ARLANNI.TXT

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Foreword

This story is my first (and possibly only) sizeable work of fiction to be published. The background is to be found in chapter 418, book 19, Epic 3 of the Adventurers series by Tom Miller. When Tom announced in chapter 619 on 6-March-2000 that he would not be following up the fate of this minor supporting character, I thought I might have a go myself. The following tale is published with his permission. 


The Tale of Arlanni

Hagor the innkeeper only picked at his beard when he was worried. He picked it now as he studied the delicate cursive script on the transparently thin parchment. His chin was decidedly less luxuriant, such was his consternation at the unexpected missive. It was not the message itself, which was brief to the point of rudeness. "Care for the girl", it read, "the seal, your fee". A few minutes ago, the wax seal had discharged a finely cut gemstone as Hagor had broken it. He was no jeweller, but he was used to adventuring types paying for their stay with gems. He guessed this one was worth at least as much as the inn. Another tuft of hair rolled between his fingertips as he looked across at the dishevelled wench who lay curled up by the dying hearth. If she was indeed the subject, then whoever wrote the letter must have a rare prescience - it must have been written some time before she arrived, or the ink would still be wet, and the seal still soft. 

A polite, tiny cough in front of Hagor snapped his concentration. The beard-tuft drifted to the counter top and rolled off to join its fellows on the worn boards. "A copper for Oliver?" said the urchin expectantly. The boy had delivered the letter over five minutes ago, and deserved at least a copper piece for the trouble. "Who gave it you?" growled the man. "I, er , just found it" he replied hesitantly, not expecting to be believed.  Hagor scowled, but somehow, that was the answer he wanted. This was a strange business, smelling of wizards and magic. One does not pry into the affairs of wizards. Hagor's huge hand swept a copper from the counter and hurled it at the urchin's face with such force that it could have put out an eye. The boy caught it easily - as he always did - and grinned back widely. "Now hoppit, young Sarmy" roared Hagor, as the boy took flight through the kitchen and out into the night.

The innkeeper turned again to observe the girl. She was wrapped in what might have been a sturdy travelling cloak once, though now it was little more than a large rag. A black leather sleeved jerkin showed underneath, and worn boots held together by knotted twine. An empty satchel wrapped round some kindling served as a pillow. With no money for a room the girl had begged for a few minutes by the fire to warm herself and promptly fallen asleep. With an unsteady hand he picked up the letter which had been enwrapped within the one addressed to "innkeeper". It was engraved with one word in the same tiny archaic hand as the other. It was an unusual girl's name. It read - "arlanni"

Someone was calling. Insistent, distant, over and over again. She spun round, trying to locate the voice, and saw only the dark grey stone of the castle, and her companions, all around her, lying broken and still. Fearing the terrible elven sorcerer would appear at any moment to fix her with his single ghastly eye, and devour her screaming soul. Fearing the wild pale woman that tore poor Arkayn to pieces with bare hands, would seize and shred her too. But the voice was not their voice. It was human, compassionate, concerned, even a bit nervous. Then suddenly she was awake, and  staring with frightened eyes at the kindly innkeeper who had allowed her respite from her race through the cold night. They stared at each other in silence for a long minute. The innkeeper swallowed several times during this, and she tugged the edges of the cloak in a futile attempt to hide within it. 

"How did you know my name?" whispered the thief eventually. "So it is true" said Hagor slowly. "What is true?" she asked. "You have a friend of great power" he replied, handing her the little fold of fine parchment. "He has paid me well for your keep." Hagor paused, as his mind adjusted to more familiar territory. "Would you like some ale while I prepare a room? Perhaps a bite to eat?" Arlanni nodded. She was utterly dumbstruck by this turn of events.  She had no friends now. The corpses of the other eight members of the Company of Nine lay in the sorcerer's castle in Helgate. The same sorcerer who had restored her life, for no reason, as casually as he had struck down her companions. She had left his money with the church of Pelor, fearing he would control her through it. Or was there a reason after all? If so, how did he know where she would run to. It was more than she could comprehend.

Arlanni felt a firm hand grasp her arm and seat her unresistingly at a worn trestle. She did not notice a small mug of ale appear beside her, or the flicker of the flames from the kindling which was shaken out of her rolled pack into the embers.  She clutched the parchment tightly in one fist, not daring to look at it, as she chewed mechanically at the doorstep of bread placed in the other. Her mind had simply shut down with the cumulative shock of the last few days, and would remain so until she woke the following morning. Hagor picked at his beard again as he watched the two kettle girls haul  the limp form up to a hastily made bed. "No good will come of this", he muttered to himself.

Arlanni slept soundly, completely exhausted from her travel as she was, and did not rise until late morning. Remembering with a start the sudden change in her fortunes she scrabbled for the note which she hoped would answer the host of questions in her mind. After several minutes of rising panic, a crumpled folded sheet eventually turned up amongst the bedsheets, where it had been dropped from a manic grip relaxed by sleep.  

Sitting on the edge of the bed, Arlanni picked at the edges of the fold with unsteady fingers. It opened with a resisting scrape as the creased edges were flattened. The message was rather more verbose than the innkeeper's, although Arlanni did not know this. There were only two lines to it, in letters that wasted no space upon the parchment. It read "stay if you seek employment." Then on a new line "curiosity is not becoming. " Finally a small but unmistakable outline of a keyhole with a lockpick alongside it. A strange mixture of elation and fear flowed through her veins. There was no doubt that a powerful and probably wealthy man needed her professional skills, and for fairly obvious reasons wished to remain anonymous. Things were definitely looking up.

Once this fact had been digested, Arlanni took a closer look at the room her new employer had provided. It might be the best room in the inn, she decided, more likely if the inn had a poor run of fortune. The mattress was well stuffed, the sheets were clean, the room was well lit from windows behind the curtain. As she pulled back the curtain, she gasped at the window itself, or rather the bolts securing the frames. Recently fitted, they were quite massive, and would resist a determined assault. Feeling quite apprehensive now, she decided to ask the innkeeper about both this feature, and the terms upon which he would keep her.

Hagor was busy preparing his other guests for departure when she saw him. It turned out that he had little more idea about her benefactor than she did. He did not elaborate on the nature of the payment, but insisted she need not worry about it, though stroking the bare patches around his chin with his fingers as he spoke this. Earlier the gem had fetched 100 gold griffons at the moneychanger's, so it must have been worth at least double that. She must be a truly special lady, he thought.  

"What about the window bolts?" asked Arlanni suddenly. Hagor looked puzzled for a moment, but quickly caught the thread. "You're new to Hardby, lass. Some folks are believing the rumours about night creatures. You'll find most houses are well locked at night these-a-days. But don't you trouble yourself, they're a superstitious bunch round here. Anyways, there's plenty of good folks about who will gladly give chase if such things were real". "What sort of things?" she asked anxiously, knowing that most of her work would be at night. "I don't rightly know" he replied, lifting a tangled knot out from under his chin by the roots. Arlanni winced at his unsavoury habit,  making Hagor embarrassingly aware of it and hastily flicking the evidence to the floor. "I never saw anything meself, like" he continued, holding both his hands firmly on the trestle, lest they wandered back to their former haunt. "But a few people have vanished over the past year and, like, rumours have grown in the telling". Arlanni decided that a few jugs of ale might loosen other tongues around the town, so decided not to press the innkeeper further. Besides, he was her only source of food, shelter, and anything else she needed for the foreseeable future, so she best not upset him.

The next four weeks passed uneventfully for Arlanni, and Hagor seemed very relaxed about things too. He had clearly found some money from somewhere because the inn was soon crawling with carpenters, tilers, limners and other trades. All manner of things which had seemed a deliberate part of the olde-worlde atmosphere were repaired or replaced. The inn was the only one of any size in the town, and catered especially for merchants and adventurers travelling the high road to Helgate. Arlanni's room was indeed the best room in the house, and remained pretty much as she had first seen it. Hagor had decided that 'care' covered food and board only,  not unlimited spending money. The food was well cooked and plentiful...
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