Here is a new Metamor Keep story!

   Chris
   The Lurking Fox




Journeys and Destinations
By Christian Okane
 
 
Takes place after http://metamorkeep.com/story/Taking_Account.php   in April 
708.
Also read http://metamorkeep.com/story/Pondering_the_Past.phpfor more 
information
 
 
   Edmund had kept the retinuesmall. Only forty soldiers and brothers would 
accompany him on the trip. Thosewere enough to scare off any bandits or 
raiders. Along with them were three wagonsfilled with supplies. At the head of 
this small group a woman in full armorcarried a pole from which hung a banner. 
The banner was of dark blue and had agold Follower Cross on it. It marked this 
small group as an official processionof the Order of Protectors. While their 
weapons and size would keep mostbandits at bay the banner would scare off any 
meddling or overly hostilenobles. It was also sure to attract a lot of 
attention.
 
   Edmund could go covertly, justhimself and a few others and easily and 
quietly make the trip. He had done suchthings before in the past but the 
paladin wanted people to know that this was agroup of the Order of Protectors. 
Letting all know that the order was in thearea and there to stay. It was sure 
to stir up trouble and it was an unsubtlemessage to Lord Donel that the order 
would oppose the man's ambitiousexpansion.
 
 
*******************
 
 
  At Castel Roegh theKnightmaster of the Order of Protectors was also preparing 
for a journey. Hewas traveling with a far larger retinue. Besides himself there 
was a closeguard detachment of twenty Knightbrothers. another one hundred Lay 
swords andtwo wandering Brothers (whose special skills were always useful). All 
were tohelp protect the two hundred lay brothers and servants and ten wagons 
full ofthe records and material that went along with running a large 
organization likethe Order of Protectors. Also two more wagons came along for 
the food andsupplies needed for the trip.
 
   In spite of the short time andthe number of people involved. things went 
remarkably well. Still there weresome issues. There just weren't enough wagons 
to haul all the needed material.So after unloading at the destination the 
wagons would make a second trip. PatriciaSamantha Fitz Hues (wife of Lay 
brother Joseph Fitz Hues) was in her thirdtrimester. No one wanted to risk 
mother or unborn child so the couple wouldremain behind. Their skills with the 
bow would be missed but all wished themwell.
 
   The distance involved intraveling from Cantel Roegh to Chough castle and 
then on to Kelewair didn’toverly worry the Knightmaster. Even though it meant 
traveling across most of  the width of the Southern Midlands. The roadsbetween 
the two points were well maintained and the weather was good.
 
   What worried Kenward was who theywould meet along the way. They were 
traveling through an area that was highlypopulated and had recently suffered 
through the brutal civil war. One of theafter effects was this very journey. He 
knew the route. As a Knight of theOrder of Protectors he had traveled it many 
times. There were few places hehadn’t gone over the years of serving the order.
 
   The Southern Midlands like allof the Midlands was badly divided religiously. 
Half the population wasLightbringer, a pagan faith with a bewildering array of 
many gods and goddesses.They were diametrically opposed to the monotheistic 
faith of the Followers andthe two groups had clashed and fought many times over 
the centuries. Of theremaining half most were Follower but a good portion were 
the misguidedRebuilders. A group who, although they worshiped the Great One 
opposed. (oftenviolently) on HOW to worship him. With some of the Rebuilder 
sects it was hardto tell that they weren’t Ecclesia. So trivial were the 
differences from theTrue faith. But some were very odd. Even in more peaceful 
times it made for atrying trip. With tensions and emotions running high after 
the civil war itmade it all the more difficult. It was why he was taking along 
so many Knightbrothersand Lay swords. Their combat skills might be needed.
 
   He was placing great hope inthe two Wandering Brothers. Both brothers 
Sedgewick and Aelfrick were paladins.Being a knightbrother of the order was 
difficult. Being a priest was equallydifficult. But a real paladin mixed both 
the rules and measures of a knightwith the vows of a priest. It made for a 
difficult path that few could follow butthose difficulties had their own 
rewards. They could dispel the undead, healthe sick and injured and accomplish 
other impressive feats of faith. Both had along history of working with people. 
Of being able to solve problems by wordand prayer rather than by sword and bow. 
Something all too rare in theMidlands.
 
 
*******************
 
 
 
   The City of Laselle itself wasdecently if unimaginatively laid out. Its city 
walls were square with a gate oneach of its four walls. The western wall hugged 
close to the river that broughtso much trade. The western road left the western 
gate and crossed the river onan overly grandiose bridge of stone. It then ran 
arrow straight to the sea ofStars. The road itself was an old empire 
construction and had stood up to thecenturies well. The road that ran from the 
east gate went continued east andeventually reached the city of Midtown. But it 
didn’t stop here. Instead itcontinued onward before ending in the town of 
Medalia.
 
   Sitting at the mouth of theMetamor valley meant that as many times as the 
valley had been invaded anddestroyed, So had Laselle. It left all of its 
citizens a touch paranoid and itswalls were tall, thick and studded with many 
towers.
 
   Laselle was geographically tothe west of Midtown but it was politically 
midway between Metamor Keep andMidtown. The Duke and Lord Donel were at odds 
for control of the importanttown. There are two factions that vie for control 
of the city government. Itshowed in the treatment Stealth received. Some people 
were friendly andhelpful, while others showed hatred. Most seemed to waver in 
between showingsomething between indifference, disgust and nervousness. But all 
were quitehappy to take his coin when he showed interest in buying something. 
Stealth wasnot here to shop. He was here to see what the town was like and to 
meetsomeone.
 
   Edmund had stopped his smallgroup outside the city in a small grove of trees 
just out of sight of Laselle.“The order has sent a Lay brother as a guide. He’s 
meeting us in Laselle. Iwant you to find him and bring him here.”
 
   “That’s it?” Stealth asked.
 
   The paladin shook his head.“No. We have heard rumors of,” he paused for a 
moment. “Problems between thepeople of Laselle and Keepers.”
 
   Stealth tilted his head to oneside. “Problems? You mean Keepers being 
attacked? Or just being rude.”
 
   “We’re not sure,” Edmundresponded. “Mostly word of harassment but no open 
attacks.”
 
   “You want me to find out,”Stealth responded. “Go and see what occurs?”
 
   Edmund patted his friend onthe shoulder. “I know that you have the common 
sense to avoid trouble and theskills to get out of it if something happens.”
 
   Moving at a moderate pace (makingsure to not too fast or too slow) so as to 
not attract attention the cheetah madehis way through the town. He would 
occasionally pause at a shop or at somevendor but he always kept his true 
destination in mind.
 
   It stood in the center of thecity where the two old, empire roads crossed. 
Literally. It was a tall, squatrectangular building at least forty or fifty 
feet high. It was made of a toughstone that had weathered to a smoky gray 
through centuries of battering byweather and armies. At first Stealth thought 
it was a massive gate tower. Itsmost unusual feature being that it had gates on 
all four sides instead of justthe usual two.  Massive, thick woodendoors bound 
with iron stood open but were ready to be closed at a moment’snotice. But as he 
got closer he saw things that confused him. 
 
   The battlements on top were ofstone of a different color and were obviously 
a much latter addition. The wallsshould have been smooth but they were covered 
with nooks, niches and alcoves.All manner of things that recessed into the 
stone or protruded from it. Thereseemed to be no rhyme or reason to them but as 
he got closer Stealth saw thatmost were empty but several held the battered 
remains of what might have oncebeen statues. Above, below and alongside those 
were the remains of writing inold Suiel, carved into the stonework. None of the 
writing was complete. Justparts and pieces of words and sentences that made no 
sense.
 
   Over the gate in front of himwas a particularly large niche. It held a 
battered, stone torso that was barelyrecognizable as being human. It had no 
head or arms and just two chipped andcracked bits below that might be legs. 
Above the niche was writing in large,bold lettering. “HAIL EMPOROR TAGIL . . . 
CONQUER . . .“ Nothing else was legible.
 
   Stealth looked around. The plazawas filled with people headed about on their 
own errands. Some were simplymoving through going to places unmentioned. Some 
were browsing the shops andbooths that lined the edges of the open area. All of 
them seemed intent ontheir own business and paying him no mind.
 
   It was a quiet sound that cameto his sensitive feline ears. He heard it over 
the hustle and bustle of thetown around him. It was the soft rusting of leaves. 
A sound so out of place ina town. A shiver ran down his spine. Stealth slowly 
turned around and lookedagain at the monument.
 
   Gone was the battered graytower of stone. In it’s place was a tall, towering 
victory monument clothed allin white marble. Its sides were covered with 
statues of proud, courageous,legionnaires killing tall warriors who all seemed 
to be naked and wielding longswords and spears.
 
   The thick wooden doors thatcould close the archways was gone, He looked up 
at the place over the arch atthe niche. There stood the statue of a tall man 
dressed in the full ceremonialarmor of a Legion general. He had a proud, regal 
look on his face. “ALL HAILEMPOROR TAGILLINUS CAVARILLI CONQUEROR OF 
MARACTANIA” were the words over thestatue.
 
   “Are you all right sir?”
 
   Stealth turned away from thestrange tower and looked in the direction of the 
voice.
 
   Standing next to him was a manslightly taller than himself. He was black 
haired and had a full beard andmustache. He was wearing a shirt and breeches of 
a dark brown and had on tallboots. Over the shirt he had a short coat of dark 
blue. In the center was agold Follower cross. A short sword in a plain scabbard 
hung from his belt and abox was strapped to his back. 
 
   Stealth turned and looked backat the tower. It had returned to it’s modern, 
battered and worn appearance. “I. .  I was just looking at the monument.”
 
   “It was built to celebrateemperor Tagillinus’ conquest of what’s now 
Northern Midlands in -570,” the manexplained. “This is the place where the last 
Centli chieftain Louerniossurrendered.”
 
   Stealth gave a chirp oflaughter. “It’s pretty battered.”
 
   “It’s over a thousand yearsold,” the man responded. “It’s a miracle that 
it’s survived at all.”
 
   “It was pretty impressive backbefore the invasion.” Stealth commented.
 
   “It’s still impressive now.”The man put his right hand to his chest and 
bowed. “I am Lay brother Emile Mosin.Your guide.”
 
   The cheetah returned thegesture. “I am Stealth and I’m glad to meet you.”
 
   “Brother Delacot is close by?”Emile asked.
 
   “Just outside of town,” Stealthresponded. “Please follow me.” He turned and 
looked at the monument and saw itwas still in it’s old, worn form. Then he 
turned and hustled off down thestreet.
 
 
*************
 
 
   In the small tent that Edmundand Stealth shared a council was held. Aside 
from the two cheetahs Terrie wasthere. Also with them was Emile.Stretched out 
on the table in front of them was a map of the Northern Midlands.
 
   “Which way do we go now?”Terrant asked. “We can follow the main route and go 
east but that takes usthrough Midtown. Lord Donel is sure to stop us. I know 
you want to confront himbut that is a taking him on at his strongest.”
 
   “We could avoid Midtown,”Stealth responded. “But how? The main road goes 
through Midtown.”
 
   “I was born and raised in thearea,” Emile said. “I know every road and trail 
and there are ways aroundMidtown.”
 
   “We can’t go east,” Stealthsaid. “So we must take the road south or west. 
The west road leads to the Seaof Stars and eventually Menth and Soran.”
 
   “And south?” Edmund asked. Hetraced the road south of the city with his 
finger. The river flowed south outof Laselle and the road followed it. Some 
miles south the river branched intotwo smaller ones and road split too. Each 
smaller road following one of theriver branches. One branch meandered west and 
eventually reached the Sea ofStars. The other branch went south and ended in a 
large green spot.
 
   “That is Tearmann marsh,”Emile commented.
 
   “I’ve traveled the main road manytimes but I’ve never left the road. Never 
been in that marsh.” Terry said.
 
   “No reason you should,” thescout answered. “The road detours around it for a 
very good reason. Travelthere is difficult at best. It’s even parts earth, 
water and mud. Lots and lotsof mud. Travel by walking or riding isn’t possible 
because of the mud andwater. But the water is too shallow to really use large 
boats.”
 
   “How are we supposed to getacross?” Edmund asked.
 
   “There is a trail that picksup where the empire road ends,” the Lay brother 
commented. “It crosses usingthe few bits of hard ground that there are. For the 
rest it uses a causeway, alow bridge, to cross over the worse parts.”
 
   “What is the causeway like?”Terry asked.
 
   “It’s wood and about five tosix feet wide,” Emile answered.
 
   Terrant made a painedexpression. “That’s barely wider than the wagons.”
 
   “What happens if we run into acaravan going the other way?” Stealth asked.
 
   “There are various islandsalong the path. Some large enough to hold the 
whole group. “The trail leavesthe marsh here,” Emile said and pointed to a spot 
south of Midtown. It thenheads east and ends at a spot south of Medalia.” He 
tapped a spot on the map tothe south of Midtown, close to the Great Barrier 
Range. “There’s a small roadthat heads south from there.”
 
   “What’s that road like?”Edmund asked.
 
   The lay brother traced hishand along a faint line on the map. It hugged 
close to the mountains followingeach curve and twist of the terrain. “Been a 
long time since I was on it. It’snot paved like the main road but it was in 
good shape. It skirts the mountainsbefore it ends in Kormley. It’s not straight 
like the main road and it will addseveral full days to the trip.”
 
   “I don’t mind the extra timeinvolved,” Edmund said calmly. “But I will not 
skulk around in the wilderness.I want people to know of this trip.”
 
   Emile was quiet for a momentand seemed to be counting to himself. Ticking 
off numbers with his fingers.“We’ll pass through at least eight, good sized 
villages.” He tapped severalspots of the map. Each representing a town or 
village.
 
 
*******************
 
 
   They left before dawn whenmost of Laselle was either still asleep or just 
waking up. The group packedquietly and quickly. Then they headed south, moving 
quickly but not tooquickly. They didn’t want to be seen as fleeing. But they 
also wanted as fewpeople as possible to see them at all.
 
   Dawn found them several milessouth of the city and moving along a road whose 
stone had been laid down almosta millennia before. Roads branched off at 
irregular intervals heading indifferent directions but the main road continued 
south following the riverclosely.
 
   Finally, they came to wherethe river branched into two separate parts as did 
the road. One branch with itsroad went west to the Sea of Stars. The other 
continued south.
 
   The passage of the centurieshad worn the stones smooth but they were still 
strong and the road flat. Theypassed mile stones at regular intervals that 
marked the distance fromsomewhere. But the numbers shown didn’t match the miles 
to Laselle or Midtown.The further they south they went the higher the numbers 
became.
 
   They passed small towns andvillages interspersed between fields of wheat and 
corn as they traveled. Thepeople there gazing at them with a mix of curiosity 
and confusion. The villagesgrew smaller and further between until they vanished 
leaving just woods andfields laying fallow and returning to the wild.
 
   The Suielman road simply endedin a field of knee high marsh grass. They 
could plainly see where the graypaving stones simply stopped. It wasn’t that 
the rest of the pavement had beenlifted and stolen long ago. The road had been 
cleanly and deliberately stoppedat that point. The stones ended in a neat 
straight edge. A trail of gravel continuedonward as it wound its way south 
quickly disappearing into brush and low treesin the distance.
 
   “Ahead is the marsh,” Emilesaid solemnly. “They say the empire engineers got 
this far before they realizedthey couldn’t get through the marsh.”
 
   Dasan knelt and felt theground. “I’d believe it. Even after a small rain 
this would turn to mud.”
 
   “Knee deep mud,” Emileresponded.
 
   “Can we cross it?” Terrantasked. “Will the wagons make it?”
 
   “They should unless it getsworse,” the scout answered. “Small groups and 
caravans use this route all thetime. Mostly to avoid paying tolls.”
 
   “It remains gravel and earthtill it reaches the trees,” Emile said. “Then it 
crosses the swamp on a woodencauseway.”
 
 
*******************
 
 
   The marsh didn’t suddenlyappear. Instead it slowly crept up on them as they 
moved. The grass around thetrail gradually got higher and thicker while the 
ground grew softer and wetter.Walking on the trail was hard enough with each 
step being more labored. Thehorses pulling the wagon had to strain more. Any 
step off the trail would seethe person’s leg sink into the mire. Finally, the 
gravel and dirt of the trail gaveway to roughhewn planks which squeaked and 
squished when pressure was appliedto them. The planks gradually lifted off the 
ground, held aloft by pilings madeof tree trunks.
 
   The marsh itself was a mix ofswamp, streams, slow moving rivulets, rivers. 
small islands and mud humps thatwere an equal mix of earth and water. 
Interspersed with all of that were islandsof grass and brush and dense stands 
of trees. Any movement through that wasimpossible. A person would sink up to 
their hips in mud that seemed to beeverywhere. The only reason the group could 
make any progress at all was thecauseway which ran arrow straight through the 
marsh.
 
   The going was slow as the boardswere slick and covered with moss in spots 
but they were generally sound. Worsestill the causeway was only slightly wider 
than the wagon wheels.
 
   “This is a great place for anambush,” Stealth commented. “Out in the open on 
this causeway we’ve got nowhereto hide.” He looked at the marsh all around and 
below them. He spotted ahundred places where someone could hide.
 
   “No need to worry,” Emile saidcheerfully. “The locals won’t bother us. So 
long as we stick to the causeway.”
 
   “Locals?” Edmund asked as helooked around. All he saw was mud, trees, waist 
deep water, more mud andplants. “People live here?”
 
   The lay brother nodded hishead. “Oh yes. Have for millennia. They say when 
the empire first conquered theNorthern Midlands Centli survivors fled here. 
Centuries later when the Suielmanempire collapsed their survivors fled here as 
well. To escape the Lutins.”
 
   “Certainly a place no armywould go,” Adelyte commented.
 
   “And I see lots of birds andfish to hunt and eat,” Dasan added. “Lots of 
plants too. You could easilysurvive here. So long as you don’t mind the wet.”
 
   Just then a flock of birdsspooked by their noise took off and flew away 
squawking their fears.




End part 1





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