Author Archives: thetomewriter

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About thetomewriter

I am a happily married father of five and professional IT consultant who has been dreaming of writing a fantasy book series since sometime around high school. During the course of 2010, all of my past ideas and false-starts came together into a single broad outline for a series loosely based on the role playing games and characters my best friends and I played with as kids, mixed with a series of underlying themes from biblical Christianity (a la C.S. Lewis or Tolkien, two of my favorites). At the six month point of writing, I decided to start a blog to track the process and begin to bring in early readers.

Wicked Pads and Progress

Greetings all! Passing along news and notes about the ongoing work of The Tome of Greystone.

I occasionally listen to a podcast called “Writing Excuses” featuring my current favorite-author-in-the-world Brandon Sanderson and a group of several of his author friends. They discuss everything from the mechanics of writing genre fiction to specific aspects of writing to getting published, and do it in a very funny, easy going way (their motto is “Fifteen minutes long, ’cause you’re in a hurry, and we’re not that smart!). A few months back I heard a Writing Excuses episode where the crew was discussing how they track details for characters and plot lines when writing epic tales. One of the authors (it might have been Brandon) described a non-internet wiki tool called WikidPad, and I decided to give it a shot.

After about a month of using WikidPad, I am hooked. Not only is the tool freeware, it is incredibly easy to use. It allows you to type page after page of freehand notes in any format you want while hyperlinking pages together by keyword using terms with DoubleCaps. So in the end I have a sprawling intra-net of linked pages for people, places, events, etc. that I can add to at will, forming a formal reference book for the Tome of Greystone.

Of course, maintaining it is a large task in and of itself, and one that I am having to squeeze in at odd hours of the night. But I think it will be well worth it as the books grow in size and complexity. If any of you have a project or hobby that requires the management of lots of minutia that could benefit from an internet-style linking scheme, I highly recommend WikidPad. It’s going to come in very handy when I need to remember where Renald the drowning wagon guard lived, how I first described King Balon’s silver-red sword Thundercrest, the exact words of the disappearing grandmother in Gilston, or the odd occurrence of thunder over the Ash Barrows… all without having to thumb back through the entire book searching for answers. Sweet.

In other developments, I am still moving ahead with Knights and Watchers while I intermittently re-read and continue to make corrections in Emergence. Still shocked that I am constantly uncovering small mistakes and typos in Emergence after four read-throughs. Yikes! But with 125k words, I guess I need to cut myself some slack.

I am totally pleased with how things are progressing in Knights and Watchers. I got to my first “monster” scene a few days ago, introducing one of the two main types of evil creatures that will be making life miserable for the hero characters in the future. The scene involved a steaming pit and multiple near-death experiences, and came out pretty stinking scary! Which is what I was going for. More importantly, I have never seen an creatures like it in fantasy novels. My oldest friends out there can attest to the fact that the one thing I used to lack in the world of fantasy and role playing games was originality; I simply stole the best ideas of every single other creative person in the fantasy genre! But not this time. So far, I can happily say that most of the things I have written seem very original.

But please correct me, early readers, if I am wrong!

More to come soon! I am about to get feedback from a couple of local Cincinnati-area early readers, and I will share their thoughts here on the blog. And in even more exciting news, I am planning to attend a fiction writer’s group next week to share some (or all) of Emergence. The more feedback the better!

~Kevin

 

Valley Girls in Greystone. Totally.

I received feedback this past weekend from one of the early readers. His thoughts really made me think, so I thought I would bring some of those thoughts here to the blog. In summary, his comments involved inappropriate voice from some of the characters… in terms of figures of speech, colloquialisms, and expressions (sure hope I am using “voice” correctly in this context!). Note that this isn’t the first time I have heard this comment. And I doubt it will be the last.

Generally speaking, the comments state that character X in the traditional middle ages setting Y “just wouldn’t say that”… where the “that” is a turn of phrase that the reader is familiar with from modern discourse. I have been very much in agreement with this idea in general. It would be distracting to have your contemporary fantasy realm heroes suddenly start talking like valley girls. You are taking the time to build an elaborate fantasy world, so why not also include language in your differentiators?

But this does raise a question: who’s to say what the common expressions are in a given fantasy world? What if, for example, the people of a given region DID in fact sound like, well, valley girls? If it worked for the internal consistency of the story and other world-building details, why not?

Of course, the answer is that the book would stink, that’s why. But there is a point in there somewhere. For example, where is it written that all American fantasy automatically means characters with english accents? And that therefore speak with conventional Brittish idioms?

So far, only one of the groups of characters I have come up with have Brittish accents and speak with the formal bent of the Queen’s english; the Bards. But the Falons, for example, seem to have Aussie accents, and Heartlanders have southern Kentucky drawls. So shouldn’t their speech reflect their regional differences?

Of course it should. But without distracting or confusing the reader by using words that automatically bring unwanted, out of place imagery into the story.

OK – enough for now!

Kevin

Moving Ahead

Good evening, folks! I have spent my writing time these past few nights focused on moving ahead with book 2 of the trilogy, “Knights and Watchers”. Like “Emergence”, this is still just a working title, but I find it fitting and kind of mysterious. Strangely, though, the events in Knights and Watchers are much less mysterious than those in Emergence. Several of the big mysteries actually get solved… which of course then leads to a ripe harvest of new mysteries leading into book 3 (working title, “The First Proving”).

For example, here in Knights and Watchers the reader gets to learn the identities 0f the shady men dressed all in black except for a sole shimmering silver accessory. The primary heroes (Argand, Kosin, Max, Brien, Varix, West, Surk, and Loric) all find out the nature of their individual “emerging” powers and begin to learn how to use them. Much more is revealed about King Balon’s plans and the Blood Knights’ purpose (which is sort of obvious).

I am curious though, and a little worried, about how much I will be able to fit in book 2 without going over the 125k word goal. For example, a lot of attention needs to be paid to the seven female primary characters – 2 of which haven’t even been introduced by the end of Emergence. Getting their story arcs rolling must happen in Knights and Watchers. And a significant amount of story must focus on the Messenger and the Poet. Because they matter.

Then there has to be room to begin the Proving event itself. It’s going to begin during the last few chapters of book 2, then conclude during the first third of book 3. I am excited about writing that. Serious fun awaits!

In case you didn’t catch it, yes… there are 8 main male characters and 7 females. And yes they end up pairing off. So why the discrepancy? That’s the biggest mystery of the entire series, leading to the big twist ending.

Which leads me to another looming concern. My “big twist ending” is many, many books away. And as you all know, this is probably never going to be anything other than a hobby writing project. Am I really going to keep writing all of these stories – full NOVELS – even knowing that they are really just for me and a few select friend readers? It pains me to imagine not making it through to the end of this main story arc, but my outline described 2 more trilogies to finish this first part of the Tome of Greystone. That’s 9 books total for those doing the math at home. It would take The First Proving trilogy (Emergence, Knights and Watchers, and The First Proving), then a second trilogy called The Council of Lords (working titles: The Council of Lords, The Hialon Valley, and The Tome of Greystone), then a final trilogy called The Last Peace (working titles: The Red Kings, The Lodestone, and finally The Last Peace).

That would be about 1 million words of fantasy writing. That might never see the light of day beyond this blog and the advance readers! That feels… a little insane!

But nevermind all of that for now. For tonight, a new blog post, a few more lines of conversation between the 8 heroes as they sit in a restaurant in Riverside finally getting to know each other, then off to bed. Gonna take it all one page at a time!

~Kevin

What Is and Isn’t Wrong with the First Draft of Emergence

Hello, all!

For those of you reading an early un-edited copy of Emergence, here are a few comments on what is and is not wrong with the story you are reading. I suggest at this point that you sort of ignore the typos that remain… I have come across a few misplaced words, missing punctuation, and grammatical errors, but for the most part those will be addressed if and when I ever have this stuff edited professionally (and when I do my next end-to-end proofread down the road a piece). What I am really looking for from you guys is commentary on the *story* itself. Characters, pacing, plot, etc.

Then there are the things that might look wrong that really are not. For example, capitalizing the words Spring, Summer, Fall, and Winter. These are not typos, but an indication of how the Greystone calendar system works. The Seasons are what we would call months, so they are presented with Caps as we do January or July. Each year is divided into four seasons of 90 days each. So the date might be the 54th of Fall, or Summer 2nd, followed by the year (see the Glossary for more details about the Land’s Ramagan Calendar).

Also, the occasional capitalization of the words nightwing or nightwalker is OK. These words are used as exclamations, almost curses, and are the names of mythical monsters from Greystone’s past.

In all of this, the Glossary is key. It explains much of the background behind the Land’s constructs and provides a pronunciation guide.

Thanks!

~Kevin

Advance Readers! Thoughts and Theories?

For any and all advance readers out there, please feel free to post comments, questions, thoughts, and theories about Emergence in this thread. For critiques about the novel as a piece of prose, please message me directly via Facebook… but please use this thread to comment on plot-based stuff. If anyone has a question that I can answer without big spoilers, I will answer it. I am hoping that this might help clear up any areas of the book that might be unintentionally vague or confusing, helping me to focus the story on the areas that are SUPPOSED to be vague and confusing!

Thanks!

~Kevin

The First Draft of “Emergence”!!!

Greetings, all!

Earlier today I finished the first full draft of Emergence, Book One of The First Proving trilogy. Whew! It is as yet un-edited, but it is safe for consumption by critical fantasy readers everywhere who are interested in providing feedback. If you are interested in reading the draft, just let me know.

The book stands at 125,000 words, and stretches 418 pages in a 12-point Times New Roman-based PDF. The glossary is both incomplete and over-complete… I have to add some people and places to it still, but it also includes entries that will not make sense until the second book is complete! Oops.

There are many aspects of the book for which I particularly want feedback. There are certain scenes I don’t like as much as I should, some plot lines that may or may not strike the right note, some dialogue issues here and there… but instead of pointing these areas out, I am going to just wait for comments from daring readers and see what THEY have to say. Perhaps my areas of worry aren’t the ones that an unbiased reader would pick out.

Lastly, after my re-read I realized just how strongly this book does NOT stand alone. Despite its length, it just manages to introduce the characters and places and plots. NOTHING gets resolved in Emergence, no questions get answered. It is truly just a first installment. My main goal is to get the reader wanting to read more by the time they close the book (err… the file), wanting to figure out the mysteries and anticipate the twists that might be coming. If I accomplish that, I think that it’s a good first book of the trilogy.

All for now, folks! Stay tuned…

 

Revised (Shorter) Chapter 1, and New Chapter 2!

Hello all,

I am nearly at the 50% point in the proofreading effort for Emergence, but I have taken a break to re-wicker the chapter breakdown in the first half of the book. So with that in mind, I am re-posting the revised chapter 1 (which has only minimal changes from the first half of the original chapter 1) and all of chapter 2, “The Galleon”.

All comments are welcome!

* * * * * * * * * *

1 Pithwood

Argand only raised an eyebrow as the fat, black-bearded brigand slowly drew a cruelly curved scimitar from the sheath at his waist. He had a raw, angry looking scar running straight down the center his forehead and onto the bridge of his nose, and looked like the kind of man who was accustomed to drawing blood.

The thin, hawk-nosed man to the brigand’s left and the young, angry looking man with the pock-marked face to his right both took the cue and drew the short swords they wore on their waists. Behind them two other thieves, hooded and menacing, drew their weapons.

“Here now”, the fat bandit grumbled in a deep, gravelly voice, “less not make doin’s get ugly here, young masters.”

He slowly pointed the broad bladed sword at Argand, standing tall and expressionless twenty feet away across the small clearing, then at the shorter, stockier form of Kosin next to him.

“Ain’t no need for either of the two of ya to get hurt, y’know,” he continued, grinning a nearly toothless grin through his thick and matted beard, “just toss yer weapons and toss yer gold, and we’ll call it smooth.”

Smoke still sputtered upward from the remains of the last night’s campfire, and the two one-man tents that Argand and Kosin carried with them were not yet fully bundled. It was perhaps one half hour after dawn on a cloudy, cool spring morning. A fine time of day for highwaymen to attempt to take travelers unaware.

But not all young travelers are so easily waylaid.

“I am Argand Mason of Eagle’s Reach,” Argand spoke in a loud, commanding voice. “I will give you this one chance, cutpurse,” He squared his broad shoulders lifted his cleft chin high, while gently resting his hand on his leather bound sword hilt. “Leave us.  Now. And I can promise you that you will not be injured. This is more than I expect you deserve given the nature of your work… but nevertheless. You have this one chance.”

Argand’s face was set like stone, his square jaw looking as if he were a king passing judgment, not a weary young traveler being assaulted by highwaymen. His thick, wavy black hair was slightly disheveled, as were his clothes. Like a man suddenly roused from sleep, which he was. But his youthful face radiated strength, eyes set, lips a tight line, as if he fully expected the bandits to back down.

And they nearly did. For a moment, the fat thief with the scar hesitated. A look of confusion seemed to cross his face, as if he was not really sure what he was doing. Then he seemed to remember himself.

The skinny thief laughed aloud mockingly, as if trying to cover his leader’s hesitation, while the others just shook their head and smiled in a show of pity. The scarred leader, now recovered from his momentary lapse, waved his scimitar menacingly while he broke into a smile.

“O’ reeeally???” He drawled, stepping closer to the two young men. “Now, lemme see, Eagles-Reachling. You, tall as ya might be, holdin’ maybe twenty-five Summers in the land? And yer wee-short companion there with ya? And yer gonna… uh… let US go unhurt??? When it’s five on two? Mighty bold words, don’t ya think?!”

“Let’s just take these fools, Argand,” muttered Kosin under his breath, “they’re common cut-throats. We can beat them easily enough.” Kosin was almost a foot shorter than his broad-shouldered friend, with wavy black hair and green eyes. He was very muscular for his size, broad in the chest and rather thick-armed. He spoke in a quiet, flowing voice while standing ever-so-slightly on the balls of his feet. Kosin was always ready to move.

“We can take them,” agreed Argand quietly, “but it’s the eight men that have crept up behind us in the brush that concern me, Kosin.”

Kosin’s eyebrows climbed up his forehead in alarm.  Argand kept his face frozen, feeling the presence of all of the brigands through his feet as he always did. Every step, every shuffle, every pause… he could feel all of their movements, their very presences, through the ground itself when people were this close to him. It took very little effort for him to differentiate the pulses in the ground and pick out the eight hidden assailants and their movements. He still wasn’t sure exactly when he had realized that the odd sensations actually meant something, that they were so very useful. But during this most recent few weeks of eastward travel from theHighlandsalong the crime-riddenJury Road, he was sure the tell-tale pulses had saved his life repeatedly.

The lead thief had heard Argand. The grin faded from his face, replaced by a puzzled frown that made his raw forehead scar bulge grossly.

“How…??? Ya couldn’t have possibly known,” he sputtered. Then he gathered his wits and raised his oversized sword to attack position.

“Well, then, young tho ya are, I guess we’ll be havin’ to do this the hard way!” The fat thief advanced.

“Ummm,  Argand?” Muttered Kosin under his breath as he slowly drew two of his short, hilt-less daggers from within the folds of his cloak.  “Thirteen men? We have been pretty lucky before, but…”

“RUN!” Argand breathed at Kosin, then he took off at a full sprint to his right. He bounded over the dying embers of the fire and disappeared into the brush. Kosin paused for half a heartbeat, then dashed after him.

The five thieves took off in pursuit, and the grunts and exclamations from the nearby woods announced that the rest of the bandits had joined the chase.

Argand angled sharply left through the thick brush and occasional thin trunks of burban trees, his long legs pumping in the chill morning air. Kosin was faster, though, and soon was right on his heels.

“Get ready, Kosin,” Argand panted, swatting saplings from before his face and leaping over a few deadfalls. “A few of these slime are mounted… we can’t outrun them.”

Kosin slid and bounded along next to Argand, much more like a dark-clothed blur than a man. He had a much easier time leaping over obstacles and weaving his way among the woodlands than Argand did, and it wasn’t just due to his smaller size.  He had always been especially skilled when it came to athletics, his body just as fluid as his voice was.

“Okay… up ahead,” breathed Argand as he saw the beginning of a thickly grouped patch of adult pith trees, their trunks as big around as a horse is long. There was very little undergrowth between the huge trees due to the lack of light under their heavy canopies. Argand knew the trees were there moments after he had started running. He had no idea HOW he knew, but he knew.

The sounds of horses and men drew closer as Argand and Kosin broke out of the brush and into the pithwood.

“You go up, and I’ll go around,” panted Argand. But Kosin was clearly already of the same mind as he ran straight for a tree.

Kosin said nothing. He rarely spoke during their recent encounters with brigands, cutthroats, and other diverse miscreants all over Jesserin duchy.  He leapt at the nearly black trunk of the largest pith tree in his line of sight and hit it hard, letting his fingers find the natural cracks and crags in the rough surface while his toes almost instantly found purchase beneath him.  He sped up the tree almost as fast as he had been running a moment before.

To Argand, this was nothing new or surprising. Kosin Fletcher had been climbing trees, walls, rocks, and just about anything else vertical since he could remember. Argand slowed, glamncing back to watch Kosin as he reached the canopy and stepped out onto a large branch positioned over the area. Kosin squatted low, balancing easily, while he pulled several of the razor-sharp, hilt-less throwing knives he carried.  He had nearly two dozen of the six-inch long weapons hidden amongst the folds of his cloak and clothing, each held in place by a thin leather sheath lined with steel. The short man was nearly invisible in the dim pithwood canopy, seeming to fade right into the shadows of the giant trees.

Argand knew that Kosin didn’t really want to kill any of these ruffians, but he knew that it might be unavoidable if the thieves proved either too skilled or too persistent. As Argand slowed, he tracked Kosin out of the corner of his eye; he was jumping nimbly from branch to branch, throwing blades held between several of his fingers, working to gain a better line of sight based on wherever Argand chose to hide.

Ahead, Argand saw a small clearing in the wood that would serve his needs, dominated by a group of short, six foot wide stumps of ancient pith trees that had clearly been felled by loggers some years before. Crouching down behind the largest stump and closing his eyes, Argand focused on the peculiar, pulse like surges he felt in his feet and legs and read them as if he were scanning a book. Through the sensations, he could tell that the horses had stopped, the riders now on foot, and that his earlier count had been accurate; he and Kosin were powerfully outnumbered. The brigands likely knew that the two young men were going to try to hide, not run. Argand knew it would take some show of force to deter them at this point. The chain mail he wore, the sword at his side, even his and Kosin’s clothes would fetch a fair weight of gold and silver on the streets of nearbyJesserinCityor Oakbridge – not even counting whatever coins might be found in their pouches. No, they would not give up this chase easily.

The dim woods felt ominous and foreboding as Argand waited, stone-like in his stillness.  Slowly, silently, he drew his broadsword from its sheath as he felt the thieves grow closer. He always felt a little more confident, almost as confident as he acted, once he had his blade in his hands. This sword had been a gift from his father, as was tradition in theHighlands, but he had still not named it. Maybe today would be the day the name would come to him. Perhaps this was going to be that memorable of an event.

Or perhaps he and Kosin were about to come to a premature end.

Without thinking, he placed one hand on the ground as he crouched. His eyes popped open in shock as suddenly he felt strong waves of warmth stream up his arm to his shoulder and beyond, as if a flow of heated bathwater had been injected into his veins. He jerked his hand up and almost cried out, but the feeling vanished instantly. All he could feel now were the sensations in his feet. There were brigands less than fifty feet from him, and they were closing from behind his hiding place.

He carefully returned his hand to the ground and the shot of warm energy again coursed up his arm in waves. It was not painful in any way, but was almost overwhelming in its power.  It took him a second to realize that the sensations in his arm were exactly aligned with the familiar, pulse like surges in his feet. It was the same feeling, but magnified a hundred fold. He closed his eyes and concentrated on the surges.

The energies climbing into his consciousness from the ground itself seemed to solidify, suddenly coalescing into vivid images in his mind. The fat leader of the band, closing in on the pith tree stump at a slow trot, the other thieves lined up behind the leader with their bows and swords at the ready, two other mean closing from the left with short swords and daggers, two more men with bows closing slowly from the right, horses tied to trees about fifty yards distant, a man wearing silver gauntlets holding a strange-looking sword standing in a clearing ringed with deep shadows, a trader’s wagon pulled by a team of four workhorses along the Jury Road, the crowded marketplace in Oern village, leagues away on the river —

Argand jerked his hand from the ground and gripped his hilt in both hands.  His eyes were nearly watering from the intensity of the sensations and flitting pictures that had just flashed across his thoughts. The images of those men and places were so… CLEAR… this time around, with his hand in the soil and fallen leaves. He had never before felt anything like it. What’s happening to me? He thought.

But there was no time. He could hear the heavy wheezing of the fat lead thief just on the other side of the stump. Argand held his breath, uttering a silent prayer to the Creator for help… and for continued accuracy from Kosin. He didn’t want to end up with one of those perfectly-sharp throwing knives ruining his day.

In one fluid motion, Argand popped up from behind the stump and slashed powerfully with his big blade, knocking the sword out of the fat thief’s hands and sending it flying. Without pausing Argand leapt over the stump and brought his sword’s pommel down hard on the leader’s bearded, filthy head with a sickening crunch. But before the thief’s round body could hit the ground, Argand was upon the next three brigands like a storm of metal, attacking furiously with the short, circular arcs of the Highlander blade technique. Less than two heartbeats later he disarmed the first of them with a fake slash followed by a quick twisting jab to the thief’s wrist, then felled the other two by shattering their short swords with two lighting fast, crushing overhand swings followed by a swift kick to the gut of the nearest man. The first man’s arm was clearly broken by the blow which had demolished his sword. His screams of pain merged with those of the other shocked, wounded bandits. It was clear that they were in no way expecting such a powerful response from Argand.

But the others, led by the scrawny fellow with the hawk nose, had recovered from their surprise at Argand’s furious onslaught. Hawk-nose stood in front of Argand with his sword at the ready as the men behind him quickly fanned out to cut off any escape. Two of the thieves had bows up and drawn. Argand’s time was up, and he knew it. He charged ahead anyway.

Then Kosin struck.

Both of the bowmen screamed loudly as their extended hands were pierced by shining metal knives that came whistling down from the canopy above. They released as they howled, their arrows launching aimlessly into the ground around them. Half a heartbeat later, the hawk nosed man and his companion dropped their swords and screamed in pain, blood gushing forth around the throwing knives that split their wrists from the back to the front.

More screams erupted from the woods to the left and right, and Argand could sense – again via the pulses in the ground – that several of those men that had been attempting to flank them were now bolting for their horses.  The wounded and bleeding men in front of him turned and sprinted out of the pithwood, cradling badly sliced hands and working to stop their bleeding. A few of them managed to yank the knives free and drop them as they ran. Argand was careful not to move at this point; Kosin’s aim was impossibly good, but he didn’t want to mistakenly move into the path of one of his deadly blades.

At that moment Argand sensed that there was still one thief that had not run, hiding behind a tree to the right. Argand held his sword at the ready, but knew he had no chance to cross the distance in time if the bandit had a bow.

Quickly searching the canopy high above, Argand was able to spot Kosin. With unreal agility, he ran down a tree limb almost over Argand’s head, slid around the trunk, then vaulted up and over several thin branches to land on another, higher branch. Kosin scooted down this one nearly to its end, balancing nearly on the tips of his toes as he approached the farthest point out that would bear his weight. Then he dropped into a crouch.

Argand slowly lowered himself into a crouch and placed his left hand on the ground. The chorus of images quickly cleared into a vision of the hiding thief, and he did indeed have a bow with an arrow on-string. He was older, with thick, matted white hair falling down his back and a round shield strapped to his back.  Glancing back into the high pithwood canopy, Argand gasped in alarm as Kosin drew and threw one of his gleaming knives as hard as he could towards the open space in front of Argand – and simultaneously there came the high twang of a bowstring release.

Argand reflexively tensed for the arrow’s blow, but it never came. He heard a quick cracking sound, then the thud of the arrow hitting the ground somewhere nearby. A moment later, another scream pierced the early morning air. Argand sensed the archer’s steps as he ran out of the pithwood, doubtless carrying another one of Kosin’s blades in his flesh.

Kosin landed on the soft ground in front of Argand, his black cloak flailing around him as he fell instantly into a crouch.  He still had a knife in his right hand, pinched between two fingers, but Argand lowered his sword and heaved a sigh.

“That’s it, Kosin.  That’s all of them,” he said, finally breathing easily.

“No,” Kosin said, slowly spinning in place in his crouch and surveying the trees, “No, you said there were thirteen. I don’t see any others either, but I nailed eight with knives, and you got four with your sword. Where’s the other?”

Argand’s smile faded.  He sheathed his broadsword and focused on the sensations in his feet. The pulses were there, But they revealed no other bandits in the vicinity. He squatted down in a crouch mirroring Kosin’s, and laid his hand gingerly on the ground.

The warm energy spun into his arm once again, but Argand was expecting it and quickly focused on the pulses and their meaning. He instantly saw images on the surface of his thoughts, like vibrant oil paintings come to life. He saw the thieves as they gained ground on horseback and on foot, working their way eastward back toward the fishingvillageofOernthrough which Argand and Kosin had passed on the previous day. They would be seeking medical attention from the local physician, and fast.

But the thirteenth figure, the one in the silver, shimmering gauntlets, was gone.

“What’s this?” asked Kosin, frowning at his crouching friend. “A new trick? Or are you worn out from your swordplay with the fat man?”

Argand grinned and stood, brushing the soil off of his hand. “Well, yes. A new trick. I will explain it to you… if I can… later. But no, there’s no one else anywhere near here. I picked out thirteen men, yes, but the thirteenth was no thief I think.  Someone was standing farther off – maybe a lot farther off – not sure. I couldn’t tell the difference.”

Kosin stood and slid his knife deep into the folds of his cloak.  He still scanned the pithwood warily as he began hunting for his remaining knives among the leaves and dirt.  It took a lot to get Kosin to relax after an event like this. And events like this were happening nearly all the time these days in Jesserin Duchy.

What was the land coming to?

“Four men, Argand? You took down four men, hand-to-hand, and don’t even have a scratch to show for it??? It’s hard to believe, but you are getting even better with the sword, aren’t you.” It wasn’t really a question.

Argand sighed. “Kose, it wasn’t even that hard. It’s like… like they were ridiculously slow. As if they were moving through a bog and I was going full speed ahead. If it hadn’t been for the bowmen, I feel like I could’ve taken them all!”

“Well, this time I thought you weren’t gonna make it, Argand,” Kosin said seriously as he picked up another bloody blade and cleaned it on a handful of fallen leaves. He frowned. “I thought that last bowman was going to force me to continue my travels solo.”

“You and me both, Kosin!” Argand laughed as he leaned against the stump. The fat thief still lay at the base of the once-huge pith tree, out cold and snoring softly. He would have a colossal bruise and an equally large headache once he awoke.  “If that last one had a decent aim, I think you would be carrying me on your back to the nearest cuperative for an emergency arrow-ectomy right now!”

Kosin’s frown faded, but neither did he smile. Argand caught his change of mood and looked at him pointedly. Kosin looked away and walked over to an arrow laying on the ground a few dozen feet away, then tossed it to Argand.

Argand caught the half arrow and looked at it closely. The arrowhead was intact, but the shaft ended abruptly as if it had been cut. He raised an eyebrow. A second later, Kosin tossed him the other half of the shaft with the fletching still in place. Argand’s eyebrows rose high on his forehead as he again looked at Kosin, watching as the small man bent to pick up the last of his throwing knives, buried almost up to its end in the soft earth. This one had no blood on it.

Argand’s mouth gaped open.

“Right,” Kosin said, growing a little pale. “Your bowman didn’t miss. I… uh… I hit the arrow. In mid-flight. With one of my knives.”

Argand closed his mouth, then blinked hard.  “A new trick, Mr. Fletcher?”

Kosin smiled then, but still looked a little worried. “Well, yes. I’ll explain it to you… if I can… later.” He slowly shook his head, grinning at his old friend.

“Argand,” Kosin said, head still shaking in confusion, “what is happening to us?”

“I have no idea, Kose old friend. I have absolutely no idea.”

2 The Galleon

“Hip-Hip…”

“HOOORAAAAYYY” came the wall-shaking third cheer, followed by the loud clanging of metal mugs full of ale being slammed together by the scores of soldiers that crowded the tavern.  Loud slurping gulps followed that, as the minstrels at the far side of the room resumed playing their upbeat, celebratory song. The Galleon had not seen a crowd so large and so happy in many months. The fat tavern keeper had a smile plastered on his face even as he barked orders at his sweating serving girls, poured trays full of ale while gathering fistfuls of silver and gold coins, and generally tried to maintain some order within the chaos of food, beer, music and men. The room was warmed against the Spring evening’s chill by a series of small hearths set in the wall opposite the bar, and was brightly lit by marsh-oil lamps suspended from the wood beamed ceiling in round, wooden chandeliers.

Maximus Chemael held three brimming mugs of ale up high as he quickly weaved his way back through the throng to the small table where his companions waited. He was a tall man, giving him a good view of the masses, but that wasn’t why he was able to so smoothly navigate his way through a crowd that was jostling and bumping nearly everyone into significant spills.

“Dinner is served, fellows!” he crowed as he sat down, passing one mug to blonde-haired Brien and the other to the nearly bald Varix. All three pushed their empty mugs to the edge to be scooped up by the next passing server, then attacked their new ale with fervor.

“Next rounds on you, Var,” Max continued loudly to be heard over the noise, wiping the foam from his lips with a sleeve slightly rust-stained from his gauntlets. “I get the feeling that this might really BE our dinner! I doubt this place has enough meat on-hand to feed this many victorious fighting men with no advance notice!”

Max was fairly sure this was the truth. Gilston was a small town along the Palladon road, and existed more as a convenient waypoint for traders trekking betweenGreystoneCityand Pallas than anything else. But today, the Pathwatch of Greystone had struck a mighty blow against the bands of Mindonite attackers that had been disrupting that critical trade route. It was rare for bandits and barbarians to be organized and cooperative with one another, so large battles were pretty much unheard of.  But when word reached Queen Lorillin that just such an organized mass had taken up residence near Gilston, she sent two one hundred-man groups, each formally known as a ‘blade’ of Pathwatch soldiers, to eliminate them.  The battle was short and one-sided; the men of the Pathwatch, like Max, Varix, and Brien themselves, were well trained and well armed. Many of the Mindonite thugs fought with clubs and crude spears and wore little to no armor.

And so the celebration had landed in Gilston, and the Galleon – the only tavern in town – was bulging at the seams with Greystone peace-keepers being praised as heroes by the townsfolk.

“You’re not going to hear any complaints from me, Max,” said Brien, taking a long pull from his tankard. “These Heartland ales just hit the spot, you know? And for two-weight silver, who’s gonna complain, even if it tasted like marsh-water!”

“Nahhhh, these farmer’s brews aren’t for me, Brien,” answered Max, jerking his upper body to one side as a drunken reveler was jostled into a fall right towards him. The tipsy soldier bounced unceremoniously off of Max’s chair back then collapsed onto the floor. A few other soldiers hustled over to the moaning man, helped him up, and nearly carried him off towards the privies in the back of the long room. Max leaned back again.

“This will do for a party night,” he continued, “but for my money you can’t get ale like they brew up north, near Jalsmin. Right near the source, you know? All the wheat and barley in the Land, right there at your fingertips!” He took another long pull.

Brien shook his head, wagging a finger in Max’s direction. “The plains are great for common ale, sure… but if I had my druthers, Max, it would be theHighlandsfor their icewine! Now there’s a drink for you. Smooth. Sophisticated…”

“Expensive!” laughed Max. “I mean, you pay like fifty-weight of silver for a jug, don’t you?”

“Well, yeah,” Brien agreed loudly, leaning back in his chair and waving casually to Jod Marivan, a bowman in their unit that had just dropped into a chair at a nearby table. “But its worth it! Everything up in theHighlandscosts a ton! But its worth it! And it doesn’t come in JUGS Max, you cretin! Sure wish I had some of that icewine now.” Brien’s deep-set blue eyes seemed to lose focus for a second, as if he were suddenly deep in thought, but a hard bump from two men working to squeeze past behind him snapped him out of it.

“This place is getting out of hand fast, fellas,”  Max nearly yelled. “Maybe we should bail out and see if we can get a room in town somewhere? Lodging’s sure to be tight tonight. It’d be nice to not have to sleep on the ground back in camp.”

“Normally I’d be the first to agree,” shouted Brien, “But I heard there was a Bard in town tonight.  If so, she’s bound to come here, right? This is the only gig in town!”

“Oh, you and your bards, Brien,” chided Max, then he drained his tankard and slammed it down on the rough wood. “Have you ever met one you didn’t fall in love with on the spot?”

“So I like music??!! What’s the problem with that?”

“So it’s music you like? There’s a fine quartet of minstrels over there just performing their hearts out for you, then! Why don’t you go sit at their feet and ogle them for a few hours, eh?” Max leaned forward and pointed towards the small cluster of musicians, playing a triumphant victory song as they sat against the far wall. It was hard to hear the drums or the hand-harps over the increasingly intoxicated crowd. Max also realized that the number of women in the tavern had been steadily increasing for the past few minutes. While it made the crowding even worse, it certainly improved the view.

A chorus of shouts broke out just past their table, with more mugs of ale being banged together high over the heads of a group of men. “Hail to the Captain!!!” and “Victory for the Fifth Blade” were being shouted by two dozen or so men standing around a long thin, dining table.

Captain Britness was making his way through the crowd, a mug in each hand, suds spilling down the front of his huge brown beard streaked with grey as he alternately drank from one and toasted his men with the other while making a circuit around the room.

“Hail to the victors!!!” came his booming response. Brit was a bear of a man, broad shouldered, thick-armed, and imposing despite his nearly fifty Summers in the Land. He stood around six-foot five inches tall, which made him approximately the same height as Max and Brien, but he towered over the shorter Varix. Brit’s skill in leading Pathwatch blades was legendary, as were the tales of his prowess as a Captain in the Grey Shields.

“Hail Captain Britness!!!” Max, Brien, and Varix cheered together as he passed, mugs held high overhead.

“Hail to you, my victorious friends!!! Max Chemael, Var Cooper, Brien Page, to you!!” He yelled back, pausing for a moment to look them each in the eye as he saluted them with his tankard. The Captain took pride in knowing all of his blade by name, despite the fact that the ranks assigned to him from the Grey Shields changed every season.

“Varix!” Brit boomed, looming over their table and smiling broadly. “I can’t believe you aren’t in the local cuperative!!! I was about 30 paces off when you took that spear to the gut, man! Nightwings! How are you sitting here in one piece??”

Varix smiled up at the Captain, lifting his tankard high as he spoke. “Luck of the Creator, Captain Britness!” he yelled. “He took a good stab at me, yes, but it glanced off my mail and did only a little damage. Nothing a few tankards can’t numb, at least.”

“Well, good on you, my young champion! Enjoy your evening, my boys, but watch your time in the morning. We pull out for Pallas at first light!” Britness then pushed his way forward through a couple of young-looking  local girls who were being chatted up by a few great-bowmen, and continued his personal parade around the tavern.

At that moment, Max’s mind was filled with the flashing image of a broad-shouldered, older serving woman carrying no less than 6 giant tankards of ale… falling right toward Max’s own back. OH NO!!!, he seemed to hear in a nearly screaming woman’s voice.

Max released his tankard and spun out of his chair in a flash with one hand under the woman’s arms and the other catching her around the waist. His feet were planted firmly and wide in his near crouch, so he was rock-stable as he grabbed her, panting, and leaned her back up onto her feet. The server had been mistakenly tripped by Captain Britness as he shoved his way through the crowd, but Max’s fast action prevented a near flood of fresh ale.

The men near their table who noticed the save began clapping and cat-calling in appreciation. Brien joined in, laughing as he did so.  Max stood and produced an audacious bow, then slid back down in his seat and retrieved his ale. Varix drank his beer and said nothing.

“Thanks, sir! Thank you! My name is Verlin” the server said, working to catch her breath and smiling a toothy grin at Max. She had to have more than 60 Summers in the Land, but her arms looked strong enough to wrestle a bull. “That was… amazing! How did you do that??”

“My lucky day, I suppose!” grinned Max. “Besides, what’s a worse way to end a good day then by taking a six-tankard bath in a crowded bar, hmmm???”

“Good point, sir, good point!” Verlin said as she began to worm her way through the crowd toward her original destination. “By way of thanks, the next round for you and your table-mates is on me!”

“You, my dear, have a deal,” said Max. Brien lifted his mug in salute in Verlin’s direction as she departed.

“That wasn’t luck, was it, Max,” said Varix in a flat voice.

The smile faded from Max’s face as he turned to Varix. He was light-haired and light-eyed, but had tanned skin and an often grumpy expression. He very rarely talked during their nights out on the town, whether inGreystoneCityor out on Pathwatch duty like this trip to Gilston. He was of medium height and build, but was fearless in a fight and had quickly caught the Captain’s eye years back when the three young men had first applied to join Greystone’s army, the Grey Shields.

“Ive seen you do some pretty amazing stuff,” Varix continued, sitting forward, his face expressionless, “but that last bit there? That was more than you usually let slip in public. The ale is just making you drop your guard a little bit, yes?”

Max still didn’t respond.

“So what’s your point, Var?” asked Brien, leaning forward and toward Varix. “So he’s good? You’ve fought next to him, you KNOW how good he is. So maybe it’s not luck. Call it skill! Is that your point?”

“No, it’s not. Max, what you have been doing is– well, it’s not natural is it,” Var continued, catching Max’s eye. “I’d be willing to bet you can’t even describe it, can you. And don’t know when it started, right?”

The three sat silent for a moment, the revelry continuing all around them.

Max sighed. “Yes, Var, it seems weird at times. Not very natural, in fact. Yes. I can agree with that. So what? It keeps me alive out on the battlefield, and that, in my book, is a plus. So like Brien said, what’s your point? You’re always kind of cryptic, but this is even unusual for you!”

Varix looked down at his nearly empty ale, then seemed to make a decision. He pulled a short dagger from his waist. It was the largest weapon allowed through the doors of the Galleon, whose bouncers figured that small weapons would lead to a minimal set of problems when the inevitable barroom fights broke out.

He held the dagger in his right hand, and looked up at Brien, then Max, who both exchanged a quick alarmed glance at each other.

“Var, hey… what are you—“ began Max.

“Var, put that down! If the Captain sees—“ started Brien.

But they were both too late. Varix turned the blade tip towards his left wrist and jabbed the blade home, pulling upwards toward his elbow as he sliced. Instantly both Max and Brien were on their feet, lunging after Varix’s arms and crying out. But then they froze. Varix had finished his slash and pulled the blade back already. Except… there was no slash. No blood. Nothing.

No one around them even noticed that anything had happened as the raucous group began to get well into their ale and war stories.

Max and Brien sat back down, mouths agape.

“I have been pretty sure about this for months now, guys,” Varix continued, still holding his dagger. “I found out by mistake, of course. Dropped a practice sword on my bare foot one morning, point down. Practice swords are dull, but the points aren’t. When nothing happened, I got suspicious.”

He again placed the tip of the dagger against his forearm, then dug in with a quick thrust. Max grimaced, then relaxed as he again saw that nothing happened.

“Today was the ultimate test,” Varix continued. “That Mindonite spearman didn’t miss me. His blow didn’t ‘glance off of my mail’ either. He had knocked my sword out of my hand, then he proceeded to run me through with a spear that would have spitted a decent sized boar. It hurt a little, kind of like being punched in the gut, but… but then I grabbed his spear, wrestled it from him, and planted it in his gut instead.” He looked down at his own abdomen and frowned at it.

“I don’t even have a bruise,” he said.

Brien reached out and took the dagger from Varix’ hand. He carefully tested the point with his finger and jerked back in shock as it easily drew blood. For the first time that day, Varix smiled. A grim, unsure smile, but a smile nonetheless. Brien handed the dagger back.

“Max, when I say ‘un-natural’, that’s exactly what I mean. I don’t think I am alone. You’ve got something going on, don’t you?” Var said, re-sheathing the dagger.

Max said nothing, and neither did he meet Var’s gaze. How do I explain something like this? he thought to himself. How do I explain something that is totally inexplicable? He took a deep breath.

“I knew that you couldn’t be hurt in today’s fight, Var,” Max said, leaning forward and speaking just loud enough for the others to hear. “I don’t know how, but I knew.”

Var’s eyebrows rose in surprise. “You knew? How could you possibly know?”

“I think there’s a reason we have all become such good friends,” Max continued, looking into Brien’s confused eyes. “I feel like we are supposed to stick together. I have no idea why, but… well… I have always known there was something different about the both of you. And about me.”

“Well, don’t try to stick a knife in my arm, please,” Brien said, grinning uneasily.

Max chuckled. “No chance of that, old friend,” he said.

Max and Brien had known each other since grade school in the central Cardinal district ofGreystoneCity, and had been friends from their first meeting. The two met Varix years later during their training to join the Grey Shields, but he also clicked with them right away despite his quiet and sometimes surly demeanor.

“What does this mean, Max?” Var asked, leaning even further in.

A hush passed through the room at that point, most conversations tailing off as all attention was directed to a red-cloaked figure that had climbed on top of the long, rainwood bar. The Bard had arrived.

* * * * * * *

Thanks for reading!

 

The First Proving: Emergence Copyright Kevin E. Jackson 2011

Baddies on Parade

First, a caveat. I am not going to talk much about the antagonists in Emergence because I don’t want to give too much away. Info about most bad guys is revealed slowly as the story progresses, and there are only a few story segments from a baddie POV. And of course there are secret baddies, spies, and people who look evil but might not be. That said, though, I can certainly talk about the dark and twisty kingdom to the west of the Black Mountains, MasMindon.

MasMindon has been a thorn in the side of the Greystone Protectorates since the dim, prehistoric era before the Northern Migration hundreds of years ago. The two countries fought several major wars and numerous small battles since that time, with only one clash among the many initiated by the armies of Greystone. MasMindon, despite covering the known Land from Cronia to the Western Flow and from the Black Mountains to the Theron Sea, is resource-poor. But instead of pursuing trade, they have chosen conquest. If not for the nearly impenetrable barrier of the mountains, there might have been endless war between Greystone and MasMindon.

The current King of MasMindon is the aged but strangely vigorous Balon Horncrest.  He rules as an absolute dictator from the capital city of Maradon near the Gray Marshes. Directly beneath King Balon in the power structure are his twin sons Ardeman and Tamaric, known as the Blood Princes.  King Balon keeps very few within his circle of power, but there is no doubt that his chief advisor Pinneron is a key figure. MasMindon is divided into counties that are each ruled by a Warlord. The Warlords are typically selected from the ranks of the Mindonite army by either the King or the Blood Princes.

At the heart of the current rancor between Greystone and MasMindon is the attempted Mindonite invasion of RC 1260 (the current year is RC 1299). During that invasion, assassins killed King Darren Greystone, his wife, and three of their four children. King Balon denied that he was responsible for the assassinations, but his credibility is suspect.

Since the borders between the Greystone Protectorates and MasMindon remain closed, most current information that is known about MasMindon comes from secretly gathered intelligence. Rumor has it that Queen Lorillin Greystone’s Chief of Security, Jaymes Baron, operates an extensive spy network throughout the known Land. While all royal officials deny the existence of such a spy agency, several new facts about MasMindon’s ruling family have recently been learned.

The Blood Princes have secretly fathered sons (as many as a half-dozen, maybe more) and had them raised far from Maradon near the mountain village of Garon. Neither Blood Prince is married, and there has been no sign of the women who gave birth to these young men.  There has also been conversation in the town of Garon about an organization called the Blood Knights, but little is known about what this name means.

Another oddity involves reports of wagons, apparently full of prisoners, being delivered directly to Maradon Castle. This is quite strange, since the design of King Balon’s red castle does not include extensive prison facilities, and Mindonite legal matters are usually (brutally) handled within each local Warlord’s jurisdiction. Further, none of these large groups of prisoners have ever been seen leaving the castle. Recent reports also claim that many of the prisoners appear to be asleep or dazed upon arrival.

On an unrelated note, a disturbing new development in baddie-dom has come to light within the Protectorates themselves. For the first time in Greystone’s history, a widespread organized crime ring has developed. They call themselves the Trax, and reports suggest that their ranks are managed from within Greystone City itself by a ruthless leader called the Hilt. Some royal officials believe that the Trax is directly responsible for the recent dramatic increases in crime throughout the duchies. Local patrols across the nation have been instructed to be on the lookout for potential Trax activity.

That’s it for now! Proofreading of Emergence continues. Hoping to be done in another week or so.

~Kevin

Thrusts and Parries

Hello, all!

I want to throw out some quick notes on main thrusts of the Tome of Greystone books. I think that this info will help clarify the direction and shape of the stories moving forward. Yes, I am talking about this project like I am a real, published author who has some deadline to hit and a contract and a life… No, none of the above is true! But I am proceeding as if it *were* true, because it’s a heck of a lot more fun that way. I am about to send draft copies of Emergence out to the early readers who have asked to see it, so additional info might be in order.

The story arc for The Tome can be divided into three segments, which I will call sagas because it sounds dramatic and important. The first saga takes place within a five-year span, and includes “The First Proving” trilogy (Emergence, Knights and Watchers, and The First Proving) which takes a single year, then two follow-on books tentatively called “The Council of Lords” (if I don’t get sued for such a generic title) and “The Last Peace” which cover the remaining 4 years.  I am at LEAST going to write all of this first saga in its completion, regardless of people liking it or a publisher caring. Why? Because it’s so stinkin’ fun! Period. “The Council of Lords” and “The Last Peace” are required to complete the full first saga anyway, so I do not plan to pause until they are written.

I have outlined a second saga as well. The problem is, I almost HAVE to write it given the way the first saga ends- there are several big questions left unanswered. But I have a feeling that I will be tired of writing by then. Maybe. Anyway, the second saga takes place in Greystone as well… but about 700 years have passed. My plan has this saga also being a trilogy of fat books or a collection of 9 skinny ones.

Lastly, I have outlined a third saga that takes place 300 years or so BEFORE “The First Proving” trilogy. Prequels. They are less critical to the overall arc, but finally explain all of the stuff in the other books and setup the beginning.

I just realized that I just copied George Lucas’ progression in Star Wars to a “T”. Oops. Oh well. I come by it honest, I guess.

Another few notes: These are not going to be typical “powers” driven stories. The plot does not center on the super powers of our heroes at all. Their abilities almost become secondary to the plot and the problems in the Land. In a way, this is the best definition of one of the core conflicts in the Tome: these guys get all of this power, but it doesn’t fix everything. Sometimes, it seems to fix NOTHING. The main thrust of the arc isn’t the super powers and their origins and how cool they are, and the climax of each saga is NEVER about the heroes discovering some great new ability or finding a new weapon or “believing in themselves” or anything like that. The climaxes are always about the choices that the heroes (and others) might make, and why they might make them. They are about the characters growing beyond what they are in the beginning of the tales. And there is not always a happy ending.

This is not to say their powers are not awesome or important. They are. And in true nerd fashion, they will be shown off extensively. But they are not the story in and of themselves.

Now, my main reason for saying all of that is because I haven’t yet written the Proving event. And I will be tempted to go crazy and make the story suddenly all about the magic. If that happens, please slap me soundly until I stop. Thanks in advance.

Another cool note… I have a Facebook friend named Peter who is the assistant to my favorite fantasy author in the world, Brandon Sanderson (a NYT Bestseller several times). Peter has given me some advice via email (and a lead on a good agent), and I am not ashamed to say that I have asked him to read this blog. You never know…  🙂

~Kevin

Emergence – Chapter 1

Hi all,

Time for the caveats before a sample of my writing. Below is an unedited-but-sort-of-proofread copy of Emergence, Chapter 1. Note that it’s a long chapter, and initially was TWO chapters that got stuck together during restructuring (and might become two again!). Also, the paragraph formatting got screwed up in the copy-and-paste, but I’m leaving it as-is.

I am looking for feedback. Like it? Hate it? Too wordy? Too much action? Not enough action? Lacks creative language? Trying too hard? Not trying hard enough? Of particular concern to me is the “hook” of the first chapter; does it make the reader WANT to read more. Does it introduce enough to make a reader think “this could be good”, or “I wonder what is going to happen next!”. To be fair, I intended the first *several* chapters to accomplish this goal, but agents and publishers sometimes just review the first ten pages or the first chapter in order to make a buy/no-buy decision.

Please know that I am open to criticism because it will help me to become a better writer moving forward. So let me know what you think. Of course, “It Freakin’ Rocks!” is good too.

Have at it!

*Dramatic Pause*

1 Pithwood

Argand only raised an eyebrow as the fat, black-bearded brigand slowly drew a cruelly curved scimitar from the sheath at his waist. He had a raw, angry looking scar running straight down the center his forehead and onto the bridge of his nose, and looked like the kind of man who was accustomed to drawing blood.

The thin, hawk-nosed man to his left and the young, angry looking man with the pock-marked face to his right both took the cue and drew the short swords they wore on their waists. Behind them two other thieves, hooded and menacing, drew their weapons

“Here now”, the fat bandit grumbled in a deep, gravelly voice, “less not make doin’s get ugly here, young masters.”

He slowly pointed the broad bladed sword at Argand, standing tall and expressionless twenty feet away across the small clearing, then at the shorter, stockier form of Kosin next to him.

“Ain’t no need for either of the two of ya to get hurt, y’know,” he continued, grinning a nearly toothless grin through his thick and matted beard, “just toss yer weapons and toss yer gold, and we’ll call it smooth.”

Smoke still sputtered upward from the remains of the last night’s campfire, and the two one-man tents that Argand and Kosin carried with them were not yet fully bundled. It was perhaps one half hour after dawn on a cloudy, cool spring morning. A fine time of day for highwaymen to attempt to take travelers unaware.

But not all young travelers are so easily waylaid.

“I am Argand Mason of Eagle’s Reach,” Argand spoke in a loud, commanding voice. “I will give you this one chance, cutpurse,” He squared his broad shoulders lifted his cleft chin high, while gently resting his hand on his leather bound sword hilt. “Leave us.  Now. And I can promise you that you will not be injured. This is more than I expect you deserve given the nature of your work… but nevertheless. You have this one chance.”

Argand’s face was set like stone, his square jaw looking as if he were a king passing judgment, not a weary young traveler being assaulted by highwaymen. His thick, wavy black hair was slightly disheveled, as were his clothes. Like a man suddenly roused from sleep, which he was. But his youthful face radiated strength, eyes set, lips a tight line, as if he fully expected the bandits to back down.

And they nearly did. For a moment, the fat thief with the scar hesitated. A look of confusion seemed to cross his face, as if he was not really sure what he was doing. Then he seemed to remember himself.

The skinny thief laughed aloud mockingly, as if trying to cover his leader’s hesitation, while the others just shook their head and smiled in a show of pity. The scarred leader, now recovered from his momentary lapse, waved his scimitar menacingly while he broke into a smile.

“O’ reeeally???” He drawled, stepping closer to the two young men. “Now, lemme see, Eagles-Reachling. You, tall as ya might be, holdin’ maybe twenty-five Summers in the land? And yer wee-short companion there with ya? And yer gonna… uh… let US go unhurt??? When it’s five on two? Mighty bold words, don’t ya think?!”

“Let’s just take these fools, Argand,” muttered Kosin under his breath, “they’re common cut-throats. We can beat them easily enough.” Kosin was almost a foot shorter than his broad-shouldered friend, with wavy black hair and green eyes. He was very muscular for his size, broad in the chest and rather thick-armed. He spoke in a quiet, flowing voice that always made Argand think that he would be a good singer.

“We can take them,” agreed Argand quietly, “but it’s the eight men that have crept up behind us in the brush that concern me, Kosin.”

Kosin’s eyebrows climbed up his forehead in alarm.  Argand kept his face frozen, feeling the presence of all of the brigands through his feet as he always did. Every step, every shuffle, every pause… he could feel all of their movements, their very presences, through the ground itself when people were this close to him. It took very little effort for him to differentiate the pulses in the ground and pick out the eight hidden assailants and their movements. He still wasn’t sure exactly when he had realized that the odd sensations actually meant something, that they were so very useful. But during this most recent few weeks of eastward travel from theHighlandsalong the crime-riddenJury Road, he was sure the tell-tale pulses had saved his life repeatedly.

The lead thief had heard Argand. The grin faded from his face, replaced by a puzzled frown that made his raw forehead scar bulge grossly.  “How…??? Ya couldn’t have possibly known…,” then he gathered his wits and raised his oversized sword to attack position.

“Well, then, young tho ya are, I guess we’ll be havin’ to do this the hard way!” He advanced.

“Ummm… Argand?” Muttered Kosin under his breath as he slowly drew two of his short, hilt-less daggers from within the folds of his cloak.  “Thirteen men? We have been pretty lucky before, but…”

“RUN!” Argand breathed at Kosin, then he took off at a full sprint to his right. He bounded over the dying embers of the fire and disappeared into the brush. Kosin paused for half a heartbeat, then dashed after him.

The five thieves took off in pursuit, and the grunts and exclamations from the nearby woods announced that the rest of the bandits had joined the chase.

Argand angled sharply left through the thick brush and occasional thin trunks of burban trees, his long legs pumping in the chill morning air. Kosin was faster, though, and soon was right on his heels.

“Get ready, Kosin,” Argand panted, swatting saplings from before his face and leaping over a few deadfalls. “A few of these slime are mounted… we can’t outrun them.”

Kosin slid and bounded along next to Argand, much more like a dark-clothed blur than a man. He had a much easier time leaping over obstacles and weaving his way among the woodlands than Argand did, and it wasn’t just due to his smaller size.  He had always been especially skilled when it came to athletics, his body just as fluid as his voice was.

“Okay… up ahead,” breathed Argand as he saw the beginning of a thickly grouped patch of adult pith trees, their trunks as big around as a horse is long. There was very little undergrowth between the huge trees due to the lack of light under their heavy canopies. Argand knew the trees were there moments after he had started running. He had no idea HOW he knew, but he knew.

The sounds of horses and men drew closer as Argand and Kosin broke out of the brush and into the pithwood.

“You go up, and I’ll go around,” panted Argand. But Kosin was clearly already of the same mind as he ran straight for a tree.

Kosin said nothing. He rarely spoke during their recent encounters with brigands, cutthroats, and other diverse miscreants all over Jesserin duchy.  He leapt at the nearly black trunk of the largest pith tree in his line of sight and hit it hard, letting his fingers find the natural cracks and crags in the rough surface while his toes almost instantly found purchase beneath him.  He sped up the tree almost as fast as he had been running a moment before.

To Argand, this was nothing new or surprising. Kosin Fletcher had been climbing trees, walls, rocks, and just about anything else vertical since he could remember. Argand slowed, glamncing back to watch Kosin as he reached the canopy and stepped out onto a large branch positioned over the area. Kosin squatted low, balancing easily, while he pulled several of the razor-sharp, hilt-less throwing knives he carried.  He had nearly two dozen of the six-inch long weapons hidden amongst the folds of his cloak and clothing, each held in place by a thin leather sheath lined with steel. The short man was nearly invisible in the dim pithwood canopy, seeming to fade right into the shadows of the giant trees.

Argand knew that Kosin didn’t really want to kill any of these ruffians, but he knew that it might be unavoidable if the thieves proved either too skilled or too persistent. As Argand slowed, he tracked Kosin out of the corner of his eye; he was jumping nimbly from branch to branch, throwing blades held between several of his fingers, working to gain a better line of sight based on wherever Argand chose to hide.

Ahead, Argand saw a small clearing in the wood that would serve his needs, dominated by a group of short, six foot wide stumps of ancient pith trees that had clearly been felled by loggers some years before. Crouching down behind the largest stump and closing his eyes, Argand focused on the peculiar, pulse like surges he felt in his feet and legs and read them as if he were scanning a book. Through the sensations, he could tell that the horses had stopped, the riders now on foot, and that his earlier count had been accurate; he and Kosin were powerfully outnumbered. The brigands likely knew that the two young men were going to try to hide, not run. Argand knew it would take some show of force to deter them at this point. The chain mail he wore, the sword at his side, even his and Kosin’s clothes would fetch a fair weight of gold and silver on the streets of nearby Jesserin City or Oakbridge – not even counting whatever coins might be found in their pouches. No, they would not give up this chase easily.

The dim woods felt ominous and foreboding as Argand waited, stone-like in his stillness.  Slowly, silently, he drew his broadsword from its sheath as he felt the thieves grow closer. He always felt a little more confident, almost as confident as he acted, once he had his blade in his hands. This sword had been a gift from his father, as was tradition in the Highlands, but he had still not named it. Maybe today would be the day the name would come to him. Perhaps this was going to be that memorable of an event.

Or perhaps he and Kosin were about to come to a premature end.

Without thinking, he placed one hand on the ground as he crouched. His eyes popped open in shock as suddenly he felt strong waves of warmth stream up his arm to his shoulder and beyond, as if a flow of heated bathwater had been injected into his veins. He jerked his hand up and almost cried out, but the feeling vanished instantly. All he could feel now were the sensations in his feet. There were brigands less than 50 feet from him, and they were closing from behind his hiding place.

He carefully returned his hand to the ground and the shot of warm energy again coursed up his arm in waves. It was not painful in any way, but was almost overwhelming in its power.  It took him a second to realize that the sensations in his arm were exactly aligned with the familiar, pulse like surges in his feet. It was the same feeling, but magnified a hundred fold. He closed his eyes and concentrated on the surges.

The energies climbing into his consciousness from the ground itself seemed to solidify, suddenly coalescing into vivid images in his mind. The fat leader of the band, closing in on the pith tree stump at a slow trot, the other thieves lined up behind the leader with their bows and swords at the ready, two other mean closing from the left with short swords and daggers, two more men with bows closing slowly from the right, horses tied to trees about fifty yards distant, a man wearing silver gauntlets holding a strange-looking sword standing in a clearing ringed with deep shadows, a trader’s wagon pulled by a team of four workhorses along the Jury Road, the crowded marketplace in Oern village, leagues away on the river —

Argand jerked his hand from the ground and gripped his hilt in both hands.  His eyes were nearly watering from the intensity of the sensations and flitting pictures that had just flashed across his thoughts. The images of those men and places were so… CLEAR… this time around, with his hand in the soil and fallen leaves. He had never before felt anything like it. What’s happening to me? He thought.

But there was no time. He could hear the heavy wheezing of the fat lead thief just on the other side of the stump. Argand held his breath, uttering a silent prayer to the Creator for help… and for continued accuracy from Kosin. He didn’t want to end up with one of those perfectly-sharp throwing knives ruining his day.

In one fluid motion, Argand popped up from behind the stump and slashed powerfully with his big blade, knocking the sword out of the fat thief’s hands and sending it flying. Without pausing Argand leapt over the stump and brought his sword’s pommel down hard on the leader’s bearded, filthy head with a sickening crunch. But before the thief’s round body could hit the ground, Argand was upon the next three brigands like a storm of metal, attacking furiously with the short, circular arcs of the Highlander blade technique. Less than two heartbeats later he disarmed the first of them with a fake slash followed by a quick twisting jab to the thief’s wrist, then felled the other two by shattering their short swords with two lighting fast, crushing overhand swings followed by a swift kick to the gut of the nearest man. The first man’s arm was clearly broken by the blow which had demolished his sword. His screams of pain merged with those of the other shocked, wounded bandits. It was clear that they were in no way expecting such a powerful response from Argand.

But the others, led by the scrawny fellow with the hawk nose, had recovered from their surprise at Argand’s furious onslaught. Hawk-nose stood in front of Argand with his sword at the ready as the men behind him quickly fanned out to cut off any escape. Two of the thieves had bows up and drawn. Argand’s time was up, and he knew it. He charged ahead anyway.

Then Kosin struck.

Both of the bowmen screamed loudly as their extended hands were pierced by shining metal knives that came whistling down from the canopy above. They released as they howled, their arrows launching aimlessly into the ground around them. Half a heartbeat later, the hawk nosed man and his companion dropped their swords and screamed in pain, blood gushing forth around the throwing knives that split their wrists from the back to the front.

More screams erupted from the woods to the left and right, and Argand could sense – again via the pulses in the ground – that several of those men that had been attempting to flank them were now bolting for their horses.  The wounded and bleeding men in front of him turned and sprinted out of the pithwood, cradling badly sliced hands and working to stop their bleeding. A few of them managed to yank the knives free and drop them as they ran. Argand was careful not to move at this point; Kosin’s aim was impossibly good, but he didn’t want to mistakenly move into the path of one of his deadly blades.

At that moment Argand sensed that there was still one thief that had not run, hiding behind a tree to the right. Argand held his sword at the ready, but knew he had no chance to cross the distance in time if the bandit had a bow.

Quickly searching the canopy high above, Argand was able to spot Kosin. With unreal agility, he ran down a tree limb almost over Argand’s head, slid around the trunk, then vaulted up and over several thin branches to land on another, higher branch. Kosin scooted down this one nearly to its end, balancing nearly on the tips of his toes as he approached the farthest point out that would bear his weight. Then he dropped into a crouch.

Argand slowly lowered himself into a crouch and placed his left hand on the ground. The chorus of images quickly cleared into a vision of the hiding thief, and he did indeed have a bow with an arrow on-string. He was older, with thick, matted white hair falling down his back and a round shield strapped to his back.  Glancing back into the high pithwood canopy, Argand gasped in alarm as Kosin drew and threw one of his gleaming knives as hard as he could towards the open space in front of Argand – and simultaneously there came the high twang of a bowstring release.

Argand reflexively tensed for the arrow’s blow, but it never came. He heard a quick cracking sound, then the thud of the arrow hitting the ground somewhere nearby. A moment later, another scream pierced the early morning air. Argand sensed the archer’s steps as he ran out of the pithwood, doubtless carrying another one of Kosin’s blades in his flesh.

Kosin landed on the soft ground in front of Argand, his black cloak flailing around him as he fell instantly into a crouch.  He still had a knife in his right hand, pinched between two fingers, but Argand lowered his sword and heaved a sigh.

“That’s it, Kosin.  That’s all of them,” he said, finally breathing easily.

“No,” Kosin said, slowly spinning in place in his crouch and surveying the trees, “No, you said there were thirteen. I don’t see any others either, but I nailed eight with knives, and you got four with your sword. Where’s the other?”

Argand’s smile faded.  He sheathed his broadsword and focused on the sensations in his feet. The pulses were there, But they revealed no other bandits in the vicinity. He squatted down in a crouch mirroring Kosin’s, and laid his hand gingerly on the ground.

The warm energy spun into his arm once again, but Argand was expecting it and quickly focused on the pulses and their meaning. He instantly saw images on the surface of his thoughts, like vibrant oil paintings come to life. He saw the thieves as they gained ground on horseback and on foot, working their way eastward back toward the fishing village of Oern through which Argand and Kosin had passed on the previous day. They would be seeking medical attention from the local physician, and fast.

But the thirteenth figure, the one in the silver, shimmering gauntlets, was gone.

“What’s this?” asked Kosin, frowning at his crouching friend. “A new trick? Or are you worn out from your swordplay with the fat man?”

Argand grinned and stood, brushing the soil off of his hand. “Well, yes. A new trick. I will explain it to you… if I can… later. But no, there’s no one else anywhere near here. I picked out thirteen men, yes, but the thirteenth was no thief I think.  Someone was standing farther off – maybe a lot farther off – not sure. I couldn’t tell the difference.”

Kosin stood and slid his knife deep into the folds of his cloak.  He still scanned the pithwood warily as he began hunting for his remaining knives among the leaves and dirt.  It took a lot to get Kosin to relax after an event like this. And events like this were happening nearly all the time these days in Jesserin Duchy.

What was the land coming to?

“Four men, Argand? You took down four men, hand-to-hand, and don’t even have a scratch to show for it??? It’s hard to believe, but you are getting even better with the sword, aren’t you.” It wasn’t really a question.

Argand sighed. “Kose, it wasn’t even that hard. It’s like… like they were ridiculously slow. As if they were moving through a bog and I was going full speed ahead. If it hadn’t been for the bowmen, I feel like I could’ve taken them all!”

“Well, this time I thought you weren’t gonna make it, Argand,” Kosin said seriously as he picked up another bloody blade and cleaned it on a handful of fallen leaves. He frowned. “I thought that last bowman was going to force me to continue my travels solo.”

“You and me both, Kosin!” Argand laughed as he leaned against the stump. The fat thief still lay at the base of the once-huge pith tree, out cold and snoring softly. He would have a colossal bruise and an equally large headache once he awoke.  “If that last one had a decent aim, I think you would be carrying me on your back to the nearest cuperative for an emergency arrow-ectomy right now!”

Kosin’s frown faded, but neither did he smile. Argand caught his change of mood and looked at him pointedly. Kosin looked away and walked over to an arrow laying on the ground a few dozen feet away, then tossed it to Argand.

Argand caught the… the half arrow, and looked at it closely. The arrowhead was intact, but the shaft ended abruptly as if it had been cut. He raised an eyebrow. A second later, Kosin tossed him the other half of the shaft with the fletching still in place. Argand’s eyebrows rose high on his forehead as he again looked at Kosin, watching as the small man bent to pick up the last of his throwing knives, buried almost up to its end in the soft earth. This one had no blood on it.

Argand’s mouth gaped open.

“Right,” Kosin said, growing a little pale. “Your bowman didn’t miss. I… uh… I hit the arrow. In mid-flight. With one of my knives.”

Argand closed his mouth, then blinked hard.  “A new trick, Mr. Fletcher?”

Kosin smiled then, but still looked a little worried. “Well, yes. I’ll explain it to you… if I can… later.” He slowly shook his head, grinning at his old friend.

“Argand,” Kosin said, head still shaking in confusion, “what is happening to us?”

“I have no idea, Kose old friend. I have absolutely no idea.”

*    *     *     *     *     *

Kosin couldn’t stop laughing, despite the chill rain and northerly breezes that had both him and Argand huddled under extra shirt layers and their waterproof caynspun rain-cloaks as they walked.

“No no, Kosin! That’s not what I meant at all! Its not that she wasn’t pretty…,” Argand said indignantly, embarrassment ringing in his voice. “She was, well, she was… acceptable… in terms of looks…”

Kosin erupted into another wave of laughter, shaking his head as they sloshed along the muddy Jury Road just west of Haverlin City. Ten yards ahead off them a wide wooden wagon pulled by a team of old horses creaked and groaned its slow progress through the foggy, rainy haze.

“Acceptable? Acceptable????” Kosin laughed even harder. “Has there ever been a bigger indictment of one woman’s looks than calling her ‘acceptable’? You might as well just come right out and say ‘below average’!!”

“She wasn’t that bad!” Argand insisted, giving in a little to Kosin’s infectious giggle. “Okay, okay… maybe she was a little bad.”

Kosin nearly howled.

“But that’s not the point, Kose!” Argand insisted, stepping around a large, muddy puddle that might have threatened to pull his boots off. “When it comes down to it, I want to find someone strong, you know? Not a push over, not all demure and face paint with no inner spirit.”

Kosin took off his wet gloves and wiped his tearing eyes, still snickering. “Okay, okay, Argand. If you say so. So what are you looking for then, a Dramini warchief? You want a woman who can, and does, pretty much beat you up every day?”

Argand snorted. “Not exactly, Kose. Well, not at all. I dunno… I just think I will know her when I find her.”

Argand kept smiling after that exchange. It was the most they had laughed in a week or more. The frequency of trouble that they had endured since leaving the Highlands had been wearing on them, with bandits and even a few encounters with Mindonites keeping them on edge. Their most recent encounter in the pithwood had been far too close of a call for either of their tastes.

But coming across Roca the lamp trader on his way back to the east from the Highlands had been a boon. Although the wrinkled, white-haired old trader already had four guards on detail to keep him safe along his journey, he was quick to offer 50 weight of silver each – plus meals – to Argand and Kosin for their services. He had clearly been hearing rumors about how much more dangerous travel was getting in the western lands, and the sound of an empty wagon meant a trader with full money pouches; a surefire target for highwaymen.

So the last several days were relatively uneventful for the two old friends. The four original guards, middle-aged men that had probably worked on local patrols most of their lives, kept to themselves well ahead of the wagon while Argand and Kosin brought up the rear of the procession. Each night, the group of men slept in the bed of the wagon while two at a time stood watch along the edges of their camp.

On several occasions Argand had sensed the approach of groups of bandits while he was on watch, fluttering pulses of energy in his legs solidifying into life-like images in his mind, but each time the assailants had withdrawn instead of attacking. Also easing their jobs as trader’s escorts was the proximity of this stretch of the Jury Road to the Kirill river. As they walked, the road’s edge was sometimes only a few feet from the steep, tall banks of the muddy flow. While this sometimes made Roca nervous as he guided his horses, it meant that there would be no bandits sneaking up on them from that side.

“So what about you, Kose?” Argand asked. “Whatever happened between you and little Kalia Linon? For a while there I thought you were going to put our plans aside and settle down with her in Jesserin City- maybe open up a new outlet for your dad’s shop.”

“Nahhhh… it wasn’t meant to be,” Kosin answered, pulling his hood down even lower as the rain grew more intense. “You know I could never settle down in Jesserin. Kalia was a great girl, no doubt about it, but her future is all planned out in her mind. Take over her dads bakery, build out and expand, then take over the Land via baked goods! There was no way I could sign up for that.”

Argand pictured the buxom blonde girl that had lived just a few doors down from Kosin throughout his youth. On one of Argand’s father’s many visits to Jesserin City, which always included a stop by the Fletcher’s for a visit and a meal, Argand had met Kalia and her family. She was the daughter of the man known as perhaps the greatest baker in all of Greystone. And she had been smitten with Kosin for years.

“How did she take the news that you were leaving?” Argand asked. “That couldn’t have gone well.”

Kosin sighed. “I didn’t tell her.”

Argand’s eyebrows rose in shock.

“I couldn’t! You met her once… you know how she was.” His frown deepened. “I really should have just faced her, told her my plans, but in the end… I just left her a note.” There was a hint of pain in Kosin’s voice, the laughter gone.

He continued. “I told her to find someone else, someone who could share her dreams, and to take good care of herself. And left it on her desk at the back of the bakery. She probably pitched a royal fit, truth be told! But she will be better off for it.”

Argand watched as a train of a dozen or so large wagons rolled past them on their left, heading westward towards the mountains. If they had not been so close to Haverlin now, Roca doubtless would have stopped the passing traders and asked them about road conditions ahead. But the road markers they had recently passed told them that they were close. They would make it into the town before nightfall. That meant payment from Roca, cold ale, hot food, and sleeping on a warm, dry bed for the first time in a great while. Argand grinned in anticipation. He had been unable to shake the chills of early Spring for the past few days.

“But if we succeed,” Kosin added, turning to look at Argand through the cowels of each of their hoods, “if we actually succeed at going on Venture and surviving, and bring back the head of some wyvern or tamrof, and we become knights? She would come with me, I think. As much as she loves the bakery, loves her father… if I were Sir Kosin Fletcher, I’d bet she would give it all up to come with me.”

Another line of small carts passed them on the left, also heading west. Argand could hear Roca calling out to them to make way; they were crowding much too close for comfort on the narrow mud road, and Roca’s wagon was dangerously close to the edge of the river’s bank.

“But I won’t do it,” Kosin finished. “I couldn’t do it. There was just something missing between us, you know? Something always seemed not quite right. Close… but not close enough. Does that make any sense?”

But Argand wasn’t listening. At that moment, a twenty foot long section of the river bank beneath the right side wheels of Roca’s wagon gave way in a rush of sloppy wet mud.

“Roca!!!!” Argand yelled, running up to the rear of the wagon.

Roca quickly took stock of the situation, and screamed for his four guards to drop back to the rear and help push as he began frantically whipping and calling his horse team to pull.

The passing wagons had forced him too close to the edge, and in the blink of an eye the road had collapsed. The big wagon had stopped and was tipping, teetering above a fifteen foot drop into the cold and rushing waters of the Kirill.

Within seconds, the four older guards had joined Argand and Kosin at the rear gate of the wagon and were pushing and lifting for all their worth in the slippery mud. The oldest of the guards, Renald, had lined up closest to the collapsed river bank, and really wasn’t providing much lift at all as he fought to find purchase for his feet.

“Renald, get out of there!” Argand yelled through the sheets of rain. The wind began to pick up as well, driving into their faces as they strained against the wagon.

“No, I’m fine!” He yelled back.

“A weight of gold to each of you if you get ‘er clear!!” Screamed Roca in his dry, raspy voice.  The men needed little extra motivation, though. All of their belongings, save swords and cloaks, were in their packs in the back of the wagon. Plus losing Roca’s wagon would mean earning no pay once they reached Haverlin.

With a rushing slurp, several more feet of ground broke away under their feet. Argand side stepped but kept his footing somehow, almost shin deep in the mud that now was the very edge of the river bank. But with a yell, Renald lost his footing and slid down the slope and into the waist deep mud being quickly washed away by the river.

Renald’s cries for help pierced the sounds of the downpour, the shrieking calls of Roca, and the grunts of the men just as a crack of thunder split the afternoon air. Argand glanced down to his right at Renald as he thrashed and pulled against the liquid mud, but he had already sunk up to his armpits as he was slowly pulled out into the current of the deep river. Nightwings!, Argand thought. He’s wearing his mail shirt. He’s too heavy to escape the mud and water. Can he get it off in time?

The horses were pulling for all their worth, Roca standing up on his wagon seat to urge and whip them on, as Argand, Kosin, and the three other guards pushed and lifted with all their strength, but the wagon was just too heavy and off balance. It began to slip down the slope.

Argand felt the earth beneath him begin to dissolve in the thundering downpour. The bank was giving way, and his lifting efforts were pushing him straight down. He was up to his knees in the slowly dissolving mud, and within seconds would be sucked down the bank into the bog like Renald. He couldn’t extract his feet, every motion pulling him deeper. Panic began to set in. He was also wearing a rather heavy mail shirt under his heavy cloak.

“We’re losing her!!!” Kosin called out as the wagon shifted right again. The horses were growing tired. They were all nearly out of time.

“We need to bail out, boys!!” The guard next to Kosin, Opren, screamed against the wind and rain. Another massive peal of thunder rolled over them. “It’s too late!”

Suddenly the mud lurched downward, and Argand felt himself begin to fall with the weight of the wagon almost entirely on him. Straining to get free, he screamed NO!!!  in his mind, digging within himself for more strength. No! I have to get sound footing!!

And suddenly there were the pulses.

He had almost forgotten them in the strain of the moment, thunderstorm raging around them as the earth collapsed, but there they were. Surging through his feet and legs, he could feel and nearly see everyone around him clearly despite the gale, the five soaking wet men giving their all at the rear of an old, empty wagon, the wrinkled old trader, terrified of losing his cask of gold, his wagon, and his team of horses to a mudslide, the slender but muscular man in the distant shadows wearing the silver, almost shimmering gauntlets, his black cloak flapping in the stormy gusts. And something else. Something that felt solid, strong, and moving upward towards his feet from deep below the wet ground. He focused on the feeling, which was strangely familiar for some reason, and a heartbeat later he felt solid rock under his feet. Solid rock that was rising, slowly but inexorably upward.

Argand could feel the stone, and in his minds eye he could almosts see it in the mud below him; an impossibly broad shelf of solid rock, lifting him and the other men upward steadily as if a giant’s hand were buried deep in the earth with no other purpose but to shore up their steps. Soon the wagon began to rise as well, its back wheels suddenly having solid support.

The wagon lurched forward as the horses feet suddenly hit stone just an inch or two below the mud, and seconds later Roca had the wagon safely on the far side of the road. Just as the guards and Kosin stepped out of the now shallow mud near the high river bank, Argand remembered and cried out.

“Renald!”

The men spun to the rushing, swollen river but saw no sign of Renald. Then a hand broke the surface frantically some fifty or sixty feet off shore and even further downstream to their left. It quickly disappeared below the surface.

But Argand knew where he was. The pulses were still there, coursing through his legs in a torrent that nearly equaled the rain, and through them he could make out the faint image of Renald’s body floundering under the murky surf.

Argand did not hesitate. Before he could even consider what he was doing, he had discarded his soaked cloak and outer shirt, then yanked off his slate colored chain mail shirt and tossed it to the ground. He turned to Kosin as he unclasped his sword belt, squinting at the shorter man through the pouring rain.

“I’m going to need your help again, Kose,” Argand said simply. “I can get to him, but you are going to have to get us back out.”

Kosin’s brow furrowed, but he nodded once quickly as he took the sword and sword belt. Then Argand turned to face the Kirill.

“What? What’re you doing?” asked Roca as he approached, staring in disbelief at Argand. “You can’t save him, man! He’s gone… lost! It’s suicide to-“

Roca cut off abruptly, his jaw hanging slack, as Argand leapt off of the bank with a powerful bound and quickly sank into the churning, rushing mire of mud and water.

*     *     *     *     *     *

“Rope!!!” yelled Kosin as he ran upstream, scanning the ground. Opren, who was the youngest of Roca’s guards, sprinted over to the wagon. He had a large coil of spring rope in his hands in seconds, which he tossed to Kosin as he ran back to the bank, splashing and sliding in the muddy lane. More thunderclaps seemed to punctuate the haste they knew they needed to make.

Roca and the other guards were staring out into the wind and rain-beaten river, but Kosin didn’t look. He knew that Argand was stroking for all of his worth towards Renald’s position. And he knew that he had to be ready to help  them both.

Kosin finally found what he was looking for; a fallen tree branch, about five feet long and two inches thick at its widest. He tied one end of the rope to the fat end of the branch with amazing speed.

“Mate,” said Opren in his Falon accent, shaking his soaked head and squinting in the driving rain. “Its too late. Renald’s gone, and your friend is already way to far out to reach.”

Kosin ignored him as he turned to just see Argand disappear beneath the opaque surface of the water quite a distance downstream. He took a few quick steps backward, then trotted toward the bank with the branch held back like a javelin. He planted his left foot and heaved the branch into the open air above the Kirill, high and arching, with the spring rope trailing behind it like a streamer as it rapidly uncoiled from its pile on the ground.

The branch hit the water point down and plunged below the surface.

“Grab the end!” Yelled Kosin as the rope fell limp along river and earth. He picked it up himself and got a firm grip with a coil wrapped around his wrist. Opren and the others, bearded Flint and short, stocky Eron, didn’t move.

Then the rope went taught, straining and leaping out of the water.

Opren’s eyes went wide, and he nearly dove onto the rope as the others followed. They pulled in unison, then began running westward along the muddy road, quickly bringing first Renald’s then Argand’s heads into view. Argand had his arms wrapped around Renald’s chest and held the spring rope and branch in clinched fists right in front of Renald’s face. Coughing and sputtering, the two mud-soaked men were hauled up the solid, smooth low cliff of the river bank.

Renald lay face down in the muck in the pouring rain, coughing and vomiting as Opren leaned onto his back, forcing the filthy water out of his lungs. Renald had managed to take off his cloak and boots, but he still wore his chain mail shirt. Argand seemed fine, however, if soaked and filthy. He knelt beside Renald and assisted Opren. Roca’s wrinkled face was as white as his hair. Flint and Eron were staring incredulously from Kosin to Argand to Renald and back again, speechless.

“I have good aim,” Kosin said, grinning at them all. “Thanks for the rope.”

Two hours later, Roca’s wagon rolled past a series of large family farms that marked the outskirts of Haverlin. The rain had finally subsided and the air seemed warmer, but it seemed to Argand that the chill in the air had grown stronger anyway. He hoped he wasn’t getting ill from all the wet weather.

Even though their journey with Roca the lamp trader was about to end, the conversation had not.

“I tell you, it’s just not natural, mates!!” Said Opren again, nearly yelling. “You felt it, Flint! You too, Eron! Stone doesn’t just grow up out of the ground like a burban tree in summer! That wagon was a gonner, mates… there weren’t nothing there but mud! Then all of the sudden–”

“And I told you that Kosin and I didn’t feel anything odd, Opren!” Argand lied cooly. He had secretly told Kosin to play along, and given their history, Kosin was quick to agree with no questions asked. “We just finally shifted the wagon onto that firm rock area. The horses get all of the credit.”

The five healthy men walked along next to the open rear gate of the wagon, while Renald sat on the wooden slats of the wagon bed. He looked exhausted and still coughed uncontrollably, lungs having taken in far too much muddy water, and he had developed a fever. It was tremlung, a treatable but still very dangerous disease common to those who survived drowning. He would need medical attention, and soon.

“And then that throw, mates? Dropping that branch like a war-spear exactly where Argand’s hand could find it???” Opren continued, undeterred.

“No, no,” said Renald, taking a long drink from a water skin to help quiet his cough. “No, it was way more amazing than that, Opren, like I said it was. I couldn’t see anything! That muddy flow was pitch black at 1 inch under the surface! I was done for, given up, I tell ya,” then he stopped for another coughing fit.

“Sinking, drowned, done for!” Renald continued. “But there I was, still reachin’ for the surface, prayin’ for help.  And then Argand’s arms were around me, holding me up as if I were nought more than a small child! Next thing I knew, we were being hauled up onto dry land. Incredible.”

“Like I said, the credit for the throw goes to Kosin,” Argand said. “The branch splashed in right near me, so all I had to do was grab it!”

“Look, I told you all,”  Kosin said, shaking his head, “and Argand can attest to this, I have always had good aim! It was a lucky throw! Anyone might have made it!”

Opren threw up his hands in surrender. He had been talking non-stop about how that huge area of bedrock had just risen out of the muddy earth, challenging them all to provide an explanation that didn’t include mass insanity.  Flint had been agreeing with him consistently, scratching his beard thoughtfully and looking confused, but didn’t talk about it with nearly the conviction of Opren.

Then Eron, the youngest of the four guards at around forty Summers, spoke up for the first time that afternoon.

“It’s just like in the stories, men,” he said quietly. “My old pa, Creator keep him, he used to tell me to pay attention to all the old Bard’s tales. Used to say, ‘those stories had to come from somewhere, son’. Told me that he had seen things, with his own eyes, in his youth in the Grey Shields. Strange things. Magic things. I never belived him. Nope. Not one bit.”

Then he raised his eyes to look first at Kosin, then at Argand. “Not until now.”

Renald nodded his head emphatically, coughing all the while. He was convinced that the Creator himself had intervened and saved him.

Argand and Kosin prepared to launch into more denials, but Roca halted his horses at that moment and jumped down from the wagon seat. They were at the west gate of the walled city of Haverlin, and as was tradition, Roca would pay them and release them from service before crossing the town’s threshold.

“Much obliged to the each of ya, sirs. Much obliged,” Roca said as they prepared to go their separate ways. “I’ll be here in town for about a week… if any of you are looking for another route, I’ll be headin’ east for Greystone City. I’d have ya all back, frankly. Same rate, Same deal. If so, look me up. I’ll be at the Green Maiden Inn, near the wharf.” While he addressed them all, his eyes lingered on Argand and Kosin.

They shook hands all around and began to depart, but Renald held Kosin’s hand for an extra moment as he caught Argand’s eyes. The older man’s eyes were wet, his voice rather shaky.

“I owe you my life, young men. I don’t know how you did it, but I am in both of your debt. You ever need anything, you look me up. I am always in and around the Jury or Cayn Roads on duty, but I live back in Oakbridge. Look me up, men, you here me?”

He broke into another fit of coughing then, almost doubling over.

“You take care of yourself, Renald. I’m sure we’ll cross paths again,” Kosin said simply, then joined Argand to pass through the west gate and into Haverlin. They were waved in by an imposing group of Haverlin local patrolmen without inspection or comment.

They felt their wet spirits lift once they were into the crowded, marsh-oil lit evening streets. Vendors lined the avenue here near the gate, still hawking their wears despite the late hour. Boots and caynspun shirts, dried peppers and sweet fruits imported from Cronia, hats of every type, small weapons, light shirts of mail, it was all available within a few feet of the Haverlin threshold.

At almost the same instant, the two men wrapped their nearly-dry outer cloaks tighter around themselves. Kosin was convinced that he must be coming down with a cold due to all of the Spring rains, but he knew that Argand would be far more susceptible after his stint in the cold Kirill river rescuing Renald.

“You too, huh?” Argand said.  Kosin nodded and shrugged. “It doesn’t seem like it should feel this chilly, but I tell you, Kose… I want to get in front of a fire in the worst way!”

“Not surprising,” Kosin said. “We haven’t exactly been keeping dry and warm, you know. If Renald’s spare clothes didn’t nearly fit you, I’d wager that you might be on your way to the nearest cuperative.”

“’Nearly’ fit is right! I need to get back into some pants that I can actually be seen in public wearing.”

They passed out of the gate’s market area and turned right onto Fish Street, one of the main thoroughfares across Haverlin City’s hilly expanse. Fish Street split the city nearly in half, circling right around the Mayor’s mansion at the center of town, then continuing on to the wharf along Lake Haverlin on the far side of town. Kosin knew that Argand was going to try to talk him into dipping a little deeper into their money pouches than usual in order to stay at an inn close to the city center. Kosin hated spending money on pretty much anything, but given the wet conditions they had just endured and the powerful chill he was feeling, a more expensive inn might be worthwhile.

“So what really happened back there, Argand?” Kosin said suddenly, now that they were quite far from both Roca and any of his four guards.  “The rock really did grow.  ‘Like a burban tree’, as Opren put it. I felt it, and I know you did too. So… given your fondness for talking to the ground…”

“Kose, you know I have no idea. I thought I was done for. The whole bank was giving way, I was trapped past my knees in the muck with the wagon practically falling on me… I couldn’t have escaped. I had no way out.”

He paused in front of a fruit vendor, and handed over two weight of silver for a bag of beautiful, bright oranges.

“Then the pulses hit me again, out of no where,” Argand continued.  “And I could feel the stone, the rock itself, moving up beneath me. I don’t know how it happened. But thank the Creator it did!”

Argand tossed his old friend an orange, and they both began to eat as they walked.

“I wasn’t thinking about stone or rock… I didn’t do anything or think anything at all, except for how desperately I needed firm footing,” Argand said. “I could feel it… but I don’t know how I actually DID it.”

“And there was something else, Kose,” Argand added, sounding less sure of himself. “Remember back in the pithwood? Think back to… okay, remember when I thought there was one more thief than there really was? You were waiting for the last guy to pop up and attack us, but I told you that the last person I had sensed was gone? That last man was way far off, and sort of hidden, but I saw him. He was a smallish man in mostly black, except for shimmering, almost glowing silver gauntlets. He was just standing there, facing me, still as a statue, holding a sword that kind of resembled a spear…then he was gone.”

Argand turned to catch Kosin’s eyes. “I saw him again during the mudslide. The man in the silver gauntlets. For a fleeting second, there he was, off in the distance, standing in the storm. It was him. And afterward, once we were all clear, nothing. No sign of him.”

“Are you sure it was the same man?

“No doubts. None at all. There’s something… different, profoundly different, Kose, about seeing someone ‘this way’,” he pointed to the side of his head, “versus seeing with the eyes. I think I would know him anywhere now. Whoever he is.”

Kosin looked troubled. “So you think we’re being followed.” It was not a question.

Argand shrugged. “I guess so, Kose. Either that or I am just imagining the guy. I don’t know. Maybe I’m just going crazy.”

“Ha! There’s no doubt you’re crazy, Argand,” Kosin said, “but what difference does that make since I’m crazy too? I believe you. Period.”

A pack of men on horseback raced past them at that point, forcing them to give way to one side. They wore the white berets of the Haverlin local patrol, and they were in quite a hurry towards the center of the city.

“So what about you?” Argand continued. “How did you possibly hit a moving target in the middle of a rushing, muddy river, with a stick weighted down with 100 feet of spring rope?”

“Like I told the old mercenaries, Argand. I have good aim.” Kosin took a big bite of his peeled orange, turned to Argand and grinned. Another wave of shivering hit him just then, and his grin faded. He felt cold right through to his core.

“You know that’s not nearly enough of an explanation, right?”

“Yup. Now let’s get some dinner and some sleep.”

Argand sighed, and the two walked deeper into the city in search of an inn and a warm fire.

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

Thanks for reading!

~Kevin

The First Proving: Emergence Copyright Kevin E. Jackson 2011