Road to Torik
A fantasy interlude
"Wassail-Bout" artist: Mary A. Hallock-Foote |
Braccus lifted the pint toward the
ceiling, not minding the drops that sloshed out over the rim. It was
getting late and they had to leave early the next morning.
“Odin's mercy on us if we aren't able
to stand up in the morning!” Braccus exclaimed to his traveling
companions. “The ale has flowed swiftly this night, but we haven't
quite reached our destination. This is no time for us to get that
drunk, not yet.”
Meritor, the short-beard, nodded his
agreement. Being the smallest among the four travelers he was the
easiest sloshed. Then he looked toward the surly manager of the Ale
House and inquired, “Would you, kind sir, have accommodations for
weary travelers this night?”
The man put down the jug he was
cleaning on the table in front of him and said, “I don't have rooms
but there's a loft for ya' up theres if you want it. I changed the
hay out this morning.”
Braccus pulled Kaster to his feet.
“Sorry, friend, but this party is over. There'll be ale enough when
this journey is over.”
Meritor looked over at Hodkins who was
eying him with an evil grin. He wasn't about to try and lift the
larger man to his feet, no doubt Hodkins was planning something
should he be so foolish. Hodkins was the trouble-maker of the group,
Meritor told himself, best just to avoid him. When he turned toward
the stair, he heard Hodkins chuckle as if he had won something.
Meritor carried his recursive bow up to
the loft and found him a nice corner, where he could put his back to
the wall and keep a knife handy. The three larger men climbed up,
with some grumbling, before falling in heaps. Within minutes the loft
was full of loud snoring. Meritor would hardly sleep this night.
Torik. Was this town they were
traveling to really worth all this trouble? The Prince had given them
this assignment, so there must be something to it. He said they would
find trouble and that the town needed them. In all fairness, the
Prince had told them quite little. Still, the future king was
trustworthy and had been so since they all first met years ago.
They were the heroes of Archlandia and
they wouldn't have become such without the information they were
given by the Prince. The King was a bit daft and of dimming
faculties, but his son went into the shadows to make sure things got
done. Of course, if something went wrong they were on their own and
the Prince probably couldn't save their rumps.
So the next morning the three burly men
with swords and the smaller man with his bow climbed onto their
horses to continue their journey.
“Torik, the peppercorn capital of
Archlandia! Where the sneezing never ends!” Hodkins exclaimed as he
pointed them forward. Sort of an encouragement, Meritor told himself
while shaking his head at the antics of the big man in bearskin fur.
Four missions the prince had set them
on. Four! Three of these had turned out well, one of those involved a
fight against a troll and another against a monstrous sea creature.
Meritor hoped to never see the sea again. Once, though, a band of
thieves had surrounded them and forced them to leave the Kings Wood
of Scrantonshire. Soldiers had to be sent in and from all accounts,
the toll was a bit high.
The four horses moved at a careful
moderate pace through the uneven trail covered with ruts that could
break their legs. The King desired real roads to be built but there
were very few, for it was quite expensive. The road to Torik was not
important enough to have more than an unmaintained trail such as
this.
In front of them, in a sunny spot in
the middle of the road, a dwarf was standing and waving his arms as
if they might not see him. “Please, good sirs! Please, have a
little mercy on one such as I!”
Braccus sat up in his saddle. “What
seems to be the problem, dwarf?”
The dwarf bowed very formally before
speaking again. “My name is Malwart. My mistress, employer, has
been kidnapped by bad men. They are holding her in a cave on that
hillside and says if I do not pay them twenty silvers they will cut
her throat. Please help me. We are poor, we have nothing.”
Braccus was thinking about it. Even
from behind him Meritor always knew when Braccus was thinking. His
head would tilt down, his mouth tighten and his belly grumble barely
audibly.
“We are on a mission. This is not our
problem.” Meritor said, knowing full well that they were about to
go looking for a cave. The three brutes never backed down from a
fight, excepting what happened at Scrantonshire and he would never
bring that up if he wanted to keep his head attached.
Finally Braccus made up his mind. He
lifted his sword into the sky, so did Hodkins and Kaster and they
yelled as if rushing into battle. Meritor rolled his eyes and sighed.
He was already turning his horse when the other three took off at a
gallop. Meritor followed.
The cave was downhill, surrounded on
three sides by high rocky ridges. Like a horseshoe.
“This is a trap.” Meritor told
them. Ignored, as usual. “This is obviously a trap.”
Braccus stared down at the dark cave.
There was no telling what was in there, possibly an old woman in
peril, possibly armed orcs or a dragon. Once they rode down into
that, they would have no escape except back up the hill where Meritor
planned to stay and cover them with his bow.
The dwarf finally caught up with them.
“That's the cave! That is where my mistress, er... employer, is
being held for ransom!”
“No sign of a guard.” Kaster noted.
“No sign of anything at all.”
Braccus admitted.
“Might be hiding on the ridges
somewhere, get at us from above maybe?” Hodkins said.
Now they at least try to be sensible.
Still, there was no way they would not be looking into that cave now.
Meritor had already resigned himself to this.
“Oh, please please, help us.”
Malwort, the dwarf told them. Jumping up and down pathetically.
“Should we?” Braccus asked the
other two brutes.
“We should!” Kaster answered.
“I think so.” Hodkins chimed in.
Then all three kicked their horses into
gear and sailed down the incline toward the cave. Meritor was already
pulled the arrow in his bow back to cover his compatriots. The dwarf
had disappeared. Something about that bugged Meritor, he couldn't
quite remember what he had known earlier. Once he pulled the bow back
he was all business and other worries were forgotten.
Then from behind him he heard the
movement of shrubbery. Then the mocking high-pitched laughter of the
dwarf, Malwort. He turned to look but he already knew. Yes, this had
been a trap. The dwarf and several orcs surrounded him.
“I knew it.” Meritor said trying to
get off at least one arrow. Then something hit him in the back of the
head and the lights went out.
Just as they were reaching the cave
Braccus heard loud, throaty roars from up the hill. Looking back he
saw a bunch of large, gray-skinned orcs with clubs as large as
himself running toward them.
“So it was a trap.” Kaster said,
amused.
“The small man was right, who would
have guessed?” Hodkins replied as they all sat on their horses and
waited for the orcs to close the distance. No sense getting their
mounts tired when you could let the enemy wear themselves out running
and screaming while waving giant clubs.
Braccus pulled his sword as the orcs
closed in and the other two men followed suit. The dwarf on the
hillside, seeing how calm the men were, was starting to have second
thoughts about the enterprise. When he saw the men slay the first few
orcs, he turned and ran toward where he had tied up his own pony.
“Must get to Torik! Find safety with
Lord Jasper!” The dwarf named Malwort was telling himself.
As the sound of the small horse
trotting faded, Meritor laughed. He had laid there as if asleep with
his hands bound. The poor didn't know they were going to the same
place as his hiding spot. Meritor found this quite funny for a
moment, until the pain in the back of his head returned. Find out who
sent the dwarf to waylay them and then kill them both, he told
himself, good plan. Ouch.
It didn't take long to slay the orcs.
As big as they were these creatures were very stupid and all three of
the men had experience against them. There was nothing in the cave,
no surprise.
“That dwarf tricked us.” Hodkins
said.
“Well, it was obviously a trap that
needed sprung.” Braccus said. “We can deal with the dwarf later,
for now we have to collect Meritor and be on our way. The sun is
already above us, half the day is gone.”
“Very true.” Kaster said.
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