Wednesday, August 28, 2013

'The Glove of Shadows' Chapter Eighteen- Test of Strength


Anna’s eyes fluttered open as the sunlight dribbled in through the slats of the window near her bed. She hadn’t meant to sleep so late, but she and the others needed the rest. For reasons she couldn’t readily put her finger on, she didn’t think the Hoods would be left in the dust.

She rolled out of the bed, stretching her arms and legs and rubbing feeling back into them. She strolled over to the door, secured the deadbolt, and took off her shirts and wraps, getting in one last breather for her lungs and breasts.

She walked over to the bathroom, admired the Dwarven plumbing design, and drew herself a bath. The tub was too large, even for someone like Stockholm, but Jafts and Minotaurs could grow to ridiculous heights, and they were probably the hotel’s most frequent guests.

She stripped and slipped down into the warm water, letting it soak through her skin and into her sore muscles. Too much time on the road. She closed her eyes briefly.

There was a disturbance of the water, and when she opened her eyes, she nearly shrieked when she saw that Stockholm had joined her in the tub. He had a washcloth over his privates, but she felt awkward and distressed nonetheless.

“What,” he said gruffly. “You haven’t got anything I’m interested in, remember?”

For a moment, she couldn’t think of anything to respond with, and she erupted with coarse laughter. She splashed the water at him playfully, but he didn’t return the gesture. Instead, he took the soaked cloth and draped it over his snout.

“Gods almighty you gave me a scare,” she said. She draped her arms over the sides of the enormous tub, making herself comfy. “You know, you and I have spent a lot of time together on this whole journey. I feel like I’m getting to really know you.”

     “That’s because you pal around with Flint all the time,” Stockholm said through the washcloth.

Anna’s eyes wandered southward through the clear water, and quickly spun away when she caught the slightest glimpse of his manhood. Cripes, she thought, if he were straight, he’d give some lucky girl a run for her money.

“I like the Prime well enough,” he said, “don’t get me wrong. But he and I simply lead much different lives. You and I, too, but I think you and I needed to get better acquainted. Especially since I’m going to be gone for a while next year.”

“What do you mean you’ll be gone? How can you know that, big guy?”

“Just trust me on this, boss lady.” He pulled the cloth off and rubbed soap on it. “I’ll be gone for quite a while, possibly up to a full month or two. I’ll put in appearances where and when I can, though.”

“Stocky,” Anna said, hesitating a little. “Um, there’s a few things I know I’ll never understand about you. Ever. But one thing I have to ask is this—how long have you been living like this?”

Stockholm stopped halfway through rubbing under his left arm with the cloth, and looking at her with the most serious cast in his eyes he could manage. “How long have you been drifting the lands of Tamalaria?”

Thick silence settled in the bathroom, almost taking on a visible hue of a barrier between the two of them. Finally, he gave her a partial answer, which for now, was good enough. “If it’s a question of how old I am, I’ll answer you as honestly as I know how; I’m twenty-two-hundred and forty-three years old. Much older than those of my species, even my long living tribe, live to. As for the how or why of that, I cannot remember. Something happened a very long time ago to me. It involves a handful of the gods, that much I know.” While he wasn’t giving her the whole truth, he figured this much was better than nothing.

“The wandering. Yes, I’ve drifted a lot over the last six hundred years.” Stockholm went back to scrubbing his underarms. “I learned all of the combative arts I could, as early as I could, so that I could handle every situation I came across. But I haven’t really had a clear purpose for a long time, boss lady.” He now splashed water on himself. “Now, I do. I make things work for a while, until next year. Then, I do as the gods council me to do,” he said.

“I never figured you for a holy man.” Anna raised an eyebrow as she grabbed a washcloth of her own and set to work scrubbing clean.

“I’m not.” The Red Tribesman appeared thoughtful for a moment, and then stood up in the tub, turned around, and stepped out. He shook himself off like a dog, his hair poofing out in large tufts like a cartoon character. “By the way, Anna?”

“Yes?” she asked, as a tsunami in miniature smashed into her, breaking over her upper body with a wet ‘smack’. “Oh, you bastard! I’ll get you back.” She exited herself, drying off and selecting a new outfit for the day’s work ahead of them. It would be the last day of this long, hard trip. And in the end, she thought, we won’t even do what we’ve been trying so hard to do, not if what Stocky says about the Glove is true. What then would they do with the artifact if they gained possession of it? Would they warn Thaddeus Fly about the curse upon it, since it seemed fated that they would run into the Midnight Suns again in those forsaken ruins? She didn’t know, and as long as all of her companions stayed safe and free of injury, she didn’t care.

* * * *

     As Anna and Stockholm were getting out of the bath, Thaddeus Fly and his band of Midnight Suns stomped up the snowy trail toward the mines. Several signs, each written in a different language, warned of the closed mine ahead. Nobody in the company could read the ones written in Dwarven, but Trent could decipher the signs written in the rough scrawl of the Jafts. The signs left for the blue-fleshed humanoids not only had writing on them, but little pictures of stick figures falling from cliffs, skulls and crossbones, and one picture depicting a group of lawman stick figures beating a central figure about the head with sticks with nails in them.

The Minotaur warnings Rage could interpret, since their language was so closely akin to that of the Greenskins as a whole. “Pass, at own, risk,” he read aloud. “Hey boss, I tink it’s dangerous around here.”

Fly rolled his eyes and moved ahead.

The company came upon the entrance to the mines a couple of hours before noon. Large wooden gates, painted gold and black to warn against entry, stood between two natural rock formations. A sign behind the gates, written in the common tongue, read, ‘This mine closed due to hazardous conditions, to include: sudden drops, instability of shafts, and dangerous, hostile creatures of unknown origin and/or nature. Thank you for staying out. This means you!’

Rage grabbed one of the gate doors and ripped it from its moorings, tossing it aside like so much driftwood. “Da way is clear, boss.”

Fly instructed everyone to take a last stock of their belongings before they entered the mines. As they set about securing their gear and pulling weapons out, or in Lain’s case, raising a few corpses from the snowdrifts and the hard packed ground, Fly took Trent and Akimaru aside.

“All right, you two.” He put a hand on each man’s shoulder. “You’ve both been down there before, and I recall you telling me about the freaks that guard the ruins. Remind me what we’re up against if we go down there now.”

Trent’s mind reeled at the memory of the multi-limbed guardian that had nearly killed him. Other monstrosities dwelled in those ruins, but this time, he wasn't going in ignorant of them, and Akimaru was not his only reliable companion. Together, the five of them should be able to take care of business, but what if there was a whole community of the creatures down there? What then?

“Well, Headmaster,” the Human Ninja began. “I’ll not sugarcoat it, sir. It’s going to be horrific. The one creature I recall with any clarity nearly killed me. If not for Akimaru, I wouldn’t be here right now.”

Fly considered this for a moment before looking to Akimaru, the half-breed elemental and Psychic.

“Aki? Anything to add?”

“Yes, sensei,” Akimaru said. “The creature which Trent mentioned is not unique. There are likely several dozen of them down there, along with others I sensed and saw when we were in those ruins before. I took Markus-san and Solomon back to the surface, and returned there when they were away to Solomon’s home, that Markus Trent could receive healing.”

This was news to both Fly and Trent, and so they listened more intently to the white clad Ninja.

“There are wild Sidalis down there, along with the monsters that lurk about. In addition, there are men made of mecha, long since rusted over, but still dangerous to us.

“The mutants live and hunt in packs, though what exactly they hunt for food, I do not know. The abominations, like the one Trent and I saw, are primarily solitary creatures who lurk and stalk alone, picking at the mutants unfortunate enough to fall to them. In addition, a handful of earth elementals are holed up in one of the larger buildings.”

“The mecha men—” Fly was concerned more with artificial drones than with the mutants or elementals. He had little working knowledge of technology. “What did you observe about them? Are they dangerous like the other inhabitants of the underground city?”

“Yes, Headmaster,” Akimaru said. “They are dangerous. They hunt as well, but they seem to do it out of habit, out of nature. They use mecha weapons both carried in hand and embedded in their bodies.”

As soon as Akimaru said this to him, Fly realized what the Midnight Suns would have to do to survive.

“Everybody, make camp,” the Black Draconus said. “We’re going to wait here for a while.”

Rage and Lain made no sign of surprise, and made a basic camp along with Akimaru and Trent.

When they were settled in, Fly sat in the snow and waited. Norman Adwar, he thought, would be a great addition to the excursion. “We wait for William Deus and the Hoods. We keep the truce, and we work together to find Evergreen. We can use their muscle and their unique skills. Above all, we can use a distraction for the mutants and monsters,” he said.

* * * *

When Flint reported that he could see campfire smoke, Anna knew that Thaddeus Fly waited for her. The Black Draconus Ninja would want Anna and the Hoods along for the ride as well. She was all too happy to agree—for the time being.

     “You want I should send up a white flag, William?” Flint asked. “You know, the whole ‘we come in peace’ thing?”

“No, Flint, that won’t be necessary. If he’s waiting for us, Fly has serious doubts about the safety of entering the ruins alone. We’ll help the Suns out as far as we can, or as far as we dare. Remember, we’re both after the same thing here.” She addressed everyone in the group. “Help keep each other safe, but by no means let one of the Suns get his hands on the Glove first. We’ll find Evergreen and cut her hand off if it’s required. But we’ll not let Fly have it.  No curse is going to rid us of them, damn it!  We’ll run them out of Desanadron ourselves.

Mutters of agreement rose from the Hoods and Lee Toren, and the company continued up the path in the face of the falling snow.

Forty minutes later, at sharp incline in the path, they veered slightly right and came within eye- and earshot of the Midnight Suns.

Fly’s company sat in a loose semi-circle, a few undead Minotaurs and Dwarves milling about under Lain McNealy’s command.

Anna saw the Headmaster’s broad back, and when the white clad Ninja, Akimaru, pointed in her direction, Fly rose and turned to face them, one empty hand up in the air. “Hail and well met,” he called to the Hoods.

“Hail and well met.” Anna sprinted ahead of the group, her feet slipping and sloshing about in the fresh fallen snow. She finally made her way up to Fly, sucking air. The mountains were no good for her lungs, she decided, no good at all. She learned over the last few days how the Dwarves, such stout fellows all, could be such good marathon runners out in the plains and forests of Tamalaria. When you worked for most of your life in a region like this, it did wonders for your stamina. “So, what’s the situation?” she asked.

“We aren’t entirely certain,” Fly said. “We decided to wait for you and yours,” he said, nodding at the Hoods as they gathered up behind Anna. “In particular, we’ve been waiting for Norman Adwar, so we could ask him a few questions.”

This caught Anna’s interest, and she beckoned the Gnome Engineer forward with a wave of her hand.

Looking abashed, Norm waddled up through the deepening snow.

Fly gave him a perfunctory bow of respect. “Good Master Adwar.”

“Um, yeah, hullo there,” Norm said. “Uh, what exactly do you need me for? I’m just an Engineer.” His left hand patting the heavy metal object tucked into his waistband, reassuring himself that it was still there.

“Akimaru, come here,” Fly said.

The white clad half-breed stood and stalked over, the soles of his boots never sinking beneath the powder. He stood next to his sensei, his hands hanging loosely at his sides.

“Describe to master Adwar here the mecha men you spied in the ruins on your previous trip here.”

“You’ve been here before?” Anna’s suspicions of Fly’s motives grew. If he already had an idea of what was down in the ruins, why wait for the Hoods? Could the beings lurking down there be that dangerous?

“Yes, I have been here before, along with Markus Trent,” Akimaru said flatly. “I have laid eyes upon more of the inhabitants of the underground city.” Akimaru turned his focus on Norman, who shivered when he saw those frosted, glassy eyes.

If he turned on his Identifier, he wondered, what would the readout display say? Or would the device simply implode in on itself?

“Master Adwar,” Akimaru said, “there are men who are composed of machinery down in the ruins, armed with mecha weapons that they both carry, and have as parts of their body. I spied no flesh on their bodies, though I could not get close enough to be certain.”

Norm’s memory flooded through his mind’s eye—lines and lines of text from ancient technology guides he’d read over the years laying before his mind. Portraits of technology of the Third and Fourth Age scrolled past, dozens, scores of them, and he had to shut his eyes to bring the images into full focus.

Two groups waited silently while Norm considered the newest batch of images in his head.

Heads, he thought suddenly, that’s the ticket. “The heads, Akimaru, what did they look like?”

The half-breed considered this for only a second.

“Their heads were shaped like curved tubes. Like the metal items they fire from their carried weapons,” he said.

“Bullets,” Norm said. “The heads are shaped like bullets. Okay. I think I remember seeing one of those in a workshop in Palen.” He drew out his pad of paper, and did a swift, crude sketch of the mechanical man he’d seen. “This looks like crud. Any artistic talent, Aki me boy?”

Instead of answering, Akimaru brushed gently past the Engineer and over to Styge, who was finishing his drawing’s last minute detail. Akimaru ripped the pad from Styge’s hand, turned it over to a blank page, and handed it back.

When Styge had his hands on the pad again, Akimaru clutched the old man’s shoulders gently, and sent the image of the mechanical men to Styge’s mind directly.

There came a flurry of pencil strokes.

After only a handful of minutes passed, Styge handed the finished drawing to Akimaru, who returned to Anna and Norman, holding the torn sheet to them.

“This is what I saw, master Adwar. By the way, Master Styge, very nice work you do here.”

Styge gave him his gap-toothed smile, and rubbed his Mohawk roughly.

“Yup, that’s as I guessed.” Norman took the picture. “It’s an old model of security droid.” He dropped the obscure word into his sentence as though anyone would know it aside from him and Stockholm. “From the middle of the Third Age, I’d wager. They’re equipped with a long-lasting battery that only powers their bodies when a warm-blooded creature comes within three hundred yards,” he said. “If they’ve been moving around at all like you say, Akimaru, they haven’t got but a few years left in the ol’ fuel cells. Course, that’s a little beyond the scope of our time frame, isn’t it?”

Anna, Fly and Akimaru said nothing in reply.

“Of course. Now, here’s how we go about dealing with them,” Norman said.

The entire group, Hoods and Midnight Suns alike, gathered around the Gnome Engineer.

“Don’t forget there’s other things down there to worry about, Norm ol’ chum,” Lee advised.

“I haven’t forgotten,” Norm spat irritably. “Now listen.” He pointed fixedly at the drawing. His finger rested on the stomach of the machine drawn on the paper. “This here is where the battery is housed. A direct blow to the chassis will dislodge the battery and take them out of commission.”

“Simple as that?” Flint was frankly surprised that anything technology related could be so easy to deal with.

“Should be.” Norm’s voice slightly clouded with doubt. “There’s another model, came out not too long after the first run of these, that had a sturdier battery housing inside. A simple blow to the stomach wasn’t enough with them. You had to shatter the housing completely to shut them down. Just bear in mind, though, that these things may be rusted and old, but they’re bound to still be deadly accurate.”

“Wait a minute,” Fly said, raising a finger. “You said they react to anything warm blooded, right?”

Norman nodded, a smile alighting his face when he realized what Fly was about to suggest.

“Not a problem then. I’m cold blooded, as I’m sure Akimaru is,” he said, to which the half-breed nodded. “We’ll personally deal with the mecha men then. Will they even detect us?”

“Nope,” Norm said. “They only react to warm blooded threats, like I said. Their targeting systems were developed by the Dwarves during their Third Age border skirmishes with wild Minotaur tribes. You two won’t even register.”

That much at least settled, the group looked to Akimaru concerning the other creatures in the ruins.

“The many-limbed creatures of black flesh showed little fear of magic and are immensely powerful, physically. However, they are slow, as their legs are very stout. Swift maneuvers, hit and run, will work best. As for the mutants, I cannot say what tactics would work best. They will, as a result, be our largest problem.”

With nothing more to hold council over, the ensemble from Desanadron headed into the mines, uncertain of how many of their members would come back to the surface alive.

* * * *

The Guild members stood crowded together atop the steep cliff that dropped down to the outskirts of the buried city and took in their surroundings with true awe. Other than Akimaru and Trent, had never seen such an enormous unpopulated area, or buildings so tall.

Even Lee Toren, who’d seen an amazing sight or two in his time, sucked in air through his teeth and whistled, the sound echoing out over the city. “That’s some scenery, eh? Now, how the hell do we get down from here?”

Lain McNealy moved back into the mineshaft, summoning a few agents with her.

When there was enough room on the ledge to move about, Lain sent several of her zombies through, giving them orders with words lost to the majority of lands.

The Minotaur and Dwarven corpses shuffled toward the lip of the ledge, and crouched.

One large Minotaur, only a few weeks dead from the look of him, clung to the ledge. Another Minotaur cadaver climbed down and grasped its ankles. On and on this went, with Lain summoning up more corpses from the mineshaft itself to join the ‘human’ chain that would serve as the group’s ladder.

Anna eyeballed the horrific structure critically, and asked Lain if it would hold Rage or Stockholm’s weight.

“Certainly,” Lain replied. “When a person is dead, their arms don’t get tired.”

Twenty minutes later, the proof was in the pudding as they say, as the Orc descended the ladder of corpses to the floor of the ruins. Stockholm didn’t bother with the ladder, opting instead to leap from several hundred feet up. He landed in a crouch, thudding against the ground with a discernable tremor.

“Real subtle there big fellah,” Flint moaned. “Nobody in this creepy cavern’s gonna notice a huge Red Tribe Werewolf leaping out of the sky. Dolt,” he added, trying to keep his voice inaudible.

Stockholm, though, clouted him one upside his head.

Flint rubbed his head, and tuned up his hearing. Something was breathing heavily, and not too far away. “Heads up and eyes open, folks, I hear trouble.”

The two groups spread out, the Hoods keeping to the north of the main road heading into the city while the Suns took the south.

They stayed roughly twenty-five yards apart, all brandishing what weapons they had on hand.

Anna looked over at Norman. “Um, Norm? What is that?” She indicated his weapon.

“Oh, this?” Norm gave a satisfied smile. “It’s called a revolver. Forty-four caliber. Packs one hell of a kick, but I made a few adjustments to compensate for recoil.”

His words were all gibberish so far as she could tell, but he seemed pleased, and she knew from the sound of it that it was a weapon. That was good enough.

The first monstrosity leaped from around the corner of the first building they approached.

Huge and lumbering, it stampeded toward the Midnight Suns, loosing a horrid battle cry as it charged.

Trent, his memories of the monster’s kinsmen resurfacing, searched for the crimson eyes that would be found in its upper torso.

He spotted them, wide and bloodthirsty, pathetic almost in their primal need and hurled three shuriken in rapid succession, striking the eyes with deadly accuracy.

The lumbering behemoth went down in a twitching heap, grappling at its impaled eyes and shrieking its final death throes.

Anna’s spine stiffened at the sight of the beast, all muscle and sinew stretched as tall as she and as broad as Stockholm or Rage. A shiver ran the course of her body, and she set her focus forward now, making certain to sweep the interiors of the buildings they passed.

None of the structures seemed unstable at a passing glance, but with her usual eye for detail, Anna saw the signs of decay. Crumbling bricks, loose molding, and strange, thick roots wrapping around the foundations of the smaller structures. These telltale signs informed Anna that this marvelous, forgotten metropolis would be nothing but mortar and dust in a few decades.

Up ahead, she spotted Lee Toren ducking into what appeared to be a storefront. “Flint, go retrieve our wayward hired hand,” she called to the Wererat, who saluted and sprinted into the shop after the Pickpocket.

The interior of the store was littered with a thick layer of dust, dozens, perhaps hundreds of old cobwebs, and the footprints of Lee Toren. The Gnome stood before a shelving unit caked with dirt and grime. Something shiny must have caught Lee’s eyes, because the Pickpocket stared vacantly.

“Oi, what have you found, Lee?” Flint asked a second before he pulled the Pickpocket back from certain death.

A thick, winged serpent slithered before the Wererat and Gnome, and Flint barely tugged Lee out of the path of its venomous fangs.

Flint was about to stab the creature in the head when it turned its gaze upon him. His arms went slack at his sides, and only Lee’s quick recovery saved Flint from the fate he’d prevented the Pickpocket from suffering.

The Gnome struck the serpent through the head with one of his daggers, pinning it to the floor as it thrashed under his hand. When the creature fell still, Lee pulled his weapon out, and looked Flint up and down.

“Sorry about putting you through that.” Lee shook his head. “I just glanced in and that thing had me, mind and all. We really have to tread lightly…. Hey, what’s this?” He plucked up an object from the shelf, turning it over in his hand this way and that. “Any ideas?”

He handed the object to Flint, who sniffed it a moment, and then turned it this way and that. It was a thin, rectangular container of some sort, with something rattling around inside. He grasped the edge of the container, and it opened with ease, revealing a shining, circular disk. The words ‘The Roving Tramps’ were imprinted on the disk like a declaration.

“No idea,” Flint said, tossing the container and its disk aside without interest. “Come on, we’re wasting time here. Remember, we’re not treasure hunting, Lee. We have a purpose.”

“Oh, yeah, I forgot, we’re down here in these godsforsaken ruins, looking for a woman who can make herself totally undetectable. Sorry for being greedy.”

Anna and the rest of the Hoods stood outside, arms folded with looks of disapproval. They continued on down the main avenue in silence, keeping themselves razor sharp.

The two groups pulled slightly tighter together as they went, the buildings crowding in around them. Harsh barks and growls sounded around them, the denizens of the city coming out of their hiding places to look at these new intruders, or as most of them thought of the mixed companies, meals.

Only two miles away, atop a three-story building labeled ‘Chet’s Hardware’, Teresa Evergreen looked at the sudden activity down the avenue. Her pursuers had come for her.

Ten minutes passed, and the Midnight Suns and Hoods made little progress, trying to stay well away from any open buildings and resisting the urge to branch out onto intersecting streets. “This is taking too long,” Fly called over to Anna, who simply nodded. “We need to find the woman quickly, before our hosts decide to take action against us en masse.”

“I agree, but we have little choice. We don’t exactly know how we’re going to find her.” Anna stopped in her tracks, and all of her agents, with the exception of Norman, followed suit.

The Gnome Engineer was using another of his gadgets, staring at it as he crept along with the revolver in his right hand.

“Two streets south of us, we’ve got droids.” Norman finally came to a halt twenty yards beyond Anna.

Stockholm stiffened, his nostrils flaring haywire.

“Fly, Aki, you two want to,,,” Norm got no further as a mutant crashed through the window of a nearby residence, flying at Norman with one long, leathery arm extended.

“Norman, no!” Stockholm gauged the speed of the creature and his own movements, terror ripping through his heart as he concluded that Norman would be flayed alive before he could intercept the wild Sidalis.

Its entire body was ropy and thrashing with anticipation, its flat, board-like face a mask of hideous boils that swelled as it closed on Norman Adwar.

Norman, either out of fear or instinctive reflex, brought the barrel of his revolver up, aiming straight at the creature’s face, and pulled the trigger twice.

Two hollow, booming reports echoed through the cavern ruins as gaping, bloody holes tore open in the mutant’s face. It fell mere inches short of Norman, twitching and its head bleeding. A smoldering, bloody mess decorated the back of its skull as brain matter sizzled and popped around the wound.

Norman vomited explosively, much more than he had after beating on Lee Toren in Ja-Wen, the foul reek of his stomach’s contents filling the air as they splashed over the back of the dead mutant.

“Well played, Norm, well played,” Flint said, rushing past the stunned Stockholm to pat Norm on the back, which triggered another burst of vomit.

“Come now, it’s not so bad. It was you or him, right?”

Hands on knees, crouched over to stay on his feet, Norman Adwar nodded a very little bit.

The reports of the firearm had scared off most of the group’s visitors, and Fly and Akimaru took full advantage of this, acting on Norman’s previous statement and moving toward the droids south of their position.

When they came upon a group of six rusted mecha men shuffling aimlessly about, the two Ninjas stabbed them in their frail stomach chassis.

With whirs and buzzing noises, they fell limply to the ground, their artificial lives snuffed.

The Ninjas returned to the larger group, and everyone seemed to take in a large sigh of relief.

“Well, that’s dealt with,” Anna said.

She had no idea what was about to fall upon them, and neither did anyone else, perhaps excepting of Akimaru. The half-breed knew all too well the sound of the creature that bellowed from the far end of the city. It was the primary reason he had ceased his exploration of the ruins. Despite his considerable powers and skills, he would never be able to defeat that particular foe.

The true Guardian of the underground city had awakened.

* * * *

Teresa Evergreen heard the reports of the Gnome’s revolver, and knew that the mixed company of Hoods and Midnight Suns would make swift progress now that most of the city’s inhabitants were scared off.

Having the advantage of freedom of movement, she took off west, toward the far end of the city.

Teresa explored the ruins when she had first arrived. At the far end of the city, several miles from the ledge that led back to the ruins, she had found a creature that could only be described one way. It was Death given a host body and a license to dispense of the pleasantry of waiting for a mortal’s true end. The construct appeared to be a Half-Giant, grafted here and there with dozens of mecha implements and armed to the teeth with gigantic weapons.

An aura of magic hung about the construct, though Evergreen had never met a Giant that could perform spells of any kind. It stood stock still in some sort of constraints set into the wall of the iron cage that enclosed it.

A lever set into the wall next to it drew her attention, and when she flipped it down, the construct’s eyes flew open, and the constraints retracted into the wall, releasing the Guardian. It stretched its massive arms and legs slowly, laboriously, and groaned. Yet beyond this, it made no move.

The construct’s left arm, she saw as she stood beside it, was encased in an artificial housing of some sort, with the words ‘Technos Corporation Unit D-4’ stamped into the metal. That housing, she realized, was where the flow of magic was coming from.

Artificial magic, she thought. How fascinating the era this thing was from must have been.

When the creature let out a low, rumbling moan, she felt a little pang of fear. When it roared like a one-man army, she nearly urinated in her pants. The Guardian sensed a threat, and marched off to meet it, breaking down the cage wall in front of it by simply walking into it. Teresa Evergreen smiled despite her fear. She’d like to see her pursuers get past this monstrosity.

* * * *

When the nearby mutants and beasts fled in a panic, Fly, Anna, and every other agent with them knew they were in deep shit. If the freakish inhabitants were afraid of whatever was coming down the main road toward them, they didn’t stand a chance.

“Options, everybody,” Anna shouted as the ground beneath them rippled with tremors.

“Scatter and run like all get out,” Lee Toren shouted above the din of stalactites in the cavern ceiling falling all around them.

This was exactly what they did, with Akimaru lagging a little behind with Stockholm and Rage.

The three of them served as a rearguard until a huge chunk of the cavern ceiling came down in front of them, severing them from the others.

Anna turned back and shouted for them.

“Go on ahead,” Stockholm called back. “We’ll find a way around.” He turned to Rage and Akimaru. “All right, gentlemen. We can either go around and find the others, or we can stand here and fight whatever it is that’s going to be bearing down on us.”

“I vote we run,” Akimaru said without hesitation.

Stockholm peered into the half-breed’s eyes, and saw genuine terror. If a creature such as Akimaru was worried, then he should be too.

“All right, point taken. You’ve seen it before, haven’t you?”

Akimaru nodded hurriedly, and led the trio down a side street. Rage plunged a heavy fist into the face of one of the monstrosities that had first threatened the company, or at least one of its kinsmen, breaking its face and sending it flying ahead of him. As it fell heavily to the cavern floor, he ran over it, crushing several vital organs under his sheer weight.

“Nice, very nice,” Stockholm commented as he took in labored breaths.

“T’anks,” Rage replied.

The trio turned again, running up a road parallel to the main road. After a few minutes they made their way back to the main company, who had only moved about a hundred yards back toward the city’s entrance.

They’d gathered in a circle around Styge, who Stockholm saw was seated on the ground, chanting and waving his hands in mysterious motions.

“What’s de old guy doing?” Rage inquired.

“The only thing that matters right now,” Stockholm said with a wicked, murderous smile. He looked at Rage and put a heavy hand on his shoulder companionably. “He’s saving our asses.”

* * * *

As soon as the company separated from Stockholm, Akimaru and Rage, the others ran up the street a little way, and waited for their safe.

Styge took an immediate seat, pulling out his sketchbook, and the others l watched as the denizens of the ruins came flying at them from all directions. They appeared to be set on getting one last meal before going into hiding from whatever creature scared them so badly.

Flint, Fly, Trent and Lee Toren defended them, knives and shuriken flying with deadly accuracy.

Norman fired into the oncoming assailants seemingly at random.

His shots weren’t, however, as random as they appeared—several more mecha soldiers had come lumbering from their hidden posts, and he took them down as priority number one.

The mutants of the ruins were wild and unskilled at the use of their powers, and so they came bodily at the company—they could be dealt with by the others. The mecha men acted purely on programming, and had to be put down quickly.

Anna had little battle prowess, and backed herself up against Lain McNealy, who was reviving fallen mutants and monsters as soon as they perished from their wounds.

It was a stalemate at best, but everyone knew they had to protect Styge. The old man was up to something, and from the sound of the words escaping his mouth and the hand motions he was making over his drawing of the Blue Dragon, it was something on a scale beyond grand.

The last of their assailants scattered as another bellow from the Guardian sent shockwaves through the air and ground.

Anna looked south, and saw Stockholm, Rage and Akimaru running toward them, rejoining the group just in time to be of no help.

Flint, who had suffered a few scrapes and cuts, was breathing heavily as Stockholm approached. “Fat lot of good you did,” he mocked, smiling at the Red Tribesman. “I know you and Akimaru could both have jumped over that boulder in the road.”

“True enough, but we weren’t about to leave Rage behind.” Stockholm looked not at Flint but at Styge. “He’s really going to manifest a Blue Dragon in here, isn’t he?”

Flint merely nodded, and sank down to one knee.

“Flint, are you all right?”

“I think one of those buggers had venom.” The Wererat held his left arm up for Stockholm to inspect.

Sure enough, one of the slash wounds had swelled up and turned a bright, vibrant orange.

“It won’t kill me, but it’s going to be hell going to the bathroom I think, ha ha.” He dropped his rear end on the ground.

The entire company as a whole looked up then, responding to another loud, ominous growl from directly above them.

A Blue Dragon hovered in the air, snarling violently as it floated westward, down the road toward the city’s Guardian.

* * * *

Teresa told herself to stay put. However, curiosity was a hard thing to conquer, and she wanted to leave nothing to chance. If the Hoods and Midnight Suns managed to steal a victory over the construct, she could slip past them while they licked their collective wounds.

Up the main road she sprinted, barely able to keep stride with the Half-Giant.

A few miles later, she spied the Blue Dragon, snarling and snapping at the air, shimmer into existence.

“Styge,” she whispered aloud.

In her surprise, she let her cover slip for just a moment.

The Half-Giant construct wheeled on her with uncanny speed, raising the artificial left arm toward her.

“No, wait, I’m not what you’re after! Look, look at that Dragon.”

A burst of lightning force erupted from the end of the mecha arm, ripping through her body, sending currents of force and agony through her muscles, her bones, her very soul. She tried to cry out, but found her lungs melted to liquid in her chest. The construct stood still for a moment, its face devoid of any emotion or interest.

As Teresa Evergreen fell dead to the ground, the construct loomed over her a moment, and spoke its first words in over a millennium. “Target neutralized,” it said in a half humanoid, half mechanical voice.

It turned back toward the east, and stomped steadily down the road, the Blue Dragon coming into full view now.

“Target acquired.”

* * * *

Flint slapped Styge’s cheek, shook him by the shoulders, and hollered in his face.

Nothing worked—and Styge remained motionless on the cavern floor.

Though the Wererat didn’t know it, Styge was still very much alive and awake. The continued physical existence of the Blue Dragon took a large toll on Styge, but it was a price he could afford to pay—for now. Too long at it, though, and it would be lights out, permanently.

The Blue Dragon floated downward toward the ground and its oncoming attacker.

The construct Guardian pounded forth, bound to the restraints of gravity despite its full complement of otherworldly powers.

As the two colossal opponents closed on one another, the Blue Dragon brought swirling lightning to bear, and the construct aimed its mechanical left arm at the Dragon’s zig-zagging chest and underbelly.

The Blue Dragon, as a creature purely of Illusion magic and only temporary physical presence, didn’t have to wait as long to summon its power as a real Blue Dragon would. A bright starburst of power erupted with a thunderclap from its throat, searing into the Guardian’s chest, hurling it back through the air.

“I could have done that,” Fly said without much enthusiasm.

With their feared Guardian locked in combat with a Dragon, the city’s freakish residents felt safe enough to explore out into the streets to see who would live, and whether or not their earlier prospective meals had left the ruins. Seeing that they hadn’t, several abominations made their way toward the company, who turned to face them.

From having squared off with one another on many occasions, the Hoods and Midnight Suns moved around one another with a strangely fluid grace, agents from one Guild aiding those of the other with expertly times cooperative attacks.

Norman’s revolver ran out of ammunition, and he fell back toward Styge so that he could reload.

Anna stepped into his place, pulling her short sword and deftly dodging and rolling aside from the multiple heavy limbs of the mutants, monsters and hybrid animals.

She struck out at them where she could, but she was getting winded again, and wouldn’t be able to keep up the pace for too long.

Norman returned to her side, his revolver cracking off reports even louder than the Blue Dragon’s breath weapon, sending bullets tearing through the creatures’ heads and chests.

He wasn’t exactly a marksman, but Norman had found his niche all right, she thought.

Akimaru sprayed shards of ice at the oncoming assailants, and tapped a few on the forehead with his bare hands. Those unfortunate few didn’t even live long enough to feel their heads burst apart when Rage or Stockholm took their cue from the white clad Ninja and punched or kicked through the skulls that had become cold as ice, and as fragile as glass.

These three, of all of those assembled, worked together with the seemingly least amount of forethought or effort. The battlefield was the kingdom to which each had been born, the closed fist was their scepter, the body count their proof of heritage. The only crowns upon their heads were Stockholm’s matted, bloody fur, Akimaru’s ice spikes covered by his mask, and Rage’s thick sheets of sweat.

Flint, Norman and Anna moved with similar grace, though they had Markus Trent alongside them. While Anna wasn’t very skilled at melee or missile combat, she was a Rogue, and knew a thing or two about dirty fighting—which Trent and Flint were all about.

Kicks aimed at what they thought, and often rightly so, were genitals. One of them led a freak away from the others while Trent sneaked up behind it and slit its throat.

Norman was able to use these loosely formed tactics to reload when he needed to, and thankfully, he’d brought a whole load of bullets along for the trip, in case the revolver worked. If it hadn’t, he’d probably be dead by now.

Fly worked in conjunction with Lain’s many undead servants, nearly two dozen of whom she had summoned from the corpse ladder that would let them out of the city. Accompanied by the falling mutants and monsters, these lurking, shambling combatants served mostly as decoys, but a few were very freshly dead, and more than worthy allies under her command.

Together they cut down a large number of the residents of the ruins.

Styge, meanwhile, stayed focused on keeping the Blue Dragon image solid. He only had a few minutes left to work with.

Whatever the Guardian was, it was terrifying, going blow for blow with the Blue Dragon. When Styge floated the Dragon over it, seemingly out of reach, the Half-Giant grabbed large chunks of debris from the fallen stalactites around him, and hurled it into the chest or broad side of the illusion made real.

The Blue Dragon would fan a little, wisps of smoke billowing out from around its mostly ethereal body as Styge prepared it for another gust of lightning, letting it circle a little of its own free will.

The Blue Dragon swooped down sharply at the construct, releasing its thundering fury full force into the Guardian’s upper body.

It flew not straight back, but down to the packed granite floor.

Styge motioned the Dragon down atop it, and could feel the construct’s ragged breathing beneath the hard scaled talons of the blue reptile.

Perhaps he could defeat it after all. Wouldn’t that just beat all, he thought.

The Guardian had other ideas, however. It jerked to the right, grabbing the Dragon by the throat.

Styge’s drawing, while beautiful, had been too entirely accurate—Blue Dragons were among the smallest of the legendary wyrms, and the construct’s enormous hands clamped fully around its throat, squeezing down suddenly and violently on its windpipe.

With an audible snap and moan, the image of the Blue Dragon shimmered into nothingness.

The construct looked around, confusion clearly reflected in its analytical face.

This apparently did not compute, or something like that, Norman observed as he fired off his last round in his current load.

The Half-Giant came at the group again as their straggling assailants fled.

“Scatter and retreat,” Anna called out.

Apparently, though, there wasn’t too much of a hurry.

After a few hurried steps, the Guardian stumbled, severely injured by the Blue Dragon.

Stockholm slung the old Illusionist over one shoulder and was making away with him, but the Red Tribesman looked over his shoulder at the Guardian.

It had halted a dozen yards away from Lain McNealy and Thaddeus Fly, and slowly pointed its mecha arm at them.

Black fire belched out at them, and both Headmaster and Necromancer fell to the ground screaming and on fire.

“Come on,” Flint tried to tear Anna away from the scene of carnage, but she would not be budged—not this time.

Every reasonable synapse in her mind beat on her to turn, take the Wererat’s advice, leave this tomb of death and freaks. But she cannot—not so long as those two still screamed, because that means they’re still alive.

“You want to save them, don’t you?” Flint was incredulous.

“I’ll draw its attention,” Anna said.

Flint pointed with one long, narrow finger at the changing scene.

Akimaru was wrapping Rage’s right hand with a thick layer of mystic ice as the Orc Berserker waited patiently, showing no signs of discomfort or pain.

Meanwhile, Trent danced around like a jester, keeping the Guardian busy with his feints and lunges. The Human Ninja even landed a few shallow stabs to the creature’s legs.

Anna watched in fascinated horror as the plan struck her mind’s eye.

The scene in her head played out only a few seconds ahead of the physical events, and it went something like this. 

Rage, right hand covered with magical frost and ice, lumbered toward the Guardian as it wheeled about, trying to get Trent in the sights of the mecha weapon on its left arm.

As Trent slowed, he back-flipped high over Rage, who roared as loudly as the construct, thrusting his fist into the end of the barrel arm of the construct.

A huge conflagration and a wave of concussion force sent everybody, including Lee Toren, sprawling to the ground.

And what has everyone’s favorite wise-ass, amoral and cravenly Pickpocket been doing since the battle between the Guardian and the Blue Dragon had begun? Just what he had always done best.

He secured the object the Hoods had hired him to help them seek out, and waited atop the ledge leading into/out of the ruins.

The Glove of Shadows hung loosely tucked into a vest pocket as he sat and pulled out a cigarette, lighting it as the concussion wave struck the entire city.

* * * *

Smoke and dust clung to the air around them as the Hoods and Midnight Suns pulled themselves into sitting positions. The blast had blown the entire left arm off of the Guardian, they saw, looking up and west to where it lay still, looking shattered and lifeless.

The bloody, spent meat of the severed appendage lay only a few yards away from Rage, who was also very badly off.

The Orc Berserker’s face was shredded, the broad, flat green nose torn open to reveal bare nasal passages, the fleshy lid of his left eye completely ripped off. A small piece of metal shrapnel was deeply imbedded in the eye itself, and several dozen other pieces of ancient metal littered his chest and stomach. His right arm was a mess of gore, the flesh and much of the muscle burned to the raw, bleached bone. All of this Anna, Stockholm, Flint and Fly took in at a glance.

Akimaru and Trent had also been very close to the source of the wave of force, and had been knocked hard into nearby storefronts, the glass shattered into thousands of shards.

Trent, still nearly unconscious was losing the feeling in his broken left leg. Sweat and tiny tendrils of blood matted his hair to his head. Even had he been fully awake, he couldn’t have seen the carnage, because he lay in a heap behind a store counter.

Akimaru suffered far less injury than Markus Trent, but that was mostly due to his unique physical and magical make-up. When Rage-san had thrust his fist into the cylindrical tube at the end of the Guardian’s left arm, Akimaru had thrown up a wall of ice shielding in front of him. This barrier had absorbed the brunt of the concussion wave. However, the explosion had been too much contained fire, and Akimaru had been tossed like a twig in a tornado through the window of the shop opposite Trent, and subsequently through the wooden counter itself inside.

He was bruised, certainly, but not in any way broken or seriously threatened.

Thaddeus Fly had felt the least impact from the concussion wave, because the force of his breath weapon was so much like the force of the wave. He had only been pushed backward a dozen or so yards, and would have stayed on his feet if the Wererat hadn’t been hurled bodily into him. The two had gone down in a tangle of angry, panicked limbs, each grappling for the other’s throat, certain that they had been set upon by creatures of the ruins again.

When they had one another by the windpipe, they looked into one another’s eyes, and shared a silent laugh.

Stockholm had experienced a brief moment of clarity just before the explosion. He had grabbed Norman Adwar and tucked him against his broad chest, crouching forward and keeping his back to the oncoming blast.

The two Hoods flew through the air, Stockholm letting his body go limp at the precise moment of the strike, and tensing up again as Norman shrieked like a banshee in his arms.

Stockholm managed a nearly impossible mid-air turn, and landed heavily on his back, with Norman safely propped seated on his stomach.

“Get, off,” was all the Red Tribesman managed after recovering his senses.

Lain McNealy had been completely taken by surprise by the concussion wave. Thankfully for her, her undead minions had stood before her in a line of sacrificial lambs. She had only been knocked a few feet, and was dusting herself off.

When she looked over at Rage, she let out a high-pitched, horrified moan of fear. “Rage! No, Rage.” She flew to his side and knelt next to him. “Say something, green meanie, tell me how you feel.”

Anna stood next to Lain, and placed a consoling hand on her shoulder.

Lain didn’t object, but didn’t pay much heed either.

Rage’s lips pursed suddenly, and he coughed, a harsh, strangled noise. “I feel like boigra, teacher,” he muttered through bloody lips. “Can I skip class today? I t’ink dat’s only fair.” He tried to sit up.

Fly joined them, as did Flint, Norman, Stockholm and finally, Akimaru and Trent, the white clad Ninja supporting Trent under the arm like a walking crutch.

As they all gathered around Rage, who had now successfully sat up, they heard another low, primal roar issue from the Guardian.

“Oh shut it.” Norman lanced his gun hand out to his right and pulling the trigger four times in rapid sequence.

Four ragged flaps of flesh burst apart in the Guardian’s forehead. To conclude the ordeal, Stockholm leaped through the air and landed with a devastating kick to the construct’s organic throat.

Brains blown apart, bled nearly to death, and with no more fresh oxygen coming down its windpipe, the construct fell dead as fast as it had come to life.

Anna looked around the company, and spotted Styge’s limp form where Stockholm had been forced to set him down in order to protect Norman Adwar. He easily could have protected them both, so why set down the old Illusionist?

Anna bent over Styge.

His eyes were wide open, and a satisfied smile graced his dry, cracked lips.

She guessed Stockholm’s motive for leaving him on the ground, and then took Styge’s wrist between her fingers. Her guess was confirmed—she found no trace of a pulse.

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

'The Glove of Shadows' Chapter Seventeen- End of the Trail


Teresa Evergreen had expected pursuit. It stood to reason that as soon as she betrayed her beloved Markus Trent, the Midnight Suns would be hot on her trail. She just hadn’t expected them to take so long to come after her.

She crouched atop a rock spire along the first of the footpaths into the northern mountains, looking down at the Midnight Suns. She’d been waiting in a nearby cave for two full days.

Earlier this very morning, before the sun had fully come into view, she had seen a strange mutant flying past, a hybrid of man and hornet, with a Lizardman gripped in its hands. They appeared to be working together, and if her instincts were still to be trusted, they too were looking for her. “Well, well, the game gets more interesting all the time,” she’d whispered to herself.

Now, however, looking down at the Midnight Suns, she realized that the game wasn’t all that fair. After all, they had no way of finding her, so long as she kept her wits about her and her powers active.

Her heart skipped a beat, however, when the white clad Ninja, Akimaru, looked up toward her. Had her cover wavered slightly?

But no, Akimaru looked away from her and up the trail again, following just behind a groggy Rage.

Teresa followed after, leaping from stone spire to stone spire, nimble and agile as ever. When the footpath the Suns followed turned west, she continued north, navigating and negotiating steep inclines and jutting mountain faces.

She had left marks of her passage, but unless Akimaru was inspired to leap up onto a rock spire, nobody would find them. Trent, however, just might, she realized, and increased her pace. She had to find someplace to hide, and she had less and less time to do so. If the Midnight Suns had arrived finally in the mountains, then the Hoods wouldn’t be too far behind.

Though her powers nearly rendered her untraceable, she knew one of the Hoods could find her. Not Stockholm, no, and not the Wererat either.

But that damned Illusionist might be able to see right through her veil of invisibility. On top of that, she had to worry about the mutant and his Lizardman friend. She had no idea if they could successfully track her down, but she didn’t want to take any chances.

Where could she go, in the mountains, where she could successfully take refuge? Certainly not with Solomon, she thought, he’d want to wring her neck for leaving him for Markus Trent.

But the ruins, she thought. Those ruins could make do.

* * * *

“Remember, head straight back,” Stockholm said in a low voice to the horses as the rest of the company headed into the mouth of the hills that lead up into the mountains proper. Stockholm released the bridle of one of the chargers, and it led the other horses south and east again, toward the city of Desanadron.

Finished with their purpose, the Red Tribesman hadn't wanted to risk them being slain by wild creatures waiting for them at the foot of the hills.

“That was real noice of you, mate, real noice,” Lee grumbled, walking along next to Norman Adwar at the rear of the ascending company. “Now how the hell are we gonna git home?”

“The gods gave us each two legs, Lee,” Stockholm’s replied before heading up toward Anna.

Flint leaned back toward the two Gnomes from his spot in the middle of the company.

“Four sometimes,” the Wererat said with a grin. He coughed harshly, and lit another cigarette.

“Sure, loit another one ‘ere my ducky,” Lee said. “You sound roit as rain me mousy friend.”

“Piss off,” was the only reply.

The Hoods made their way up the footpaths, the rain left behind them in the flatlands of the northern plains. Here, in the hills fronting the Dwarven Territories, the air felt cool and clammy, damp with the snow they would soon be passing into. Knowing that the Dwarven Territories never experienced anything but wintry conditions, everyone from the company had brought their snow gear, and started to strap it on at around midday, when the elevation started to rise greatly. They were in the Territories now, without a doubt, and the first of the snows could be seen up the trail.

The Hoods didn’t break for a meal at noon, choosing instead to push onward. Anna had guided them to one of the easier climbs up into Dwarven lands, the slopes gentle enough that even Norman Adwar and Styge could make their ways up without too much trouble.

Stockholm fell back several times from his position up near the front, each time offering to carry the old Illusionist, but Styge refused him politely.

His attention kept darting off to the east, where he thought he could just barely discern someone hopping around the higher spires of rock like a frog or grasshopper. Nimble, he thought, whoever that was.

In this fashion they marched throughout the daylight hours, the old Illusionist finally taking up the Red Tribesman’s offer as late afternoon shifted into early evening. Flint let Norman ride on his back for a little while as well, Lee complaining about not getting so much as an offer of a ride.

Anna laughed at the expert Pickpocket, whom she knew to be more than sturdy enough to handle the wintry conditions of the mountainous Dwarven Territories.

As the sun set in the east, the company found a small alcove set in the side of the mountain and made a temporary shelter there for the night.

No plant life had been seen in the last hour of their travel, snow blanketing the area eternally. This told Anna that they had made excellent time. The Hoods would be atop this particular mountain in another half a day, so long as they continued to follow the twisting, circling path they were on, and then they could make an easy trip north, to Traithrock. In the Dwarven capital they would hunt down information where they could, and try to figure out their next move in the comfort of Dwarven hospitality. Gruff, hard working, and often combative people though they were, the Dwarves also knew a thing or two about how to treat travelers.

The Rogue wondered if Stockholm had spent any time here, among the Dwarves, and after everyone else had gone to sleep, except for her, Flint and the Red Tribesman, she asked.

“Yes, I have lived in these mountains, though not in Traithrock. The people there know me, but not so well as the Monks of the Kento temple in the far west. Their temple sits on a cliff face, with a long drop to the ocean on its back side.”

“That’d be one hell of a drop if someone used the wrong door to duck out for a squat,” Flint joked.

Anna and Stockholm both laughed for a moment before Stockholm turned serious again.

“You know, we had one young apprentice make that mistake,” he said evenly. “Luckily for him, the masters were able to save him. They tossed him a sutra scroll that allowed him to float down to the water, gentle as a feather. He had to swim around for a while, but they got him back up to the temple.”

“So, did he finish his training all right,” Anna asked.

Stockholm grunted a harsh laugh. “He was expelled a month later for laying with one of the chambermaids. Sex was not allowed in the temple grounds, you see.”

Flint balked at this. “You mean to tell me that the whole time you’re there, you can’t have any romping around? Well, no offense, my fine furry friend, but it’s a good thing you’ve got a strong willpower.” Flint puffed on his smoke. “I never would’ve lasted a month!”

Anna punched him in the arm, and took a sip off her aleskin.

“What? I’m serious boss. Life of celibacy just isn’t my style!”

“Really?” She felt slightly tipsy from the ale she’d consumed throughout the evening. “Just when was the last time you got lucky, mouse?”

Flint rolled his eyes and thought back. “Four months,” he said. “She was a fine piece of…” he stopped when he saw their faces.

They each tucked in for the night then, unaware that the Midnight Suns were camped less than a mile away, on another of the mountains.

* * * *

“Good thing we’re both cold-blooded,” Bergeon said to Dean Masters as they surveyed their surroundings. “Did you notice those footprints on the taller spires when we were flying past?”

“I did.” The Sidalis cleaned the tip of his spear with some of the snow on the ground and a rag. “I don’t think any of the thieves we’re after could have done that. You know, Lee Toren wasn’t with those prisoners. Perhaps you were right before.”

“What do you mean,” Bergeon said, licking the air with his tongue to get a good whiff of the air around them.

“I mean perhaps we should leave them alone. That Orc was no laughing matter, friend, and the Necromancer woman apparently has a good deal of power at her disposal.. They’re beyond our skills to deal with, just the two of us.”

“Nobody is beyond our skills, Dean,” Bergeon snapped. He was a devout swordsman without a specified Class, and his love of his steed had been greater than any Knight might have for their horse or griffin. Only Beastmasters had a fonder relationship with their animals than Bergeon had had for his stamprous. He had raised the animal from birth, naming it Talon, running with it in the fields, and training it in combat. Yet a legion of undead had been brought down on it, and he’d been forced to leave it to its fate. No, he thought angrily, we’ll not leave them go. “That woman took Talon from me, and I shall have her head for it.”

“Oh for heaven’s sake, it was just an animal.”

A moment later, one of Bergeon’s swords was at his throat. “And you and I aren’t much more than that, Dean Masters! You just remember that!” The Lizardman glared at Masters a moment longer, and sheathed his weapon. “We are not under the eye of Reynaldi right now. His orders can wait. Lee Toren can’t go far with the Glove of Shadows—not in these mountains. We’ll find him, but not before we slay the Necromancer woman. And if the Orc survived his injuries, we’ll finish him off as well. Nobody escapes the death of my swords.”

The two agents of the Order of Oun walked a while, periodically stopping to check for signs of people’s passing. They found the small, heavy tracks of Dwarven patrols here and there, but discovered nothing to indicate the passage of the thieves.

Although the sun had set long before, another two hours passed before Bergeon agreed to set camp in an outcropping of rocks that fronted a cave set in the mountain. He didn’t want to go in the cave and disturb anything living there, so instead, he and Dean Masters took turns keeping watch throughout the night.

The next morning, they found the Midnight Suns again.

* * * *

Akimaru went around the company, shaking everyone awake. Fly had told him to wake them just before sunrise, since he would have the last watch of the night.

“Oh man,” Markus Trent said, shivering. “This weather up here sucks.”

“Get used to it.” Fly hitched up his rucksack. “We’re heading for Traithrock, and we’ll need another full day, maybe day and a half on these mountain paths. As long as we don’t come across any Dwarven patrols, we’ll be just fine.”

Everyone got up, getting their things together. “How are you feeling today, Rage?”

“Better, sir.” The lumbering Greenskin stretched his massive frame lazily, working his limbs awake. “Still not up to, ah, you know, um, what’s the word?”

“Snuff, Rage-san,” Fly said. “The term is, up to snuff.”

“What’s snuff?” the Orc Berserker asked seriously.

Fly chuckled at his ignorance, but smiled gently at the man. “Lain can explain it better than I, my fine green friend. For now, let’s just get going.”

The Midnight Suns moved out into the snowy day. The sun shone brightly in the mountains, but imparted little of its warmth on the snow-covered mountains.

They continued on up the mountain, keeping to the paths they knew, avoiding the broader ones that Dwarven patrols would surely watch.

Then, around one turn in their mountain path, they saw the two strangers who’d attacked them, weapons at the ready.

The two groups stared at one another menacingly.

Atop the slope, the Sidalis and the Lizardman swordsman stood, feet apart, battle ready.

Trying to fight on the slope would be madness, Fly realized, but the mutant had wings. All he had to do was hover out away from the slope, and pick them off with his spear from a distance. Being at a higher elevation, the pair of strangers also had the advantage over Fly and his company. How would he deal with them appropriately?

“Sensei, please step aside,” Akimaru whispered into Fly’s ear.

The Black Draconus did as Akimaru asked, and stood near the edge of the slope. He risked a brief glance downward, and saw that if he slipped wrong and fell, he would plummet a good six or seven hundred feet before he struck another footpath. He would be killed for sure.

“We will let you pass, murderers,” Bergeon said, pointing his katana right at Lain McNealy. “If you give up the Necromancer. I shall have her head in exchange for the life of my steed.”

“You attacked and trapped us, swordsman,” Fly shouted up past Akimaru, who was steadily walking up toward the soldiers.

Bergeon didn’t hear a word of what Thaddeus Fly yelled. His eyes were locked on the Necromancer, his blood boiling with hatred.

Dean Masters only heard Fly vaguely as well, but for different reasons. He had seen the Orc, who had survived his wounds, but looked ill, weakened. But his bulbous, insect eyes were locked on the feet of the white clad Ninja approaching them. The man didn’t walk through the snow, but atop it. No sign of Akimaru’s passage could be seen.

“Sergeant, look.” The corporal pointed at Akimaru.

Bergeon tore his eyes away from the Necromancer, and was shocked by the same observation Masters had made. “What the hell are we dealing with here?”

“I don’t know, Dean, but you’d better use one of your barriers, and be quick about it,” Bergeon said, as Fly let loose a shuriken.

The metal projectile split the mutant’s left hand up the middle, and he let out a horrendous, high-pitched wail of agony as Akimaru made his move.

The white clad Ninja shifted his feet, and threw his hands forward, releasing a cone of force at Bergeon.

The Lizardman saw that the cone was actually thousands of minute shards of ice, and he drew his shorter sword, weaving his blades back and forth before him. Only a handful of the shards struck him, piercing his body like arrowheads without wooden shafts. His arms and legs bled openly on the snowy slope, but he was largely unharmed.

Bergeon’s training alone saved him from the next attack, as Thaddeus Fly came through the air at him, a jump kick just glancing Bergeon’s shoulder as he spun to the side.

The Lizardman looked to his right, and saw that another Ninja, a Human clad in gray tunics, sat astride his ally, Dean Masters, stabbing the mutant over and over in the arms.

Masters managed to throw Trent off, squaring off with him and lunging with his spear. He missed the stab, but tore it back around, cutting open Markus Trent’s left leg and spraying the snow with blood.

Fly drew one of his short swords, and engaged in a fast-paced duel with the Lizardman. Back and forth they went, exchanging blow for blow, neither making much progress. Fly knew the level of skill of the swordsman was high, probably much higher than his own. However, he had watched Bergeon, fight against Rage, and had watched his movements when Akimaru had flung his cone of frost at him. He had a pattern, and Fly waited for the opening that would help him finish this battle.

Trent, meanwhile, was backpedaling, being forced against the side of the mountain by Dean Masters’s continued assault. The mutant had lost his ability to put up his barriers when the shuriken damaged his left hand, but his skills with a spear hadn’t been much diminished. Over and over again he came at the gray-clad man who had tried to take advantage of his injury, landing one more slash on Trent’s face—before he was slammed by a huge, green fist.

Rage loomed over Masters as the mutant fell to the snow, sending up clouds of snow as he flapped his wings to get away.

He just got away from a stab to his back, Trent’s knife landing hard in his right calf.

Masters groaned in pain and rubbed the left side of his face where Rage had punched him.

The Sidalis floated out over the side of the slope, out of their attacking range. “What good are your weapons now, fools?” He cocked his right arm back, securing a chain at his hip to the blunt end of his spear. He would throw the spear and haul it back, hopefully landing it in one of them and pulling them over the edge, down to their death.

Which one, which one, he thought. That was when he noticed Akimaru again—too late.

Masters saw a shining surface jutting from the slope—a walkway made entirely of ice. Upon the walkway, which led right up beside him, stood Akimaru, the white clad Ninja.

“What the hell,” was all he managed before the grinning apparition, with its ice stalactite-covered head, breathed a freezing mist over his wings.

Dean Masters plummeted out of the sky, screaming all the way down.

After a full two minutes of screams, there was stunted silence, with only the clash of swords to break it.

Akimaru put his mask back over his head.

Fly looked for that opening, missing his opportunity only by a half a second each time it showed up.

The pattern was getting tighter as he struggled against the swordsman, each passing moment lending him seemingly greater speed.

While Fly flagged and slowed, this Lizardman, this inferior creature, gained the advantage.

Now or never, he decided, and opened his snout.

Bergeon’s eyes went wide, but he managed to tuck and roll away from the blast of lightning just before Fly let it erupt out of his mouth.

The mountain shook as the blast struck empty air.

Bergeon took advantage of this slip-up on the Draconus’ part and pelted down the slope toward the still Necromancer woman.

The gray clad Ninja was on the ground, tending his bleeding wounds, and the white clad freak was still walking back slaying Bergeon’s companion, leaving the Necromancer wide open to attack.

Screaming for blood and vengeance, Bergeon bore down on her. Lain McNealy didn’t move, couldn’t seem to move if she had wanted to. He had her dead to rights.

A few yards away from the woman, a huge, meaty fist reached out from behind a jutting segment of rock in the mountain, grabbing him by the throat.

In all of his years of training, Bergeon had never let his anger get the better of him, and now, he had let himself make the error that cost him his life. He darted his eyes to the right, and found himself looking into that wide, shining smile he had seen a few days before.

The Orc he had stabbed in the stomach knocked his sword out of his right hand with ease as he crushed the breath from his neck. “Remember me?” Rage asked before he threw Bergeon over the edge of the slope.

* * * *

Anna Deus and her band of Hoods experienced no such trouble on their way to Traithrock, which they reached just after noon that same day. The Dwarves on duty at the city gates had recognized Ignatious Stockholm, and palavered with him before letting the company into the city proper.

Traithrock spread before them, smoke rising out of chimneys everywhere they looked, guards standing about and holding friendly conversations with the townspeople. Crime was not much of a factor in daily life here, so guards were closer to the meaning of civil servant in the Dwarven Territories. If a shop owner needed something taken home, or brought to the shop from his abode, he needed only ask a passing guard to do him the favor, and it was done. Anna envied these people their peaceful existence, devoid of the fear of gangs and Guilds.

“All right people, let’s split up,” Anna said to the group as a whole. “We’ll meet up back here by the gates at nightfall. That goes for everybody, Lee,” she said meaningfully. “I don’t want you taking advantage of these people’s trust and getting us in trouble.”

“No worries, mate.” Lee inhaled the lovely aroma of home-cooked food from nearby. “I never cause trouble when I’m here. I prefer ta have me ‘ead on its shoulders, know what I mean?”

The Hoods split into teams, heading out into the city of Traithrock.

Styge and Flint headed west, toward the business district. Anna and Stockholm headed north, toward the government buildings and the mines. Norman and Lee, being Gnomes, who were often considered a cousin Race to the Dwarves, headed east, toward the taverns and the first of the residential districts. Each team had a single purpose—find anything relevant to their search, particularly where a fugitive might hole up.

As they had agreed, they met back up by the gates as the sun started to set on the day. There, each team revealed what little they had learned.

* * * *

Styge and Flint made their way to the shopping district in the southern region of the city of Traithrock, slumping along at a leisurely pace, enjoying the hustle and bustle all around them. The Dwarves were busy folk, and had no use for nonsense or tomfoolery until after dark.

Flint watched a team of Dwarven carpenters work on the siding of a new tavern, no foreman in plain sight. Only by the difference in work clothes was Flint able to finally identify the man as they passed by, because even the foreman was getting his hands dirty, hammering huge support spikes into the wood siding.

“Very industrious people, Dwarves,” Styge observed, puffing on a tobacco pipe. “Hard workers, hard drinkers, hard people. But they’re very respectful, very law abiding folk.”

“Yeah, I’ll give you that, old man.” Flint slowed as they passed by an elaborate stone cathedral. “But how can you tell a male from a female around here? They all look the same to me.”

“Oh, that’s easy.” Styge approached a trio of Dwarves who were seated before the cathedral, sipping coffee in tureens from a thermos.

He stood there a moment silently, until they acknowledged him, then he turned his eyes to one in particular. “Excuse me, ma’am, but would you happen to have the time?” He kept his hands folded behind his back.

“T’is half past five hours in the afternoon.”

To Flint, the Dwarf woman’s deep husky voice sounded no different than any Dwarven man’s.

Styge shuffled back to him, and together, they walked down the street further, ducking into a sundry goods store after a few minutes.

“So, how do you do it old man? I’ve lived much longer than you, but I can’t tell the difference.”

“It’s easy, when you know what to look for.” Styge ordered a box of matches and a half-pound of pipe tobacco from the clerk.

The counter was low, as was the ceiling, and Flint had to duck a little to fit in the store’s main room. He wondered what sort of trouble Stockholm was having, seeing as he had a good foot on the Wererat, and a good deal more width.

“And what exactly does one look for?” Flint wrote down an order for six packs of rolled cigarettes and handed it to another clerk, this one a teenaged Human boy. The store was lit with tubes of glass hung in brackets set in the wall, orange swamp gas glowing inside of the tubes. This was a strange new form of lighting, discovered and developed by the Dwarves of the hill regions to the east of the mountains. The swamp gas could be collected by simply holding a glass container over one of the many natural ground vents in any of the swamps found throughout Tamalaria. Then, it was filtered through rubber tubing into the light tubes of a building, and a match was struck against the access hole of the rubber tube. The swamp gas burned slow and bright, lighting a room quite well and for a long period.

“Well,” Styge said, thanking the Dwarven clerk for his purchases. “Take a look at this man’s left ear.”

The Dwarf gave him a queer look, and pulled the scruffy red hair back from the side of his face.

Flint saw a plain ear.

“What do you see?”

“I see an organ that aids in hearing,” Flint said sarcastically. “What the hell else should I see?”

“No earrings, right?”

Flint shook his head.

“Very good. That means this fellow is a man. Also, there’s the matter of the beard. See this gentleman’s beard?”

Flint took a good long look at the long, crimson beard. It was braided on the two sides near the edge of the long, flat chin.

The Dwarf tipped his head back and grinned, pleased that someone was admiring his facial hair.

“Now, what one thing stands out about it?”

“Aside from the typical Dwarven length? No offense, sir,” Flint said.

“None taken.” The clerk watched these strangers’ conversation about Dwarven ears and beards with interest.

“Dwarven women braid their beards in the middle.” Styge lit his pipe. “That’s the easiest way to spot a woman in the crowd.” Styge turned his disarming smile on the store clerk. “Now then, could I ask you a few questions, sir?”

Nice transition, Flint thought. Compliment the man, then start asking questions. Too bad he’s not a Rogue. He’d make a good con man.

* * * *

Norman Adwar and Lee Toren walked through the city streets of Traithrock, and in order to keep suspicions low, did what most civilized Gnomes did in strange cities—they held hands. It made Lee sick to do it, and Norman wasn’t too fond of not having his hands free, but they knew that they’d stick out like sore thumbs if they didn’t among these Dwarves. In Traithrock, two kinds of Gnomes let their hands be empty around each other. Thieves, for one, and Alchemists for another. Neither of these sorts was trusted in the Dwarven Territories, and so the pair of Gnomes from Desanadron walked hand in hand down the busy streets of the tavern-infested area of Traithrock.

When they picked a less than seedy tavern, they found the publican of the establishment locked in an arm wrestling contest with a Jaft man, another of the Races prone to living in the mountainous and dangerous regions of the lands.

As soon as Norman and Lee took in the sight of the blue fleshed humanoid gaining a slight advantage, the owner/bartender of the tavern shifted the pressure on his elbow and slammed the Jaft’s arm down on the bar counter.

Uproarious shouts of praise and disbelief filled the air, along with the natural stench of several of the contest loser’s kinsmen. Five Jafts in all stood about the pub, all huddled together to laugh and jeer at their companion’s failure to best a ‘wee man’ at a test of strength.

“Anybody ever tell you you’ve got a knack for getting people into the worst possible places and situations?” Norman asked Lee.

“Certainly, lad,” he replied. “You isn’t the first, and you won’t be the last, I’ll wager. Now buck up, lad, and let’s get us some drinks.” Lee Toren’s eyes naturally lingered on each loose stringed money pouch he saw. “This is one sort of bar where we won’t have ta say a word to anyone to learn of current, local news.”

The two Gnomes let go of one another’s hand, approaching the low countertop with Lee in the lead, two fingers up.

The Dwarven publican nodded evenly at the Gnome Pickpocket, and poured two clean mugs of ale.

Norman eyed his glass with suspicion before sampling the beverage, which, much to his surprise, was slightly sweet.

“Excuse me, sir,” he said to the publican, who looked away from the current Jaft challenger for a moment. “What’s this made with?”

The Dwarf laughed merrily for a moment, and shook his head. “It’s honey ale, lad. Brewed and distilled with mountain snow and honey. Careful you don’t drink it too quick, master Gnome. It may taste kind enough, but there’s a bear’s bite behind every swig. Not exactly for the casual Gnome customer.”

Norman thanked him for the information, and took a seat at the bar, settling in to watch the next contest.

Lee Toren, meanwhile, set his eyes on a man with whom he had worked a few independent jobs years back. The man was a Tanner Cuyotai, a member of the most common tribe of werecoyote. Artemis Lane, the man had called himself, although Lee figured that had to be a played up name. Most performers of the fine art of confidence man took on several names a year, or kept an arsenal of readily assumable identities on hand for repeated use.

Lee strode over slowly, savoring the sweet sense of a victory already at hand. Lane, if that indeed was his name was now, was engaged in conversation with a pair of respectable looking Dwarven gentlemen. He wore the fine black and white tunics of a nobleman. Tufted collar and cuffs flowed out over his furry neck and wrists, and lent a subtle grace to his movements as they ruffled.

“And that, my fine sirs,” Lee heard as he approached, “is how you could literally triple your profit margin over the course of only a month.”

Lane held up a long, slender finger to stay the Dwarves. “If you kind sirs would excuse me, one of my investors would like a word with me right now. Isn’t that so, Mr. Orten?” The crafty Cuyotai looked Lee dead in the face.

“That’s roit, moi ducky.” Lee realized wouldn’t have the immediate advantage to press, as the two Dwarven businessmen clearly wanted to linger, untrusting of such a smooth transition in the Cuyotai’s speech with them to this newcomer. “Timothy Orten, gennelmen,” Lee offered the Dwarves a friendly hand. “I should just loik to say that you’d be makin’ a foin investment wiv the good sir here, if’n you’s opt to invest.”

The Dwarves muttered to one another for a moment, and then asked Lane to excuse them while they talked over his proposal in private.

No sooner had the two Dwarven investors exited the tavern than a pair of hairy, gnarled hands wrapped themselves in the front of Lee’s tunic and hauled him forward, spilling a good quantity of his ale to the wooden floor.

“What the hell do you think you’re doing, Lee?” Foam forming at the corners of Lane’s mouth. His eyes were wide and wild, and the Gnome Pickpocket gathered that his con had already seen some rough spots along the way. “I’ve been working those two stunted fools for three whole days.”

“Calm down now Artie.” Lee pushed away from the Cuyotai Rogue with his free hand. “And be mindful of the beer. I paid good coin fer this drink.”

Lane grunted and motioned Lee to take one of the empty seats across for him, but the way he did so made it clear that Lee only had a couple of minutes to ask him any questions.

“All right, you little braggart,” Lane whispered, keeping his voice low and a fake smile plastered to his broad, canine lips. “What do you want?”

     “Answers, Mr. Lane.” Lee took a swig of his honey brew. “Just a few. First off, you seen any strange folks passing through the city? Stranger than normal, I should say,” Lee amended before Lane could give him a smartass reply. 

“Nothing too bad, not really. There’s a tribe of Jafts in the city for trade and booze, maybe a few loose women if they can find a compatible species. That’s about all.” Lee finished his beer with a quick chug, and wiped his mouth with a sleeve.

“Roit. Good enough, then. One more question.”

Lane raised a suspicious eyebrow. “That’s it? Two questions? You’re usually much more full of inquiry, Lee. Old age finally catching up to you?”

“Never mind my age and answer my question. Is Solomon still hanging about? You know, the old part-timer? Mister ‘I’ll work fer anyone what pays me enough’?”

“Oh, he’s still kicking about. Skulks around a ways from the city a lot, near the old mines what got shut down last year.” Lane smiled and waved at the two Dwarven businessmen he’d marked before. “You have your answers, Lee. Now get out of here before you ruin my deal.”

Lee offered his hand, which Lane shook, and he was off the seat and away.

When he got back over to Norman, the Engineer was three quarters into his third honey ale, and well beyond the path of mere drunken happiness. He had to sling Norman over his shoulder and carry him out of the bar, moving awkwardly back through the city streets to where he would rendezvous with the rest of the Hoods.

The mines seemed a safe enough bet, if he could get anything useful out of Solomon. Then again, he thought as he laid Norman down in the snowy street to sober up, assuring the guards nearby that his friend had simply taken too much honey ale too quick, perhaps he wouldn’t have to drag anything out of Solomon. Not when blokes like Stockholm and Flint were readily available.

* * * *

“If someone was going to hole up nice and tight around here, it’d be in those mines,” Morek Rockmight said to Ignatious Stockholm.

Anna had let the big Red Tribesman lead the way toward the government buildings, and Stocky hadn’t even wavered slightly in his path to the councilor’s abode. A quaint, three story house, built on a scale to accommodate Humans and Elves with ease, Morek’s home was open to all those he considered friends. This list included some of Tamalaria’s finest, and its worst. He’d never been quite sure where to lump in Ignatious Stockholm.

“So why were the mines abandoned?” Anna asked after thanking the Kobold house servant for her tea.

The three of them sat on the covered patio of Morek’s home, drinking hot tea and enjoying the cheese-filled biscuits the hired help whipped up for them on the pinch. Morek tried to apologize for the quality of the food available on short notice, but Anna waved the apology off. If she could eat like this every day, she thought, she’d be as squat as the Dwarven Boxer.

“Last year,” Morek said, “a team of diggers was headed in for a routine day on the job. Only one of them was soused as all get out, and stumbling around loik an idiot. He seemed to fall through a crack in the wall, as ‘is mates says it. When they followed him through it, they found this door. Well, you know us Dwarves—we’re not naturally curious folks, but this was just something too weird for comfort, you know? We’d been pulling iron and gold and copper out of those mines fer years now, and suddenly there’s a door up near the higher levels? Didn’t ride well with the lads, and so they came back and told the council about it.

“We all talked it over, me and the other six councilors, and we agreed to send in an exploration team. Five men, heavily armed, with some good fighting skills and a few of the machine weapons we’ve scrounged up from other hidden ruins over the years. Never know what you’re up agin when goin’ under the ground anymore. Um, do we ‘ave any of those chicken things left, Travis?” This last question Morek directed at the Kobold butler, who smiled his polite smile and nodded.

“Cor, heat those up and bring ‘em out. You’ll find these a treat, big man,” he said to Stockholm. “Good stuff, good stuff. Kobolds is really very good at three things, I’ve found. One is magic. They’ve got a nat’ral talent fer it. Another’s cleaning, which they’ve got an even better knack for. And the last is cooking, because believe you me, I’d never find the patience to sit around the kitchen and concoct half the stuff ol’ Trevor there comes up with.”

“The mines,” Anna tried to get the aging Boxer back on track.

“Oh, right.” Morek looked surprised at himself for digressing. “So we sent in a group of five able men. Not the very best, but mind you, these blokes had been around since Tanarak of Sidius. Very reliable, capable in a pinch. Five went down into the ruins beneath the mines, and only two came back alive.” Morek’s voice lowered to a threatening whisper. “The creatures they described are freaks of nature, demons almost for sure. Blighted, black-skinned things wide as an Ogre and fast as a leopard.” His voice filled with a terrible awe. “Three or four arms, strong as an ox to each limb. And there were other monstrosities down there, my friends. Things the two survivors couldn’t even bear to talk about. Weird animal hybrids, and even a few things they could only describe as men made of mecha and steel. No, if anyone wanted to take refuge down there, they’d have to be able to make themselves totally invisible to survive.”

Invisible, Anna thought. Like Teresa Evergreen.

* * * *

The city of Traithrock finally hovered into plain view below the Midnight Suns. Though they were all beaten, bloodied and bandaged, they were glad for the sight of it. The Dwarven people wouldn’t exactly welcome them, Thaddeus Fly knew. Theirs was a motley crew to be sure, and among them was an Orc, one of the few species in Tamalaria that the Dwarves openly hated.

As the company got closer to the city, Fly noticed that Akimaru exuded more and more of an air of impatience, anxiety. Had he been here before? Fly thought a few years back. He had sent Aki and Trent on an excursion up here to a set of discovered ruins. The part-timer, Solomon, probably still lived in Traithrock. He might be able to provide them with ideas on where she might be hidden.

The Midnight Suns arrived before the city’s open gates a little after the sun had set, only a few hours behind the Hoods, who had already held council and moved on.

As soon as Fly stepped through the gates, two-dozen Dwarven guards surrounded the company.

Axes, short spears and war hammers at the ready, the city’s guards held a safe distance from Fly’s group. One of the stout troopers, wearing heavy banded chain mail with a single plate of metal over his right breast, approached the Black Draconus. Upon the plate was emblazoned a diagonal blue line, apparently some sort of rank signifier Fly had never laid eyes upon.

“Hail and hold, outsiders.” The Dwarf hollered in harsh, guttural tones, though Fly was only a few feet away. “Most who come to Traithrock through the open and public roads are welcome, but not all. We would know your names, and your Class. If you belong to any army, give us your rank and your nation as well.”

Well, Fly thought, may as well get this tricky business over with by playing it honestly.

“I am Thaddeus Fly, Ninja. I am the Headmaster of the Midnight Suns.” The Black Draconus called back just as loudly as the Dwarf. He looked around at the assembled guards, and saw the blissfully unaware looks they gave each other. Good, he thought, they’ve never heard of me. “With me are,” he said.

“No, Thaddeus Fly, Headmaster of the Midnight Suns,” the captain of the guards said, putting up a staying hand. “We shall hear from your compatriots themselves. You there, Human.” The captain pointed at Trent. “Name, class and status.” Trent gave the captain a low, mocking bow, grinning like a court jester at play for his king.

“I am Markus Oliver Trent.” H stood to full height. “Ninja, and second in command of the Midnight Suns, though this is often a point of dispute among our Guild.”

Nice, good little public jab, Fly growled in his mind.

“Good. You, woman,” the captain spat.

“I am Lain McNealy, Necromancer, member of the Midnight Suns. I have no official rank.”

There came some mixed, apprehensive murmuring after her introduction, but the captain made no comment, insisting only that the Orc go next.

“Um, I’m not really sure what to do Ms. McNealy,” he whispered to the Necromancer.

She whispered something briefly in his ear, and he grinned. “Oh, dat’s not so hard. Okay, um, my name is Rage. I’m a Berserker. I’m in da Midnight Suns. Was dat okay?” He whispered the last, seeking the Necromancer’s approval.

Oh boy, Fly thought, here comes the really hard part. “You there, white one,” the captain said, pointing an accusing finger at Akimaru. “Name, class, status. Now!”

“I am called Akimaru. I am Ninja, and am also a Midnight Sun,” Akimaru offered evenly. “Nothing more shall I say to you, honorable captain.” He offered the Dwarf a deep bow from the waist.

This seemed to have a calming effect on the captain of the guards, and that calm spread from him to his kinsmen.

“It is well,” the captain said, giving a curt hand signal to his men, who lowered their weapons and slowly returned to their posts. “You may pass into this our city, but be warned. Any shenanigans on your parts will be sorely and swiftly dealt with. Understood?”

The company as a whole agreed, and the captain of the guards sauntered away. They had finally made it to Traithrock, and with only the strange mutant and the swordsman Lizardman to deal with along the way. Those two had been a tremendous pain in their collective ass, but at least they had been the last obstacle between themselves and Traithrock.

Now, to find Solomon, Fly thought, and beat whatever info out of him that we can.

* * * *

Two hours prior to the exchange between the guards and the Midnight Suns, the Hoods all came together at that same spot. No Dwarven guards bothered them. The city’s denizens recognized Stockholm, and the Gnomes were their cousins in spirit, so the group was left to hold their brief council. This particular council began with Flint giving Lee a small, blue pill to force feed to Norman.

“It’ll sober him up in about five minutes flat,” the Wererat explained.

“You sure it isn’t some sort of poison?”

“I save those pills for your coffee.” Flint gave a dubious smile.

Flint and Styge went first, telling Anna that they hadn’t found out much, except that the mines northeast of the city had been shut down a year back for reasons unknown to the shopkeepers.

On this subject, Lee and Norman, now sober and suffering a huge headache, had little more to offer.

When Anna retold Morek Rockmight’s account, things took a serious turn for the better. They all had a rough idea of what Teresa Evergreen was capable of. However, they all agreed that the group could do little without good food and rest, and so they all headed, as a group, to the only hotel in the city that catered specially to ‘big people’, as the mountainous Dwarves called them.

The accommodations were comfortable, if nothing else. The company split into three rooms, keeping the same partners as they had for the collection of information. When Anna and Stockholm entered their room, they had both been pleased to see that the housekeeping staff took their jobs seriously.

“So, left or right?” Stockholm eyed up the two available beds.

Neither would be a good fit for his massive frame, Anna saw, but if he curled up in his animus form, either would be perfect.

She opted for the one on the left, and tucked herself under the covers. She lay there, quite still, for a long while, waiting for the soft snore of her crimson companion.

After an hour and a half, she rolled over, and saw him sitting on the edge of his bed, staring at nothing.

“Stocky?”

He gave her no answer. Instead, he stood up, a glassy, unfocused look in his eyes, and shuffled out of the room like a zombie.

“Stocky,” she said, only slightly louder, praying he’d snap out of whatever trance he was in. She didn’t want to be alone, here, in this foreign territory. She knew that Flint would already be fast asleep in his rented chambers, and though she liked them all, none of the others seemed fitting company at this late hour. She rolled back over, and waited quietly for Stockholm to return.

A half an hour later, the Red Tribe Werewolf came back into the room, looking haggard, but smiling.

Anna sprang from her bed and jumped at him, wrapping her arms as best she could around his huge upper body.

He patted her comfortingly on the head, and she suddenly found herself crying, wishing she could be back home, in bed with her husband, Harold. “Don’t leave me alone like that, Stocky,” she said, pounding a limp fist against his barrel chest. “Never again, you hear me?” She looked up into his huge, cavernous eyes. “Where have you been, anyway?”

She sniffed the air around him, particularly the odor coming from his left hand. “And what’s that smell on you?”

“Oh, nothing much,” Stockholm said with a grin. “I just had to take care of some business with a fish.”

Before Anna could protest or ask any more questions, he scooped her up, laid her back on her bed, covered her up, and gently kissed her forehead. “Good night, Annabelle Deus. Rest well, and think no more on this matter. Soon, we will all head home, and live a while without William Deus in our lives.”

She smiled warmly at him, and found that his kiss had made her drowsy, as Harold’s always had. Within minutes, she was restfully, peacefully asleep.

* * * *

Markus Trent hadn’t felt so good in a long, long time as he ran the cheese grater along Solomon’s leg for a third time.

Oh, what beautiful, gorgeous shrieks Solomon makes. To think that Fly granted me this delicious playtime.

The Midnight Suns had wasted no time following the direct path through the center of the city that Markus carved for them. He was anxious to be done with this whole business, anxious to be back in Desanadron, going about his usual tasks and daily habits. The road was no place for him, and pent up frustrations were on the verge of breaking him apart when Fly had suggested that he ‘tune Solomon up’ to get the information they needed.

Trent had opened the front door of Solomon’s cottage with ease, picking the lock so fast he might as well have had a spare key. He and Fly had barged through the door, falling upon a half-sleeping Solomon as he had headed for his door to see who was trying to call on him at this late hour.

The two Ninjas had quickly incapacitated him, and Fly had helped Trent bind him and gag him in a straight-backed oak chair in his own bedroom.

The prostitute in the bed hadn’t even woken up from a drunken sleep that would take a massive explosion to wake her.

Fly had instructed Trent to get the information they needed, and then had exited the cottage to wait with the others.

“Isn’t it marvelous, Solomon,” Trent asked the part-time agent and freelancer. “If you survive to see another sunrise, it shall be the most glorious sight of your long, meaningless life.”

Trent raked the grater across the exposed bone of Solomon’s left leg again, coaxing another hiss of agony from the bound man.

“No whore will ever be able to satisfy you as much as the fresh morning air being drawn into your lungs. Don’t you see, Solomon? I am setting you free. And you don’t even have the stomach to thank me for it!”

Another scrape of the bone, and though the muffled screams were gratifying, the cheese grater had become boring.

Trent left Solomon to wallow in his misery for a few minutes, while he searched his cottage for more goodies to work with.

He came across a glass bottle of vinegar, popped the stopper, and took a whiff. It was strong stuff, and he instantly liked it. However, this wouldn’t be good for more than a few minutes of fun so he scrounged about for more goodies.

“Ah, isn’t this convenient,” he whispered, feeling the front of his pants swell out from his growing erection. What he had come across was another glass vial, this one filled with a thick, greasy lamp oil.

His hands flew over the drawers of the kitchen he had found the oil in, and his fingers found purchase on a book of matches moments after throwing the silverware drawer to the floor. “Perfect.”

Back to Solomon, who was now crying and sobbing. Trent danced in front of him, cackling like a hyena as he poured the vinegar on the bleeding leg wound.

Solomon screamed with renewed vigor, thrashing about like a nightmare marionette.

“That’s right, that’s right, scream for me sissy boy.” Trent danced behind the chair, pouring a small portion of the lamp oil into Solomon’s greasy black hair. He struck a match, and let it fall onto the damp scalp, reveling in the screams and the thick, black smoke of the burning flesh atop Solomon’s head.

When Trent finally doused Solomon’s head with water from his kitchen pump, the man was teetering on the brink of death.

Trent undid the gag in his mouth, and crouched down next to him, all business and false concern.

“You know, if you just tell me what I want to know, we won’t have to continue this all. I’ve got a healing sutra right in my pocket that can fix you up just fine, friend.”

Solomon still moaned a little, though his voice had been strained so badly that he couldn’t make a noise louder than a kitten’s mewl.

“Now, has Teresa been by to see you?”

A silent nod, and nothing more.

“Good, excellent. How long ago did she drop in?”

“Yes… terday,” Solomon managed, licking his cracked lips. “She… wanted, to know, if… the mines, were… still being… worked… on.”

“Okay, good. We know they aren’t.” Trent pulled a sutra from his pocket. The writing on it would be completely foreign and unreadable by Solomon, but he knew Trent would tell him how to activate it before he left.

“Is she heading there?”

“Yes,” Solomon croaked. “To, the, ruins.” The part-timer confirmed Trent’s fear that Evergreen would be confident enough in her powers to try to hide among the monstrosities living therein.

Trent patted him gently, warmly, on one bound arm.

“You’ve done well, Solomon. I’m sorry I had to put you through all of this, but I figured it was the only way to get you to talk. After all, old flames have a way of making men keep their mouths shut. Now, you can use this sutra to heal yourself once I’m gone. Not before, or I’ll have to split your eye with a shuriken, okay?”

Solomon nodded, and Trent placed the sutra in his hand. “Very good. Now, I’m going to leave. Remember, shuriken to the eye.” He left the cottage bedroom, and then the house.

Outside, Fly and the others turned to face him.

“The ruins, Headmaster,” Trent said with a satisfied smile. “You know, I didn’t think you’d let me have any fun on this whole trip. Thanks for proving me wrong.”

The Midnight Suns left the city behind them an hour later, navigating through the city streets and out through the east gates.

In the cottage that Trent had used as a romper room of torture, Solomon unleashed the chi magic locked in the sutra.

There was a brief, hot flash of yellow light, as from a hundred candles flickering to life. So raw was his throat that he didn’t even scream when the lights turned out to be flesh-eating scorpions, which crawled into his open leg wound and mouth, devouring him from the inside out.