Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Kilkarak’s Expedition Journal Entry Day 9...Addendum

Beer! Beer, beer, beer! I could never have imagined something could make you feel so…tingly. I tingle from my lips to my toetips. My head won’t balance on my neck. Forgive my handwriting, it is dancing across the page, up and down, like the hills of my homeland. These words are spilling from my fingers in big golden drops on this page. At the tavern, I had the fortune to meet a brew master from Hiroja. I forget his name…something like Hoarg, Foarg, Schmoarg-a-boarg-a-dilly-doo. How do I write laughter? Boarg and I became fast friends over a pint of fangwail pale ale. I gave him a fake name but I may have let it slip that I am a chemist. We had a delightful conversation about specific gravity and how to combine different ingredients and where they are harvested. We compared compounding methods and ratios. Ratios. That word looks funny, ratios. Is that how you spell it? My next pint was a bitterot brew and I do believe I went blind after my first sip, but I kept up the conversation, not letting on that my world had gone dark. However, when my sight came back, my new friend was gone. How long had I been talking to myself? Had anyone noticed? I’m glad I was in disguise. If any of my friends saw me, I would be banished from the Catalyst Foundation. What am I saying? I am already banned from the Catalyst Foundation and I have no friends. Well, except Jarax, who should return at any moment. And my son, Dashyl, who is asleep on the soft bed next to the writing table. Peaceful. Enjoy the peace, son. Once we reach the Tanglefern Thicket, all luxury and comfort will vanish from our lives. Perhaps I could take some beer with us. I do believe that is one of the best ideas I have ever written down. Good night.

***

Readers, please forgive my entry from this night. I am not proud of the frame of mind this entry reveals, but for the sake of true and accurate reporting of this expedition, I will leave it intact for future readers. – Kilkarak

Friday, January 10, 2014

Dashyl's Quest

Soern took a big gulp of his lukewarm tea and swallowed hard. “Oh, something else is chasing you? Something worse than a Krill Assassin? Are you criminals of some sort? Is there a bounty on your heads? Perhaps I should contact the Shrieves Council of Denholm and report you two.”

“No, no, it’s nothing like that,” Dashyl said quickly, shaking his head furiously.

Soern burst into another round of belly laughs. “I am just pulling your legs, your wee legs. What could you two have done to be followed by a Krill Assassin and something else? Tell me…”

Fretly chimed in. “It’s serious. Have you ever heard of the Center of Death Tournament?”

“Heard of it? I was its greatest champion. I had to stop competing because I was so dominant. The audience grew bored with seeing me win, so I was not invited back.” Soern leaned back in his chair and clasped his hands behind his head.

Fretly stood up from his seat. “Are you joking,” he asked.

Soern chuckled under his breath, but his countenance quickly lost all frivolity. He leaned his massive bulk forward until he was nose to nose with Fretly. “I may find things amusing often, but I assure you, I am serious,” said the immense Kirzan.

Soern leaned back in his chair and the mirth returned to his face. “Yes, I was somewhat of a legend in my day. When I was not invited back to fight, it was just as well, I had beaten the odds and walked away with my life too many times. My luck was bound to run out. I wandered the countryside for some time. I tried to settle in Trader’s Haunt, but that den of miscreants was more dangerous than the tournament. So, I made my way to Anchorwatch and eventually found a way to make a living guarding this road. I have lived in this hut ever since.”

Tugging on his beard, Soern’s eyes scanned the one-room hut, considering the weathered boards and old furniture of his home. “It’s certainly not a home befitting a legend,” Soern sighed. “But, I’ve met many characters on this road, some with news of the far reaches of Veratar. Those conversations have given me something to look forward to each day: who will visit me today? Who will share my tea with me?”

Fretly chewed his bottom lip waiting for Soern to let him continue. Finally, he interjected, “Okay, okay, so you used to be some great warrior. Since you always won, you might not know what I have learned about the tournament and its secret.”

“Is that right,” Soern asked. “You? What would a boy know about the tournament?”

“I’m not a boy,” Fretly growled. “I fought in the tournament.”

Soern cocked one eyebrow. “Now I must ask, are you joking?”

“I wish,” Fretly snorted. “I entered with my Kirzan friend, he was an anvyl, big as you. We traveled from Fairewood where we had heard of the tournament from visitors. We wanted treasure, we wanted riches. But I watched my best friend die on the battlefield.” Fretly choked a little on his words.

“Aye, you are not a boy if what you say is true,” Soern said.

“I died. Or at least I thought I was dying when a curic came to me and told me the secret of the tournament.” Fretly, who had been looking out the window as he talked, turned and looked into Soern’s eyes.

Soern leaned forward again. “What secret,” he asked.

“That the curics use nysik to wipe the memory clean of the losers of the tournament who haven’t been slain, then they make them fight again. She told me that I needed to remember what she told me and that I needed to escape.”

“Ha!” Soern guffawed, nearly falling backwards in his chair. He regained his balance and brushed moisture from his eyes. “Oh, that’s who is after you? Curics? Curics who somehow are involved in a plot to…to…to recycle losers?”

“I don’t know, all I know is that she told me to escape. I would die if I stayed,” Fretly insisted.

“Fret, you told me all this after having a nightmare. Are you sure this isn’t just a dream you had,” asked Dashyl.

Fretly turned and growled at Dashyl, “It’s not a dream. It’s a memory. I’m sure of it.”

“Well, in all my years of fighting in the tournament, I never fought those who I had killed before,” Soern said. “Unless they somehow disguised their appearance, but I doubt that would be possible. You never forget a face of one you have killed. Strange details of their faces still haunt my sleep, each one individual, each one different than the last.”

“But why would a curic tell me that if it wasn’t true? I am right, I know it,” Fretly insisted more fervently.

The three sat in silence, except for the occasional sipping of tea. Soern twisted a few gray strands of hair under his chin, lost in thought. After a while he stood up, took the teacups from Dashyl and Fretly and set them on the countertop. He turned slowly and looked each of his visitors up and down, now twisting the hair under his bottom lip.

“I will fetch my brother from Anchorwatch and return quickly. I’ll trust him to protect you two from any Krill Assassins,” Soern said, then looked at Fretly and smirked, “or any curics coming to kill you. Once he is here I will return to Anchorwatch to secure two more igwaza and supplies so the three of us can make the trip to Trader’s Haunt as quickly as possible.”

“You’re going to leave us alone here after telling us there may be another Krill Assassin after me,” Dashyl protested.

“It won’t be for long,” replied Soern. “I will ride my igwaza into Anchorwatch and bring my brother back immediately. You’ll hardly notice I am gone. Stay put, but keep watch. I doubt a Krill Assassin would look for you in my humble hut here, you should be fine.”

“I guess,” Dashyl shrugged.

“Don’t worry, Dash, I believe him. Let’s rest here, out of sight and indoors for once,” Fretly persuaded.

“Yes, listen to the man,” Soern said, chuckling again. “I’ll be back before an igwaza can flick its tail twice.”

And with that, Soern left the hut. They could hear him speaking in soft tones to what must be his igwaza. “Let’s go, Griffypuss,” they heard him say as he mounted the swift-running creature.


Fretly and Dashyl laughed and asked simultaneously, “Griffypuss?”

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Dashyl's Quest

Soern filled his teacup and offered his guests a refill, which they both eagerly accepted. The Kirzan returned to his seat on the cot and slowly shook his finger at Dashyl.

“I was on my rounds, patrolling the city’s defense perimeter. There hasn’t been much action lately, so I’ve been expanding the range of my patrols.” Soern leaned forward and poked Dashyl’s chest, then pointed out the window. “Luckily for you, I went farther to the northeast on this particular day, along the seldom used road that leads to Blue Hollow.”

“Blue Hollow, where’s that,” Fretly asked.

“Don’t interrupt,” snapped Dashyl.

Soern took a side-glance at Fretly before continuing. “Blue Hollow is the one place on this continent that the Akrasa call home. Mostly they are a nomadic people, but some do maintain dwellings in Blue Hollow. They believe it is the place where the Akrasa race originated.”

“I’ve been there,” gasped Dashyl. “The Akrasa, do they have blue skin?”

“Yes. Sometimes green, too,” Soern answered.

“I remember a blue-skinned person took care of me and my dad. I don’t…no, I don’t remember his name.” Dashyl took a deep breath and thought for a second. “All I remember is that my father died, but I lived. He healed me and the next thing I know, I was with the curics.”

“That makes sense,” said Soern, “The Akrasa are healers. They know how to refine and craft radia in ancient ways that most other races on Veratar have forgotten. I run into them from time to time. They avoid the cities, as a rule, but Anchorwatch is close to their homeland and the residents let them do their business unmolested.”

“I have a feeling the Akrasa who helped me is dead,” sobbed Dashyl as pieces of his memory returned. “He’s the one who gave me my dad’s journal. I didn’t know about it before he gave it to me.

“That is a definite possibility, I’m afraid,” Soern said. “If a Krill Assassin was following you, he probably tracked you to Blue Hollow. The assassin had just caught up with you when I found you.”

“What happened,” asked Dashyl.

“I heard sounds of a scuffle, so I left the road and approached from the trees. The assassin had pulled you some ways away from the roadside. He didn’t see me as I hid in the shadows. You were tied up on the ground, gagged and clearly drugged. He had the journal you speak of in his hand and was talking to you. He said that even though he had you father’s journal, he still needed to kill you. He said he was charged with erasing everything about your father and you were the last piece remaining. He then dropped the book on your head and pulled out a dagger. I had picked up a couple throwing stones and hurled them at the assassin knocking him to the ground. Charging from the tree line, I skewered the assassin on my pike before he had a chance to use any of his deadly abilities. You have to kill a Krill Assassin quickly, otherwise…well, no one I know has survived a long fight with one.”

“Did you go through his possessions? Were there any clues about who he was or where he was from,” asked Dashyl.

“That I can’t tell you, my boy,” explained Soern. “You were in such bad shape, the first order of business was to get you to the curics. After staking the dead Krill to the ground, I gathered you and the journal and ran back to the city. I rode the biggest, fastest igwaza in Anchorwatch to carry you to Rathyra. I left the assassin’s body for the Anchorwatch guard guild to remove.”

“Can we go to the guard guild and see what they know,” asked Dashyl.

“That would do no good. No one knows the identity of Krill Assassins and they don’t have any unique markings or identifying paperwork. The body was burned by the guild in accordance with protocol in dealing with Krill Assassins, or anyone else who uses lethal poisons and chemical weapons.” Soern reached over and patted Dashy on the shoulder. “It has been a good while since I saved you. Long enough for whomever wants you erased to realize the first assassin failed his mission and send another.”

“You mean there could be more after me? This wasn’t just one guy,” Dashyl shrieked.

“I wouldn’t rest easy with the belief that this assassin acted alone, Dashyl. Krill Assassins are most often the pawns of a higher power in the Legion. I don’t know who your father was or why his journal is so important, but in all likelihood, others know about its existence, as well as your existence, and will be coming to finish the mission. You just don’t know, so you should be very, very careful,” Soern admonished, but then shifted to a more hopeful tone. “This is your chance to put some distance between you and your pursuers. Throw yourself so far off their trail that they will never find you. I would not waste your time in Anchorwatch. That is your last known destination to them, you could be walking right into their clutches. I would head immediately to Trader’s Haunt. I agree now that this is the most expeditious route to safety.”

“Just the two of us, alone, exposed” Dashyl asked.

“Do not worry. I will accompany you as far as Trader’s Haunt,” Soern offered.

“We don’t need you,” Fretly shot.

“Shut up, Fretly,” Dashyl said. The boy stood up, walked over to Fretly, and leaned over so their noses almost touched. “Soern is going with us.”

“Okay, okay. If that’s what’s happening, then we better tell him,” Fretly said.

“Tell him what,” Dashyl asked.


“That the Kirll Assassins aren’t the only ones chasing us.”

Saturday, October 26, 2013

Dashyl's Quest

“There’s not much to tell, really,” Dashyl admitted. “I woke up in the care of curics from Sanctum. They nursed me back to health and took care of me until I was okay to leave.”

“Ah yes, I left you in the care of Rathyra. A robust and stoic curic. However, she can be a little brisk in her bedside manner.” Soern chuckled at some far off memory coming to the surface. “Once, in her care, I complained about her vigorous scrubbing while cleaning a deep wound I had from a vaygr. A piece of the beast's tooth had broken off in me and she was so determined to remove it that I passed out from the pain. She never let me live that down. For being a healer, her sense of humor could be rather cruel.” Soern stroked his beard and smiled with a distant look in his eyes. “Ah, but I have delayed you further, please, young Dashyl, begin again.”

Dashyl and Fretly shared a furtive glance before Dashyl continued his story. “Ah, well, I met Fretly when he was brought in one day for healing and he was pretty much the only company I had other than the curics, but they didn’t ever talk to us for very long.”

“Humph,” Soern snorted, “They are women of few words. What are your plans now that you are right as a river?”

“Why should we trust you,” Fretly asked.

Soern laughed a few belly laughs and slapped his hands down on his enormous thighs. “My little friend, I could have killed this young Sarion when I first encountered him. Why would I want to interfere with his plans now? If you continue to be suspicious of me, you may wait outside until Dashyl and I are finished catching up.”

Fretly pouted, crossed his arms over his chest and sank into his seat a little deeper. “Whatever. Dashyl, if you trust this guy, then I trust you.”

“See, that’s acting like a wise adventurer,” Soern said, winking at Fretly.

“We had hoped to find a caravan in Anchorwatch to travel with across the Tournament Plains to Trader’s Haunt," Dashyl explained.

“Trader’s Haunt,” Soern asked incredulously. “Why do you want to go to that forsaken place? The main reason I am paid to man this post is to keep the riff raff from Trader’s Haunt out of Anchorwatch. The two of you will be skewered and scambagged before you see your first morning in Trader’s Haunt.”

“You underestimate us, my gargantuan friend,” Fretly said. “I have fought in the Center of Death Tournament. And lived, as you can see.”

“As have I. As have I,” Soern said, stroking his beard and squinting at Fretly. “Fighting an opponent in plain view in front of you is one thing. Avoiding a blade or a bash from behind in a crowded alley is another thing entirely.”

“Have you heard of the Urchyn’s Clan,” asked Fretly.

“Hm, those pesky rascals from Fairewood? Yes, I have heard of them, common thieves who steal while travelers enjoy entertainment. I have never seen or met one,” Soern answered.

“Until now,” Fretly pointed out. “And we are more than thieves. Surviving as an Urchyn in the underworld of Fairewood is no less dangerous than slipping into Trader’s Haunt unnoticed. We’ll make it. Don’t twist your beard off worrying about us.”

Soern looked at his young guests and sighed. “I suppose you are going there to catch an airship. Where? Back to Fairewood?”

“Fretly is. I don’t know yet. I want to go home, but I’m not sure there’s any reason to go home,” Dashyl said.

Soern slurped the last of his tea and stood up. The Kirzan towered over Dashyl. Sarion, on average, are the shortest race on Rynaga (of those that live on land), while Kirzan are the tallest. Dashyl nearly fell over looking up at Soern, but balanced himself at the last minute.

“Dashyl, there is a very good reason for you not to go home. You are being hunted. A Krill Assassin was after you,” Soern said.


Dashyl’s eyes grew large. Something tugged at the edge of his memory, something ominous. His heartbeat quickened. Tears welled up in his eyes. He dropped his head and watched a tiny carapid crawling along the floorboards of the hut as Soern went on telling his story.

Friday, August 16, 2013

Dashyl's Quest

“Have I met you?” Dashyl asked the burly fellow who sat across from him at a table so large that he could barely see over the top from his seat.

“Have I met you,” the boy asked. Soern roared with laughter. “Oh, that’s nice. I save your life and you ask me if we’ve met.” Soern pounded on the table with his rocky fist making the table jump blotting out Dashyl’s vision of his host. This boisterous host eventually was able to breath and wiped a tear from each eye. “Aye, you were unconscious and near death, but you looked up at me and I told you my name.”

Soern leaned to the side of the table and stared into Dashyl’s face. He did not see any recognition or sign of remembrance in the boy’s eyes. His tone grew serious as he sighed and said, “Ah, well, I should not be surprised when nysik is involved. Nasty stuff, that is.”

Soern stroked his beard and looked out one of the four windows of his hut. “It doesn’t matter that you don’t remember me, I still am dying to know how you come to be sitting in my hut again.”

Dashyl stood up on the seat of his chair and looked Soern in the eyes. “I’ll tell you, but you have to tell me all you know about meeting me that I cannot remember. Deal?”

“Aye, we have a deal, an easier deal to uphold I have not had.” A tea kettle whistled at that moment and Soern rose to his feet and lumbered about preparing to share his refreshment. "I only have sigilweed tea, I must apologize if that is not appealing to you. The flavor is harsh, but it helps me stay awake at my post.”

Fretly nodded and smiled as he took the oversized cup that looked small in Soern’s hand.  “Mmmm,” he murmured as he drank trying not to make an uncomfortable face.

“No thanks,” Dashyl politely refused and offered the reason, “My father always said that sigilweed tea makes your mind weak.”

Soern’s eyes narrowed and not an inch of his great bulk moved. Fretly fought hard to not spit out his tea. He swallowed hard and whispered into Dashyl’s ear. “Never refuse tea from a Kirzan, it is very rude!”

“A Kirzan!” Dashyl shouted. “I’ve heard about you guys, but I’ve never seen one. You are as big as I’ve imagined. But, you don’t seem very barbaric.”

“Yes, Dashyl, I am a Kirzan,” Soern stood up as tall as he could as he said this. “And you will drink my tea.” He said in a voice a few octaves lower than his normal tone.

“Yes, sir,” Dashyl bleated out as he grabbed the cup with both hands and took a drink.


Soern smiled and sat on the cot that was his bed so he could see his guests without obstruction. He sipped his tea eagerly and said, “Begin. By my most binding oath I will not wait one moment longer to hear your story.”