving the steppes.
"We, the Elder Speakers, have seen that our people are slowly
outgrowing the land they have been given to live upon. Soon, more
territory will be required. It is Our feeling that the only territory
available is the place known as the Plains of Rihelbak.
"But We also know that the Duke of Grahk grasps this land with an
unseemly greed. The treaty that removes the land from our use is almost
sacred to him. However, We believe that it is possible to render that
very treaty into the instrument of our deliverance, the means by which
we can regain access to the territory we will need to grow and prosper
in the coming years.
"We have spoken to the Anhilizharnoh, the Lords of the Sky, and it
is with their advice and help that we propose the solution to our future
need. Items have been enchanted toward this purpose, and all is in
readiness. Only the method of delivery is left to assign, and your
devotion to the duke aligns perfectly with our needs. Will you accept
this task to serve your people?"
Kendra remembered her hesitation, and the reassurances of the
ghostly figures with one voice that no one would be harmed in the
process of securing a future for the Siizhayip. Eventually she had
agreed, and she had been instructed in the details of the complicated
yet subtle plan that the Elder Speakers had devised.
They had determined that the weak point in the Duke of Grahk's hold
over the Plains of Rihelbak were the confirmation ceremonies. If the
treaty was not confirmed five times in a row, then it would be rendered
void and the Rihelbak Plains would become part of the Siizhayip's
territory again.
Seeing this weakness, the Elder Speakers had devised a way to turn
it to their advantage. One of her favorite fox-shaped brooches had been
enchanted heavily with the intent of making the wearer forget about the
confirmation stipulation attached to the treaty. The enchantment was
strong enough to make those that came into casual contact with the
wearer also forget. If the brooch was given to the duke as a gift from
his new love, he would be sure to wear it always, and the enchantment
would do its work.
The treaty itself would be secured within another carving of hers,
a simple box enchanted with a spell that made it inconspicuous and
easily forgotten, even if it sat in plain sight. And the third part of
the plan involved altering any written references to the confirmation
clause stored away in the ducal mansion, so that no one could be
accidentally reminded of it. This would be accomplished by further
enchantments on small pieces of parchment that, when slipped into the
scroll cases or between flat bound leaves, would accomplish the
rewriting.
Kendra had received her permission the very next day, and had
swiftly packed her things and set out for Grahk, eager to be with the
duke and to carry out her mission. Bralevant had eagerly accepted the
fox brooch, as the Elder Speakers had predicted. The other parts of the
plan had been carried out surreptitiously. The keeper of the archives
had been flattered by her interest in the history of Grahk, and once she
had placed the treaty scroll in the enchanted box, she had just walked
deep into the archives and placed it on a shelf.
Time had passed, and the difficulties that the Elder Speakers had
mentioned surfaced. Her fantasies had died; Bralevant had not been quite
the man she had thought, and she found living the life of a Kuizhack all
but intolerable. She'd had no choice but to leave.
Once she had returned to the steppes, abandoning her only child,
Bralidan, in the process, she had waited for the first confirmation
ceremony with trepidation. She feared that her leaving would destroy the
plan. Too many things could go wrong, and she wouldn't be there to try
to make them right again. What if the enchanted items had been found?
What if as soon as she had abandoned him, Bralevant had removed the
brooch, and everything had been undone? But that hadn't happened. Four
times in a row, she was part of the Siizhayip group attending the
confirmation ceremony, and four times the Grahk Kuizhack didn't show up.
But the last time, the twenty-fifth year since the last
confirmation, the Fretheodan had shown up, ruining the plan. And then
she was appointed to lead the delegation that would go to Grahk and ask
Duke Bralevant to voluntarily give up the Rihelbak Plains.
And as before, the night after she had been informed of Demahh's
appointment of her as leader of that delegation, she had been visited by
four glowing translucent forms. Whether they had been the same forms as
before, or whether they represented the same retired shamans as before,
she didn't know. What she knew now that she hadn't the previous time,
was that the Elder Speakers were not supernatural intercessors for the
Lords of the Sky, but just a body of old shamen who helped guide the
Siizhayip by focusing on the future, something that the council of clans
seldom had the opportunity for, burdened as they were by the day to day
concerns of her people.
This time, Kendra hadn't been given a choice. She had been given a
phial filled with poison, and had been given her real mission to
Plethiss: to ensure that the Siizhayip regained Rihelbak.
The Elder Speakers had told her that an augury they had performed
led them to believe that the successor to Bralevant would return use of
the land to the Siizhayip. It was her task, in the rather likely
eventuality that Bralevant refused the petition, to ensure that the
duke's heir had the chance to make the prophesy come true sooner rather
than later.
Kendra's problem was that she wasn't sure. Not that the poison was
required; she knew that Bralevant had lied to her about relinquishing
control of the Rihelbak. He would never let that land out of his
control, not while he lived. What she wasn't sure about was whether she
could kill him.
The hate of twenty-two years ago still lived within her, but so did
the love. Bralevant himself had given her a convincing argument for
carrying out the plan -- it *was* only one life -- but Kendra just
didn't know whether she could take that particular life.
Complicating the issue was the involvement of Demahh's only child,
Nikorah, and her own son Bralidan. If she did away with Bralevant, then
Bralidan would become duke. But did the heir feel the same way about the
Rihelbak as the duke did? No matter his Siizhayip heritage, Bralidan had
been raised by Bralevant as a Kuizhack. It was only natural that the son
would think like the father.
And beyond that, if Bralidan and Nikorah were in love, as their
actions over the past week would suggest, then Nikorah would want to
stay with him, and Kendra knew how ultimately destructive that would be.
As heir, Bralidan had more freedom, and could at least spend *some* time
on the steppes. So, by following her orders, she could be dooming her
own son to ultimate unhappiness by forcing him into the role of duke and
all of its restrictions.
It was all too complicated, with dilemma atop dilemma. She almost
wished to have such a simple plan to carry out as her first mission had
been.
Midway through dinner that night, Bralidan reached a decision. Amid
the noise of the nobles and Siizhayip crowded into the great hall,
enjoying themselves and their food, everything just came together for
him. Perhaps it was the way he was so comfortable with Nikorah at his
side. Perhaps it was the dread he felt in anticipation of his father's
speech that would happen later in the evening, the speech wherein Duke
Bralevant would tell the delegation from the steppes that he would not
be giving the Rihelbak Plains back to them. It seemed almost cruel for
Bralidan's father to have kept the Siizhayip here for a week just to
tell them the same thing he could have told them a week ago. He felt
embarrassed to be a Fretheodan, to be of Grahk, to be a Kuizhack. So
perhaps his decision was a means of running away from all that. Or maybe
he just wanted to try to find happiness for himself in a way that didn't
involve the predestination of his heritage.
He wanted to tell Nikorah right away, but the noise level in the
room precluded that. Conversations were being conducted in shouts, and
he didn't want to announce his plans to everyone just yet. So he waited
eagerly for the moment when he could get her alone and give her the
news.
In the meantime, he continued to enjoy himself. He found himself
wondering what gatherings of Siizhayip were like. He pondered what
different kinds of food he might eat out on the steppes. He was looking
at everything around him with new eyes, as if he might be seeing some of
them for the last time. Instead of making him sad, each such realization
only buoyed him higher, for each one reinforced the fact that he had
decided to change his life. With or without Nikorah, he was going to go
live on the steppes, and he didn't think he had ever been happier in his
life.
In the pause between the main and dessert courses, as the servants
started to clear away the tables to make space for dancing, Bralidan
lost track of Nikorah. Everyone had left their seats to stretch their
legs and talk in groups that were different from their seating patterns.
He had felt a touch on his arm and Nikorah had said something about
being right back, and then she had vanished.
The servants started bringing in the dessert course, setting the
sweet confections on a table on one side of the room, and Nikorah hadn't
reappeared. Perhaps he had heard her wrong? Was she expecting him to
meet her in his or her rooms? Bralidan began to get a little worried,
and frequently scanned the milling throng in the hall, looking for
Nikorah's blonde hair.
He made a slow circuit of the room, glancing down the various
corridors that led away from the great hall. No sign of her, anywhere
... until he reached the windows and he looked out to see a figure
standing atop the outer wall. The intense moonslight shone brightly,
reflecting from the blonde hair of what had to be Nikorah.
Bralidan hurried from the hall and made his way onto the walkway
atop the wall. As he walked toward Nikorah, he marveled at the picture
in front of him. The light of the two moons seemed focused on her, due
to the lack of any other feature around her. She almost glowed as she
stood there, her attention focused on something set on one of the
merlons in front of her. His mind almost automatically rendered the
scene in terms of how he would make a mosaic of it, separating out the
handful of colors he would need -- several shades of black or dark grey
for the night sky and the wall, off-white and pale yellow for the two
moons, another yellow for Nikorah's hair, a host of greens for the gown
she was wearing. He did his best to memorize what he saw in his mind,
and then continued toward her.
He was almost next to her by the time he was able to see what she
was looking at, since she had it cupped in her hands. She seemed to be
staring at it very intently, and when Bralidan saw it, he stared at it
as well, though not for the same reason.
What he saw in her hands made his hand go to the large pouch he had
taken to carrying. He felt the irregular shape of his falcon-stone with
relief that turned to curiosity. If his stone was still in the pouch,
what was Nikorah looking at? It seemed to be an approximately pie-wedge
shaped slab of stone with intricate carving and interwoven bands of
metal and glass on its surface. Just like his falcon-stone.
He undid the clasp of his pouch and drew out his stone. He compared
the two carvings and saw that they were not the same in actual design,
but he thought that they might both be from the same larger work.
Bralidan cleared his throat so as not to startle her, and said,
"Greetings, Nikorah. I couldn't help but notice that object you are
holding. What is it and where did you get it?"
Nikorah turned her green eyes on him, and he thought the glow her
smile brought to her face outshone both moons. She looked back at her
stone; it was carved with the figure of a cat, Bralidan noticed. She
said, "It is a piece of a carving of something. My father bought it for
me from a tinker several winters ago. It is musical, too -- if you tap
the metal strips, they make notes. See?" She tapped at the silver and
gold bars crisscrossing the surface of her stone with the ring on her
smallest finger, and clear notes belled out of them.
Bralidan said, "I wonder if mine does that too?" He set his stone
next to hers and used his knife hilt to tap the metal ribbons. Delicate,
pure notes issued forth, and Bralidan said, "That's amazing!"
"You have one too?" asked Nikorah. "Did you also get it from a
tinker?"
"No, I just recently found it in the catacombs under Plethiss. But
they certainly seem to be remarkably similar, don't they?" Bralidan
stared at the two stones and something about them seemed to nag at his
brain. The ribbons of metal and glass seemed almost like they should go
together, though the large animal carvings didn't fit together. But what
if ...
Bralidan picked up his stone and tried to fit its edge to the edge
of Nikorah's stone that it was next to. Some of the strands matched, but
not all of them. And then he thought he saw something. He reached out
for her stone, and just before he actually touched it, he realized that
she might not like that. He turned to her and said, "Oh, I'm sorry. May
I just move your stone a little?"
She was staring at him with a gleam in her eye that had nothing to
do with the moonslight, and he almost forgot about the stones
altogether. But that something he had seen nagged at him, and he
blinked, breaking eye contact. Nikorah took a moment to respond, but
finally she said, "Oh, ah, yes. Sure, go ahead."
Bralidan turned back to the parapet and lifted Nikorah's stone. He
reversed their positions, set them back down, and stepped back. Nikorah
gasped; the match was obvious. Those two pieces of stone had once been
joined together. The beast that was entwined with his falcon wasn't a
dog, but a cat: the very cat that was on Nikorah's piece.
Bralidan stepped back toward the parapet, and Nikorah echoed his
movement. They each reached out to their own piece, crossing arms. They
looked at each other and smiled. Bralidan thought of the decision he had
made over dinner. Was this some kind of confirmation of that decision? A
sign from the gods? Or just coincidence?
He turned back to the stones and gently pulled his stone toward
Nikorah's, and she did the same with her own. The two stones touched,
and fit together perfectly.
Before he could make any remark, or even remove his hand from his
stone, he felt a tingle in his fingertips where he touched his
falcon-stone. He noticed then that both stones were starting to glow
slightly, and this time it was no simple reflection of the light of the
moons. The glow brightened slightly, briefly flared up, making Bralidan
squint, and then faded away totally.
The tingle was gone, but something else was also gone: the split
between the two pieces! No dark, jagged line ran down the middle of the
joined piece; each band of silver or gold or glass that had been broken
between the two pieces was now joined up perfectly and whole again.
Bralidan touched the middle of the now single piece of stone
gingerly. The tingling did not resume, and he could feel no hint of the
separation that had once split the piece. He was just about to ask
Nikorah if she somehow knew what had happened, when she burst out with,
"Look! Wykuza's Attendant is on fire!"
Bralidan looked at Nikorah, and then followed her pointing arm up
into the sky to see a great fountain of fire rising from Celene, the
smaller moon. He stared at the spectacle, and then laughed out loud. Yet
another omen! Without a doubt, the gods *were* trying to tell him
something.
Periodically, Celene produced a gout of flame that commonly lasted
three or four days. Astrologers and priests were constantly trying to
predict when the Fireflow Mountains on Celene's surface would erupt.
They were seldom successful except, it seemed, by accident. Whenever the
flame appeared, it was taken as a favorable omen by any with plans to
promote. The Festival of the Fountain, which always followed the
appearance of Celene's Flame, was a very auspicious time to begin
anything.
Bralidan's doubts and reservations about the decision he had made
were all wiped away. This was what he was meant to do. He turned to
Nikorah, who was still looking up at the celestial spectacle. He briefly
wondered what Celene's eruption meant to the Siizhayip, but he decided
that he would find out in good time.
"Nikorah," he began, and she turned her attention to him. He
continued, "Over dinner tonight, I came to a resolution in my heart, a
resolution that has only been strengthened and confirmed by the mystery
of the carved stones and the display above us. I have decided to leave
Plethiss and Grahk. I wish to live on the Great Steppes, to live as one
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