“I am fighting for Mezro,” Artus offered quietly.
But you will not become a bara. The warrior melted into the form of a matronly old woman with jet-black skin and hands worn from years of hard work. She turned away and walked slowly back to the darkness at the edges of the room. You must come with me now, she said in a sad, tired voice, keeping her stooped back to the explorer.
“Come with you?”
Yes, came the calm, steady voice of a middle-aged man. He had the face of a teacher, full of self-assurance and a slight look of knowing arrogance. His tobe was unkempt, his beard in need of trimming. There is no reason to give you the test if you aren’t interested in becoming a bara. My law says you must be taken up to my home in the sky, since you failed to satisfy my challenge.
Artus was on his feet now. “If those are my only choices, I will take your test,” he said firmly.
Ubtao paused and ran a hand through his beard. So be it.
The small circle of light expanded, blinding Artus for a moment. When he could see again, he looked out across an endless field of glossy black stone. A star-filled sky, silver tears on a vast canvas of velvet, stretched overhead. Gently the starlight rained down upon the field. Artus felt the radiance wash over him like cool rain. The nagging pain in his shoulder vanished, as did the ache of the myriad other small wounds he’d gained on the expedition.
The silver light swept across the stone. Wherever it touched, it left a complex pattern of lines and angles and curves. Artus saw shapes emerge from the jumble—a book, the partly unraveled scroll that symbolized Oghma, the crest of the Scribes’ Guild of Cormyr, Pontifax’s badge of honor from the crusade. These glowed a little more brightly than the rest of the maze, but their fight was like a candle to the sun compared to two other shapes Artus could discern before him.
A simple circle dominated the center of the pattern, within it the harp and moon symbol of the Harpers—at least, an incomplete version of the Harpers’ symbol.
The world is a labyrinth, and the true followers of Ubtao know the pattern that represents their life. When they die, they must recreate that maze, spell out their past for me. This time there was no avatar to give a face to the voice inside Artus’s head. To be a paladin of Ubtao, a bara of Mezro, you must know more. You must complete the maze long before you die, look ahead to the pattern that will be your life in the years and decades to come.
The explorer felt his heart sink. No wonder there were so few barae chosen; who could look out over his past and divine his future so accurately? Sanda, obviously. And Rayburton. And all the other barae.
Setting his jaw in grim determination, Artus kneeled and ran a finger along a smooth curve. Thankfully there were some recognizable patterns in the riot of silver, some unfinished symbols he could easily complete. Best to start there, at the obvious. Maybe the rest would fall into place after that.
When he took his finger away from the floor, it was coated in Stardust. The line he had been touching remained unchanged, but the radiance clung stubbornly to him. He curled the finger into his palm and made his way to the pattern’s center.
“The first thing to do is draw a line across the Harpers’ symbol,” Artus whispered. “There’s certainly no need to finish it.” His voice sounded hollow and small on the silent plain.
Now that he was closer, he could see the circle bordering the Harpers’ symbol was incomplete, too. Here and there, gaps broke its perfect form. This had to be the Ring of Winter. Nothing else had been so important to his life. As he reached down to complete the ring, something about the design jangled Artus’s thoughts; he stepped back and looked at the maze again.
If the Ring of Winter had been his life’s quest, why was the Harpers’ symbol the true heart of the pattern?
I’ve given up on them, he reminded himself. I haven’t been in contact in years with most of the other members I knew. The Harpers’ ideals and methods were important to me once, but I’m just not that idealistic anymore. Artus sighed raggedly. Then why do I want the blasted ring? he thought. To use it for good? To stop scum like Kaverin from exploiting it for his own gain? That’s the Harpers’ fight, too.
“Maybe closing off the Harpers’ symbol would be a mistake,” Artus said. “Maybe that part of my life isn’t over just yet. Maybe….”
The solution struck him then. No matter what pattern he drew, it would be wrong. The moment he walked out of the barado, he could decide to become an active Harper again. He could just as easily decide to work against them. Life may be a labyrinth, he realized, but you never have walls before you, not unless you create them. The only real pattern is the one you leave behind you, the immutable decisions—right and wrong—that mark the wake of your passing.
“It’s done,” Artus announced. He looked out across the plain. “Whatever I add could be wrong—or right. All I have to do is decide to make it so.”
The past champions of Ubtao appeared out of the velvet-black sky. The statues could never do these men and women justice. They stood in a semicircle around Artus, quietly studying the explorer, their eyes still alight with the passions that drove them in life. Here was the bara that could control fire, bathed in snaking bands of flame; the master of the raptors, arms outstretched as he floated off the ground, an eagle at his side; the weaponsmith, his wrinkled face and arms singed by forgefire, a well-worn hammer in one hand, a magnificent spear in the other.
Only the most wise can see through the illusion of fate, came a soothing voice. It seemed to fell from the midnight sky itself, carried on tiny bursts of Stardust. You are worthy to be a bara of Mezro.
“But I… can’t accept that honor,” Artus said.
A murmur of disapproval ran through the gathered barae, but from Ubtao there was silence. The barae showed their disappointment with icy stares and grim frowns.
Perhaps you can tell us your reasons, said the woman wrapped in flames.
The old weaponsmith was not so kind. He insults Ubtao and the city! It is our duty to end his life!
Artus pointed toward the Harpers’ symbol at the center of the glowing pattern. “There are other cities in the world that need protection, other peoples who need to be defended against creatures like the Batiri,” he said. “I will fight for Mezro, but not exclusively. I cannot be a bara.”
The assembled heroes faded from view, followed quickly by the starry sky and the vast stone plain. Once more Artus stood in the modest chamber. At the heart of the faint circle of light, the explorer looked up into the silent darkness above him. “I need the ring,” he said. “Please, let me take it and go.”
One who is wise enough to pass my test should know I never would have prevented you from doing just as you wished. My law is simply that, my law. You must follow it only if you choose to do so, only if you give me that power over you.
To Artus’s right, not a dozen steps away, the Ring of Winter floated in the darkness. The simple band of gold turned slowly, and it seemed to Artus the faintest glimmer of starlight winked seductively off its frost-flecked curves. With a trembling hand, he reached out for the artifact, the thing that had consumed a decade of his life.
Holding the ring was much like gripping the magical lightning bolts conjured from T’fima’s ensorcelled diamonds; the gold band vibrated with power. It also burned Artus’s fingers with its intense cold. Frost crept down his forefinger and thumb, then worked its way across his palm. Artus hardly noticed, so stunned was he to actually hold the fabled Ring of Winter.