Sunday, 22 January 2017

Mamelon 2 - Chapter Fourteen

CHAPTER FOURTEEN




Ygor’s growing preoccupation with a fury directed at himself and his companions for letting Michal escape under their very noses was, perhaps inevitable, to prove his undoing.  The mystery perplexed him and Ygor was not one to be easily perplexed. He must have had help, but whose? The druid asked himself over and over. Not Astor for he would have sensed Astor’s presence, surely? Yet how can I be sure of anything anymore? Ragund…? he mused briefly, but rejected the notion out of hand. Ragund was a great mage, yes. Even he, Ygor, would not deny that, but great enough to overcome druid magic?  “No!” Ygor exclaimed aloud, and not for the first time the mountain rang with the force of his denial. Then who or what had come to the aid of young Michal, and how…?
Thus it was that, deep in thought, Ygor and his acolytes rounded the next corner to find themselves confronted - and outnumbered - by Radik and his company of krill’s; a small company it may well have been, but one that was armed and ready to greet their new guests with as much hostility as necessary.
Krills and druids had been sworn enemies for more lifetimes than Ygor cared to count. This thought flashed into his mind just as the first arrow flew past his left ear. Instantly, his innermost druid self took over and attempted an ages-old magic that would temporarily blind the enemy and allow them to escape.
To Ygor’s utter consternation and horror, his attempt failed.  He strained with all his senses to achieve what should have been relatively easy for a druid of his rank… but it proved impossible. This cannot be! Who…what…? But the mountain supplied no answer and a blow to the head rendered him instantly unconscious.
……………………………..

“Kill the druids except their leader. They will serve for several suppers, but he may well prove useful, Radik snarled.” He did not wait to see his orders carried out but retreated into his makeshift tent to discuss the situation with Arissa.  He was well pleased with himself. It had been a Krill bringing up the rear, not least because of an old injury, that had alerted him to the druids’ approach. Instantly, he had resolved to lay a trap rather than avoid them. Would the druids not sense their presence? The thought had crossed his mind, of course, but he decided to chance his luck anyway.
Radik’s recklessness had both surprised and exhilarated him. What chance Krills against druid magic? Yet, it was if some inner voice urged him, with increasing passion, to attempt the elimination of an ages-old enemy. Besides, his conscious self wasted no time reminding him that Arissa would approve, and while that in itself hardly mattered, it could only better the chances of their engaging in a very pleasurable time later. Arissa, he had discovered long since, never engaged in intimacy lightly. She was the most highly sexed female it had ever been his good fortune to encounter.
While Radik did not hold females in high esteem except for sexual pleasure, he had good sense enough to appreciate that Arissa was no ordinary female. She often had ideas worth listening to. All but oblivious to the piercing screams of Ygor’s small company as they were butchered, he thus sought out she whom he had come to think of as his consort. He was less than pleased to find her in the company of the imbecile elf who doted on her regardless of the fact that he, Radik, had raged at Pers’ blind infatuation on more than one occasion. Moreover, the Krill leader blamed Pers for releasing his prisoners despite the elf’s cries of protest. Who else would dare set them free?  At the same time, even Radik had to concede it was unlikely Pers would have found the nerve if only for fear of arousing Arisa’s displeasure. Why does she tolerate him?
Why, indeed? Arissa found herself wondering much the same thing although she had been flattered by the way the elf had leapt to defend her against a druid who had made the mistake of attacking her. She had no need of his help, of course, but appreciated it all the same, especially with Tol having disappeared shortly before the unsuspecting druids fell into the trap awaiting them.
It disturbed Arissa that the gentle giant had left the camp without her knowledge, but she did not doubt he would return soon enough, he always did. Even so, it was a constant source of concern to her that, devoted slave as he was, Tol clearly had a mind of his own, one which she had never succeeded in fully accessing if not for want of trying. Invariably, she would probe and come up against a wall; a not an entirely blank wall, but one she could not pass.  Ordinarily, this would have rung loud and clear alarm bells in her head, but she put it down to Tol being something of a simple soul, persuaded that any suspect wardings were neither calculated nor even intentional but simply the effects of a naïve consciousness. Radik had once challenged her assessment of Tol as being too crude to be true. His choice of words, however, more so even than the fact that he had dared challenge her at all, so enraged her that they did not speak for some time.  Once reconciled, the Krill leader had wisely kept his own counsel regarding Tol and avoided the subject thereafter.
“I don’t care what Radik says or thinks,” Pers was saying for the umpteenth time as Radik entered, I did not release the prisoners.” Arissa merely shrugged. He hated it when she did that as it invariably meant she was displeased with him. “Why does no one suspect Tol? It’s not as if anyone even knows where he has gone…”
True, Radik was inclined to agree, but said nothing. “We have their leader, and…” he flung the elf an accusing glare, “…Ygor had better stay our prisoner or heads will roll.”
Pers visibly flinched.
“My clever Radik,” Arissa purred, wondering at the same time how a bunch of Krills had managed to snare a company of druids, however small. Something is wrong, very wrong. For now, though, she kept her suspicions to herself. “Who is a clever Radik then?” she exclaimed, embracing the Krill leader and showering him with kisses, much to his obvious delight and Pers’ ill-concealed jealousy. 
“Never underestimate druids,” said Pers, “Ygor will only be of any use to you as far as he is prepared to be so.”
“Perhaps,” growled Radik, “you would prefer I set him free, ye who set such store by the freedom of others while content to remain enthralled by foolish puppy love?”
Pers winced at the jibe and looked directly at Arissa as if half expecting a show of support, but not surprised to find none, only profoundly disappointed as always. Will I never learn?  She cares nothing for me. I know this, and yet I cannot leave her. Why? Do I truly love her? How can I even ask myself that, and where is Tol?
“Nevertheless, the elf has a point,” conceded Arissa, addressing Radik without sparing Pers so much as a glance.
Radik shrugged. “We can dispose of him any time. Meanwhile, he may prove useful. There are forces at work that I do not understand. A master druid has to be a useful insurance against whatever power is working against us in this damn mountain.”
“Don’t count on it,” hissed Arissa. “For once, the elf has a point. Never underestimate a druid. If you are not careful, very careful, Ygor will see you dead long before you can spit on his grave. Better he die now along with his comrades than remain the slightest threat, surely?”
“I fear no druid scum,” Radik snarled, “and you may well be right, my sweet, but alive he may yet be useful to us. We will interrogate him later. For now, I have an appetite for making love to the most beautiful woman in the world.”
Arissa’s smile struck Pers as being more smug than pleased. She has the krill just where she wants him, but she does not care for him any more than she cares for me. The notion that the likes of Arissa only used others for their own selfish ends came as no surprise to Pers. So why do I stay? Why do I care for her so? Or perhaps I am meant to stay for some other purpose and my love has only ever been an illusion? The elf left the tent less so because he clearly was not wanted there than gravely disquieted by thoughts that had not surfaced his mind before although…Can they really have been there all the time? If so, why do they visit me now..?
Pers had the faintest sense of an unknown presence that vanished almost as soon as he became aware of it. Before he could quite collect his thoughts, he heard his name called and found himself approaching the druid, Ygor, even as he struggled to summon a show of self-confidence. Why do I get the feeling I am being undermined, and not by any presence with which I am familiar? Even as he thought it, though, he sensed ‘undermined’ was incorrect. Yet, he dismissed any notion of ‘support’ as fanciful. Whatever, it was disconcerting to say the least that he should even begin to question his pledged allegiance to Arissa. There is something curiously potent in the air, but what? Magic, perhaps? But when had he ever felt uncomfortable with magic? The elf shook his head, more confused than considerably less concerned than he felt was appropriate.
“Don’t shake your head at me, elf,” hissed Ygor. “You may not know it, but you are as much a prisoner here as I am if not more so,” he scoffed, “At least I know I am a prisoner while, you…you are but wet clay in the hands of evil doers.”
Pers confronted the druid leader with a semblance of composure he was far from feeling. Ygor had been bound to a rock, his physical appearance badly mauled while continuing to emanate a powerful presence. How, the elf wondered, had the druids been caught off guard by a company of Krills that barely outnumbered their own and would never, in normal times, been a match for them.
“Ah, but these are not normal times, elf, as well we all know,” said Ygor as if reading other’s thoughts..
“Have you come across my sister?” It was not the question Pers meant to ask, but the first that came to his lips.
“Irina is here beneath the mountain? Interesting,” murmured the druid, “She will be with Heron, of course, and who else, I wonder…?” Why is this news to me? Why have I not been aware of this? Something or someone is playing with me. Well, they will live to regret it. I am sure your sister is in good hands, which is more than I can say for you, my good elf.  He treated Pers to a patronizing smile that made Pers cringe. “Tell me. Surely, you cannot trust these Krill mercenaries or the witch whore, Arissa, who travels with them? Can it be that your elven senses play you so false that you are immune to all else but her beauty? He laughed as the elf’s bemused expression. “Oh, yes, I cannot deny her that although I suspect it goes but skin deep.  As for what evil lies beneath…”  He spat.
There was a time not so long ago that Pers would have struck out at anyone defiling Arissa’s name. On this occasion, though, he remained curiously unmoved. Nor did he feel in the least inclined to leap to his beloved’s defence.
“It is appropriate that you, a druid, should speak of evil,” Pers retorted, “It is all you know.” Yet, there was something about the druid, a ‘presence’ that, for all the elf could not help but find it very disturbing, was also oddly reassuring, as if the piercing eyes were  able to penetrate a deeper elven consciousness that has been suppressed and was starting to reawaken. Confused and upset, Pers began to move away.
“You are right to feel as you do, elf, for nothing is at it seems in this place. Only fools cannot trust their own judgement, but here…trust and judgement, I am thinking they are much as rock and hard place here.” But why, why, and what am I not seeing?
“Only a fool would trust a druid, that’s for sure,” Pers responded in much the same mocking tone as Ygor had used, “Trust is a precious thing, neither easily earned or given,  even to the inner self, and then only selectively and unreservedly or not at all.
“Wise words, elf. Unreservedly, yes. Selectively, yes. You speak of the inner self. And do you trust yours, elf? I suspect not. Nor I mine, I find, if the truth be told.  So where does that leave us, elf?  In a fine mess, I’d say, wouldn’t you?”
“You know nothing, druid,”
“And you know less than nothing, elf. Perhaps, between us, we can learn something?”
“Are you asking for my help?” Pers could not believe his ears.
“The day a druid asks aid of an elf has to be a dark day indeed,” was Ygor’s oblique reply.
“A dark day for you, yes,” Pers said quietly. “Whatever Radik’s plans for you, you can be sure it will involve torture.”
“And for you, elf,” murmured Ygor icily, “Do you honestly believe he and Arissa have anything less unpleasant in store for you once you have served their purpose?”
“Oh, and what purpose would that be?”
“You tell me.” Ygor fixed the elf with a searching look that forced Pers to turn and walk away, feeling sick, as if he had been violated.
Ygor watched him go with a self-satisfied smile. That he would make an ally of the elf yet, he was in no doubt.
For his part, Pers wandered to the edge of the camp and just beyond, sat on a shelf of rock and put his head in his hands. The druid is right. I can trust no one, including myself. So what should I do…nothing or something? Nothing would be safer, for now.  Something, has to be better, though,  but what…?”
Someone came and sat beside him. Startled, Pers took his hands from his face and looked up.   “Tol…! Where in Ri’s name have you been?” he asked before remembering the giant was dumb.
Tol’s colourless lips and grey eyes smiled. Instantly, Pers felt reassured and uplifted, which was a new experience as he had never felt at ease with the giant in the past. He turned slightly, all the better to follow Tol’s steady gaze to where Ygor, too, was watching him carefully, as if assessing his worth…
Pers felt a growing unease merge with a weird sense of nameless purpose. His chest began to tighten as if giant and druid had him in a vice-like grip. “What do you want of me?” he asked mutely of both.
By way of a riposte their silence spoke volumes.
Aware and not aware or what he was doing or why he was doing it, Pers went to Ygor and cut the druid’s his bonds free with the elven blade he always carried.
Some drunken krills nearby were celebrating an easy victory over the druids, but no one saw or heard a thing as giant, elf and the only druid left alive snuck off into the gloom.
……………………………

“It is Ygor and his companions.” Mulac murmured unnecessarily. Beth nodded as they lay low and heard rather than saw the druid company pass overhead where the track began to slope until she guessed it would reach their level just ahead.  Presumably, they had covered the distance by way of another of the mountain’s higher paths. More to the point, she mused, how had Tol known they were in such danger? Instantly, she corrected herself. By now, she should know better than to be surprised by anything the gentle giant said or did.
“You sensed their presence or do you have magic that told you of it?” the disquieted Nu-Gen demanded in a harsh whisper.
            As simply and briefly as possible Beth explained how Tol had warned her. Mulac’s response took her by surprise. He did not, as she had expected, question her ability to make contact with Tol via mind-talk but appeared to take it in his stride. Instead, he commented, “To whom, I wonder, does he answer, this Tol?  I suspect it not to Arissa. Clearly, he has a part to play in what brings you to Mamelon and places us on the back of a sea monster,” he chuckled humorlessly. “So who can he be, this Tol, and what his purpose?” he murmured, more to himself than to Beth.
            Beth could only shrug off the question she had put to herself time and again, the answer to which she could not begin to imagine. Mulac seemed to accept this and, much to her relief, seemed content to drop the subject; for now at least as they continued to lie low, watch and listen. The druids had barely turned the next bend when all at once the very walls of the mountain seemed to be screaming. Surprise, rage, fear, all these were let loose among echoes that assaulted their eardrums and made their blood run cold.
“Krills…!” Mulac murmured and put a finger to his lips as Beth started to speak. “Hush, Bethan, for walls have ears,” he mouthed. Beth fell silent although she doubted if any sound either of them made would be heard by either walls or living things for the sheer fury of blood curdling yells and frantic cries.
Beth-Bethan clung to Mulac. Ri knows, I have no love for druids, but even they do not deserve that Krills should feast upon their remains, possibly even while they are still alive. Ri, save them from that, at least.  A ghastly picture of what was almost certainly being played out not far ahead crossed her mind’s eye and caused her to shiver violently. 
Glad of Mulac’s arms around her, Beth still found time to wonder how it was that calling upon the god came so naturally to her. I am more Bethan than Beth. The more she tried to resist this truth, the stronger her conviction that it could not, should not be resisted.  Or reversed…?  For the first time, she confronted the possibility that she may not return to Earth.
Mulac’s comforting embrace tightened perceptibly. Had he read her thoughts, she wondered?  Did she really want to return to a life without him? But that question, she resolved to put aside until such a time as she might be forced to choose. Assuming, I still have a choice, Bethan of Mamelon pondered ruefully. Yet, I cannot, must not let go of Bethany Martin completely or…Mulac nuzzled her neck and the unfinished thought became lost as she raised eager lips to his and the shrieking walls fell momentarily silent.