To Narm’s quiet embarrassment, Marimmar cleared his throat importantly, squared his shoulders, and turned about grandly in his chair. Oh, gods, thought Narm despairingly, deliver us all. His eyes sought out the ceiling.
Before the Mage Most Magnificent could draw breath, however, one of the company of adventurers had turned to another and said, “Rymel! A tale! Give us all a tale!” “Aye! A tale!” echoed other companions. “Well, J don’t know,” Rymel began, but he was drowned out in a roar of protests.
“Tell you what?” Rymel asked. “What would you hear?” “Wha-well, man, you know! Anything. Delg,” the man added, turning to the dwarf, “you choose. You know more of the old days, and-”
“Odd things, aye,” the dwarf of the company said sourly. “Odd myself, am I not?” He chuckled away their protests, hefted his drink consideringly, and said, “Well, Rymel, if you will, tell the tale of Yerevan’s last race. It’s been awhile, and I would hear it again.”
Narm noticed that Marimmar, who had been hemming and puffing in his seat, forgot his vanity at hearing the dwarf’s request and leaned forward in interest. The two ladies who had defended Ghondarrath also fell silent and turned to listen. The bard Rymel looked about at all the attentive faces and said slowly, “Well enough then. It’s a little tale, mind, not a great saga of love and battle and treasure.” “Tell on,” the lady called Sharantyr bade him simply from across the room. Rymel nodded, and spoke quietly. Silence fell but for the snap of the fire as those in the taproom leaned forward to hear the better.
The bard was good, and his gentle words brought the tragic tale of the last king of Westgate to chilling life. All listened, in the cozy room where the old axe hung.
The mood of the evening had changed, the danger past and forgotten, Gorstag affably at ease again. Marimmar the mage never did tell his tale…
The Company of the Bright Spear drank much and went up to their room late. Rymel, his lute left upstairs with their travel gear, had led the locals in a score of ballads with his fine voice atone. Delg the dwarf had lost his favorite dagger somewhere and was moody and suspicious. The burly fighter, Ferostil, was very drunk, and-as usual-trading coarse jests in voices loud and slurred, and the wizard Thail, grim and sober, was guiding him up the stairs with many a sigh and jaundiced look.
“Lend me a hand, Burlane,” he pleaded, as Ferostil nearly fell back on top of him. “This lout is nearer your size.”
“Aye,” their burly leader said good-naturedly. “We’ve lost enough tonight.” He leaned back to grab Ferostil’s shoulder. “Come then, Lion of Tempus,” he said, hauling hard. “Now, where’s that room?”
“This one,” the wizard said, and threw the door wide.
Within, all was as they had left it-packs strewn about, cloaks thrown over racks. A single lantern had been lit.
“My spear!” Burlane roared suddenly. “Where is the Bright Spear?” They peered all about, alert upon the instant, but there was no place in the room that could have concealed its flickering radiance. Their greatest treasure was gone.
“By all the gods!” Burlane bellowed. “I’ll have this inn apart stone by stone if need be! That thieving bastard of an innkeeper! Delg-quick, run to demand it of him! Thail, look to our horses! Is anything else missing?”
“Aye,” said the wizard thickly. His hands trembled above his opened pack. “All my spells.” His face was ashen; he sat down on the bed suddenly and stared at nothing, dazed.
“Thail!” Burlane roared, shaking him. “Come, we must-”
“My axe also,” the dwarf’s sour voice cut through Burlane’s rage. “I see no sign of our charter from the king, nor Ferostil’s shield. Rymel”
The bard was standing sadly by his pack. His shrug and empty hands told them his lute was gone as well. The men of the company stared at each other mutely. Everything dearest and of most value was gone.
Into the shocked silence came a knock upon the door.
Delg was nearest. Dourly he flung the door wide, expecting trouble. Over his shaggy head they all saw the pale, solemn face of a young girl with large, dark eyes. In one hand, she held their charter from the King of Cormyr. In the other, she gripped a spear that flickered with a pale blue light. She stepped calmly into the room past the astonished dwarf, cleared her throat in the tense silence, and said softly, “I understand you need a thief.”
In the Mist
If discomfort and danger be always at hand, why then adventure? There is something in mankind that leads some always on to such foolishness, and the rest of us benefit by the riches and knowledge and dreams they bring us. Why else tolerate such dangerous idiots?
Helsuntiir of Athkatla
Musings
Year of the Winged Warm
The Company of the Bright Spear were six in number. The tall warrior Burlane bore the magical Bright Spear and led the company. A younger bladesman rode with him, the merry Ferostil. Delg, the dwarf, was also a warrior. His constant companion was the bard Rymel, probably the brightest of them all. The wizard Thail deferred to his younger, louder companions. Last and least of the company was the thief, one Shandril, a bright-eyed, soft-spoken waif in ill-fitting old breeches and a much-patched tunic.
They had nearly slain her when she had appeared with their missing gear, which she had slipped away and stolen while the ladies Storm and Sharantyr were facing down the company in the taproom. After their rage had subsided (under Rymel’s laughter), only Delg had protested against her joining, but the fighter-with the same avid look in his eyes that Korvan got-was enthusiastic. So far, however, Ferostil had not bothered her.
Shandril had slipped out of the inn that same night to wait for the company in the trees on the edge of Deepingdale, leaving only a hastily scribbled note for Gorstag. She had spent anxious hours in the dark with small forest creatures rustling and scuttling unseen around her, afraid that the company would change their minds and ride off without her. Shandril’s heart had leaped when they had come into view through the dawn mists, leading Lynxal’s empty horse for her. She had trembled so with excitement that she could hardly speak, but she had gotten into the saddle somehow, though she had never before ridden a horse. She was relieved to discover the dead thief’s weapons and gear strapped securely to the saddle, though she had no idea how to use them either. She would just have to learn… and fast!
She’d taken nothing from the inn but the clothes she wore, and the single nice gown that had been made for her. Robbing Gorstag seemed a poor way to repay him for his kindness, and Shandril was not a thief at heart.
She wondered that night if she’d be any good at thievery, with the company’s eyes on her in judgment. Her arms shrieked stiffly from gripping at reins and saddlehorn. Her legs ached even worse. Places on her thighs had been rubbed raw, and when it rained and cold, lashing winds blew at the same time, Shandril wondered why she’d ever left the safe, warm household of The Rising Moon.
The next morning, her heart light and free, she knew why she’d left. All around her lay the green gloom of deep woods, where men said only elves had walked scant summers ago. Everywhere she looked she saw new, wondrous things. When Burlane had changed their course after a discussion in which Rymel and Thail spoke most, Shandril had been thrilled at the simple freedom of choice.
There was another reason she’d left to start a new life. For the first time in her life, she had friends around her. Oh, Gorstag and Lureene had been her friends, but they were always busy, always rushing off to do something that did not involve her. But now she had friends who rode with her and would fight with her and were there all the time. Hunger for freedom and friendship had pushed her to take that extra step, to steal up to the long room and knock on the door to face the Company of the Bright Spear. Even in the taproom, when it might have meant gruff old Ghondarrath’s death and they had been loud and mocking, even then it had thrilled her: the belonging, the trust.