J
jrhume
Guest
THE STEEL TRIDENT OF BAL SAGOTH
Escape from Castle Bibelot
Slim slashed the throat of one Varlet and threw himself backwards on the stone steps to avoid the axe swung by another. A quick kick in the chest sent that one over the rail. Another slipped on the bloody steps and tumbled back into those following. Slim levered himself erect and scrambled to the head of the stairs.
â Å“Lance,â ? he panted, â Å“now would be a damn good time for a bit of magic. There must be thirty of these sods!â ?
â Å“Nonsense,â ? replied the wizard. He raised his diminutive crossbow and put a quarrel into the left eye socket of an officer-caste Varlet crouched on the landing below. The creature made a sound like a rusted gate hinge and toppled to the floor. Lance levered another quarrel into position. â Å“There are twenty-seven -- less the three we've killed. A reliable spell will take too long and I don't have any to waste.â ?
The Varlets milled about on the stairs and landing, bereft of directing authority. Slim glanced over his shoulder. â Å“I don't know where this hallway might lead, but we've got to go back down. We'll be caught like rats if we let them push us any higher.â ?
Lance planted his next quarrel dead center in the chest of the Varlet highest on the stairs. The bolt slammed through chest carapace, punctured various vital organs and cracked the thing's back plate. It tumbled down, kicking spasmodically.
â Å“Come on,â ? said the mage. â Å“I seem to recall a service stairwell.â ? In a swirl of black robes, he spun and stalked down the dim hall. A single arrow smacked into the wall beside Slim's head. He jerked back, cursed and scrambled after his companion.
####
Their rescue effort had gone awry from the first. The ancient drain tunnel they used to slip under the castle wall should have brought them out in the lowest dungeon level. Instead it ended at a solid brick and mortar plug, obviously put in place both for security and to keep drain water from flooding the dungeon.
Lance led the way up a rusted metal ladder to an iron grate set in an open courtyard. He had to use a small bursting spell to free the grate. Either the noise alerted the Varlets or a human Sensitive detected the spell-ripple and gave warning. Some Naturals still allied with Twisted kind, even as the power of wizardry waned.
Unable to return to the drain, the two men sprinted from the courtyard and sought a way down into the dungeons. A quick sortie might still allow them to free their friend, the ex-legion corporal and one-time safe cracker, DanJanou. But Lance, who hadn't been in the castle for many years, soon lost his way. Now they were two floors above the courtyard level, with pursuit close behind. Unable to reach DanJanou, their own escape seemed less and less likely.
####
â Å“This way,â ? hissed Lance. He shoved through a plain wooden door and led the way along a dark, narrow hall between two large rooms. Several doors opened into each room. On either side of the doors small sliding panels were set at eye level. Spy panels, thought Slim. He slid one open. That room held rows of empty chairs. Lance opened a panel on the opposite wall. â Å“It's empty,â ? he whispered. â Å“Come on.â ?
At the end of the hall another door opened on to a landing and a square stairwell. Narrow stairs snaked around the walls. Taut ropes stretched from the dim reaches above and disappeared into the gloom below. The two men crept down the steps. Two levels down a wooden platform hung in the center space.
Lance stopped Slim. â Å“It's a service elevator.â ? He stepped onto the platform and grasped a thin rope that led from a hole in the center. A slight upward pull caused the elevator to move down a trifle. Slim stayed on the landing, well clear of the contraption. He had a bad feeling about the mage's intentions.
â Å“Come on,â ? said Lance. His come-along gesture was impatient. â Å“Get aboard! This thing will take us all the way to the dungeons. We may yet be able to retrieve DanJanou!â ?
â Å“Right. We mustn't forget about old DanJanou.â ? Slim's thoughts were occupied with the horde of Varlets soon to be pounding down from above. He put one foot on the platform, then drew it back. â Å“What makes you think it goes down that far?â ?
â Å“It's for the kitchen, dummy! The kitchen serves all levels of the building.â ?
Slim nodded. He still had qualms. â Å“You sure this is the right building? What if the dungeons ain't under this one?â ?
Lance stomped a booted foot. The platform lurched down a handspan. â Å“Are you coming or not?â ? The mage was always a little petulant when he ran out of logical responses. With a muttered prayer addressed To Whom-It-May-Concern, Slim consigned himself to the elevator.
####
A fair distance below, DanJanou angled a pork chop bone into his cell lock mechanism and pried at the latch. He willed it to move.
The ancient lock was a simple over-center latch encased in an iron box -- paper thin iron. Three days earlier he had punched a hole in the metal and tried to open the latch with a fried chicken bone. That attempt failed. He hoped pork bones had more tensile strength. Over the last two days he had shaped and scraped the bone. He now had a curved tool with a small indentation in the tip. With any luck he would be able to pry the latch out of its slot in the door frame.
A single human jailer occupied an office near the stairwell. The only other humans in the dungeons were prisoners. Two Varlets were always on duty. DanJanou shivered to think of his eventual fate under their clawed hands. Sometimes one would stop at his cell, rattle the bars and gnash its heavy jaws. A dim red glow pulsed in their multi-faceted eyes. DanJanou tried to assure himself that it was just a reflection of the corridor lamps. At times he even believed it.
Minutes earlier, both Varlets had pounded up the stairs and out of hearing. The one human wandered out of his office and stood, perplexed. After a moment, he shrugged and went back inside. DanJanou retrieved his bone tool and crept to the door.
The rusted latch scraped and squawked as it moved. DanJanou stopped and eyed the jailer's door. Sweat stung his eyes. He heard the man push his chair back and get up. He must have heard the noise! Liquid splashed into a cup. Coffee! The idiot had gotten up to get more coffee! The chair scraped again. Hands atremble, DanJanou moved the cell door back and forth and worked at the latch. With a loud tink!, it went over-center and popped into the open position. DanJanou scooted back to his thin mattress and sat down.
Nothing. The jailer must be deaf as a post. After several minutes, DanJanou eased the door open and stepped into the corridor. As his foot hit the floor he heard the lift ropes begin to creak. The Varlets were returning! He crept toward the jailer's office looking for a weapon. Bloodshot eyes watched his progress. None of the other prisoners made a sound.
Squeak. Squeak! The lift came closer. Sick fear threatened to gag him. His hand closed on a heavy club leaning against the wall. The feel of well worn wood under his hand drove the cobwebs from his brain. Two steps to the door, a long stride inside and it was over. The jailer never said a word, though his mouth hung open as DanJanou brought the club down on his skull. The man flopped to the floor â “ out for the duration.
Squeak! SQUEAK! DanJanou sagged against the door frame. He was too late. The lift was almost to the bottom. No time to free the others. No way out but up the stairwell.
â Å“Gods Above!â ? yelped a voice. â Å“It's him!â ?
â Å“I can see that!â ? snarled another, less pleasant speaker. He knew those bitter tones.
â Å“Lance!â ? DanJanou blinked, unable to believe his eyes. â Å“Captain Slim?â ?
Slim grabbed his arm. â Å“Keys, lad! Where are the keys? How many other prisoners are there?â ?
â Å“Come on, you fools!â ? cried Lance. â Å“We have to get out! Forget the others!â ?
DanJanou swore a black oath. â Å“No!â ? He snatched the keys off a hook beside the jailer's door. â Å“There are only a few. Give me a minute!â ? No way he was leaving without trying to free the others. Those eyes would haunt him forever.
####
In any event, there were only three living prisoners. The humans, now six all told, whisked back up the lift, slipped out of the building and crept up stone steps leading to the top of the castle wall. A great hue and cry could be heard some distance away. No sooner had Slim stepped onto the wall than a clacking Varlet emerged from a tower and began trotting toward the group. Lance barked a cruel laugh and fired a bolt into the creature's throat. It was still kicking and croaking as the last man went over the wall and slid down Slim's rope.
They were three days getting clear of the forest surrounding Bibelot. One of the freed prisoners died in a clash with a Varlet patrol. Two days after leaving the forest, the five survivors reached Fraught, a friendly town well south of Varlet territory. They gathered in a small tavern and toasted their escape with tankards of ale. Lance, in his manner, contributed a frown and a litany of complaints. Late that evening, Slim and DanJanou bundled the other two ex-prisoners, now pleasantly inebriated, into a coach headed in the general direction of their homes. Lance skipped the leave taking.
The Gang of Four
â Å“All right, lads,â ? said DanJanou. â Å“Much as I appreciate being sprung from Castle Bibelot, I can't help wondering why you bothered.â ? The three men sat at breakfast in the Lost Illusions Bar & Grill. Lance partook of his usual sour milk and bile-soaked cucumbers. Slim and DanJanou started with coffee and worked their way through a more normal fare. DanJanou's attention kept wandering to the shapely contours of their server, the morning shift barmaid. He'd been in stir for some time.
â Å“We came the instant we heard,â ? replied Slim. â Å“A friend in need is â “ well, you know.â ?
Lance essayed a creaky laugh. â Å“Don't kid yourself. We need a cracksman. And if we could have found one with any skill, you'd still be rotting in Bibelot.â ?
Slim shrugged and concentrated on mopping up the last gravy on his plate. â Å“Well â “ true enough, I suppose.â ? He flashed a toothy grin. â Å“But I'd have fretted about you.â ?
â Å“I'm sure you would have,â ? muttered DanJanou. He stared at Lance. â Å“I was about to break out on my own, as you well know. Besides, I'm not in the business of cracking safes anymore. Every detective in the Three Cities knows my handiwork.â ?
â Å“We don't want you to open a safe in the Three Cities,â ? grated Lance. He creak-laughed again. One corner of his mouth twitched upward. Slim turned away. The wizard's smile hinted at blood and death and cruel winter winds and seven years bad luck. A bit of oral hygiene would have helped, but even with clean teeth and sweet breath Lance's mirthful expressions had been known to abort calves, bring codfish out of a clear sky and cause painful sores in private places.
DanJanou shuddered. â Å“W-where is this job. N-not that I'm interested, mind.â ?
â Å“It's away south,â ? said Slim. â Å“Far south. Beyond the Black Fang Mountains.â ?
â Å“There's nothing on the other side of the Black Fangs but desert,â ? said DanJanou. His heart began to knock against ribs. There were rumors of places south of the mountains. Places no sane man would consider as a travel destination.
â Å“It's properly called the Desert of No Return,â ? intoned Lance. â Å“And our goal lies further south.â ?
â Å“You can't mean . . .â ? DanJanou's mouth seemed to fill with ashes.
â Å“We mean . . .â ? Slim struggled to say the NAME.
â Å“Castle Dread,â ? hissed Lance. â Å“The last wretched hideout of Direful Dorosh.â ?
â Å“The blackest warlock left alive,â ? whispered Slim. "And don't forget Brin. Mistress of Dread.â ?
â Å“A witch, a she-devil,â ? added Lance. His usual pallor faded to parchment white. â Å“Men shriek for death in her presence.â ?
DanJanou swallowed the lump in his throat. He wanted to flee â “ to leap up and run screaming from the inn. Strength drained from his limbs. He couldn't move. It must be a mage-spell. â Å“Let me go,â ? he whined. â Å“Release me! I'm no kind of adventurer. Let me go.â ?
Lance raised an eyebrow. â Å“I'm not holding you. It must be the eggs you ate. Foul things, eggs.â ?
Slim guffawed, breaking the tension. â Å“Fowl things!â ? He pounded the table, laughing.
Lance shook his head and frowned. â Å“What's so funny?â ?
While Slim tried to explain puns to the mage, DanJanou sat with his head down, contemplating a short, bloody future. He was glad he hadn't run. The thought of the whole town calling him a girly-man and clucking as they passed didn't bother him â “ they'd done that before. But he didn't want the buxom barmaid to know he was an arrant coward.
â Å“I'll go,â ? he muttered. â Å“But what are we after?â ? The barmaid stopped and refilled his coffee. She smiled and her eyes promised more, much more. Naturally, DanJanou failed to notice that she offered that same look to all paying customers.
â Å“We're after a steel trident,â ? said Lance. â Å“The Steel Trident of Bal Sagoth.â ?
â Å“Trident?â ? chuckled Slim. â Å“It's a frog sticker. The Plain Steel Frog Gig of Who-Knows Jones.â ?
Lance shot the big swordsman a pained look. â Å“That was before the warlock, B-S, got hold of it. He charged it with baleful spells. It is now the Steel Trident of Bal Sagoth!â ?
â Å“All right â “ all right. Have it your way.â ? Slim winked at DanJanou. â Å“The frog sticker is locked in an iron safe deep within Foghorn Fortress. We're going to steal it. That's where you come in.â ?
Lance simmered over the 'frog sticker' reference, but said nothing.
DanJanou flashed a brave smile at the barmaid, but she was drawing a brace of ales for better-paying customers. â Å“You've got yourself a safe-cracker. When do we start?â ?
â Å“Soon,â ? said Slim. â Å“We need another swordsman. In fact, I'm supposed to meet an old comrade who may be interested. He should be along any time.â ?
A shadow fell across the table. â Å“Captain Slim,â ? squeaked a voice. They turned as one and beheld a monstrosity. Or, rather, a Monstro. Of all the Twisted creatures, they are the most ugly â “ even more unbecoming than Varlets. In thaumaturgical circles, Monstros were known as Half-Twisted, since they were bred to emphasize certain physical attributes, but received no outré additions, like carapaces, multi-faceted eyes or even much in the way of brains.
Slim stood up and bashed this one a couple of times on the upper arm â “ as high as he could reach. â Å“Baker!â ? he cried. â Å“Monstro-at-arms, Baker! It's good to see you â “ ah, lad.â ?
Monstro Baker had tiny, close-set eyes, an outsized nose and a mouthful of odd-angled teeth. He wore a plain, conical steel helmet. A mail hauberk covered him from neck to knees. Over this he sported a breastplate and laminated armor at his shoulders. A good-sized buckler hung on his back and an iron sword rode at his left hip. This heap of ironmongery seemed to inconvenience him not a whit. Slim introduced his two companions.
â Å“Don't walk up on Baker unannounced,â ? explained the Captain. â Å“His reflexes often outpace his brain. He'll remember your names and body odor after a week or so, not to worry.â ? The huge creature pawed the floor and brayed out a sort of laughter. Monstro Baker evidently had a sense of humor.
â Å“Well,â ? said Lance, when introductions were complete. â Å“We have our full complement. It's time to depart. Captain?â ?
â Å“Aye,â ? said Slim. â Å“Get your gear and meet me in front of the stables in ten minutes.â ? He glanced up at Baker. â Å“Follow me, lad. We don't want you getting lost. You ended up in the circus the last time.â ?
(to be continued)
Escape from Castle Bibelot
Slim slashed the throat of one Varlet and threw himself backwards on the stone steps to avoid the axe swung by another. A quick kick in the chest sent that one over the rail. Another slipped on the bloody steps and tumbled back into those following. Slim levered himself erect and scrambled to the head of the stairs.
â Å“Lance,â ? he panted, â Å“now would be a damn good time for a bit of magic. There must be thirty of these sods!â ?
â Å“Nonsense,â ? replied the wizard. He raised his diminutive crossbow and put a quarrel into the left eye socket of an officer-caste Varlet crouched on the landing below. The creature made a sound like a rusted gate hinge and toppled to the floor. Lance levered another quarrel into position. â Å“There are twenty-seven -- less the three we've killed. A reliable spell will take too long and I don't have any to waste.â ?
The Varlets milled about on the stairs and landing, bereft of directing authority. Slim glanced over his shoulder. â Å“I don't know where this hallway might lead, but we've got to go back down. We'll be caught like rats if we let them push us any higher.â ?
Lance planted his next quarrel dead center in the chest of the Varlet highest on the stairs. The bolt slammed through chest carapace, punctured various vital organs and cracked the thing's back plate. It tumbled down, kicking spasmodically.
â Å“Come on,â ? said the mage. â Å“I seem to recall a service stairwell.â ? In a swirl of black robes, he spun and stalked down the dim hall. A single arrow smacked into the wall beside Slim's head. He jerked back, cursed and scrambled after his companion.
####
Their rescue effort had gone awry from the first. The ancient drain tunnel they used to slip under the castle wall should have brought them out in the lowest dungeon level. Instead it ended at a solid brick and mortar plug, obviously put in place both for security and to keep drain water from flooding the dungeon.
Lance led the way up a rusted metal ladder to an iron grate set in an open courtyard. He had to use a small bursting spell to free the grate. Either the noise alerted the Varlets or a human Sensitive detected the spell-ripple and gave warning. Some Naturals still allied with Twisted kind, even as the power of wizardry waned.
Unable to return to the drain, the two men sprinted from the courtyard and sought a way down into the dungeons. A quick sortie might still allow them to free their friend, the ex-legion corporal and one-time safe cracker, DanJanou. But Lance, who hadn't been in the castle for many years, soon lost his way. Now they were two floors above the courtyard level, with pursuit close behind. Unable to reach DanJanou, their own escape seemed less and less likely.
####
â Å“This way,â ? hissed Lance. He shoved through a plain wooden door and led the way along a dark, narrow hall between two large rooms. Several doors opened into each room. On either side of the doors small sliding panels were set at eye level. Spy panels, thought Slim. He slid one open. That room held rows of empty chairs. Lance opened a panel on the opposite wall. â Å“It's empty,â ? he whispered. â Å“Come on.â ?
At the end of the hall another door opened on to a landing and a square stairwell. Narrow stairs snaked around the walls. Taut ropes stretched from the dim reaches above and disappeared into the gloom below. The two men crept down the steps. Two levels down a wooden platform hung in the center space.
Lance stopped Slim. â Å“It's a service elevator.â ? He stepped onto the platform and grasped a thin rope that led from a hole in the center. A slight upward pull caused the elevator to move down a trifle. Slim stayed on the landing, well clear of the contraption. He had a bad feeling about the mage's intentions.
â Å“Come on,â ? said Lance. His come-along gesture was impatient. â Å“Get aboard! This thing will take us all the way to the dungeons. We may yet be able to retrieve DanJanou!â ?
â Å“Right. We mustn't forget about old DanJanou.â ? Slim's thoughts were occupied with the horde of Varlets soon to be pounding down from above. He put one foot on the platform, then drew it back. â Å“What makes you think it goes down that far?â ?
â Å“It's for the kitchen, dummy! The kitchen serves all levels of the building.â ?
Slim nodded. He still had qualms. â Å“You sure this is the right building? What if the dungeons ain't under this one?â ?
Lance stomped a booted foot. The platform lurched down a handspan. â Å“Are you coming or not?â ? The mage was always a little petulant when he ran out of logical responses. With a muttered prayer addressed To Whom-It-May-Concern, Slim consigned himself to the elevator.
####
A fair distance below, DanJanou angled a pork chop bone into his cell lock mechanism and pried at the latch. He willed it to move.
The ancient lock was a simple over-center latch encased in an iron box -- paper thin iron. Three days earlier he had punched a hole in the metal and tried to open the latch with a fried chicken bone. That attempt failed. He hoped pork bones had more tensile strength. Over the last two days he had shaped and scraped the bone. He now had a curved tool with a small indentation in the tip. With any luck he would be able to pry the latch out of its slot in the door frame.
A single human jailer occupied an office near the stairwell. The only other humans in the dungeons were prisoners. Two Varlets were always on duty. DanJanou shivered to think of his eventual fate under their clawed hands. Sometimes one would stop at his cell, rattle the bars and gnash its heavy jaws. A dim red glow pulsed in their multi-faceted eyes. DanJanou tried to assure himself that it was just a reflection of the corridor lamps. At times he even believed it.
Minutes earlier, both Varlets had pounded up the stairs and out of hearing. The one human wandered out of his office and stood, perplexed. After a moment, he shrugged and went back inside. DanJanou retrieved his bone tool and crept to the door.
The rusted latch scraped and squawked as it moved. DanJanou stopped and eyed the jailer's door. Sweat stung his eyes. He heard the man push his chair back and get up. He must have heard the noise! Liquid splashed into a cup. Coffee! The idiot had gotten up to get more coffee! The chair scraped again. Hands atremble, DanJanou moved the cell door back and forth and worked at the latch. With a loud tink!, it went over-center and popped into the open position. DanJanou scooted back to his thin mattress and sat down.
Nothing. The jailer must be deaf as a post. After several minutes, DanJanou eased the door open and stepped into the corridor. As his foot hit the floor he heard the lift ropes begin to creak. The Varlets were returning! He crept toward the jailer's office looking for a weapon. Bloodshot eyes watched his progress. None of the other prisoners made a sound.
Squeak. Squeak! The lift came closer. Sick fear threatened to gag him. His hand closed on a heavy club leaning against the wall. The feel of well worn wood under his hand drove the cobwebs from his brain. Two steps to the door, a long stride inside and it was over. The jailer never said a word, though his mouth hung open as DanJanou brought the club down on his skull. The man flopped to the floor â “ out for the duration.
Squeak! SQUEAK! DanJanou sagged against the door frame. He was too late. The lift was almost to the bottom. No time to free the others. No way out but up the stairwell.
â Å“Gods Above!â ? yelped a voice. â Å“It's him!â ?
â Å“I can see that!â ? snarled another, less pleasant speaker. He knew those bitter tones.
â Å“Lance!â ? DanJanou blinked, unable to believe his eyes. â Å“Captain Slim?â ?
Slim grabbed his arm. â Å“Keys, lad! Where are the keys? How many other prisoners are there?â ?
â Å“Come on, you fools!â ? cried Lance. â Å“We have to get out! Forget the others!â ?
DanJanou swore a black oath. â Å“No!â ? He snatched the keys off a hook beside the jailer's door. â Å“There are only a few. Give me a minute!â ? No way he was leaving without trying to free the others. Those eyes would haunt him forever.
####
In any event, there were only three living prisoners. The humans, now six all told, whisked back up the lift, slipped out of the building and crept up stone steps leading to the top of the castle wall. A great hue and cry could be heard some distance away. No sooner had Slim stepped onto the wall than a clacking Varlet emerged from a tower and began trotting toward the group. Lance barked a cruel laugh and fired a bolt into the creature's throat. It was still kicking and croaking as the last man went over the wall and slid down Slim's rope.
They were three days getting clear of the forest surrounding Bibelot. One of the freed prisoners died in a clash with a Varlet patrol. Two days after leaving the forest, the five survivors reached Fraught, a friendly town well south of Varlet territory. They gathered in a small tavern and toasted their escape with tankards of ale. Lance, in his manner, contributed a frown and a litany of complaints. Late that evening, Slim and DanJanou bundled the other two ex-prisoners, now pleasantly inebriated, into a coach headed in the general direction of their homes. Lance skipped the leave taking.
The Gang of Four
â Å“All right, lads,â ? said DanJanou. â Å“Much as I appreciate being sprung from Castle Bibelot, I can't help wondering why you bothered.â ? The three men sat at breakfast in the Lost Illusions Bar & Grill. Lance partook of his usual sour milk and bile-soaked cucumbers. Slim and DanJanou started with coffee and worked their way through a more normal fare. DanJanou's attention kept wandering to the shapely contours of their server, the morning shift barmaid. He'd been in stir for some time.
â Å“We came the instant we heard,â ? replied Slim. â Å“A friend in need is â “ well, you know.â ?
Lance essayed a creaky laugh. â Å“Don't kid yourself. We need a cracksman. And if we could have found one with any skill, you'd still be rotting in Bibelot.â ?
Slim shrugged and concentrated on mopping up the last gravy on his plate. â Å“Well â “ true enough, I suppose.â ? He flashed a toothy grin. â Å“But I'd have fretted about you.â ?
â Å“I'm sure you would have,â ? muttered DanJanou. He stared at Lance. â Å“I was about to break out on my own, as you well know. Besides, I'm not in the business of cracking safes anymore. Every detective in the Three Cities knows my handiwork.â ?
â Å“We don't want you to open a safe in the Three Cities,â ? grated Lance. He creak-laughed again. One corner of his mouth twitched upward. Slim turned away. The wizard's smile hinted at blood and death and cruel winter winds and seven years bad luck. A bit of oral hygiene would have helped, but even with clean teeth and sweet breath Lance's mirthful expressions had been known to abort calves, bring codfish out of a clear sky and cause painful sores in private places.
DanJanou shuddered. â Å“W-where is this job. N-not that I'm interested, mind.â ?
â Å“It's away south,â ? said Slim. â Å“Far south. Beyond the Black Fang Mountains.â ?
â Å“There's nothing on the other side of the Black Fangs but desert,â ? said DanJanou. His heart began to knock against ribs. There were rumors of places south of the mountains. Places no sane man would consider as a travel destination.
â Å“It's properly called the Desert of No Return,â ? intoned Lance. â Å“And our goal lies further south.â ?
â Å“You can't mean . . .â ? DanJanou's mouth seemed to fill with ashes.
â Å“We mean . . .â ? Slim struggled to say the NAME.
â Å“Castle Dread,â ? hissed Lance. â Å“The last wretched hideout of Direful Dorosh.â ?
â Å“The blackest warlock left alive,â ? whispered Slim. "And don't forget Brin. Mistress of Dread.â ?
â Å“A witch, a she-devil,â ? added Lance. His usual pallor faded to parchment white. â Å“Men shriek for death in her presence.â ?
DanJanou swallowed the lump in his throat. He wanted to flee â “ to leap up and run screaming from the inn. Strength drained from his limbs. He couldn't move. It must be a mage-spell. â Å“Let me go,â ? he whined. â Å“Release me! I'm no kind of adventurer. Let me go.â ?
Lance raised an eyebrow. â Å“I'm not holding you. It must be the eggs you ate. Foul things, eggs.â ?
Slim guffawed, breaking the tension. â Å“Fowl things!â ? He pounded the table, laughing.
Lance shook his head and frowned. â Å“What's so funny?â ?
While Slim tried to explain puns to the mage, DanJanou sat with his head down, contemplating a short, bloody future. He was glad he hadn't run. The thought of the whole town calling him a girly-man and clucking as they passed didn't bother him â “ they'd done that before. But he didn't want the buxom barmaid to know he was an arrant coward.
â Å“I'll go,â ? he muttered. â Å“But what are we after?â ? The barmaid stopped and refilled his coffee. She smiled and her eyes promised more, much more. Naturally, DanJanou failed to notice that she offered that same look to all paying customers.
â Å“We're after a steel trident,â ? said Lance. â Å“The Steel Trident of Bal Sagoth.â ?
â Å“Trident?â ? chuckled Slim. â Å“It's a frog sticker. The Plain Steel Frog Gig of Who-Knows Jones.â ?
Lance shot the big swordsman a pained look. â Å“That was before the warlock, B-S, got hold of it. He charged it with baleful spells. It is now the Steel Trident of Bal Sagoth!â ?
â Å“All right â “ all right. Have it your way.â ? Slim winked at DanJanou. â Å“The frog sticker is locked in an iron safe deep within Foghorn Fortress. We're going to steal it. That's where you come in.â ?
Lance simmered over the 'frog sticker' reference, but said nothing.
DanJanou flashed a brave smile at the barmaid, but she was drawing a brace of ales for better-paying customers. â Å“You've got yourself a safe-cracker. When do we start?â ?
â Å“Soon,â ? said Slim. â Å“We need another swordsman. In fact, I'm supposed to meet an old comrade who may be interested. He should be along any time.â ?
A shadow fell across the table. â Å“Captain Slim,â ? squeaked a voice. They turned as one and beheld a monstrosity. Or, rather, a Monstro. Of all the Twisted creatures, they are the most ugly â “ even more unbecoming than Varlets. In thaumaturgical circles, Monstros were known as Half-Twisted, since they were bred to emphasize certain physical attributes, but received no outré additions, like carapaces, multi-faceted eyes or even much in the way of brains.
Slim stood up and bashed this one a couple of times on the upper arm â “ as high as he could reach. â Å“Baker!â ? he cried. â Å“Monstro-at-arms, Baker! It's good to see you â “ ah, lad.â ?
Monstro Baker had tiny, close-set eyes, an outsized nose and a mouthful of odd-angled teeth. He wore a plain, conical steel helmet. A mail hauberk covered him from neck to knees. Over this he sported a breastplate and laminated armor at his shoulders. A good-sized buckler hung on his back and an iron sword rode at his left hip. This heap of ironmongery seemed to inconvenience him not a whit. Slim introduced his two companions.
â Å“Don't walk up on Baker unannounced,â ? explained the Captain. â Å“His reflexes often outpace his brain. He'll remember your names and body odor after a week or so, not to worry.â ? The huge creature pawed the floor and brayed out a sort of laughter. Monstro Baker evidently had a sense of humor.
â Å“Well,â ? said Lance, when introductions were complete. â Å“We have our full complement. It's time to depart. Captain?â ?
â Å“Aye,â ? said Slim. â Å“Get your gear and meet me in front of the stables in ten minutes.â ? He glanced up at Baker. â Å“Follow me, lad. We don't want you getting lost. You ended up in the circus the last time.â ?
(to be continued)