DargonZine | Volume 19, Number 1 |
he noise was what drew Darrow outside. Not the peal of fifth bell,
mid-day of the 12th of Sy, but the screams, then the resounding crash
coupled with the splintering of wood, the rumble of falling stone, and
then more screams sounding even more frightened and desperate than
before.
Darrow's home was near Dargon's causeway over the Coldwell river;
the threadbare apartment next to the marsh beside the river was all he
could afford. Ordinarily, the causeway and the Street of Travellers that
ran from it into the city contained orderly traffic that didn't make too
much noise. This was not an ordinary situation.
When Darrow got outside, chaos greeted him. People were running
around, mostly to little purpose. He could see the same at the ends of
the causeway itself, and even on the Old City side of the river. It took
him a few menes to make his way close enough to the Coldwell, which
seemed to be the focus of everyone's attention, to learn what was wrong.
He could scarcely believe his eyes when he could finally see the
water. The barge, the very craft he had been on only a few bells ago,
had crashed into one of the piers of the causeway. He had noted
scaffolding around that pier earlier; now a large portion of the pier
had crumbled away, taking a section of the roadway above with it. Darrow
could scarcely believe the scale of the destruction. How could a single
barge, even fully loaded and in the grip of a rain-swelled Coldwell,
have done all of that?

The barge itself had split in two, with the aft section already
sinking though the bow remained afloat. Darrow lost himself in the
spectacle of the disaster for a few moments before remembering that his
best friend was somewhere in the middle of that danger.
That thought made him recall why he wasn't in the river with
Murlak. He and his friend had been sent on a mission by Sferina. They
had gone to Kenna to intercept Rancin Fer, and they had retrieved a
stolen darningfly charm mold, as well as ten Marks and a letter with the
sigil of Tyrus Vage, an unscrupulous merchant who was a rival of
Sferina.
They had been delayed in beginning their voyage back, and had
worried about pursuit. Accordingly, they had obtained disguises before
leaving Kenna: Darrow's blond hair had been dyed black and his face was
covered by a full beard; Murlak's beard had been shaved, his hair
shortened, and he had been given a strangely lumpy nose. Rancin had,
indeed, boarded the barge; the disguises had fooled the man but not
deterred him. Darrow had taken a huge chance on a bit of luck, and had
hidden the three objects where Rancin would never think to look: inside
a statue belonging to another group of passengers on the barge.
Delays had struck the barge, and the normal four-day journey had
stretched double. Darrow had left the barge the night before under the
pretense of getting some help to distract Edmond, the person guarding
the statue, so he and Murlak could get their objects back. Darrow had
also been eager to get away from his friend, who had not taken well to
being cooped up on the barge during the emergencies that had detained
it. Lastly, Darrow's dyed hair was beginning to show its roots, and the
danger of Rancin recognizing him had grown accordingly.
Darrow had reported all of this to Sferina that morning. She had
instructed him to return the letter to her above all, and she had
increased her promised wage to a full Mark each, plus half of the coins
recovered from Rancin. He had returned to his home to get a few more
bells' sleep before gathering his help and making his way to the
Coldwell docks. He had only managed to get the sleep before the noise
had drawn him outside.
His first thought was to dive into the river and try to help. He
watched a few others give in to that impulse, and be dragged away by the
heavy current before getting close to the wreckage. He then looked
around for some other way to get to the barge. The causeway was the
logical choice, but the city guard was already mustering to shut the
damaged span down, blocking both entrances and working to herd those
already on it to either end. He thought of hiring a boat downstream, but
worried that the current would be too strong to allow him to get to the
barge. Then he thought about finding one upstream, but what if he then
lost control and only added to the danger? He found himself moving in
short dashes one way and then another as idea after idea hit him and was
discarded, and he realized that the people running about weren't
confused or stupid, but probably in the same predicament he was: trying
to figure out how to help, and failing.
Darrow had started to count off the people he could call on for
more effective help when he spotted a familiar figure dragging itself
out of the river. He raced over, along with three of four other helpful
souls, and helped Murlak away from the slippery and crowded bank. A
blanket appeared and got draped over Murlak's shoulders, and then
everyone else turned to help other survivors out of the water. Darrow
drew his friend away from the activity so he could make sure that Murlak
was all right.
Murlak recovered quickly, not at all haunted by his brush with
death as far as Darrow could tell. As soon as it was seemly, Darrow
asked the second question he really needed to know the answer to: "What
about the statue, Murlak?"
"I was watching it like you said, Dar. Right up until ... No one
found our stuff in it, but I don't know where it is now."
"Do you think it sank?"
"I don't know! I was watching the shed where Edmond was watching
the statue, and then there was this crash and I was in the water. The
next thing I knew, I was on the bank."
Darrow thought for a moment. "Well, if it sinks with the barge,
that's good. We'll just have to find a way to fetch it before Edmond can
do the same. And it's safer down there anyway, 'cause no one can find
our stuff with it there. Straight?"
"Straight, Dar, but look."
Darrow followed Murlak's pointing finger, and saw Edmond climb out
of the river very close to the causeway. He had a rope in his hand,
which he proceeded to haul on, a determined look on his face. His
efforts were rewarded shortly when the rucksack that Darrow knew
contained the statue appeared out of the river at the other end of the
rope. The man paused for a moment, patting the bundle, catching his
breath. He finally slipped his arms into the straps of the rucksack and
stood, wincing slightly. He started to walk away from the river, the
determined look back on his face. He didn't seem to be bothered by the
chaos and misery around him, and didn't let anyone or anything get in
his way as he walked, dripping water and draped with plants, toward the
city.
Darrow jumped up belatedly, pulling his friend up beside him. He
started to chase the statue on the back of the man, but had less luck
ignoring what else was happening. He tried to go around lines of people
shifting blankets from a wagon to the bank of the river. He had to
detour frequently around little knots of people who were comforting
survivors or mourning victims. He did his best to avoid completely the
contingents of priests who flocked like murders of crows to the
disaster.
He lost sight of Edmond quickly, but continued gamely on. It wasn't
until he heard sixth bell ring and realized that he hadn't even gotten
as far as his own apartment that he realized his chase was futile.
Rancin Fer stood in front of the door to his boss' office,
gathering his courage. He had been dreading this moment ever since
pulling himself from the river after the crash. Despite his fears,
though, he had delayed this confrontation only long enough to get some
dry clothes before heading directly for the docks and this office. He
had his polished agate in his cheek so he wouldn't stutter in front of
Tyrus Vage; his news was bad enough without looking like a fool
delivering it. He took a deep breath, opened the door and stepped
through.
Vage was standing on the balcony at the back of his office, looking
out at the view. Rancin strode to the desk and stopped, waiting. Through
the open door he could hear the sounds of frenzied activity, even more
than normal on the docks, as the news of the disaster of the causeway
reached the extremities of the city and people began to respond. He was
about to clear his throat to catch Vage's attention when a cry went up,
followed by a splintering crunch. He thought it sounded like some cargo
slipping off its wagon.
Vage turned away from the view, a slight frown on his face. Rancin
looked relieved to see his boss in his normal mood. Vage limped back
into the room and said, "Welcome back, Rancin. What took you so long?
Where's the signed letter?"
Knowing that it would only hurt more to drag it out, Rancin said,
"I'm sorry, boss. I was mugged in Kenna, and the two that did it stole
the mold, the money, and the letter. I followed them onto the barge to
Dargon, but couldn't find them or the goods, and I looked everywhere."
Vage turned away then, and Rancin paused a moment, shifted his gaze to
the desk, and continued. "I didn't give up, boss. I searched everywhere,
every single day and night, and I had plenty of time to do so, since the
barge was delayed by freak accidents and strange happenings. Then today,
the Shuul-damned thing crashed into the causeway ..." He knew he had
only spoken the truth, but he realized how far-fetched -- lame, even --
it all sounded.
There was a crash directly in front of Rancin, which made him
stagger back a step. The business end of a gaffing pole was buried in
the center of Vage's desk. Rancin followed the pole of the tool to his
boss, whose face was a livid purple. "You stupid, stuttering whoreson!"
The pole was lifted and it crashed into the desk again. "You diseased
flea on the back of a scabrous dock rat!" Splinters began to fly as the
hook at the end of the gaff dug into the wood. "I send you on a mission
that Salamagundi's monkey could have completed --" Another crash, and
then a groan of protest from the desk as the point had to be wrenched
free. "-- and you tupping fail!" A final smash, and then Vage threw the
pole aside. Rancin watched it crash into a set of shelves before his
boss' voice drew him back.
"How could you lose that letter?" Vage leaned on his desk, which
responded with an ominous creaking that he ignored. "The mold isn't
important, and I can even deal with the loss of the money, though just
barely." The desk groaned, and then split in half and crashed to the
ground. Vage stumbled, recovered, pushed the halves out of his way and
strode right up to Rancin. "But the letter could cost me plenty. If the
wrong people find it, I could be sanctioned by the council. Being fined
would be the least result; they could insist on oversight of my business
dealings, and once word got out all of my partners would renegotiate
their contracts, and not in my favor.
"You must get that letter back, Fer. I expect you to get it all
back, but if you don't retrieve that letter, your balding head will be
on that wall over there before you can petition your precious Shuul for
mercy. Am I clear?"
Rancin nodded. He knew his boss wasn't exaggerating. He had seen
this kind of rage turned on others, and had hoped never to be its focus
himself.
"Good. Get moving!"
Rancin turned and left. He knew he had to get that letter back. All
he had to do was figure out how.
Darrow stood on the steps of the fifth bar he had visited and
nodded to Murlak, who was dried off and back in his normal clothes.
"They said he went up Thockmarr Street, Murlak. We finally know where he
is. Well, was."
Murlak smiled and asked, "How long ago?"
"Not long," said Darrow. It was eighth bell, and he had been
searching for Edmond and the statue he carried for most of those two
bells. They had taken some time to get Murlak cleaned up and into dry
clothes, and then a little more time to round up some help in the form
of their friends. Lacking any better plan, the whole group of them,
seven in all, had begun canvassing the various watering holes and
gathering places in an arc that spread out from the causeway. Darrow had
hoped that the larger than normal crowds out today would have helped
their search, but most people were more concerned with the causeway
tragedy and the various minor accidents that seemed to be springing up
around the city than with one rucksacked stranger.
Finally, though, Darrow had gotten the lead he needed.
Unfortunately, he didn't know how to capitalize on it.
Murlak voiced his dilemma. "Thockmarr is a long street, Dar. How are
we going to catch up to him when he could turn off anywhere?"
"We can't take the time to gather our people for this," said
Darrow. "I suppose we'll just have to trust to luck, Murlak. Our good
luck, or his bad."
"We could maybe get more help," Murlak said. "Ask some of the
shadow boys to help us search. There's sure to be some about."
"No," said Darrow firmly. "You know better than that. They'd figure
that if we were chasing Edmond, there would be someone else who would
pay more to know about him. It's happened before, after all." Darrow
sighed and said, "Come on, Murlak. We've got a statue to catch."
Rancin decided to start his search back at the wreckage of the
barge. He had hoped, though not very strongly, that his boss would have
reacted more reasonably and given him some help for his search; instead,
he returned to the causeway alone, but intent enough for five.
On his way down the Street of Travellers, though, he spotted two
figures on the other side of the street that seemed familiar. He
recognized the faces of the juggler and the monk from the barge, but
they were dressed in tunics and trousers, not like they had been on the
voyage. His curiosity was piqued, and he turned aside from his path to
follow them. He hoped that he wasn't wasting his time. With luck, he
wouldn't be.
Murlak stood with his hand over his mouth hiding his huge grin,
bouncing on his toes with excitement. He had been the one to spot Edmond
not more than a quarter bell ago, and he was still feeling smarter than
Darrow over it.
The two of them had followed Edmond for just long enough to figure
that he wasn't going to leave Murson Street any time soon. Then they had
used their knowledge of Dargon's side streets and alleyways to get ahead
of the man, and now they were waiting for him to catch up with them.
Darrow was looking around the corner. Murlak kept his eyes on the
hand that Darrow had behind his back, waiting for the signal. Two
fingers twitched, and Murlak stopped bouncing and reached for the stick
leaning against the alley wall. His grin faded into an intent smile, and
he readied his weapon.
Another finger twitched, and Murlak stepped forward just a little.
Finally, all five fingers clenched together and then Darrow leaned
forward just as Edmond stepped across the alley's mouth. Darrow grabbed
Edmond's arm and pulled the man right into Murlak's swinging stick.
Edmond gasped, his temple bled a little, and then he fell to the ground
and stopped moving.
Murlak stepped over the body as Darrow began to remove the rucksack
from the limp figure. Murlak checked Murson Street, and it was still
empty. He kept his eyes on the street until he felt the touch on his
back. He turned and Darrow, the rucksack in his arms, motioned with his
head. Murlak followed his friend and the statue down the alley. They
were heading for Sferina's office now, and soon he would have
half-a-Mark to spend on whatever he wanted. Perhaps a sennight in the
Mother of Pearl?
Rancin could hear his quarry approaching the alley he waited in,
and he tensed in readiness. He had watched the pretend monk and fake
juggler ambush Edmond and take the rucksack from his back. He wasn't
absolutely certain that the pair were the ones who had mugged him in
Kenna, but the way they had stalked and attacked Edmond, combined with
the coincidence of all three of them having been on the barge, made
Rancin want to see what was in that rucksack that the pair wanted so
badly.
The black-haired, bearded man and the red-haired, lumpy-nosed man
walked across the alley mouth without looking down it. Rancin pounced,
grabbing the backs of both tunics and pulled them into the shadows.
Before they could react further, he released the tunics and reached up
to slam their heads together. The thunk of skull against skull was like
a sweet song to Rancin. Both thieves slumped to the ground without even
a groan.
As Rancin leaned over the black-haired man to take the rucksack, he
noticed that the roots of the man's hair were blond. He looked closer at
the red-haired one and imagined him with a full beard. As he
straightened up with the rucksack in his arms, Rancin briefly
contemplated taking out his frustrations on the two bodies before him.
He imagined feeling bones break, watching blood spurt, making them pay
for the danger he had been put in thanks to them. They deserved it,
after all, for starting all of this back in Kenna. He had killed for
less reason than being assaulted and robbed!
Thoughts of his own safety won out over his need for revenge. He
knew that Vage needed to have his letter, the sooner the better. He
could always find these two again, and have his revenge then.
He walked away from the pair and pondered whether to take the
rucksack, which was one of the few things he hadn't searched on the
barge, directly to Vage, or to inspect it himself first. Either way, he
was pretty sure that his head was now safe from his boss' wall.
Rancin felt the sword pierce his chest, and he fell heavily against
Edmond, the man who held that weapon. Pain tore through him, and the
impossibility of having tripped to his death forced a plaintive "How?"
from his lips. The agony swiftly faded as his blood ran out of his body,
warming his chest as it flowed.
When Edmond had challenged him moments ago, demanding the rucksack
less less than a quarter bell after Rancin had acquired it himself, he
hadn't feared the outcome of any impending conflict. He had taken the
measure of the man in a glance, from the clumsy way he held his sword to
the fear and uncertainty in the young man's face. He couldn't believe
how differently it had all turned out.
Rancin's last thoughts concerned luck. The luck he had had in
finding the pair who had mugged him, the ill luck of his foot finding a
loose brick, and finally the Shuul-blessed luck of not having to face
Tyrus Vage's wrath.
And then he died.
Two bells later, Darrow sat on a stool next to Murlak and stared
into his ale with a feeling of hopelessness. Murlak was just as gloomy,
though for less reason since Darrow hadn't told his friend about
Sferina's increased reward. There was no reason to now. Darrow had no
idea who had stolen the rucksack from him, so he would never be able to
collect that reward. He hoped that Sferina would understand. He was more
concerned about failing his employer than the loss of money, though. He
wanted to retain her trust.
Murlak said, "We could ask around anyway, Dar." Darrow ignored his
friend. They had woken up less than half-a-bell ago but had already had
plenty of time to discuss their options as they made their way to this
Nochtur Street tavern. They could, indeed, ask around after someone
carrying a rucksack, but Darrow didn't fancy their chances of getting
any reasonable answers from anyone. People seemed to have more important
things to think about than strangers with rucksacks walking by. As he
thought that, the barman cursed and said, "The rat-kissing tap's broke!"
Darrow looked over the bar to see an ale barrel gushing fluid all over
the floor.
Suddenly he was yanked off his stool and toward the door. Murlak,
who had his arm and was dragging him, said, "I saw him, Dar! Come on!"
"Saw who, you fool?" asked Darrow as he tripped over a chair and
halted their advance across the taproom.
"That guard guy. Edmond. With his sack! He just walked by the
door!"
"Impossible!"
"Swear, Dar! It was him!" Murlak helped Darrow to his feet, but he
resisted when his friend tried to pull him out of the bar again.
"I don't believe you. We left him unconscious; it couldn't have
been him who attacked us. How could he have the statue again?"
"Don't know, Dar." Murlak looked pleadingly at him and said, "You
can see for yourself, but only if you hurry."
Darrow realized the logic of that and said, "Lead on."
The second ambush went just as smoothly as the first, or so Darrow
thought. He and Murlak had followed Edmond, unaccountably possessed once
more of his rucksack, along Nochtur Street past Travellers toward Main.
They had circled around the man, set up the ambush, and added another
gash to the poor man's face.
As Darrow was slipping Edmond's arms out of the rucksack's straps
for the second time, however, the man started to groan. Even panicking,
Darrow thought to stop Murlak from hitting Edmond again, since he had no
intention of killing the man and too many blows to the head were
dangerous. He wrenched the rucksack off off Edmond's back, staggered for
a moment under its weight, and then started to run, Murlak's booted feet
echoing behind.
Darrow sagged against the side wall of the Inn of the Serpent and
panted. The statue was heavy and awkward to carry, and he didn't know
how much further he could go with it. Murlak knelt beside him,
annoyingly fresh and smiling. "He's still following us," the redhead
said, and Darrow grimaced in response.
"If only this thing wasn't so heavy," said Darrow. "Well, maybe it
will be easier to carry on my back. Help me get this thing on, Murlak."
"You know, Dar," said Murlak as he grabbed the rucksack from
Darrow's lap. "It sure would be easier to carry if our stuff didn't have
a statue around it."
"By Ol's outsized feet, Murlak, you're right!" Darrow grabbed the
rucksack back from Murlak and started frantically working the buckles
and straps. "Come on, help me," he cried. Soon the strange black statue
of a man sitting tailor-fashion with a silver sword across his knees
appeared from within the canvas.
He poked and pulled at the statue for a moment before remembering
the secret. He stuck his elbow into the mouth of the statue, declining
to injure his fingers this time. The pointed ivory teeth drew blood
quickly, and Darrow smiled at Murlak's gasp as the jaws of the figure
gaped wide. He reached carefully into the newly-wide opening and grasped
the bundle inside the throat. He withdrew his arm slowly and within a
few moments the package was out of the statue. Darrow opened the
oilcloth pouch for a quick look: the contents, especially the letter,
seemed safe and dry. He bundled them back up again.
"What do we do with the statue now, Dar?" asked Murlak.
Darrow didn't need to think of an answer, as Edmond appeared around
the edge of the inn at that moment. "Put it back," the man said, drawing
his sword. "Do you realize what you've done?"
"Just taking what's ours, Edmond," Darrow said. He eyed the sword
being brandished seriously in the man's hand and wondered whether the
knife-fighting tricks he had learned from his Rhydd Pobl friend Tanner
would stand against a sword.
"Those ingredients are talismans," Edmond said. "You have to put
them back!"
It took a moment for Darrow to realize what the guard was talking
about. "Talismans?" He fingered the oilcloth bundle, and then remembered
the slimy package he had removed from the statue to insert his own loot.
He smiled at Murlak, then turned back to Edmond and said, "Those
talismans went overboard six days ago! Thanks for the use of the hiding
space, though."
A stunned look appeared on Edmond's face. "What?" he said. "How?
When?"
Murlak answered before Darrow could. Shaking his cupped hand like
there were dice within, he said, "When you were taking my money, Ed!"
Darrow watched his friend's eyes narrow, and he continued, "Speaking of
which ..."
Darrow grabbed Murlak's shoulder and said, "Let it go, Murlak.
There's plenty more when we deliver this." He backed away from the
statue, pulling his friend with him. He looked at the staring guard and
said, "See you, Edmond!" He squeezed Murlak's shoulder and they turned
in unison and sprinted away.
"I'm proud of you boys," said Sferina, looking up from the three
objects that Darrow had placed on her desk. Murlak felt good to have
Sferina praising him. He decided to forgive Darrow for not telling about
the money his friend had found in Kenna. This feeling was better than
anything he could have done with his five Mark share of those coins.
Sferina opened the letter and read it, her smile turning into a
predatory grin that made her even prettier to Murlak, even if she was
older than the shepherd, Lidala. "Yes," she said, "this is exactly what
I'd hoped it would be. Vage's plans are set out here for anyone to see.
He'll regret his darningfly caper now!"
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