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CHAPTER ELEVEN
“My uncle informs me that I am making a disastrous mistake.” The morning had been strange and unusual. Brandon had woken them up himself and led them to the gates. He hadn’t spoken and his posture was upright and tense. Amborn found he was the opposite. Whereas Brandon was standing tall and striding through the city, Amborn was slumping and barely awake. He hadn’t slept well and he was still feeling a bit out of sorts. Derek was keeping to himself and it all added up to make Amborn very uncomfortable. “I hope that your uncle is wrong.” Amborn replied. “Yes, well…” Brandon gave a wave to the men to signal for them to open the gates. “I made my decision. I trust you Amborn.” They bowed courteously to each other and Amborn found himself leaving the city of Narsik behind him. Derek and he had spent a bit of time planning their course before retiring to bed but the farthest they had gotten was a strong decision that they wouldn’t be taking the route through the Black Forest again. Instead they would be heading south of the Black Lake and across the Bluecular River. In order to do so, they would be passing through the Bluecular Forest. Derek had remained rather quiet on how much safer it would be, but Amborn figured anything was better than facing an army of deranged sorcerers. “Amborn?” said Derek. “Yes?” “I have to ask…did we accomplish what you had hoped we would in coming to Narsik? After everything, was it really worth it?” Amborn lifted his head and eyed Derek with a look of bewilderment. “Of course it was. We protected the city from what may have been its utter downfall…and we succeeded and making sure that the army of Narsik would be waiting for us when it’s time for war.” Derek rattled his head but he looked uncertain. “We’ve got a long way to go…backtracking really.” He said at last. “Perhaps, but we now have Brandon’s approval. We can supply this information to the King of Palamoore and it may convince him to join us in the fight. This was right Derek.” Amborn finished matter-of-factly and Derek smiled and let out a sigh. “You’re right of course. I was just being foolish.” His eyes wandered to the trees ahead of them. “I should tell you about the forest Amborn.” Amborn’s heart skipped a beat. “Again?” he asked. “Well…it’s not the same really. I’m not even sure if it’s even true…just rumors and old stories.” “Let’s hear it then.” Derek laughed lightly and continued. “You remember when I told that my people believed that the spirit of the chemist…Bluecular…they believe that he still resides here.” Derek looked gravely at the tree they were passing. “I remember you telling me. You said that some people have told stories of travelers getting hanged by vines and branches. But surely it’s just stories.” “I used to think so. I always believed that the tales only served to fuel an idiotic religion that my people were holding on to. But now I have to wonder.” Derek stopped and turned to Amborn. “I’ve seen things I never would have believed possible. I think now that such stories may indeed be possible.” “Well…” Amborn began but their attentions were drawn away by the sound of rustling bushes a few feet away. “Do you hear that?” Derek asked in a whisper. Amborn raised a finger to his lip and carefully began making his way to the bushes. Pausing to take a deep breath, he plunged his hands into them and pulled out the eavesdropper; throwing him to the ground. Amborn felt the air leave his lungs as he looked down at the face staring back up at him in fear. “What are you doing here?” He asked. “I just…I wanted to help.” stammered James as he climbed his way back to his feet. Amborn laughed but Derek sat down and rolled his eyes. James was glancing at both of them sheepishly. “I guess we’ve picked up a straggler Derek.” Said Amborn, but Derek was anything but happy about it. “He must go home.” He said simply. “But Derek…he’s come so far already.” “Amborn, the road we take is far too dangerous to bring him with us. He could meet his death if he comes with us…and I find this coincidence a bit…suspicious. I’m not sure I trust him.” “You can trust me!” said James loudly. Derek shook his head. “Of course you would say that. Amborn, the risk for all of us would be far too much.” It was true. Amborn knew that the road would be perilous and that a young man like James would be in even more danger than Derek and he would be in. Still… “If we send him back…in times like these…” Amborn was thinking fast and speaking slowly. “It would be more dangerous for him to make that journey alone than to come with us. Besides that, he knows our plans and would be an asset to the enemy if he were captured.” It all sounded very convincing. Amborn had wondered where the words had actually come from. Did I actually say that? “I…” Derek hung his head and stood back up. He shoved a small dagger into James’ hands and kept walking. “Once again I trust your judgment Amborn…I don’t know how you do it.” He shouted back. James smiled and Amborn took his shoulder. Together the three of them began walking further through the woods. “How far behind us were you?” asked Amborn curiously. “I went to gather my things not long after you two left town.” “Didn’t you have any family or friends who will worry after you?” Amborn asked. “Not really.” “Wait a minute…were you near Narsik during the battle?” “Yea,” began James. “I saw everything from the forest…I’ve never seen anything like what you did out there sir.” Amborn started thinking and a quick thought popped into his mind. “James! Did you possibly see what happened to see anyone being taken away from the fields; a tall skinny man in extravagant armor and brown hair?” The complete disappearance of Peter had been troubling Amborn deeply and any hint of what might have happened to him would have been valuable information that Amborn could send back to Brandon when they reached a village. “I’m sorry…I was trying to keep track of you and Derek…that was hard enough. Was he someone important?” “Perhaps.” They continued walking on in silence. There were questions Amborn knew he should be asking, facts he knew he should be informing James and more importantly, Derek, of. His mind was full of so many secrets that he had been keeping and he was finding it hard to keep telling his friend lies. James will ask questions as well…more lies I will have to tell. “You’re lucky to be alive then.” said Derek. “You could have been killed at any point…following us. You should have let us know.” James looked at Amborn as if hoping that he would come to his defense again but Amborn merely motioned for James to respond himself. “Well I was afraid. I thought you might have sent me home or…worse.” James looked sad. “You should have told us.” Derek repeated firmly. “James,” said Amborn. “You seemed happy with your place in Ailforth. Why would you leave?” “I was…content. But the truth is that there was nothing for me in Ailforth. It’s a small village and I hadn’t many friends…any family. I didn’t have a future there and the two of you were kinder to me than many of the people there.” “So you left…” said Amborn understandably. “I had the feeling that you guys were doing something important. I didn’t know what you understand, but I knew that there was something different about you both. When I saw you fight those kelts…I knew I had made the right decision.” Amborn felt his teeth grind into his lower lip. “About that…” he said. “It’s alright!” said James quickly. “I won’t tell anyone.” “That’s good. But there’s something else that you both need to understand…just because I can do these things…it doesn’t mean we should take any unnecessary risks. I can’t always control it and I have next to no understanding of the rhyme or reason of it.” Derek looked back and nodded. James was obviously trying to figure out which question he wanted to ask first. “Sometimes,” said Amborn. “It’s best just to say nothing at all.” “I only have a few questions…” said James, nearly stuttering. “This is one of those times.” said Derek stoutly. James finally understood and kept his mouth shut for quite some time. After about an hour of stumbling through the trees with nothing but the wind to listen too, even Amborn felt the need to talk again. “I suppose you should know where we are going…and why we’re going there.” He said to James. James nearly jumped at the sound but he opened his eyes wide and tilted his head to listen. “We are going to Palamoore. Derek and I have been arranging an army to march against Zaleth. The men of Narsik have agreed to wait for our return…now we must convince the men of Palamoore and the other gargils to make peace with each other and march their armies to Narsik. I suppose you know about the hatred between Palamoore and the gargils?” “Of course…how will you bring them together?” asked James. “I don’t know yet.” Amborn said flatly. James looked shocked and turned to Derek for some explanation but Derek merely said, “He’ll figure it out…just before everyone dies and the world burns down…I’m sure.” “It’s amazing that the two of you alone could be sent on such an important task! Who arranged all of this?” James was excited but he was doing very well at keeping himself under check. He almost sounded like an adult; Amborn had to remind himself that he wasn’t. “No-one…actually. We’ve set out on it under our own impulses.” “So you brought Narsik to agree with you just by meeting with them? Without any official orders or anything?” “Yea.” “Amazing!” James laughed and shook his head. Derek even smiled. “We’ve been very lucky so far. But Palamoore will prove a completely different situation I fear. Derek knew the current leader in Narsik as children, so he was willing to trust me. Palamoore will do no such thing. I’m not even sure I should let Derek come with me.” Derek looked a bit upset but then turned and continued walking. There was no way around it, the city of Palamoore deeply despised gargils and marching straight up to the city gates with a gargil as your ally would be a good way to abandon all hope of getting inside. They had been lucky enough to pass him off as Amborn’s slave before, this would be different. “But that’s a ways off yet…we may have other things to worry about. Keep your eyes and ears open and keep a look out. Do you know how to use that dagger?” James held it up and turned it over a few times in his hand. Amborn could tell right away that he was experienced with a blade. “I learned a bit…different people would show me how to protect myself when times got real bad in Ailforth…I don’t know how much good I’ll be sir…but I know what I’m doing.” “Right then…I’m glad. Enough with that sir stuff though, you can call me Amborn. I’m nobody special here, so don’t give me any titles that don’t belong to me.” “I was only trying to be polite.” said James. “But if you insist…” “Sorry, I didn’t mean to sound rude. I’ve just had a lot of compliments and praise lately…I’d rather not.” “I understand…” but Derek held up a hand and shushed them. Quietly they stood there in the midst of the wilderness. “Do you hear that?” asked Derek so quietly that Amborn could barely make out his words. “No…what is it?” “I’m not sure…it sounds like…voices….” Derek was staring out into the deepening darkness. Amborn was listening as closely as he could but he couldn’t hear anything but the wind. “I don’t hear anything.” At that moment a very distinct sound was heard however, by all three of them. Amborn recognized the noise immediately. He had heard it many times in his past life. Somewhere in the forest a tree had fallen. “What do we do?” asked James. “Find it.” They took off towards the sound and soon walked right into a clearing where several straggly men were chopping down trees. “It is…considered evil to cut down the trees of Bluecular.” Said Derek slowly as the men turned around and drew their swords. “Who are you? What do you want?” They asked. “I want you to stop cutting down these trees! What business do you have?” “Amborn…those who cut down the trees can create great poisons…these men can’t be trusted.” The first of the three men lunged at them and Derek quickly sliced his throat. The second jumped at James who barely managed to evade him. Amborn took a knife from his pocket and threw it at the man and caught him in the neck. The third man stood watching as his friends continued to spray blood across the earthy ground. Finally he tossed his blade to the ground and began to run. “Well…that was something.” James said with a smile. But something began to move. The man was suddenly sprawled out on his stomach and being dragged back towards the company. From what Amborn could see, a vine was pulling him by his feet. Just when he was about to collide with Amborn’s legs, he was lifted up and hung upside down from a branch on a nearby tree. Derek drew his sword again and James held up his blade. “What is this? What’s going on?” screamed the man through fear and pain. Amborn watched in horror as another vine quickly grabbed him by the neck and pulled until his head became detached from the rest of him. James hurled and collapsed on the ground. “Who is doing this?” shouted Derek. “I am…” said a low rumbling voice that made Amborn shiver. Following the sound of it with his eyes, Amborn came upon a very old tree that was positioned behind him. It was very large, but stranger than all of that; it was covered in thick red bark…and it had a face. “What are you?” said Amborn as gently as possible. “You stopped the men from harming the trees…” the face in the tree was speaking slowly and thinking out every word before managing to say it. “Yes…we did.” Said Amborn Derek had been standing perfectly still and looking as grim as death. He was staring at the face intently and every blink came slower than the last. “Who are you?” asked Amborn. “I am the tree of life. I am the sea of knowledge…and I am the man Bluecular.” The face scrunched up a bit at the sound of it’s own name. “But that was long ago.” Derek fell to his knees and James nearly followed if not for catching himself on his knee. “That’s impossible…” said Amborn doubtfully. The face took quick offence to it. “Nothing is impossible…I did many things that were deemed impossible in my time as a man. I have continued to do new things.” “How is it you came to this…how?” said Derek, standing back to his feet. The face turned and gave Derek and quizzical examination before answering. “Like all men I knew that death was coming for me…my time was drawing to a close….after everything I had done I knew there would be a way to prolong my life. I began searching for answers,” the face was enjoying itself and its story. “I found what I was looking for. I soon realized that I could create a…potion of sorts…that would give me life…but at a great cost.” “You’re a tree.” said James. In an instant a vine had swooped down and was holding James by his feet. “I am no mere tree!” The face bellowed. “My spirit has been contained to this…shell. But I am much more than that…” Amborn was panicking now and the situation as growing more and more tense. “Please!” He said. “Put my friend down. He is an honest boy…just a bit new to socializing I’m afraid.” Bluecular nodded for an excruciatingly long time and then slowly put James back down. “I owe you a kindness.” Spoke the tree. “Name your price for helping my children.” Amborn thought on it for only a moment. He knew what he needed to ask. “Would you please help us in our efforts against Zaleth?” he said. “Zaleth, you say? I do not know such a being.” “The one who is taking your trees and the water from the river…he’s creating…foul creatures.” Amborn was nearly pleading. He could easily see the advantage having Bluecular’s aid could be. “The Dark One!” spat the face. “He has killed many of my children…taken water from the precious rivers that I created…not for life and knowledge…but for evil and treachery!” The face was glaring off into the distance at the large gashes in the sides of the trees. “Yes…that would be Zaleth.” “What would you have me do, human?” asked Bluecular. “There will be a battle in the coming weeks…we will be taking all of our forces and meeting Zaleth at his castle at Talay-Sul…I would have you give us any help you could.” The face thought and thought and then a wide smile spread across the gnarled bark. “I promise you this…you will have my aid…beyond that I can share no further details. Do you accept this as your final payment?” “I do.” said Amborn with a grin. “Then be gone.” said Bluecular. They wasted no time. It seemed like they ran much longer than the time they had actually spent speaking with the face. By the time they came to a rest Amborn’s knees were shaking and he was out of breath. James let out an exasperated sight and laughed. “Can you believe it?” He asked excitedly. “Not really.” was all Amborn could manage. Derek was still silent. He seemed to be re-evaluating his entire life. It puzzled Amborn how such a creature as Bluecular could have existed without Ortanu’s efforts. It confused him terribly, but more than that it hurt Amborn to let Derek believe that Bluecular could actually be something worth believing in as a religion. “Do you suppose my people have been right…all of this time?” He asked Amborn at last. “I honestly do not know. But Derek, what I saw was a man who is now a tree…not a being worth worshiping…but someone who has made many mistakes during his existence.” Derek’s eyes widened and then closed. Whatever he was thinking Amborn could only imagine. They spent the night under a large tree and staring up at the stars, but none of them bothered to discuss the events of the day. For Amborn, he wished only to mull it over in his mind anyway, so he was thankful. Before he knew it, he was asleep. His dreams were filled with visions and darkness. The image of Ortanu imploding replayed itself over and over again amidst other visions of the battle at Narsik and the creatures of the black forest. Now however, there was a new vision of a large red tree with the facial features of a man mixed into the rest. Amborn’s brain would have exploded if he had not been suddenly awoken by the sound of voices. James was sitting next to a fire and asking questions. Derek was cooking breakfast and refusing to give answers. “It’s a good thing I’m starving.” He said as he sat up to wish them a good morning. They returned the favor and all three of them sat down to eat. It was a delicious, if not entirely exciting meal, of fried fish and berries. Afterwards they packed their things and continued off through the forest. According to the maps, they would be soon arriving in a small village called Alberoux; the one that Amborn had seen when he had first arrived in Lamerith. “You will feel much at home here.” said Derek to James. “Alberoux and Ailforth are quite similar. Of course, there used to be many such small villages in the country…but it’s not a safe place for a city without walls anymore. Most of them have been left abandoned.” “How have the two survived?” asked James. “Perseverance and bravery, some might say; luck and stupidity, according to others.” Derek grinned and even James had to agree. Alberoux did have much in common with Ailforth. But there were noted differences as well. Amborn could tell right away that the village of Alberoux was in much better repair than Ailforth, and its people seemed to be in much better health and spirits. There had been men and women on the streets of Ailforth begging for change and food, but Alberoux had no such beggars. The buildings were finely crafted and sturdy, despite being built of many of the same materials as Ailforth had been. “There’s no well handler.” said James with a laugh. “Everyone is doing it for themselves.” “Do you know this place well?” asked Amborn. Derek turned and smiled. “Well enough to know that we won’t be welcomed here.” “Why? What have we done wrong?” James asked. “We’re outsiders…I am a gargil…Alberoux will not take kindly to us. We should stay no longer than a night if we have too. I would sooner leave and continue travelling to be honest with you.” Derek pressed forward. Amborn hadn’t noticed it before, but now that it had been brought to his attention he could see that several people were staring at the trio disdainfully. There were frowns and scours and some were even whispering and pointing. So much hatred… It amazed Amborn how many people had become distrustful and cynical throughout Lamerith. It reminded him of his previous life and the world he once lived in. “I think we should go.” said James suddenly. “Why? Is something wrong?” asked Amborn. James bit his lip and turned to point at a group of men who were drawing their swords and marching towards them. Amborn nodded and motioned for them to leave through the other side of town. It had disappointed Amborn to be forced to leave the village so soon. He would have enjoyed the time to rest and the opportunity to speak with others on the latest news and world happenings but the men and their swords stayed at the border of town and glared after Amborn and his friends until they were completely out of sight. “Why would they draw their blades?” asked Amborn. “They are probably trying to weed out anybody that could be a spy for Zaleth…many people are doing it…smaller towns have to be more careful…you mustn’t blame them.” Derek was mumbling and walking slowly. “Why don’t we just stop here for the night? We can continue tomorrow.” Amborn stopped and threw down his bag. James followed suit and so did Derek eventually. Amborn wasn’t sure what was wrong with Derek, but he was growing quieter and his words were not as hopeful as they had been before leaving Narsik. I can’t blame him…this has been a journey through madness and insanity…I’m not as hopeful as I was before either… |
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