(Messing with formatting changes to try and make this come out correctly...)    
                    
 
 Sooo, here it goes.  My first story is somewhat of a "prequel" actually, 
showing my main character some years before he arrives at the Keep.
 
May 30, 703 CR
 
 
            The ship’s heavy lurch hurtled Zyn’s bowl into his chest as he 
struggled in vain to try and keep it steady, spilling its sloppy contents all 
over his shirt and pants.  Zyn stared at the soggy mess that were his clothes 
and uttered a profanity before setting the bowl aside and trying to wipe it all 
off.  Of course, this failed miserably, for as much as the “soup” was gunky 
bland slop instead of actual soup, it seemed to soak his clothes just as well 
as if it were water.  Zyn let out a belated, exasperated sigh, sat sulking for 
a moment, then chucked the bowl across the room.  
 
            Damn amateurs!  He [i]knew[/i] that the sailors he and Lorian had 
decided to seek passage back north with were sloppy.  He [i]knew[/i] that they 
were captained by a third rate reject who spent his time picking his nose 
rather than doing useful things like, perhaps, not running headlong into storm 
fronts that’d toss them deeper and deeper into the middle of the ocean!  
 
            Cursing, Zyn stood up and headed to the deck to find Lorian.  
Perhaps it was to say “I told you so” or something along those lines, maybe it 
was to just grumble about the food, maybe to complain about how Eli had decided 
he hated them all!  On the dark, storm swept deck, he saw a short round man 
whom he had earlier learned was a mage standing by the starboard edge, 
presumably hurling his guts into the ocean.  Zyn tried as he might but couldn’t 
remember the mage’s name, who leaned over and held his head out, but he did so 
as the whole ship tilted right, dipping him down and seeming to threaten to 
toss him overboard.  This was averted when another lurch of the ship 
accompanied by a massive wave of water knocked them both back sending Zyn 
sprawling to the deck.  Now, this trip had just, in addition to all other 
inequities, forced him to sacrifice his dignity.  Just how much more of this 
was he expected to take?
 
            “You told me so,” a boisterous baritone voice chimed in behind him 
above the roar of the sea, echoing his own thoughts before he could speak them. 
 Snapping around he saw a bearded one armed man holding onto to the ship with 
his good arm, and he had the gall to [i]smile[/i].  To smile!
 
            “You said that this trip was going to be no problem!” Zyn shot 
irately.
 
            “Calm down lad,” his mentor Lorian said, still keeping up his good 
natured smile, “I said that I’ve been with worse crews than this and survived.  
Besides, it’s just a little storm, that’s all.”
 
            “Are you kidding me!?” Zyn shouted so loud his voice threatened to 
go hoarse, “This ain’t no coastal shower, this is a damn typhoon!  I told you-“
 
            “Yes, Zyn, you told me and you’ve just about told everyone else on 
this ship as well.”  Lorian’s face didn’t lose the good natured look, but he 
did raise the bar by letting a little iron into it.  “Now come on, quit acting 
so over the top.”
 
            “I’m not acting over the top!” Zyn shrieked hysterically, “I’m 
pointing out the blazing obvious fact that we can just about kiss our asses 
goodbye at this point!”
 
            At this point even old Lorian’s patience showed its limits and he 
let out a sigh, though Zyn could only tell by seeing it rather than hearing as 
the din of the ferocious maelstrom that had engulfed them drowned out all but 
the loudest of screaming.  “Zyn,” Lorian began, but was stopped when the boat 
once again heaved heavily and they all had to grip something lest they be 
tossed to and fro.  “Anyways Zyn, this is probably the sixth time that you’ve 
come up and complained to me about this.”
 
            “Fifth!” Zyn shouted trying to be heard above the tempest, “I’ve 
only come up to you five times; the time you came down to me in the hold 
doesn’t count.”  
 
            Lorian brushed this aside with a dismissive wave of his stubbed 
right arm.  “Bah, details; you’re just getting combative about pointless stuff 
again because you’re upset.”
 
            At this Zyn couldn’t help but sneer at the man even though he was 
his mentor.  “No, I’m the pinnacle definition of calm and collected.  Here, do 
you want me to share my calm tranquil inner peace with you so the whole world 
can be enveloped in warm ooie-gooie blissful happiness?”
 
            Any other man talked that way by someone he was mentoring as Lorian 
was Zyn would have likely slapped him or beat him fiercely.  However, that was 
not what Lorian’s way, and that was probably why he picked up Zyn from the 
streets all those years before in the first place.  Where other men would 
stammer or boil with indignation, Lorian just shook his head with those knowing 
eyes.  
 
            In all likelihood, Zyn might still be just another wandering 
homeless reject who aspired to greater things but never had the education or 
training to amount to anything, wandering the streets of Korazin waiting for 
the impossible, or worse.  Or maybe not, maybe he would have found a life past 
that, but such was not to be as Lorian had found him first.  The grizzled 
one-armed fresco painter already had quite a name for himself, but instead of 
picking someone to carry on his work and legacy he had picked up Zyn, not as an 
apprentice, but simply to “show him the world,” among other things.
 
            Suddenly his thoughts were interrupted by a sudden diming of the 
available light.  In the near pitch black, storm thrashed night, the only 
illumination other than instantaneous and sporadic lightning strikes was a 
crudely concocted witchlight, seeing that somehow this incompetent crew had 
already lost all its deck lanterns during the storm and didn’t have enough 
replacements.  It was this witchlight that began dangerously fizzing out in a 
heavily stuttered fashion like a fat drunk sailor, threatening to cast the deck 
into utter darkness.  
 
            This fortunately was at least noticed by the incompetent crew in 
question, and Zyn could hear who he believed to be the quartermaster, Grumiah, 
shouting something in a heavy Southlander accent.  “You!  Mage!” he pointed at 
the slightly plump mage that Zyn had seen hurling earlier, who now perked his 
head up.  “Get over hear and recharge this witchlight of yours!”
 
            Zyn couldn’t see much because of the ever decreasing light and the 
storm’s fury, but it seemed that the mage in question was quite exasperated by 
the request even as he hurried over.  “Thi-this really is not my specialty,” he 
tried to say in a voice dripping with aristocratic accent.
 
            “Don’t really care, just make it so we don’t have to grope around 
in the dark or this storm will get [i]really[/i] bad up here,” Grumiah said.  
 
            Looking out past the deck, Zyn could see that it was just so.  
Beyond the pitiful light on the boat it was pure inky blackness, dark enough it 
seemed to swallow them all up like a floating ember and snuff them out.  
Staring out into what for all intents and purposes was an eternal void, he 
couldn’t help but wonder… wonder how such a small thing as he could exist in 
the midst of a colossal force of nature as this maelstrom.  It didn’t make any 
sense; how such insignificance and such significance coexist?
 
            The light on deck momentarily increased before sputtering and then 
resuming its previous intensity.  The quartermaster looked over the witchlight 
that was held fast to the deck by some kind of magical placeholder and nodded 
his head and then spun around to do whatever it was quartermasters did in such 
a storm.  
 
            “You know, for such a buffoon captain that we’ve got that guy seems 
remarkably competent,” Zyn said, pointing at the fading form of the 
quartermaster as he distanced himself from the pathetic glow of the light.  
 
            Lorian shrugged.  “In my experience such positions as his are 
filled by the sort that usually knows what they’re doing.”
 
            Zyn could only snort in response.  “How the pagan hells do people 
like our esteemed captain get into their positions then, the most [i]senior[/i] 
position, the one that should be the hardest to get?” he asked derisively.  
“Guy probably got in through some family connections or some other crap rather 
than anything he deserved.”  Zyn’s negative assessment wasn’t helped by the 
fact that he had seen their esteemed captain flagrantly ignore the advice of 
just about anyone who talked to him, including Grumiah who as ship’s 
quartermaster should have had much more influence on the ship’s heading.
 
            “Probably,” was all that Lorian said in reply.  A long period of 
silence followed, excepting the constant din of the storm of course.  Zyn eyed 
his mentor, noting the one armed man’s calm demeanor that stood in blatant 
contrast to the surrounding squall.  
 
            “Damnit old man, how can you do that?” Zyn asked with a small 
heaping of irritation.
 
            “What?” Lorian asked nonchalantly.
 
            “That!  It’s storming like the end of the world and you’re just 
standing there like... like... you’re just standing there!”
 
            The graying painter probably would have stroked his beard if he 
hadn’t already been using his own hand to still himself against the constant 
rocking.  Of course, he didn’t say anything, something that Zyn figured he 
would but it stoked his temper even more.  “I don’t see a reason to get all 
worked up about all of it?”
 
            “Well just why not?” Zyn demanded.
 
            Lorian gave another of his damnable shrugs.  “Because I’m just used 
to it, I guess.  Sacrificing a bit of my peace of mind really isn’t that tall 
an order in the grand scheme of things.”
 
            The younger man gave an incredulous look that was impossible to 
mistake even in the meager light and battering constant rain.  “You can’t 
possibly tell me you’re not at all unfazed by... this,” he said, pointing at 
the storm around them.  
 
            “Eh, a little bit, but peace of mind is an easy thing to give up 
once you’re used to it.”  Lorian smiled, “Unlike, say, that little incident at 
the docks two weeks ago.”
 
            Zyn had no patience or desire to revisit that incident in the 
slightest.  “Hey, that was [i]your[/i] fault; I made it clear I didn’t want to 
go anywhere near that guy and his ‘collection.’  You were-“
 
            “Making a point that I’m able to make again now,” Lorian 
interrupted.  “And that’s the difference between your reaction then and my 
reaction now; it’s a difference of how much peace of mind either of us is 
willing to give up.  Your problem, much as it seems otherwise at times, is not 
that you complain too much but that you [i]think[/i] too much.  Quit dwelling 
on why something happened and how and all that; your problem is you wear 
yourself into a hole.  So what that we’re on the middle of the ocean?  We’re 
here, and there’s not really anything that’s going to change that.”
 
            Flabbergasted and frustrated with this pointless argument that was 
going nowhere, Zyn spun around and walked away, cursing again as he nearly lost 
his footing thanks to the heaving deck.  Again, his gaze was drawn off by the 
tumultuous ocean that surrounded them on all sides, leaving them likely 
thousands of miles from another human being.  He couldn’t help but ask himself 
why he was out here.  He nominally knew the answer, though that still didn’t 
account for where they were at this particular moment.  If all had gone 
according to plan they would have be much farther north at this point, 
somewhere near the coast of the Desert of Dreaming or Ainador.  But no, thanks 
to that fat puss bag of a captain and his dimwitted crew of jack offs, they 
were Eli knew where in the middle of the freaking ocean!  
 
            Zyn was about to complain again to Lorian when a burst of lightning 
briefly illuminated the frothing sea around them, and in that brief instant Zyn 
thought he saw something.  Squinting his eyes, he tried to catch it even though 
it was pitch black again.  However, his scanning was rewarded when another 
burst of lightning showed a mountainous wave coming right at them.  
 
            “...Oh hell no.”
 
            “What?” Lorian asked, undoubtedly convinced it was something 
trivial.
 
            “That!” he shouted, pointing into the darkness, “there’s a huge 
wave coming right for us!”
 
            His voice was loud enough that it caught the attention of much of 
the crew on deck.  “Are you sure?” one of them, Bresan if Zyn remembered his 
name right, asked.
 
            “What, you gonna doubt me or are you gonna get ready for wave the 
size of a mountain to hit us?” Zyn demanded.
 
            The plump mage had been drawn over by Zyn’s exclamations and tried 
to get a good look himself.  “I don’t see any...” he began.  In that moment, 
however, another flash of lightning clearly lit up the oncoming wall of water 
that was rapidly approaching from the port side.  
 
            “Shit!”
 
            Panic grabbed hold of everyone present as they all ran screaming 
and yelling off in separate directions.  Zyn’s breath quickened and his heart 
raced as he tried to think quickly about one thing: survival.  But such 
thoughts didn’t get far when the entire vessel was slammed and Zyn was bashed 
and immersed by the wall of seawater, casting everything into darkness.
 
 
*          *          *
 
 
            It was the same; it always was.
 
            It was a cosmic battle that was no cosmic battle, but carried 
itself on as one, with the blatant exception of refusing to define itself.  No 
matter how hard Zyn tried, he could never catch what was going on.
 
            To his left, a knife; to his right, darkness.  Or sometimes the 
darkness was to his left and the knife was to his right.  Occasionally one was 
above and the other below or even in front and behind.  The one thing that 
remained consistent was that they were on opposite sides.  
 
            Were they coming at him?  Squinting, he tried to discern the 
vagueness of motion that should not have been there, but then it seemed to 
stop.  Wait, was he heading towards it?  Zyn looked down at his feet only to 
realize he wasn’t standing on solid ground.  That certainly wasn’t normal, but 
oddly enough it didn’t seem terribly relevant either.  Instead, his pondering 
was left to focus on the two choices before him.  
 
            They were choices, right?  That was what this was, right?  This 
wasn’t the first time he had seen this, and it was unlikely to be the last, so 
what was he supposed to do?
 
            [i]What are any of us supposed to do?[/i]
 
            Zyn snapped around, but as he figured, nothing was to be seen.  
Just... grey, indistinct grey in all directions.  He didn’t know how, but he 
knew that he wouldn’t find the source of the sudden interjection.
 
            He had been here before.
 
            But what was he supposed to do?  In this surreal netherworld it 
pretty much happened the way it decided it was going to happen.  If this were 
reality, he could truly ponder the significance of it, analyze it, figure it 
out. 
 
            But of course this was a dream, and as soon as he realized this, it 
all vanished.
                                          

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