Feet pounding the cold cobblestone road, Garet flees from the
guards for his life. "Stop," one shouts, "under
penalty of death!" Heh, he thinks to himself, fat chance. As he
rounds the next corner, he notices the air start to warm a bit. Must
be near the forge. He glances up and notices the forge is on the
other side of town from here... "Morlei kinra suntave!" In
a flash of light, Garet is thrown into the wall by a massive
fireball. "Oh, no..." he whispers. "Not a
pyromancer..." He raises his arms and begins to manifest a power
when suddenly the flames erupt once more...
"Garet!"
He doesn't even need to open his eyes.
"What do you want,
Eisa?"
"You were having that nightmare again... you
should really let Traku look at you. I'm worried about you. Both of
us are." Her slight body leaned up against the side table,
barely clearing its height.
Garet internally shuddered at the
thought of having to see the cleric again. "I've told you a
hundred times, Eisa, clerics can't..."
"...deal with
problems of the mind. I know, Garret. You could at least show some
gratitude! He's saved your life, what, twenty-five... no, twenty-six
times!"
He silently wished the rogue hadn't really started a
tally of how many life debts he owed Traku.
"Fine, fine..."
Garet sighed. "I'll go see the damned human..."
"You
really should watch your language, young Elan-folk mustn't talk
that way." Traku strode in, his eyes burning with spiritual
power. Garet groaned at the sight of the muscular human. "I hope
to Pelor that mouth of yours doesn't get you killed these days. So,
Garet. Why do you refuse the will of the gods? You know that your
race was blessed at the dawn of time and you grew these abilities
that…"
Garet cut him off. "Don't try to shove your
religious crap down my throat. What you can feel, touch... that's
real. But gods? No, Traku, gods cannot be touched, nor heard
or seen. What makes you think that they are..."
Garet stared
at the space where the man had been a second before. "Damn
it..." Garret rolled his eyes. Eisa giggled. "What's so
funny?" He snapped. "After all his talk about manners,
you'd think that he wouldn't break off a conversation like
that."
Something pulled him out of bed. "What in the
hells..?" He was dangling by one foot now. Eisa was laughing
uproariously. A loud guffaw erupted from outside the tent, and he
dropped to the floor. Traku walked in, saying, "You really, really
should watch that mouth of yours." He grinned. Eisa collected
herself, then fell out laughing again.
A small noise came from
outside the tent, just loud enough for Garet to hear it. He shushed
the halfling, then crept to the door. He heard the sound again, more
distinctly this time. "Get down!" he roared, as a crossbow
bolt whizzed through the air where his head was half a second
ago.
Garet threw himself into a mental stance, searching for
hostile intelligent beings nearby. He zoned in on the hobgoblin
outside the tent. The Elan threw a quick telekinetic net around the
creature before it could reload its light crossbow.
"Grahgin
surna!" it screeched as the party left the tent. "Mari
kihnak!"
"I do believe he's insulting us." Traku
said.
"Don't worry. I've got it covered..." you
stupid cleric, Garet added in thought. He pulled his psicrystal
out from a hidden fold in his tunic. Alright, do your thing.
The crystal extended its spidery legs and climbed up the invisible
ropes of the psionic net. As it neared the base of the hobgoblin's
neck, it gave a mighty shriek. "Kand'su... ganyi...
ARANUWAKI!" Suddenly, the plain was filled with utter
darkness. Light returned. The creature was gone, with the crystal
sitting calmly on the ground.
What happened? Garet asked
his psicrystal. It sent confusion along the empathic connection
between master and crystal. You know what I'm talking about.
It threw panic at him. Alright, so you don't know... calm down
already.
"He's... gone." Eisa said plainly. She
glanced at the human. "Can hobgoblins do that? I mean,
planeshifting?"
"I didn't even know hobgoblins were ever
seen solitarily," said Traku, "but that obviously was
wrong. Have you heard of this, Garet? Garet?"
"Garet...
What's going on?" Eisa asked timidly.
"Hush, halfling,
let us find out," Traku quipped.
He looked up from the
crystal. Acting swiftly, he placed the psicrystal on the ground and
drew a circle on the ground around it. With a blink of his eye, a
trasluscent dome formed over the circle. "I wouldn't want to be
there in case the dome shatters if I were you," he
warned.
"What? You mean... it's going to…"
"Yes."
Eisa
and Traku dove for cover in the boulder-infested plain.
Author's note: When a psicrystal is destroyed, the psion goes through a sort of withdrawal as his knowledge is suddenly contained in one mind instead of two. The rush causes a psion's mental state to drop well below critical for a normal creature, but this is normal and takes a few months to recover. It cannot be aided, except by direct dietific intervention.
Four Months LaterTraku sighed and replaced the bandages for the fourth time that
day. He wished that the wounds would stop being so stubborn... and
just heal, by the gods! he thought in exasperation. He felt as if
it would never end... however, if he just kept up hope...
"Huhhn?"
the figure in the bed moaned.
"Garet!" the cleric
shouted in glee. "Eisa! come quickly! Garet's awake!"
"'Bout
time," she yawned and strode in, "I must've been up for
that last two weeks making sure no one filched his things..."
Garet
sat up. "How... how long was I out?"
"Four months,"
she replied, stretching out on the rug. "And that makes
twenty-seven."
"Really? But..." The Elan stopped as
he realized that neither Traku or Eisa were no longer there. "Eisa?
Traku?" He looked around a bit before seeing where they had
gone.
Both were sound asleep on the floor.
