“She will be healed soon, Elspeth tells me. She can decide if she wants to join our search or stay here.”
Ezuri looked shocked. “You would take her on this mad quest to find some golem?”
“Yes,” Venser said simply. How could he explain to the elf the importance of Karn? Why would he want to?
“It’s strange,” Venser continued. “But I don’t recall telling you he was a golem.”
Ezuri smiled. “I have heard the name of Karn the silver golem. Who has not?”
“Almost nobody on Mirrodin knows this name,” Venser said. “Have you maybe seen Karn, or heard a rumor about him?”
“I may have heard what one of my scouts reported to me,” Ezuri said.
“Yes?”
“They heard a being aligned with the Phyrexians say, ‘the golem cannot be trusted.’ ”
“ ‘The golem cannot be trusted’?”
“Yes.”
“Who said these words?”
“I have no way of knowing that. My scouts were slain shortly thereafter.”
“What magic allows you to hear what your scouts hear?”
Ezuri smiled. “That is for me to know.”
The golem cannot be trusted, Venser thought. Interesting.
“So,” Ezuri said. “It is settled. The flesh being will stay while you go on this fool’s errand.” The elf turned to walk away.
“Wait,” Venser said. “It is settled that the fleshling will decide to stay or come.”
“Just so,” Ezuri said. “I misspoke.”
Venser looked back to the entrance of the shelter. Inside a loxodon sat quietly waiting for the fleshling to wake. As Venser waited, his mind went back to what the elf had said. The golem cannot be trusted, he thought. That is good, he decided.
Some days later Ezuri called a settlement meeting. Venser and the others arrived and sat cross-legged on the hard, hot metal floor. At the center stood Ezuri, cleaning the bits out from under his fingernails with the tip of a slim, curved dagger.
The fleshling was sitting next to Elspeth. With Elspeth’s ministrations, the flesh of the incision site had grown back together and she was able to sit without pain. But she lacked certain organs, the white warrior had told Venser. Those could not be healed back into place. Venser found himself wondering what the Phyrexians had done with the organs they took out of the fleshling. Then he remembered the room of organs they had encountered on their trip toward the center. The small Phyrexians who had assayed them.
He thought of the carnage, of the pointless butchery, of the mountains of rotting meat and organs. Would he really go back into that?
No, it would be different the next time. If he could get a guide from the settlement, someone who knew the doors and passages, then maybe they could make a more direct route. But would Ezuri allow such a thing? Venser doubted it unless there was some arrangement that benefited him in some way.
He would see soon enough. Ezuri raised his hands and the chattering of the small crowd died away. The elf smiled his widest smile.
“We have here good water, and the news from the front has almost always been good.”
There was a general grumble from the crowd.
Venser almost chuckled himself at the joke. Oh, he thought suddenly. He was being serious.
Ezuri’s smile widened more. “Yet, we have never received quite so good-a-news as that which limped into camp five days ago. Her name is Melira and many of you have visited her and received her special ministrations. She was brought here by one of our own, Koth, son of Kamath, who has returned to Mirrodin to help us all.”
The grumbles from the crowd turned to excited chattering. Ezuri raised his hands, palms down.
“But now our guests have decided to leave us,” Ezuri continued.
Have they, Venser thought. Nobody had discussed leaving with Ezuri.
Elspeth leaned in. “It seems our welcome has worn thin.”
But before Venser could respond, Ezuri was again talking, as he seemed almost always to be doing.
“But on the part of the settlement,” the elf said, “I would like to extend an invitation to Melira. Please stay with us. We have a good life here, as life is going on Mirrodin at present. You can help others outside the settlement with your gift.”
The fleshling looked around, bewildered at all the eyes on her. Venser remembered that she barely slept at night, and when she did she woke up screaming. She and Elspeth spent hours talking in hushed tones. He prepared himself to speak, but Koth stood up first.
“Yes,” Koth said. “We hope she stays to help all of Mirrodin. With her, we may yet have hope of driving the infestation away.”
The crowd was silent. There were no hisses, but neither were there any excited whispers.
But Ezuri spoke again. “Where do you travel now, companions?”
Koth opened his mouth, but Venser spoke first. “We travel to the center of Mirrodin. To find the one who can perhaps drive the scourge from your home.”
A chorus of gasps went around the crowd.
Ezuri shook his head.
“It will be dangerous and deadly,” Venser said. “The path, as you know, is hard and fraught with enemies.” He glanced at Elspeth, who nodded. “But we have the white warrior to lead our way.”
The crowd whispered excitedly.
“Yet still,” Venser yelled. “We need a guide who knows the secret ways.”
“Will the vulshok travel with you?” a member of the crowd yelled.
Venser turned to Koth, who stood.
“I think we should fight the Phyrexians on the surface,” Koth said. “We can drive them away by force.”
Many in the crowd clapped at Koth’s comment. A vulshok stood and pointed at Koth. “You are welcome here. We need people we can depend on.”
Ezuri raised his hands. “I think we all want to know what Melira has decided,” Ezuri said.
All eyes turned to the fleshling. She stood stiffly and addressed the crowd. “I will go to the center of Mirrodin.”
More whispering, and then Ezuri spoke again. “Unfortunately, we are not planning to attack the surface at present, vulshok. You may either stay with us or travel with your companions.”
“I will stay with my people,” Koth said, raising his fist high.
A small cheer went up.
Ezuri smiled as he turned to Venser. “And it is our hope that you all do not travel to the deep bowel-ways under our feet. You hold blame for the Phyrexians on the surface right now. Who knows what you may disturb next.”
Very nice, Venser thought. A nice bit of deflection. His policy of fighting the enemy on the surface is failing-but it is not his fault, it’s ours. This one will go far in positions of leadership.
But Venser did not have time to dwell on Ezuri’s machinations. A scream echoed from the right, followed by a chorus of growling cries. Venser turned in time to see a line of very large Phyrexians with clubs for appendages charging into the camp, swinging their pendulous arms and knocking rebels aside as they came. Between and behind them stood line upon line of other Phyrexians, each line larger than the one that preceded it. They were the kind with shiny chrome parts. Tezzeret, Venser thought. They were being attacked by the same kind of Phyrexians that Tezzeret kept around him.
And they were fast. Venser ducked a club before teleporting away. He materialized outside of the lean- to that held the fleshling. Elspeth had her sword out and was preparing to attack, when he snapped out of the thin air. She glanced at him and then back at the hoard of Phyrexians who had not noticed them yet. The rebel camp was in full retreat. As they ran, the Phyrexians knocked them down and trampled over them.
“I see no end of them,” Elspeth said.
“The numbers are not in our favor,” Venser said. “We must move to better placement.”
Elspeth said nothing.
“We must move for the fleshling,” Venser said, sensing Elspeth’s hesitancy to do anything like retreat.
Koth staggered out of the melee and made his way toward them. A Phyrexian noticed his departure and followed. But Koth turned and lunged forward to take hold of the thing’s rib cage and gave a sudden heave just as he heated the creature’s metal. The front of the Phyrexian’s rib cage came off. Koth took it and beat the thing around the head with it until it fell down and did not get up. Koth spit at it and stomped up to Elspeth. “Time to go, my lady,” he said. “You should go now.”