DargonZine | Volume 12, Number 12 |
erthafel, Duke Arvinsosh's chief Justicer, found the duke's summer
processions to be an odd mixture of light work and festival
celebrations. Normally, he spent the summer riding the quarters of the
duchy, distributing high justice where it was needed, serving in the
duke's, and when necessary, the king's stead. But during the duke's
periodic processions his role was more than official. He usually only
had to take up his office when a decision by local justicers was
questioned by someone of high enough influence in an area the procession
was passing through.
It was the second day of the summer festival and the procession was
once again lodged at the somewhat excessive Mordairi Holding.
Gerthafel's quarters within the manor house were opulent in the extreme,
almost uncomfortably so, but he preferred being able to sleep in a real
bed rather than a cot in a tent like the bulk of the personnel on the
procession. Mordairi manor was large enough that the senior members of
the procession were given their own rooms, while normally everyone but
the duke and his personal staff slept in tents set up somewhere on the
landholder's property.
The midday meal had just finished, when a group of seven riders
rode up to where the food had been set out on long tables in a cleared
field next to the house. They dismounted and walked straight to the
duke, one distinguished older man in the lead. That man said, "If it
please your grace, I am Franal, Lord of Granavil. I have come looking
for the new Mordairi bard; there has been a murder and a robbery at
Granavil and we believe that he is responsible."
Duke Arvinsosh stood and said, "Yes, I remember you, Master Franal.
Who has been murdered and what has been stolen?" He turned and scanned
the group gathered around the meal until he spotted Gerthafel, whom he
motioned over.
"Your grace, it was our resident artist, Eilonvil, who was
murdered. And our luck-stone was stolen. The Mordairi bard, Bonavec,
visited us yesterday; he seemed quite taken with Eilonvil, who has been
mourning the loss of our second son, Derokein, whom she loved deeply. He
cheered Eilonvil up greatly, for which we were glad. We gave him a room
last night, but this morning we found her dead in the main room, and the
luck-stone, a fox-carved fragment of sculpture, was missing."
Gerthafel took up the questioning. "You are sure that the man was
the bard?"
"Well, he said that he was. Why would he lie?"
Gerthafel looked at Master Franal with a steady, knowing look. The
man had the decency to look a little sheepish. Gerthafel said, "Well,
describe him, just so we can be sure." The prospective bard for the
Mordairi Holding had traveled from Sengintol with them, so he knew what
the young man looked like fairly well.
"Ah, he was tall and had brown hair. He dressed in fancy clothes,
and played the lute. His eyes were green and he had a big nose, and a
scar under his left eye down his cheek. He played like a Master Bard,
but he didn't sing all that well."
Gerthafel compared the description he had been given and found some
discrepancies. Bonavec was tall, brown-haired, green-eyed, and had a
large nose. However, he had no scar, played only middling well, and sang
like a songbird. Something was wrong.
"Tell me more, Master Franal." Gerthafel listened to a recounting
of the evening meal and Bonavec's musical performance. Several different
versions were given, but all were essentially the same. He wasn't
absolutely certain, but he thought that the man that the Granavil family
had entertained was not the young bard Bonavec.
Gerthafel turned to one of the Mordairis and said, "Have you seen
your new bard lately?"
"Well, no, I don't think so," was the reply.
"When did you last see Bonavec?"
"Yesterday? No, the day before."
"I don't suppose he's here now, is he?"
There was a general scuffle of feet as people looked around for the
young man, but he was not among their company. Then, because he was
thorough and knew that something was wrong, Gerthafel asked whether
anyone else was missing. In all, four people besides the bard were not
present. Two were servants of the Mordairis, known to slip away from
their work at any and every opportunity. The other two missing people
were from among the duke's party, two sisters named Maeanat and
Tironvil. With some difficulty, he recalled that Maeanat -- who was with
the duke's personal guard -- was tall, green-eyed, big nosed, and bore a
scar down one of her cheeks.
With some suspicions building, Gerthafel organized a group of
guards to ride back to Granavil Holding. The eight of them, including
the duke and Lord Granavil's eldest son, rode as fast as possible for
the neighbor holding; it had already been too long since the robbery and
murder to hope for any good clues, but Gerthafel hoped that one of them
might be able to pick up the murderer's trail.
Maeanat took her time getting to the meeting point, obscuring her
trail as much as possible. She wasn't concerned with being found
eventually, just as long as she and her sister had the time to enact the
charm. After that, being caught wouldn't matter all that much.
As she rode, she found herself regretting having to kill Eilonvil.
Befriending her had been a spur of the moment action; she had been
riding around the Granavil manor house to make sure that no one was home
before breaking in and stealing the stone, when she had spotted someone
in the graveyard. Putting on her Bonavec performance that she had been
practicing for weeks, she had gone up and introduced herself as the new
bard from the Mordairi holding. She had been surprised at the connection
she felt with the grieving woman. Even though she had never met Eilonvil
before, she felt like she had known her for years. Even playing at being
a young man, she hadn't found it difficult at all to be a companion to
the woman.
The secondary plan -- to get the woman to let her into the manor,
then slip away and steal the stone -- had also been abandoned as it had
seemed more natural to slip away into the Granavil lands and spend the
afternoon together. Once the two of them had returned to the manor
house, it had been relatively easy to continue her role and be the bard
for the whole family. Even though she had spent most of her life
fighting, first on the streets of Sengintol and later in the service of
the duke, she had always had an aptitude for playing music, able to pick
up any instrument and with just a little experimentation, play it with
ease. This served her well in her charade, and as far as she knew, no
one saw her as anyone but Bonavec the bard.
Perhaps she should have waited longer before trying to steal the
stone, which had been on the mantel just as she had remembered. But she
knew that Tironvil was already waiting at the meeting place, and the
sooner they met up the better, which was when Eilonvil had surprised her
in the manor house's main room. The act had been easy, almost
unthinking, a product of her upbringing rather than her immediate
desires. But she needed time to get away, and a witness to her crime
wouldn't provide nearly enough of that. Whereas with Eilonvil dead and
the supposed bard Bonavec missing, suspicion would naturally fall on the
group of people at the Mordairi Holding, giving her even more time to
get to the Veneletri Stones and enact that charm.
She thought herself fortunate that her ride wasn't further hampered
by the darkness she rode through, but the roadway was clearly if crudely
marked and both moons were in the sky providing plenty of light. In due
time, she met up with Tironvil at the crossroads as they had arranged
and without even a word of greeting, both started off on the next leg of
their journey.
As they rode side by side, Maeanat said, "So, Ahnev, did everything
go well with Bonavec?"
Tironvil replied, "Oh yes, just perfectly. He never even noticed
his missing clothes or instruments. Fortunate, I suppose, that they
weren't his favorite instruments. And he seemed to have no reservations
about the story of you wanting to meet him at the Veneletri Stones. But
I still wonder whether it was wise to send him there. I doubt he will
have stuck around there for so long, since he left for them two days
ago, but still, it is some kind of clue as to where we are."
"Maybe I want them to find us," said Maeanat. "And it is not as
though I know many of the local landmarks after all. It isn't important
anyway, as long as they don't find us until we've completed the charm.
And then ..."
"Right, and then it won't matter. *If* the charm and the stones
work as promised."
"Oh, they'll work. I know it. I *feel* it. Don't worry, sister. Our
future is assured." And somehow, Maeanat really believed that, as though
her entire life had been leading up to this series of events, and soon
it would be complete. Nothing had gone wrong yet, and she knew that
nothing would. This was their destiny!
Tironvil said for the hundredth time, "We're lost."
Maeanat sighed. "Yes, we're lost," she answered, trying to restrain
herself from hitting her sister.
"How could we be lost?" Tironvil whined.
"Because, Ahnev, I've never been here before!" Maeanat shouted.
"Sorry, no need to get angry. But, I thought that you said that it
would be a snap to find the Veneletri Stones from anywhere south of the
Mordairi and Granavil lands."
"And I'm sure it would be, if only everyone wasn't off at their
summer celebrations. But we'll either find the stones or someone to ask
directions of eventually. If, that is, I don't end up killing you before
then. So, if you wouldn't mind, please stop reminding me that we're
lost!"
"I'll try, sister. I'll try."
Even riding as hard as possible, Gerthafel and his group didn't
have very much daylight left by the time they arrived at Granavil
holding. The best tracker among them scouted the grounds around the
manor house, but didn't find anything of much promise. Giving up the
search for morning, the group entered the manor house. Eilonvil's body
had been wrapped and moved to the salt house, but nothing else had been
touched. Unfortunately, a detailed examination of the main room revealed
no clues. Neither did the body, save for the knife, which bore the crest
of the Sengintol Bardic school. The Granavils invited the duke's people
to supper and to stay the night. There was no entertainment after the
meal that night; everyone was eager for morning light when perhaps more
clues could be found outside.
Gerthafel was trying to coordinate a methodical search of the
grounds around the manor house in the middle of the next morning when a
familiar figure rode up on horseback. All of the duke's men recognized
Bonavec, and immediately surrounded him while he was still mounted,
swords drawn. The duke called out, "Come down from there, bard Bonavec.
We have some questions for you."
Bonavec dismounted cautiously, confusion evident on his face. The
horse was led out of the circle, and the duke's guards closed in around
Bonavec. Then, when some of the Granavil family had come over, cries
went up that the man within the circle of swords was not Bonavec.
Gerthafel wasn't surprised. He questioned the family, and they said
that this man was not the one who had visited them two days ago, which
Bonavec himself confirmed. The bard told a story, somewhat hesitantly,
of being promised an assignation with one of the duke's guards, named
Maeanat, at the local monument called the Veneletri Stones. He had
ridden away without telling anyone, waited for a time at the stones, and
then started riding back. He had taken a different path on the way back
and had ended up at Granavil instead of Mordairi.
Closer questioning revealed that it had been Tironvil, Maeanat's
sister, who had informed the bard of the desired meeting. That answered
everything for Gerthafel, except for where the sisters were.
It was the duke who asked, "What if they went to those very
stones?"
"Why would they do that?" asked Gerthafel.
"Well, if I recall," answered Arvinsosh, "the sisters are native to
Sengintol. They are not likely to be familiar with local geography,
true? Except for such famous places as the Veneletri Stones. So, if they
really did want the bard to disappear for a time, to bolster their
story, it wouldn't make much sense to tell him to just travel in some
arbitrary direction for some arbitrary number of leagues and wait. And,
having sent the bard to the stones, they are likely to believe that we
won't think that they are going there themselves. There you have it."
Gerthafel couldn't fault the duke's logic, even if he didn't
necessarily believe in it. But they didn't have any other leads, and so
within a very short time, there were ten riders racing south for the
Veneletri Stones: the original eight, plus Lord Granavil and the bard
Bonavec.
Maeanat was not the most pleased of people, but at least she and
her sister had finally found the 'unmissable' monument of the Veneletri
Stones. She was not very happy that it was late in the day, two days
after she had acquired the fox-carved stone. It had taken them too much
time to find the stones, but now they were here and there were, as yet,
no signs of pursuit.
She and her sister rode in among the many rings of standing stones,
every other pair of which supported a third stone on top of them. They
passed ring after ring, and finally arrived in the center.
There they found a large cleared space, empty except for a single
standing stone that seemed to be made of a different material than those
in the rings. It was also half-again as tall as the outer stones, and
its other obvious feature was a large hole in the center.
Maeanat dismounted, unhooked her saddlebags, and carried them over
to the central stone that was known as the Peace Stone, while her sister
took care of the horses. Dropping the bags in front of the center stone,
she walked around it, marveling at the amazing upright mass of it.
Tironvil walked over and dumped her own saddlebags and a bundle of
sticks next to Maeanat's bags, and as she walked back to where she was
working on the horses, Maeanat said, "Do you know the legend of these
stones, Ahnev?"
"No, should I?"
"Its a fascinating story, sister," said Maeanat, running her hand
along the smooth edges of the hole in the stone. "A thousand years
before the Fretheod conquered these lands, even before Gerolevan
existed, there were people here. Small tribes, small by the standards of
Sengintol that is, who wandered across these lands trying to survive.
"Two such tribes came into conflict here. They battled over this
land, each trying to claim it for their own people. But neither was
superior to the other, and the war just continued on and on.
"Eventually, the battle came to be known to a powerful wizard who
thought it within his power to halt the war. He kidnapped the families
of the rulers of both tribes, and held them for ransom. At first, the
tribes' leaders didn't believe him but once the wizard had turned both
of their fathers into beasts of the field, they gave in.
"The ransom was a pact, signed in blood and binding 'til the end of
time. The wizard erected this stone right here, and he told the tribal
leaders that they would have to suspend their war until the time when
his task was completed. And that task was for them to wear a hole
through the stone using no tools, but only the rubbing of their hands.
"With no choice but to obey, the two tribes set to their task. One
person from each tribe worked on the stone from either side. Day after
day, year after year, the tribes worked at their task. As the years
passed, the two tribes began to erect stones in rings around the central
stone, capping two with a third stone every fifth year. Stone after
stone, ring after ring, and finally, hundreds of years later, the
central stone was pierced.
"By then, of course, the two tribes were one. Working together for
so long, any differences between them had vanished long since, and been
forgotten in the dictates of the task. And that is how the Venel and the
Eletri tribes became one, and how this monumental creation came to be."
"Very interesting, sister," said Tironvil, "but how does that help
us right now? It will be dark shortly; perhaps you could help me light a
fire while you contemplate the supposed history of that punctured
stone."
Maeanat made a rude noise, but bent to help her sister. Tironvil
had never been much for imagination. The fire was laid and lit, and
Maeanat thought all the while about composing a song about the legend.
Maybe she would call it 'Stone of Peace'. She was surprised that no one
had set the tale to verse and music yet.
The fire was soon burning well, and Tironvil once again interrupted
Maeanat's thoughts with, "So, could we get this over with? We've taken
far longer getting here than we should have, and our pursuers could be
here any moment."
"And how do you know there are pursuers? Or that they're coming
here?"
"It doesn't hurt to be cautious, sister," said Tironvil. "We're
here, the stones are here, and as soon as we get them bonded together
and then bonded to us, the better off we will be. Then it won't matter
whether or not there are pursuers, right?"
"Right, right," sighed Maeanat. She pulled her saddlebags over,
opened the pouches and pulled out both wedge-shaped fragments of stone.
Setting them carefully aside, she next extracted a candle and the scroll
tube bearing the chant Melajoof had written out. She handed the candle
to Tironvil and said, "If you could light this, Ahnev, and hold it over
my shoulder so I can read the scroll, I'll start this ceremony."
Tironvil took and lit the candle, while Maeanat removed the
parchment from the scroll tube. Settling herself comfortably in front of
the fire, she dragged the two stones over in front of her. As the gentle
glow of the candle appeared over her shoulder, she looked at the carved
stones before her. There was something strange about those stones,
though. She stared at them, and noticed that it looked like the stone
fragments actually belonged together. There were fragments of the limbs
of each animal on the other piece of stone, and the bands of weaving
looked like they would match up perfectly.
She reached down with her free hand and pushed one stone toward the
other. Her sister reached over her shoulder and helped by pushing the
other stone as well. They met in the middle, and Maeanat felt a tingle
from the stones. Then, with a flash that blinded her momentarily, the
two stones fused together. When she could see again, there was only one
stone fragment in front of her, with a cat and a fox intertwined, and
with fragments of interwoven bands interlaced across the top of them.
"Did you feel that?" asked Maeanat.
Tironvil said, "Yes, I did. Maybe Melajoof was right, maybe there
is magic in these pieces of stone."
"Of course he was right! And that tingle was the stones bonding to
us. Now, we just have to read the incantation to reactivate the
protective enchantment on the stones, and we'll be invulnerable, just
like that castle they came from. Ready?"
Without waiting for the reply, Maeanat unrolled the parchment and
started to recite the incantation. The rhythm of the words felt good to
her, like a song, and she almost started singing it but wasn't sure
whether that would harm the spell. She read every word out perfectly,
and then let the parchment fall to her lap as she waited for some kind
of signal that the spell had worked. She had seen no lights, felt no
tingle, but perhaps she had missed them ...
"Tironvil, did you feel or see anything?"
"No, Nati, nothing. But it must have worked. Melajoof said it
would."
"You're right, sister. But, how can we be sure?"
As she pondered a test, she heard a noise from her left. She turned
and saw a group of people ride into the center ring. Among them were the
duke, the bard, and the duke's chief Justicer, Gerthafel. It looked like
the test had found them.
The duke called out, "Stand fast, you two," as he dismounted from
his horse. All the men with him did the same.
Lord Granavil stepped forward into the firelight and said, "Well,
she's wearing different clothes, and her hair has become lighter, but
that is the face, scar and all, that sat at my table and ate with my
family. And there on the ground in front of them is what looks like our
luck stone. This must be the one who impersonated Bonavec and killed
Eilonvil."
"The evidence is clear," said Gerthafel. "Do you deny it? Can you
refute it?"
The duke said, "Answer!"
Maeanat had risen and her sister stood beside her. She debated
constructing a lie, but decided that it was not needed. The stones --
stone -- protected them now, so there was nothing to fear from the duke
and his men. So, she said, "Yes, that was me. But there's nothing you
can do to us now."
She tilted her head toward her sister and whispered, "Come, sister,
let's run. Upon thought, they could always cage us even if they cannot
hurt us with weapons."
Tironvil nodded, and Maeanat stooped quickly, scooped up the
unified stone, and said, "Now!"
She turned and ran, sensing her sister half a pace behind her.
Shadows from the fire showed the duke's men chasing them, but the stones
were very close and if she and her sister could reach them, surely they
could make good their escape.
She felt the steel enter her back just as she was about to step
beyond the inner ring of stones. She heard Tironvil cry out beside her,
and at that moment knew that Melajoof had fooled them for a final time.
And she had been sure, so sure!
Gerthafel stood over the bodies of the two sisters, wondering why
they had run. How could they have hoped to get away? And what had
Maeanat meant by 'there's nothing you can do to us now'?
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