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“Minrah,” said Cimozjen, “I am a married man.”

“So? I’m not asking you to marry me, Cimmo. I just want to bunk you.”

Cimozjen looked toward the heavens and growled. “That’s not the point.”

“Don’t you find me attractive?”

Cimozjen closed his eyes and sighed. “I do find you attractive, Minrah, quite so. Your zeal and your energy are as beautiful as your smile. At times, you confound me greatly, which is annoying and yet also compelling. But I have sworn a vow to my wife before the Sovereign Host, and that vow is binding. Thus, no matter how attractive I find you, what you suggest cannot be.” He turned away from the window to look her in the eye. “On top of that, Minrah, you should look to yourself. You sell your dearest touch too cheaply if you would yield it up freely to a broken-down old soldier like myself.”

Minrah giggled. “I just want to see what you’re like under the blankets. You’ve got to be better than those young boys who are always trying to loose their arrows. So it’s not like I don’t know what I’m asking.”

Cimozjen kept his face a mask. “It is said that the act creates a bond between the souls forever, and I must wonder what impact it will have on you to find your soul stretched between men scattered across Khorvaire.”

Minrah shrugged. “It doesn’t bother me.”

“I think, Minrah, that that is the point.” He paused. “They say that a fruit that has been squeezed too often is garbage.”

“I’ll wager that if you give me a squeeze you’ll find out otherwise.”

“I think higher of you than that, Minrah, and you should too. I am my wife’s, and she is mine. That is the way of it, and that is the end of it.” He turned to look back out the window.

Fighter, standing in the corner, looked back and forth between the two, as a long silence hung in the air.

Finally a smile crossed Minrah’s face. “Cimmoooo …” she said liltingly.

He turned to find her slowly untying the knot at the top of her blouse. “Enough!” he barked with a chop of his hand.

“Look at that, the old man’s a pot ready to boil over,” Minrah pouted. Then she giggled. “I think I’ll call you Cimmer.”

“I have a question,” said Fighter. “Minrah said we were on a grand adventure, but all we have done is wait and argue. Is that what an adventure is, sitting and bickering?”

Cimozjen sighed. “There has been a lot of that, but there always is among people. We are imperfect, after all, but do not let these minor troubles divert you from the greater issues.”

“Issues like what?” asked the warforged.

“Vengeance, Fighter. That’s what it’s all about,” said Minrah. “A lone soldier hunting down those who killed his friend. Quite a story, and we’re all a part of it.”

“And bringing them before the proper authorities,” said Cimozjen. “Unfortunately, we lack all the pertinent facts. We’re hunting down clues, which takes time, as does all this travel. And while traveling, that is when there can be friction, because we have nothing to do and-”

“I had an idea of something we could do,” grumped Minrah.

-and there’s no way to know how long we’ll have to wait before we get results,” concluded Cimozjen with a sharp look at his companion.

Fighter nodded, then inspected the blade of his battle-axe. “I can wait,” he said. “Even with the time we have spent waiting, I have done more adventuring with you than I had known could be possible.”

“And as you’ll recall, Fighter, I said we were not adventurers,” said Cimozjen. “We’re just people.”

“That is true. You said we were seeking people to bring them to justice,” said Fighter. “Justice means equitable treatment for the crimes committed. Do you therefore mean to kill them for their murder?”

Cimozjen shook his head. “Not if I have a choice,” he said. “It’s never easy just to kill someone.”

“Actually, it is,” said Fighter. “A solid blow to the top or side of the head crushes the skull, destroying the brain. Strikes at the neck, armpit, or inner thigh cause unstoppable bleeding. Eviscerating the bowels causes them to-”

“Ewww!” said Minrah, plugging her ears. “Stop!”

Chapter FOURTEEN

The Foul Airs of Fairhaven

Sul, the 22nd day of Sypheros, 998

Well, Cimozjen, allow me to be the first to welcome you to Fairhaven,” said Minrah as they stepped off the lightning rail.

Cimozjen looked up at the clouds that covered the sky, heavy with the promise of rain. “I’ve been here before,” he said.

“Have you?” she asked. “I didn’t think the Karrn armies pressed this far into the country.”

Cimozjen clenched his jaw. “You’re right. I was a prisoner.”

“You were? How come you didn’t end up like Torval?”

“I could better answer if I knew what had happened to him. As for me, when the Aundairians found out that I was sworn by oath to Dol Dorn, they put me to work in one of their temples, healing those in need.”

“They let you tend their sick and wounded? Weren’t they afraid you’d secretly kill them?”

“Of course not. I am sworn to do no harm to the helpless.”

“But surely you were doing harm by helping the enemy, weren’t you?” asked Minrah.

“I told them I’d heal women, children, and those too badly injured to return to the field of battle. Those who’d lost a limb, for example, or were too old.” He sniffed sharply. “They plied on my vows, though, for they brought their own oathbound to me. I am bound by honor to help those of my calling, and I had to do my duty to my brethren even though I knew they’d be returning to fight against my own people. I have long tried to forgive them for abusing my oaths in that fashion.” He nodded with the grim memories. “Be careful what you ask for,” he added, “because there’s more than one way to answer a prayer.”

“Consider yourself lucky that your prayer was answered with a surprise rather than not answered at all.”

“The Host answers prayers,” said Cimozjen.

“No they don’t,” said Minrah darkly. “Or if they do, it’s all capricious. They don’t care about us at all. They’re the gods and as long as we keep worshipping them, they’re fine just sitting around being gods. I mean, they completely abandoned us in the Last War. How else do you explain a hundred years of war, untold slaughter, and the complete destruction of one of the Five Kingdoms?”

“Explain?” Cimozjen snorted. “Do you think we need the gods’ permission to go to war? We did it ourselves.” He rubbed his chin. “We fought over a throne. We were divided by the very symbol of our unity. And we continued fighting for fifty, sixty years after the original claimants were all dead, instead of just putting an end to it and restoring order. The gods did not abandon us, Minrah. We abandoned them, prayed for them to destroy their other worshippers for our own selfish sakes. If they turned their backs on us, it’s because we first were insolent and threw their own ideals into their faces.”

“You think so?” asked Minrah, her dander raised. “Then why do they keep letting their priests perform miracles, no matter how corrupt the priests are?”

“Because the Sovereigns keep their promises, even when we break ours, just as a parent will continue to feed a child even when the child misbehaves.”

“I have been here before, as well,” said Fighter, his battle-axe, as always, at the ready.

Minrah and Cimozjen looked at him. “What was that?” said Minrah.

“Fairhaven. That is what you called this place, correct? I have been before. There is something in the air that is familiar. I think I did a lot of fighting here.” He looked around. “Not in this exact spot, but in this general area. Deep inside a building, or perhaps underground.” He looked around. “It is upsetting. It reminds me that someone may attack me at any time. This is a violent place.”