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- From: k113651@lehtori.cc.tut.fi (Karhu Jouni)
- Newsgroups: alt.pub.cloven-shield
- Subject: [2xAr] Having dinner
- Date: 24 Jan 1993 19:03:28 +0200
- Organization: Tampere University of Technology, Computing Centre
- Lines: 120
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <1jui50INNkad@cc.tut.fi>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: cc.tut.fi
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- [quick update: Arliana suggested she and Armas move to a table...]
-
- Armas nodded slightly and followed Arliana to the nearest table. Simulta-
- neously they sat down across from each other, briefly making eye contact. After
- a few moments of awkward silence, a barmaid approached the table and said,
- "What can I get you?"
- Armas motioned to Arliana--he was still apparently enamored by her stunning
- appearance--and she quietly requested, "Whatever meat you have, and a fresh
- tankard of ale."
- The barmaid then looked at Armas, who ordered, "Whatever WHITE meat you
- have, rice if you have it, and a large cup of water." Clearly the barmaid was
- surprised at this strange request from this strange-looking man, for her eyes
- widened and she gave Armas an inquisitive look. Armas, noting her uneasiness,
- growled, "Feed yourself with what you like...let others do the same."
- The girl's face turned white and twisted into a look of shock. WHen she re-
- composed herself, she nodded and whispered, "Yes, my lord," and rushed off to
- the kitchen.
- Armas resumed his gaze on Arliana; she cast her eyes down for a moment, then
- looked up with confidence and met his eyes. "Have you been here before?"
- "No."
- (pause) "Nor have I. My wish is to see all lands and experience all I can,
- so I travel quite a bit." Armas simply nodded. He continuously scanned Arliana, he had never seen such a beautiful, well-defined woman.
- Though his intense stare made Arliana a bit uncomfortable, she then asked,
- "Then what, may I ask, brings you to this inn, have you business here?"
- After brief contemplation, Armas replied, "It was time for me to leave my
- home. My business is where I go." Through his gruff visage he cracked a tiny
- smile and continued, "Right now, I am right where I want to be."
- Arliana's cheeks flushed slightly, but she maintained her stoic expression.
- She would have liked a more specific answer (she had always been a very curious
- sort), but decided that this man was not one to press. After all, had he
- wanted to divulge anything more, he would have. It really wasn't her business.
- "Do you gamble?" she then asked, trying to sustain a conversation.
- "No, I do not believe in luck."
- "Well, neither do I, as a matter of fact." By this time Arliana was very
- ill at ease because of Armas's short answers. He was not hostile or cold, he
- was simply a man of few words. And he kept STARING at her.
- Arliana looked around the inn, inwardly wondering why many of the patrons
- were shuffling off to the back of the inn. And then there was the strange man
- with a blue-green tint about him, even in his long, full beard. Eventually
- Arliana's eyes again fell upon Armas's. She decided to see what she could dis-
- cover about him there. On the surface, she saw white eyes with tiny pupils,
- black as night. After a closer look she noticed that indeed there were irises,
- though they were nearly colorless. 'Behind' his eyes she saw a true sense of
- honor. And then, as if she had made a forbidden discovery, she saw a cloud of
- what resembled mist begin to swirl around and around and around...
- Arliana snapped back into awareness when the barmaid abruptly placed all the
- food on the table. She waited for a sign of approval, then left as quickly as
- she came. Silently they began to eat, and nothing was said throughout dinner.
-
- Finally, when they finished, Arliana thought she might try again to open a con-
- versation. Though she realised she was at risk of being told to mind her busi-
- ness, she took a deep breath and said, "I am curious as to where you come from,
- and what manner of traditions accompany the markings and ornamentation on your
- face." Her eyes scanned the strange tattoos on his eyelids and lips, but most
- of all she focused on the rings piercing his cheeks and coming out of his mouth
- Armas seemed unoffended and unaffected by this question, and to Arliana's
- pleasant surprise, answered thus:
- "These rings, they have two uses. Ahem. For example, in a ritual duel, the
- duellists are bound together from these rings with a chain of about an arm's
- length." Arliana waited to hear the other use, but Armas continued, "The tat-
- toos are symbols of coming-of-age rituals. A warrior is tattooed more and more
- during his life, always on the sensitive parts of his body." Armas then showed
- Arliana a small tattoo on his left palm. "This one I earned when I first
- managed to wound my teacher in a swrod-against-hands combat."
- Throughout his explanation, Arliana's eyes widened in fascination. She was
- most intrigued by this foreign man, and she realised she had much respect for
- him. Now that she was feeling a bit more relaxed, she said, "When I was very
- young, my father began to teach me to use a sword. He taught me to defend and
- protect myself. You see, my mother died shortly after my birth." At this point
- she fought back a tear, but kept her composure and continued.
- "So, my father was left the task of raising me alone." Armas said nothing,
- but it was clear he listened intently--his eyes, as ever, wre fixed on her.
- Arliana continued, "Many thing more than sword skill did my father teach me.
- Among them wre objectivity, honor and respect for all life. I have killed
- before, and would do so again. But only if my life--or someone's dear to me--
- was in danger." Referring to previous recent happenings at the inn, Arliana
- added, "I do not kill on a whim or to prove a point. That is not what my
- father taught me."
- At this point Armas interrupted. "I consider the previous killings dishonor
- able. When I killed Kaarle, the man who was hunting me, I used my hands. It
- would not have been an honorable killing had I used my sword. Only when the
- fighters are equal is the killing honorable. When I fought my teacher, I had
- a sword. He didn't. For years we were not equal...I was weaker. So he could
- not kill me. But when the day I earned this tattoo came," he again pointed to
- his palm, "I could have died. I did not. You see, my clan believes that if
- you teach a man to fight with his hands, then giving him a sword makes him a
- giant."
- Arliana agreed, and was glad that Armas finally seemed less distant. It was
- then she asked to see his sword.
- It was a crudely forged sword, though made of a very fine metal. Arliana's
- eyes grew wide; she could see its solidity and decided that she would not want
- to meet the blade in a battle. (A friendly match, perhaps--Arliana was always
- looking for a good spar--but definitely not in a true battle.) The grip of the
- sword was about 35 cm long, the blade itself 10 cm wide and about 70 cm long.
- THough it was one-edged, the blunt edge was fashioned into 2 cm long sawlike
- teeth. Not a very 'pretty' sword, but clearly it was of the highest quality.
- Arliana then--with her left hand--drew her own blade. While Armas looked
- upon it, she warned, "Do not touch it, else the results may be fatal. It is a
- magicked blade." Nodding, Armas scanned it, seeing the elaborate runes on the
- hilt, noting the strange silvery-violet hue of the metal. Though he said
- nothing (a quality which Arliana was used to by now) he seemed to approve.
- Arliana smiled at his approval, for few men take her seriously as a warrior.
- She thought to herself, "I think we are going to get along just fine..."
- As Arliana resheathed her sword, Armas looked at her thoughtfully for a
- moment. "It would be interesting to cross blades some time or another. Never
- have I seen a woman carrying a sword... and such a sword."
- Arliana's smile widened, as she responded. "It would be indeed. You just
- name the time and the place and I'll be there."
- "Yes...", she thought, "we are really going to get along fine..."
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- This story is a collaboration of Donna L. Koczaja (main author) and
- Jouni Karhu (some dialogue). The story continues.... :)
- --
- 'Listen! I have something to say! | JJ Karhu k113651@cc.tut.fi
- It's better to burn out, | 'The Immoral Immortal' \o
- than to fade away! | -=========================|xxxxxxo
- /o
-