Chapter Thirteen

EANING AGAINST A TREE at the top of a rise, Steven surveyed the land before him looking for a suitable place to camp. The knights had to stop to rest the horses in the middle of the afternoon, but Steven had kept running ahead to prepare their evening camp. Below him a small river crossed the road and it appeared to be a frequent campsite for travelers along this way. It would certainly be appropriate for the knights.

Steven looked back the way he had come and saw the knights in the distance riding toward him He squinted his eyes and cocked his head, but he could not make them look like a dragon now that he had been in their company for two days. He could not understand how he could have mistaken them that first evening. He turned his face back to the North and jogged off down the hill toward the intended campsite.

When he reached the river he saw that not only was the grass matted down around a fire-circle, but that the camp appeared to have been abandoned recently as ashes were still warm in the pit. He quickly went about restoring flames to the firepit and setting up his cooking station. Steven had seen something else from his stop up high and taking his bow and arrow he slipped off into the woods upstream from the river. A small herd of fallow deer standing about waist high were drinking and grazing near the river. Steven brought his hunting skills to bear and brought down a small buck as the others scattered before him. He gutted the deer and carted it to the camp. At the top of the rise, he could see the knights beginning their descent. The deer was spitted and turning on the fire before they reached him.

The knights cared for their horses and set up their camp around the fire Steven had prepared. By the time they were ready to settle in, the sun had gone down and the smell of roasting dear filled the valley. The knights cut strips of the savory meat from the carcass and accepted apples that Steven had gathered while the meat was roasting. When they had eaten their fill, the knights sat around the fire waiting expectantly.


The Twilight Drummers


NCE UPON A TIME, very long ago in the far southern reaches of the world, there was a country where water was more plentiful than dry land. In this country there was a village-kingdom called Faysea Mound that was completely surrounded by water as far as the eye could see. Few people have ever been to that isolated kingdom, and fewer still have returned, for to reach it you must sail in a boat that glides without oars from shore to shore, and the citizens are not friendly like we know in our time and place.

For many generations, most people knew of this island kingdom only because of the twilight drums. Just as the sun was setting beyond the mountains and the land fell still for the night, people would hear the drumming of the Fayseans faintly disturbing the quiet across the water. To hear those drums was to feel a chill and stories grew up around the legend of the Twilight Drums. If, when you heard the drums, you could not get home before the drumming ceased, the chances were you would never get home again. So went the stories that were told to children.

And so it was no surprise that people on the shores opposite the island stayed close to home in the evenings. They went inside when the drums might be heard and talked loudly, sang, or even fought with each other so that they would not hear the drums of Faysea Mound.

Near the shore where the twilight drums could be heard, was the town of Wildmoor Beach. There was never a need for a curfew in this town for at sunset every citizen was inside with as many other citizens has he could be, drinking, singing, laughing, and talking to drown out any chance they would hear the drums. Stories about the Fayseans had grown to impossible proportions in Wildmoor Beach through the generations. Some said the Fayseans were eight feet tall with skin the color of bronze. They were ferocious warriors who carried spears tipped with bone points. Some said they carried the heads of their enemies on belts around their waists. And most dreadful of all, their eyes were coal black and to look into them was to be lost forever.

But the truth was, no one in Wildmoor Beach had ever actually seen a Faysean. No one knew what they really looked like or how fierce they really were.

That is, no one until the fateful night that Tramis the Potter was caught.

Now Tramis was a kind, black-haired man with a jovial spirit and a liking for good cider. And to Tramis, the longer the cider had fermented, the better it was. Some speculated that his chosen profession suited him, for he needed a great number of jugs to keep his own fermenting cider. In fact, Tramis had discovered early in his career that he could trade his jugs far more favorably if they contained cider than he could if they were empty.

On this particular day, Tramis had been on the journey to the larger town of Rosebridge to trade his pots. It was twenty-four thousand steps from Rosebridge to Wildmoor Beach, so Tramis began his journey home early in the morning, pulling his handcart filled with the goods for which he had traded his pots. Unfortunately, Tramis had not been able to trade all the pots he took with him. Half his cart was still jammed with the jugs full of cider, while the other half contained meats, cloth, vegetables, and dry goods. In Wildmoor Beach, Tramis would continue to trade these goods for other things that he desired.

The cart was heavy and the morning was hot, as it tends to be in the Southlands. Tramis had gone only a few thousand steps pulling the heavy cart when he sat to rest. He was very thirsty, so he took a jug from the cart and promptly drained the contents. He put the empty in the cart and started off again. He had gone only a couple of thousand steps when he had to stop again. Again he drained a jug as he rested, replaced the empty in the cart. This time when Tramis started off, he realized the cart was much lighter. Of course, two of the jugs were now empty.

From here, Tramis stopped every two or three thousand steps, rested and drained another jug. Unfortunately, this slowed the progress of the potter. Not only was he stopping frequently, he was walking more slowly, his cart weaving from side to side of the narrow path as he stumbled forward.

The sun was setting when he topped a rise where he could actually see Wildmoor Beach ahead of him, but still at least three thousand steps away. It was here, as Tramis drained the last jug of cider in his cart that he heard the drums of Faysea Mound carrying across the open water.

Tramis hitched himself to the cart and set off at a hard pace, but in his cider-induced state, he often stumbled. And so it was that still over a thousand steps from his home, Tramis fell and struck his head on a rock. He lay in the path only partly awake, struggling to command his reluctant limbs to obey him. First one hand then the other pushed him to his knees. One foot then the other crawled up under him until he was squatting between the traces of his cart. He was about to thrust his body upward and continue his journey when he realized the world had gone silent. No birds twittered. No wolves howled. No wind blew. No drums beat.

Tramis involuntarily gazed out over the dark waters. There he thought he saw a flock of geese skimming the water as they came toward the mainland. He was frozen in fear as they rapidly approached the shore. Once there, they spread into the hills surrounding the town of Wildmoor Beach making strange whistling sounds as they moved. Slowly they moved forward and Tramis realized they had blocked the path to his home and were stealthily surrounding him.

He rose to his feet fighting the dizziness that threatened to overwhelm him and lurched forward with his cart. But the axel caught on the very same rock that he had fallen on and the cart jerked to a stop bringing him once again to his knees. This time when he looked up, he saw that it was not geese, but men that swarmed up the beach and over the hills, and yes, even up the path on which Tramis knelt. Each man was naked save for a hat on his head, covered with feathers so that Tramis had mistaken them for geese. From each hat came the soft whistle as the men moved up the path blocking Tramis from his home. Tramis quaked where he knelt and with the quantity of cider that he had drunk, promptly wet himself on the path.

The strange men said not a word, but encircled Tramis and his cart. They made strange gestures and low guttural sounds that Tramis did not understand. The longer they spoke and Tramis remained silent, the more agitated the men seemed to become. Suddenly the man nearest to Tramis reached out to grab his hair and pull his head back while shouting into Tramis’s face. He reached his hand back as though to strike Tramis.

He hid his eyes awaiting the fatal blow from the Fayseans, but as it did not come and did not come, he opened them a slit, then full wide again. He saw the shadows of the men in the faint moonlight as they slipped away into the woods and continued to kneel in amazement as they emerged again and flowed in a single wave down to the beach and out across the water of the sea.

Now Tramis put all his considerable strength into his cart, dislodging it from the stone that held it and rushing headlong down the last thousand steps into Wildmoor Beach and to his home. He opened his door and turned to quickly unload his cart into his little room. What a surprise to find that it was empty. The Fayseans had taken every dried strip of meat, every bolt of fabric, and, indeed, every empty pottery jug. In their place they had left one of the strange feathered hats that Tramis had seen on their heads. He picked up the hat and examined it. Just a sheepskin hat decorated with feathers and odd bits, including a bone that was shaped into a whistle. It was this that made the soft whistling sounds as the Fayseans moved inland and back to the shore. Then Tramis realized that for all his labor, his trading, and his transportation, all he had to show was this one feathered hat. He kicked the cart and pitched the headdress into a corner of his room. Then, drunk on the cider and fear, he staggered through the door and passed out.

It was morning two days later that Tramis awoke. His neighbors did not know that he had come back home and assumed he was still in Rosebridge. It was two more days before Tramis could face leaving his little home and showing his face in the town. And it was a week after that before he spoke to anyone. Whenever anyone spoke to him, he scuttled back into his house and closed the door.

The new timidity of Tramis was a puzzlement to his neighbors who were used to the potter’s friendly banter. They coaxed and cajoled him until at last one evening before sunset he joined them at the local inn to drink some cider. After he had drunk, Tramis started to tell the astounded townspeople about his adventure on the hill outside of town. At first the people were awed by the tale, but as Tramis described the Fayseans there was first a smile, and at the mention of the feathered hats, there was outright laughter. They nudged each other saying what a joker their potter was and how he had them going for a time.

Tramis grew more and more embarrassed and, determined to prove his story, rushed out of the inn and ran to his home to retrieve the feathered hat. Jamming the artifact on his head, Tramis rushed outside to return to the inn just as he heard the drums stop.

Tramis did not make it back to the inn that night. He was inexorably drawn toward the shore where he could see in the moonlight the shapes he had first mistaken for geese. There on the shore Tramis stripped off his clothes and awaited the Fayseans. As they stepped onto the shore, they flooded past Tramis and up into the hills where they hunted and brought fresh meat back to the beach. All this while, Tramis went with them, blending in, though his pale body shown in the moonlight next to their tawny skin. But when the beckoned him to join him as they set back out across the water, Tramis backed away, reclothing himself and returning home.

Often thereafter, Tramis joined the Fayseans on their nightly hunts. Sometimes he brought other goods to trade, and eventually he restored his position in the town. He never again mentioned the hat of the Fayseans. Whether Tramis ever dared to journey across the water to Faysea Mound he never told.

Many years later, Tramis moved to Rosebridge and married. His descendents moved further inland and northward. And with them came the hat of the Fayseans and the miraculous story that went with it.

That hat is this hat and I am the eldest son of the eldest son of the eldest son whose ancestry and heredity goes back to Tramis the potter.


The knights were silent and nodded to each other.

“I see the truth in this story,” said the leader of the knights. Then he reached to his own breast and removed a brooch. “Steven George, Dragonslayer,” he continued, “you have served our company well on this journey. Tomorrow we will come to Zannopolis and your service will be ended. This emblem will identify you as a man who has served the king and therefore will give you comfort and passage when you come to Byziatica. I add it to this fine hat of yours in hopes that some of its mystery will return to us who ride to war.”

Steven thanked the knight and finished preparing the deer in dried strips so they could carry it with them and eat as they needed. Then they retired to their bedrolls.


Chapter 12
Chapter 14

1 comment:

Jason Black said...

"In fact, Tramis had discovered early in his career that he could trade his jugs far more favorably if they contained cider than he could if they were empty."

Gee, I wonder why! :) Another delightful bon mot, Nathan.

"On this particular day, Tramis had been on the journey to the larger town of Rosebridge to trade his pots. It was twenty-four thousand steps from Rosebridge to Wildmoor Beach, so Tramis began his journey home early in the morning, pulling his handcart filled with the goods for which he had traded his pots."

This bit made me re-read it a couple of times; the opening makes me expect that what will come next is what happened to Tramis in Rosebridge, and that he was leaving his home early in the morning to go there, rather than that he had been there overnight from his trip the previous day.