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"This is a joyous time," the healer said, coming between the young, angry elf and the distressed Mertwig. Canpho faced the elf. "There is no need for these hard words. You're upset by your uncle's death. We understand-"

"You understand nothing!" shouted the elf, unmollified. 'This dwarf, knowing that Azurakee was dead, broke into his home and looted it while the rest of us were at the barricades!"

At the heinous charge, the assembled elves fell silent. The waves breaking on the shore and the crackling of the dimming bonfires were all that could be heard. The faint smell of roast venison mingled with the usual scents of the seashore.

Finally, Canpho spoke cautiously. "Think a moment, young one. Be sure of what you are saying. Mertwig will forgive you, I'm sure, if you retract your terrible accusation."

"I will not retract," the elf said resolutely.

'Then I will not forgive!" Mertwig erupted. "How dare you slander me in this way? And here, in front of my wife, my friends-"

"You have no friends, thief!"

Mertwig lunged at the young elf, who dodged back against his assembled kin. Canpho and several other elves grabbed the dwarf and held him back. "Dwarves!" muttered one old elf, his icy blue eyes reflecting the belief in elven superiority that was one of the least attractive attributes of the race. Tanis, himself the frequent target of hatred by both humans and elves, felt his heart go out to the brave dwarf who dared to live among elves.

"I saw him!" insisted the youth, his soft, pallid cheeks quivering with indignation. "He came out of Azurakee's house with a bag over his shoulder. I went in after he left, and all the valuables were gone. Stolen! He robbed the dead!"

"Lies!" countered Mertwig, sweat slick on his slanting brow. "Don't listen to him!"

"What proof have you?" Canpho demanded of the young elf.

The accuser lifted his round chin proudly. "Only what I saw with my own eyes."

"There!" the dwarf exploded. "He hasn't a shred of evidence to back up his outrageous charges."

The elf began to struggle against the hands that still held him, his feet scuffling gouges in the sand.

"I am not lying! Ask the dwarf how he managed to buy the glass ball for his wife. You all know he is poor. Ask him that"

Tanis had listened to all of this as he searched the crowd for Brandella. At the mention of the bag that Mertwig had supposedly carried, the half-elf gave pause. He had seen the dwarf hiding behind such a bag during the battle with the spider. Yet Mertwig had saved his life in that same battle. All he had asked for in return was Tanis's silence, and so the promise had been given. The half-elf hoped he would not be called upon to break that vow. But mostly he hoped that Mertwig was innocent. Then Tanis spotted Brandella. She was sitting next to Kishpa, both with grim expressions. The half-elf slipped off the rock and sidled close enough to overhear their conversation.

"You must speak up for Mertwig," Brandella told the mage in a low voice, squeezing his hand.

"And say what?" he asked in quiet, yet desperate frustration.

"That you believe in him. Tell them that you stand by him. It will carry much weight." Her eyes glowed dark against the deep green of her woven shirt. Kispha looked unconvinced.

"But what if he's guilty?"

"Then," Brandella argued, "you will have been wrong in one thing but right in the other."

'The other?" The mage raised his brows.

"Loyalty to your friend," the weaver said simply. He paused, obviously torn.

"My loyalty is to the truth," he finally said fiercely.

Brandella cocked her head and stroked the velvety sleeve of his red robe.

"Would you not defend me if I lied or stole7"

'That's different," Kispha replied, looking away.

"No."

"It is," he insisted.

"Not to me."

"Please," he said, shaking his head. "No more of this. Let me listen."

She let go of his hand. Tanis moved through the tense and ever-angrier crowd.

"I bartered for that glass ball in good faith," Mertwig said indignantly.

"With what?" demanded the elf.

"Uh… it's of no matter to you." The crowd rumbled at the dwarf's evasive answer.

"From whom did you purchase the ball?" asked Canpho cautiously.

"I'd rather not say," said Mertwig.

"He'd rather not say," the young elf taunted, "because if he did, you would know that my uncle's treasures had paid for that glass ball."

"Where was Mertwig when the humans began their attack?" questioned a thoughtful elf who had patiently attended to all of the charges.

"He had gone off with Little Shoulders Scowarr to find a spider for Kishpa," replied another elf, pointed ears peeking from ash-blond hair.

"Yes, but he never came back," noted yet another elf. Mertwig grew uneasy with the direction of the comments.

"I didn't want to return without a spider," offered the dwarf.

"And I didn't know that Scowarr had found one so quickly."

"Very convenient," the accusing elf said snidely.

"It's true," insisted Mertwig. Scowarr pushed forward to defend the hapless dwarf.

"What he says is so," Little Shoulders offered. "We separated early on so that we'd have a better chance of finding what Kishpa needed."

"Where did you leave him?" persisted Canpho.

"I don't know the village that well," conceded the human. "I believe it was in front of a large white hut with lots of light-blue flowers in front."

"That's my uncle's house!" declared the young elf. The rumble among the villagers grew more ominous. The accuser's friends had released their hold on him.

Canpho ran one hand over his hairless head as he surveyed the dwarf. "You had better tell us from whom you bought the glass ball," he said. Tanis heard Yeblidod gasp.

"This is not to be believed," stammered Mertwig. "Are you giving credence to this slander?"

Canpho did not answer. Instead, he said, "It would just be best to tell us the name of your seller. That way, we can put these charges to rest."

Mertwig blustered, and Tanis saw Yeblidod's eyes, so recently filled with happy tears', begin to glisten again.

"Well, I don't see what good it will do," the dwarf said. "And it's terribly unfair. I want to keep the price I paid private. This ball was a present, and my wife need not know how much I paid for it." He cast the crowd a beseeching glance, but the tide seemed to have turned against him. Only a few elves nodded encouragingly at the beleaguered dwarf.

Yeblidod moved to her husband and tenderly threaded her arm underneath his elbow. Mertwig gave her a quick, embarrassed glance and then looked away.

"So, you'll tell us who sold it to you?" asked Canpho, acting relieved.

"It was the artist, Piklaker," said Mertwig.

"Is Piklaker here?" Canpho called out.

When there was no answer, the healer asked, "Has anyone seen him?"

Loud buzzing filled the air as everyone talked among themselves, asking who might have seen the well-known elven artist last. Finally, someone standing near Kishpa shouted, "My brother said he left the village right after the human retreat."

"Another convenient answer," snarled the angry elf who had leveled the thievery charge against Mertwig.

"I didn't know he had left," countered the dwarf.

"Then tell us how you paid him. What did you barter?" insisted the youth. Mertwig hesitated. He caught Kishpa's eye and, in that moment, gave him a look that begged him to say something.

The mage remained silent, his eyes blank.

"I… I gave him… gave him a promise," stammered Mertwig. "I told him that… that I would pay him with my work."

"You're lying!" declared the young elf. "You couldn't pay Piklaker's prices with a year of your work. Maybe not even two!"

'Tell this uncouth vermin to mind his tongue when he speaks to his elders," Mertwig told Canpho, mustering all of his dignity.