[Realms #368] Honor Among Thieves
Morier smiled at the wizard as he sheathed Ravager. "Huzair, that was a masterful plan," he cheered. Winking at Karak he added, "And we said he was useless." The dwarf snorted laughter and Huzair glared indignantly.
"Maybe next time you guys will stay focused and not get distracted by the opportunity to kill something," he snapped.
"Huzair, I appreciate your quick return to the battle," Ayremac added as he limped back toward the crater which was now filled with a diffuse glow. "Your last minute contribution made the difference."
"Pressing on to look for the key really was a fantastic idea that I, for one, didn't pay enough attention to," Shamalin added quietly. She cast her eyes downward meekly. "Well done." Huzair shrugged with fake modestly.
"Morier, it brought me back to my youth in Farmin," he said with a nostalgic grin. "Just like a bar fight in the Silent Siren. When the fists started flying it meant to fill your pockets. That was the time to do the looting." He winked.
"Lets see what you have there," Ayremac suggested, angling to look at the glowing object the wizard was keeping half-hidden in his left hand.
"I cannot impress upon you enough, Huzair, how important it is that you show us everything you picked up in that alcove," Morier said, stepping close to the mage, his eyes fixed on Huzair's hand.
"Here is the entire haul Sparky and I retrieved from the lair," he said, handing Morier the glowing stone and then reaching into his haversack for some other treasures. He pulled out a wavy-bladded dagger, a small buckler with a stylized lightning bolt enamelled on it, a ring set all around with tiny, bright blue polished stones, an amulet of red gold carved with a pattern of overlapping scales, and a plain silver circlet. He then reached back in and pulled out a double handful of glittering cut diamonds. Morier looked at him stone-faced.
"Everything, Huzair," he said flatly. The wizard huffed in response.
"I said the entire haul, Morier!" he snapped, crossing his arms defiantly. "Don't look at me like that."
"We don't know exactly what the 'key' is, so it could be anything," Morier argued. "Show us what you have found."
"What? The big glowy rock carved with the earth rune that activates the portal we entered the earth test by doesn't seem like the key to you?" Huzair snarked, pointing to the glowing rock in the albino's hands and then the ring of runes on the floor of the cavern.
"Isn't the pull in your head telling you anything?" Shamalin asked and Morier shook his head. Karak harrumphed.
"It'll do ye nae good to hide anythin' from us, wizard!" the dwarf threatened, wagging his waraxe at the mage. "We live or die together! Now hand it over!"
"Kiss my ass, you greedy dwarf," Huzair shouted. "Garan Zak always said people see what they don't like about themselves in people that are different and they are jealous of. You may be strong in body, but I am strong in mind." He waved his hand and nodded at the dwarf. "Nice job killing those elementals by the way."
Karak just harrumphed in replied and Huzair turned to Morier. "Great combination of magic and fighting... just like Brynn-Toth from the texts I read," he said clapping the albino once on the arm. "I will have to get True Strike from you some time. Uncle Appie would be proud!" He smiled, but Morier wasn't letting the conversation turn so easily.
"Huzair..." he threatened and the mage huffed, reaching into The Valiant Vessel bag at his hip.
"Oh wait," he said as if he'd just remembered something. "I picked up a pair of these!" He turned, pulling both his hands out of the bag and showing them both to Morier and Kark. The middle fingers of both were extended obscenely.
Sparky twittered merrily in Huzair's ear. "Good one, boss. You got three birds!"
"Huzair, my faith in you grows each day," Ayremac said patiently as he stepped forward. "As I said, I appreciate your efforts in saving my neck moments ago..."
"Then just take my word for it and it won't become an issue. You saw everything in the bag," he said, backing up a step and angling his haversack so that Ayremac could see inside. "Sparky, are you holding out on me?"
The hummingbird twittered back at him and Huzair laughed. "He thinks you guys are funny. He has more sense of humor than all of you put together," the wizard quipped.
Undaunted, Ayremac stepped closer again. "Huzair, this is important," he told him, his voice low, but menacing. "Look me in the eye and tell me you have revealed everything!"
"Fine!" the wizard snapped. "Come on, Ayremac. Stare me down and see if I am lying... I am not! I'm damned tired of being accused, though! You all think I am a halfling or something.."
Ayremac studied the dark-skinned mage, his eyes narrowed as he appraised Huzair. There was a long, pregnant pause during which no one spoke and then Ayremac stepped back.
"He's telling the truth," the holy warrior admitted to the others.
"There seems to be more concern for the contents of Huzair's sack than for Lela," Shamalin said, gesturing sadly toward the faen's splintered body. "Let's not let the discovery of any key overshadow the loss of another life... no matter how small. Wouldn't you agree, Huzair?" The mage shrugged.
"Hey, I did not start it. This interrogation wasn't my idea," he snapped, examining his cigar as he spoke and waving dismissively at Morier, Ayremac and Kark. "Talk to these three."
Morier set his mouth in a thin line, saying nothing, but Ayremac sighed and looked ashamed. "I apologize, Shamalin. You are of course correct."
"Yeah, it's too bad Lela is gone," Huzair agreed. "She was good at detecting magic." Karak glowered at the mage and shouldered passed him to approach the faen's corpse. As he came, Spot yowled menacingly, its hackles bristling as it slunk backward reluctantly.
"And what do we do with kitty over here when he gets hungry?" the wizard asked aloud as he sized the animal up thinking perhaps that its skin would make a nice jacket. The dwarf, however, held out the back of his fist for Spot to sniff.
"Do any of ye have any skill with handlin' animals?" the dwarf asked, without taking his eyes off the cheetah.
"Not formal training," Shamalin said. "But I've been told I have a way with animals." She looked at Ayremac, wondering if he would comment or even remember the trouble she used to have with the market butchers. He did not look at her, however.
"I have a bit of experience," the holy warrior admitted instead. "Mostly with regard to horses, though. But the basics should be the same, I would think." Karak tried to pat the cheetah, but it slapped angrily at his hand, hissing.
"There there, Spot. I know it must hurt ye to lose her. I miss her too," the dwarf said, his voice heavy with emotion. Tears welled up in his eyes and he brushed them away with a guantleted hand. "She was a good sprite. A good wee lass. I'm going to miss her riding on me armor. May Shaharizod guide her soul."
"Shall I say a few words?" Ayremac asked, removing his helmet. His voice was reassuring and as soft as velvet. He looked at Morier and then Huzair, who just shrugged and puffed on his cigar. Shamalin nodded stiffly and produced her own holy symbol.
"Those who wish to may join me in a moment of prayer," the holy warrior suggested as he placed his weapons of war to the side and knelt at Lela's body.
"Umba, it is with great sadness that I call to you today," Ayremac intoned, his arms spread wide. "Although her small form may be misleading, I trust that your great wisdom will see truly that she is a great warrior. She joined this quest - as did we all - with much taken on faith. It is a quest passed from one warrior to another, unsure of the source or of the possible outcomes. She died trying to protect the rest of us, and although evil has taken greatly from us this day, I trust in you Umba, that her sacrifice will be repaid in blood and the victory of this party."
"It is now that I ask a great favor Umba, please fix your watchful eye upon this little sprite. Make her journey easy, carry her when her little wings are not strong enough to continue. I would gladly walk her one hundred days, Great Umba, if it were possible," he finished by bowing his head and saying, "With great praise."
Ayremac remained kneeling silently, for a few moments, allowing the others a chance to say their own prayers. He did not rise until after Karak got to his own feet saying, "Bye Lassie. You put up a good fight against Chaos. Your faen people would be proud."
"Would she want to be returned home?" Ayremac asked softly and Huzair rolled his eyes.
"Carry a rotting corpse around with us?" the mage asked, his lip curling in disgust. "You've got to be joking!"
"There is magic that can preserve her body," the holy warrior explained. "The Justiciars of Umba were capable of casting it. I believe that it is within Shamalin's power as well."
"You're talking about
Gentle Repose?" she asked and the Officer nodded. "I can do it if we rest and allow me time to pray and prepare."
"I don't think that's necessary," Morier said. "She followed The Green. She would want to be returned to the earth... or burned. Not artificially preserved."
"Looks like some good came of you wasting all that time with druids and rangers instead of doing your studies, Morier," Huzair quipped, glad of a reason to not carry around a corpse.
"I know this sounds callous, but we should take her belongings to both remember her by and to not let her magic gear fall into enemy hands," Karak said reluctantly. "What does she have that be the right size for all of us?"
DAY TWO IN THE ELEMENTAL NODES
They dealt with their fallen comrade's body, divided up her enchanted gear, and spent the night in the soft glow of the crater. When they awoke, Shamalin and Huzair prepared their spells, and they stepped into the crater as one. The light flared and they found themselves once more in the pentagonal hub. Everything was as they'd last seen it except that the indentation in the center of the room marked with the Earth rune was glowing softly, pulsing in time with the glow if the cube of stone that Morier held in his hands.