Naked With Company, part 2
Morier walked with Huzair back to the row of cairns to show the wizard what he was potentially getting himself into.
"It was here in Termlane Forest that five of us entered the Grove of Renewal just days ago," Morier said as Huzair puffed thoughtfully on his cigar. "Two failed to survive the Purging, two turned back before they finished, and only one completed the tasks given us by the Guardians of Fire, Earth, Air, and Water."
"And that would be you," the black-skinned man surmised. The albino nodded.
"It was there that I traded all of my belongings in exchange for assistance in completing the last of the four challenges. The two that turned back and one who declined the Grove have now left, moving South to Pellham, thinking me dead," Morier continued. "But I was given something, I don't know... some kind of 'enlightenment' when I finished the fourth test, and now I know how to find what we're looking for. I need to find them before they travel too far away."
"And we're talking about the half-elf, the ogre and the dwarf, right?" Huzair asked and the eldritch warrior nodded again. "Interesting company you're keeping these days, Morier."
"Huzair, I hope you're serious about wanting to join us. But I want you to know that this is a far more dangerous situation than I ever dreamed when I met this group," Morier warned. "We'd be happy to have you - most of all because two of our number have passed in the last few days and we could use your cunning. Another would be gone too, but for the Great Oak, who was able to encase his spirit in another body. As it is now, the others think I am dead. That's the danger we're talking about."
"Being thought dead?" Huzair asked. "I can live with that. There's been a time or two when that could have got me out of a few bad gambling debts."
"Not being 'thought' dead. Being dead," Morier corrected. "The forces we're up against are determined and the threat to our lives is very real."
"If saving the world was easy, everybody'd do it," Huzair joked. Morier just shook his head.
"The Great Oak is right now trying to get word to my friends to wait for me... well... for us. But it didn't sound very confident at the likelihood of success in getting the message to them," the elf went on. "I know this is a lot of information to take in, Huzair. But I'm glad you're here and I hope you'll join us."
The wizard considered for a moment before opening his Handy Haversack. "On one condition," Huzair said, tossing a bundle of clothes at Morier. "You gotta put these on. That skirt isn't nearly as concealing as you think it is."
Morier had just dressed himself in comfortable, if a trifle ill-fitting, traveling clothes when the wolf appeared. It as large and gray with white fangs that seemed perfectly capable of ripping Morier's throat to shreds if it chose. Despite his new garments, without sword and armor Morier still felt naked. Fortunately, the wolf did not seem threatening, it just stood on the path and regarded him intently.
That was when Morier saw the fairy. She was sitting on the wolf's back, clinging to its fur with both hands. She wore garments of green and blue and brown, her hair was gold and iridescent wings became a blur of silver behind her as she rose up from the wolf's back and took flight.
"My name's Lela," she said in a high-pitched twittering voice as she circled above Morier and Huzair. "The Great Oak said you need help finding some folks who headed out with the centaurs. Wolf and I can help, if you want. We can find them for you. Do you know they've got a giant with them?"
"That would be Feln," Morier answered, craning his neck to keep his eye on the Faen. "He's not really a giant; he's a half-ogre."
"Technically speaking ogrish blood makes him a giant," Huzair corrected smugly. "You need to crack a book more often. That whole gish thing is starting to catch up with you." Morier just shook his head. He'd forgotten how insufferable Huzair could be.
Lela alighted on a nearby branch and cocked her head at Morier. "So you're the guy who made it back from the Grove... Cool! Hope you found out what you needed to." She darted off the branch and circled Morier in a tight spiral that carried her from head to foot. "Yup," she announced as she moved back to her branch. "Looks like you did."
"You can help me... us find my friends?" the Eldritch Warrior asked. The tiny Faen nodded.
"Great Oak says I am supposed to come with you two to find the others," she said, puffing herself up to a full 12 inches in height and planting her fists heroically on her hips. "This is my first adventure. Great Oak has taught me lots of stuff but I never get to use it! This'll be great! We'll have lots of fun!"
"This will be far from fun-" the albino began, but Lela had already turned her attention to Huzair.
"Wow!" she exclaimed, pinching the wizard's black skin. "You're as dark as a drow!"
Huzair jerked away and blew a cone of cigar smoke at the Faen which she expertly avoided. "I assure you that I'm no drow!" he protested.
"That's good! They're awful!" Lela twittered and then seemed to realize the insult she'd just levied at the albino. "Ohhh... You're a drow, aren't you Morier?"
"What if he is?" Huzair argued before Morier could even respond.
"But Great Oak says you're good so you must be good," she shrugged and dismissed it all in an eyeblink. "Well, let's get going."
As they moved off down the trail toward the south, Lela kept up a steady stream of conversation of which Vade might have been proud had he been there to hear it. "So what do you think about all these goblins?... This is Wolf. He's my best friend. We talk sometimes for hours and hours....."
Neither Huzair nor Morier had any reason to doubt her and they had to respect the wolf's patience.
"So, Lela?" Huzair asked at one point. "You're so small. Have you ever sneaked into any buildings?" Morier gave the wizard a shove and Huzair looked at him indignantly. "Relax! I didn't mean anything," the mage shrugged. "Old habits die hard."