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Thursday, May 17, 2012

Chapter Fifty – The Cleansing of Darnuth Keep by Kelly D. Tolman

Posted by admin on September 7, 2009

The Cleansing of Darnuth Keep is a fantasy novel describing the adventures of Colter Halfspear as he becomes a man and an initiate of magical powers.

We discovered that a second city had indeed been built in the depths beneath Darnuth Keep, probably as much for protection from invasion as anything.  We managed to piece together enough of the layout to recognized residences and community areas as we stumbled about hoping to find clues.

Although we faced trials at nearly every step, not everything in those dangerous dungeons was horrible.  The initial rooms were merely larders and cellars beyond which lay the great underground city.  Within the city, buildings were marked with pillars, usually with a family name or crest, but often these marks had been removed.  Remnants of ancient artwork, either of stone or crystal still decorated many homes.  Some vast crystal gardens remained.  Untended in centuries they had formed a wild beauty unmatched by human skill or imagination.

The open spaces of the city proved to be both more dangerous and at the same time easier to navigate.  Many portions of the city were lighted, either by glowing fountains, iridescent mushrooms, or patches of moss that grew like ghostly lawns emitting a soft red or yellow light.  None of the living, moving inhabitants ever carried a light, so we naturally followed suit, hesitant to attract attention.  We moved about very carefully in the city, trying not to betray our presences in that foreign world.  Fortunately the remaining inhabitants of that place were equally wary.  Nothing moved about without great silence, and we often witnessed violence between various unsavory creatures.

In the center of that city lies a great fountain surrounded on all sides by a wonderful garden of strange and exotic mushrooms.  At all times the water of that fountain glows with a soft green or blue light.  We later determined that the shifting color matched the strength of the sun, green for day and blue for night, but to us at that time it was simply a beautiful refuge in an otherwise unfriendly and very dangerous place.  At regular intervals the fountain shot a wild spray high into the air that would fall down in a radiant shower of sparkling light.  The pool at its base was perhaps a meter in depth and six meters across.  All around the courtyard stones had been worn smooth from the falling water drops, and a few tiny channels had been worn where the water collected on its way to the hidden drain.  Most of the local inhabitants seemed afraid of any light, and we found the relative calm of the place a welcome respite from our journey.

I felt lost in another world as I sat, resting beneath the stalk of a mushroom as tall as a tree.  Everything around me bathed in a pale green light.  As usual the quiet seemed to stifle even my thoughts.  The only sounds I heard were the rippling of the water and my own breathing.  My family seemed so far away, a world, a lifetime in the past.  I pulled my knees to my chin, holding in my body’s warmth, though it was not particularly cold.  In my right hand I held my spear.  As always, my sword was buckled across my shoulder.  I still preferred to use my spear, but Pascalli had ensured I thoroughly understood the use of the sword.  My bow lay beside me.  In addition I hid a balanced throwing knife in each boot, and my hunting knife was tied down in a scabbard on my left.  My weapons were so much a part of me that I hardly noticed them, but I never took them for granted.

A few meters away Pascalli sat, smoking a pipe, and taking in his surroundings.  “Where do you think we should go now, Scratch?” he asked.  His voice was a muffled whisper, but I knew the sound would carry a great distance in the empty darkness.

“If I knew what we were looking for, I might have an idea,” I replied. Then I rested.  My dreams were fitful, almost nightmarish.  The smothering darkness made me all around uneasy.  I felt an unseen power watching me with hatred, beckoning me to enter some as yet hidden trap.

Later I woke and traded with the wizard.  As Pascalli rested, a few creatures came to drink at the fountain.  I remained still and silent, careful to always keep our scent away from possible danger.  Once, a large lion attacked one of the scaly green creatures and killed it.  As the lion dragged away its meal, a little pouch fell to the ground, and I heard the distinct jingle of coins.

That there would be treasure here I did not doubt, though at the moment I had no use for gold.  When I moved to retrieve the pouch, one of Pascalli’s eyes opened, but he did not try to stop me.

The pouch held an assortment of coins that I did not recognize.  In addition I found a few bits of bone and hide, as well as a small piece of iron poorly shaped into a half moon with a spike in the middle.

Since Pascalli had awakened, I tossed him the piece of iron and asked.  “What do you think that is?”

“Think,” laughed Pascalli, with a wink.  “I do not think it is anything.  Rather I know exactly what it is, although how it came to be here, or perhaps the better question would be why it came to be here is more of a mystery.”

“Well what is it?” I asked as my frustration mounted.

“It is the symbol of Delvor, an ancient evil god who delights in bloodshed and pain.”  His face darkened as he spoke.  “I fear the evil here may be more potent than I first imagined.”

“Well, whatever those creatures are,” I said.  “They are at least intelligent enough to worship.  And at least some of them understand the value of money.  All of them that I have seen were wearing nothing more than a loincloth, but this one had a sort of robe.”

“Which suggests what?” prompted Pascalli, his eyes gleaming slightly in the darkness.

“My guess is that this one was a priest of some kind.  This means that either these creatures came here at the direction of an evil outside force which knows how to organize, or that they were already here and then enslaved and corrupted by such a force.  It also suggests that they have some central leadership, as well as a temple or shrine of some kind.”

“Very well done, Scratch, you’ve come a long way.”  Pascalli’s rare compliment seemed genuine, and I admit a grin slipped onto my face.  “So, if we want to find the source of the curse, what do you suggest?”

“We should either look for the temple or the treasury,” I said.  After a moment of thought, I added, “Although they are probably the same place.”

“Lead on,” replied the wizard.  “I think we’ve risked too much time resting in one place already.”

Naturally I had no idea where to go.  In essence we were following the same wild chase we had been following before, but at least now we had a clue.  I decided to try to backtrack the creature’s approach to the water.  It had to live somewhere, and I figured that the more organized groups would be living somewhere in larger numbers.  They would probably use the large city buildings, and it would likely be reasonably close to water.

Pascalli agreed with my reasoning, but was hesitant to make a light to track with.  “Telling the world we are coming may not be the best course of action,” he argued.  “We know they outnumber us, and after our recent attacks they are probably already looking for us.”

In the end he consented.  We didn’t really have any other options.  “But only until we have an idea which direction it came from,” he cautioned.  “I still don’t want to walk into an ambush.”

Telling direction beneath ground was never a great strength of mine, but I had made a few mental landmarks.  Pascalli had brought some paper and ink, and I began making a crude map, using the fountain as a reference and judging which way we had come.  I called the entrance stairs ‘south’, and put the fountain as ‘north’.  In any event, the tracks went off in the direction I had decided was west.

Determining where the creature had come from turned out to be a rather simple affair, as our dim light showed the tracks merging onto a small path that headed generally westward.
Copyright 2008 Kelly David Tolman

On to The Cleansing of Darnuth Keep Fantasy Novel Chapter Fifty One

Back to The Cleansing of Darnuth Keep Fantasy Novel Chapter Fourty Nine

The Birth of Reason – A Poem by Kelly D. Tolman

Posted by admin on September 4, 2009

The simpleness of insanity
is reflected in golden green
when tin’s polluted face beams
up at the passerby from the pond.

The deft hand of embarrassment
then claims his victim’s senses
as he (the victim) comprehends
the trash we fling at the gods.

Cere’s loving harvest gift
is brought up and pummeled
to make candy bars and rubble
sing the woes of unjust hogs.

The blight of man hovers o’er creation
like shades in the warmth of evening,
and creature stops great, starts believing
the crass counsel of foolish pawns.

Reason unreasonable, unreadable,
credulous, penniless, proken in pity,
becomes the forte of insecurity
while new algae covers the frogs.

Heavy with the fear of understanding
the victim turns his countenance
away from dark circumstance
to find a more apathetic god.

DirecTV and the Explosion of Providers

Posted by admin on September 2, 2009

It seems like just about everyone is offering service for Direct TV these days.  You can go down to just about any street corner in any mid-sized town and you will find someone offering to sign you up for service with DirecTV.

On the whole this is probably a good thing.  Assuming that it continues to create a degree of competition with cable companies and other providers it may help to drive prices down, which, quite frankly can get out of hand very quickly.  It is hardly a surprise that many people are switching to DirecTV when it can cost upwards of $150 a month to pay for the cable channels that you want.

Of course anybody providing any kind of television service, cable or satellite is going to have to continue to compete with the internet revolution.  In all likelihood the wise companies will be those who provide internet access and then simple and effective applications for getting access to television and movie content – at a reasonable price.  Those companies that continue to follow the old model of selling direct access to content separate from the internet will slowly face increased competition and may have problems in the future.

Speaker’s Child – A Short Fantasy Story by Kelly D. Tolman

Posted by admin on

Speaker’s Child

By

Kelly D. Tolman

Almost with awe, the young mother held her first child to her breast. The smile she wore was bright despite the sweat that clung to her forehead, and the exhaustion that wrapped her body in silence. In her arms the baby slumbered, and for one moment the darkness and chill of the night were swept out of the little one room cabin.

“How do you feel now?” asked Alaina, the young midwife with fiery hair and quick eyes that seemed to take in everything at once. “He put up quite a fight, didn’t he?”

“He’s so beautiful, I never imagined he would be so . . .” Gerna trailed off as the grandeur of the moment overcame her.

“The first one’s always the worst,” said Belna from where she sat across the room. Gerna’s old grandmother smiled also as she remembered the lost moments of her own children’s births. “After that, they all come a little easier. But then, each is a little different in their own way, and you certainly can never tell how they might turn out in the end.”

“Carn,” began Gerna on a wisp of thought, “will be a fine farmer like his father. Honorable and good to the land. He will always have water, and the High One will bless his heart with the courage to face the light and not burn. He will be a fine man.”

“Of course he will,” agreed Alaina heartily. “But that is a long way off still. For now, you should rest and recover your strength. Brand will return soon with a Speaker, and you will need to be strong for him then, and for the Speaker. Belna and I will see that all is in readiness.”

With those words, Alaina immediately began making her way around the room, reordering the already impeccable cabin. Brand would likely come with the dawn, and would expect everything already arranged for the Speaker. Even if it were no more than a tiny farm near a tiny village, appearance and custom were important for the city grown Speakers. So when Gerna finally dozed a little, Alaina carefully put little Carn in the cradle that Brand had so laboriously made months before, and lit the guardian candles on either side. The speaker would not be pleased if homage to the High One was not properly paid. As if the High One had ever blessed the village with more than famine. As if the Speakers did more than take their children, or steal their hard earned harvests. Alaina paused a moment as she realized her knuckles were turning white with the force she used to grip the dust cloth. She felt the lump in her throat, and the burn begin to build in her eyes.

As if reading her thoughts, Belna asked, “how long has it been now? Not yet a year?”

“A year next month, yes, since they carried off little Stev.” A tear trickled down Alaina’s fair chin, and she turned to face the mantle, letting the heat of the flame cover the rush of blood she felt in her face.

“I am sorry that you were reminded like this. They will not take Carn.” Belna trailed off. Gerna would be hurt too badly. She could not have that, not after all she had faced. No more, not after losing Father and Mother, and already a widow once.

“The gift,” murmured Alaina, interrupting Belna’s thoughts.

“What, child?”

“They said that he had the gift. Strong and clean. He would be strong as day, they said. The gift is rare, they said. The High One had blessed our house, they said. They said so much, and still I live with need, without my Stev. You will have others they said, but I do not want others. I want my boy, my darling. That is the blessing I wait for from the High One.”

“One day,” was all the old woman could respond, and Alaina slipped into her own mutterings. On the bed, Gerna slept quietly. Would she wake for the Speaker? Please, as the water runs, let her sleep. Then Belna too slept in the old chair her own hands had helped create years ago.

The sound of horses woke Alaina just as the first parts of sky were turning gray in the distance. She sat up slowly from the place she had taken next to Gerna, careful not to wake the young mother. She checked the infant in silence, and added a new log to the fire. The teapot was quickly set to heat, and a half a loaf of good brown bread and half a round cheese were set out to serve as breakfast. That will have to do, she thought, may the Speaker be pleased. No, not pleased, just content.

Brand held the door as the Speaker entered. A short man, shorter even than Alaina, with a close cut beard of graying black whiskers, and thick curls on a round head. The familiar black garb of the Speakers seemed to fit him, seemed appropriate even from the way he walked. His boots were silent on the wood floor, and his dark eyes shifted and danced to take in the entire room even as he smiled and greeted the woman beside the fire. “May the rain fall always on your house, mistress,” he said in a very formal voice, “and may the light shine only to guide your path.”

“And may the rain follow you, Speaker of the Prophet, and may the High One open your tongue to the prophecy,” Alaina nearly choked on the words even as they came, but somehow the years of form and custom overcame the hatred she had been breeding inside herself. “A meal is ready, Speaker, and every comfort should be satisfactory.”

“That is the woman,” more an observation than a question. He looked a moment at Gerna’s tired face and still form in the bed. “She has strength,” he said after a moment, “great strength. She will have born a strong child, and has the strength to bear many more. The High One has blessed this house much already.” The dark little man took his breakfast, and made pleasant company. Brand seemed ready to collapse after the long midnight journey, but made every effort to hide his exhaustion and be a pleasant host. None of them noticed Benla slumped in her chair near the bed.

“Shall we see the child?” suggested the Speaker as he finished the last of the loaf. “The sun rises already, and soon travel will be difficult. I must make an early start.” Without waiting for a response, he rose and moved to the cradle between the two long ceremonial candles. “Your devotion to the Goddess will not go unnoticed, ” he observed quietly. May the daylight burn you and your Goddess until they cannot find even your ashes, thought Alaina as a foul taste entered her mouth. “You were the mid-wife,” the Speaker said, casting a glance at the flame haired woman.

“Yes.” She kept her voice cool.

“Was it a normal birth?”

“Everything was normal. He came out strong and feisty.”

“How do you mean feisty?”

“She was in a great deal of pain. The labor took longer than expected, but he did not seem to suffer from the struggle. He did not whimper, just clung to his mother’s breast and eventually slept.”

“Was there anything else?”

“No.”

“Are you quite certain?” Alaina nodded finally, and he turned to Belna. “And her? Who is she?”

“That is my wife’s grandmother,” offered Brand helpfully.

“Wake her, I must know what she saw.”

Brand softly shook the old lady in an effort to wake her easily, but his blood froze when he felt the cold of her skin and saw that the gleam in her eye had gone.

“What’s the matter, Brand?” asked Alaina. “Is she ill, it was a difficult night for all of us.”

“Not ill, Alaina,” mumbled Brand. “She has returned to the shade of the Goddess.”

“The High One protect and comfort,” echoed the Speaker.

Alaina sat down at the table, her stomach turning. She felt dizzy, but even as the room swayed, she found herself and managed a little control. The Speaker seemed to ignore Brand and Alaina, and turned once more to the child. Kneeling beside the cradle, the Speaker raised his arms and began to pray, “High One, Goddess of the Shade, shed now the guidance of thy shadow on this thy Speaker’s tongue. What may become of this thy newest child?” Though Alaina neither saw nor felt anything, the Speaker seemed to tense where he knelt. His voice took on a monotone when he continued, but a hint of pain, and what seemed fear or anger edged his tone. “This child, blessed of the Goddess, has born within him the greatness of farmers, the strength of legends, and many precious gifts. Carn, Child of Shade, come to dwell beneath the sun filled with the gift of cool healing, long running, and the power of legends long dead. Thy heritage will not be thine to keep, but thine to give. Blessed child of the High One, thou shalt face the day, but do not flinch, the light does not burn the gifted.” Suddenly the Speaker sloped forward. He let out a long sigh, as if breathing for the first time, and clutched his chest. Alaina almost sprang from her chair. Brand’s face had turned to ash.

“Will he be taken, then?” asked the farmer.

“Yes,” choked the Speaker as his breath returned. “There is no other way to ensure his training and safety. I will take him with me.”

“What about his mother? What will we tell her?”

“She is strong, she will have others. The gifted are few, and never have I seen one with so much strength, so much power of the Goddess.”

“Never?” questioned Alaina, her face filled with skepticism and anger.

“There is a rumor that another with great strength was found near here a year or so ago, but I have never seen the child, and I can not say, but I doubt he could be stronger, or even the equal of this one. This house will be blessed for its sacrifice.”

Alaina felt sick. Her legs were weak and the burning in her cheeks told her that her rage was visible. With a harsh grunt she lifted herself and stormed out the door. She did not hear Brand call after her, or see the shock in the Speaker’s face.

Alaina stumbled blindly past the horses and began running toward the thin road that lead to Trickend. The sun had risen but the dawn was yet cool and grey. The hard, baked earth felt cool beneath her feet. Alaina did not stop running when she reached the road. The broken stones cut her feet in places, but her senses were numb to all but the image of the Speaker. That man, standing there with his easy smile and devotion to the invisible Goddess. His Prophet’s religion, his search for the faithful, all caused her stomach to turn. The sound of hooves on the road ahead brought her to a walk. Sweat had formed on her forehead, and the subtle sting in her feet quickly became a nagging throb. How long had she been running? She was standing near a cluster of rocks at the only place the road curved until it reached Trickend. Around the corner emerged a heavy set man in his middle years, dressed gaily in a bright red shirt, and driving a slow team of four horses. “Ho, Alaina,” he called when he saw her. Apparently he did not notice her feet or sweaty brow, for he continued in the same pleasant tone. “Coming from Brand’s? So, she finally had him? It is a boy isn’t it?”

“Yes, Master Tooksn, it is a strong baby boy. The Speaker is with them now.” Alaina’s tone was colder than she intended, and she could feel herself losing control again.

“Oh, perhaps then I should wait before I see the new parents.”

“That would be wisest,” agreed Alaina as a new thought entered her head. “I was just on my way to Trickend to get a few things for the child, but if you wouldn’t mind, perhaps you could go to the widow Harla, and tell her of the birth. The Speaker should be done before you return.”

“Harla you say? Will you need anything else?” Master Tooksn looked for a moment into his wagon, and said, “I was just bringing along the ceremonial gift of the silver knife and wisdom cakes. It wouldn’t do to have them in the sun, if you would take them ahead for me.”

Alaina accepted the small bundle of cakes, and the silver sheathed knife graciously, and turned back toward the homestead. The beating of hooves faded with the creak of the wagon, only to be replaced by the sound of another horse coming from the farm. Alaina composed herself quietly, and looked up to greet the Speaker. He held the child close to his breast, and rode only as quickly as care and good sense would allow.

“We meet again, miss,” said the Speaker when he saw her, “I see you have the gifts for the Goddess, I shall take them if you please.” When Alaina didn’t respond, the dark man dismounted carefully, his silver earrings reflecting quickly in the growing light. The baby whimpered softly as he balanced the bundle on the saddle. The cry was quiet, and not prolonged, but the sound reached Alaina, and as the memories of her own Stev’s quiet cries returned. The Speaker looked at her with a slight frown. Beads of sweat had begun to form on his forehead, and he seemed oddly uncomfortable in the dark clothes beneath the morning sun. Alaina barely noticed as the ceremonial knife slipped from the silver sheath, and she didn’t see the paleness come over the Speaker’s face, or hear his final gasps.

Alaina left the child with Brand, whom she found sobbing quietly in a corner of the tiny cabin. His eyes brightened briefly at the sight of his son, but became once more grave as the midwife left, and he put the boy on his mother’s breast.

THE END