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- Path: sparky!uunet!stanford.edu!rutgers!igor.rutgers.edu!aramis.rutgers.edu!kjc
- From: kjc@aramis.rutgers.edu (Kelly J. Cooper)
- Newsgroups: alt.pub.dragons-inn
- Subject: Jameson W. Walker meets [Mage Guild]
- Keywords: you got your JWW in my [MG]!! you got your [MG] in my JWW!!
- Message-ID: <Jan.22.19.15.30.1993.14766@aramis.rutgers.edu>
- Date: 23 Jan 93 00:15:30 GMT
- Organization: LCSR @ Rutgers University
- Lines: 211
-
-
-
- "Age appears best in four things: old wood to burn, old wine to drink,
- old friends to trust, and old authors to read."
- - Francis Bacon
-
-
- The Archmage Nescie wandered through Generica, lost in thought.
- Starting from the Mages' Guild, he first strolled absent-mindedly
- north along the Arcade of Fountains to Glorshanned Keep, then turned
- back at the gate and headed southward again. A patrol of guards
- riding to the Keep were startled as they and their mounts were lifted
- bodily into the air and leap-frogged over Nescie. He continued in a
- straight line underneath them past the Mages' Guild and the Great
- Library, muttering softly to himself. He paused on the huge
- Ceruputhon River bridge, watching the river barges, skiffs, and larger
- sea-going ships going by. Almost without thinking, Nescie created a
- water elemental from the swirling current, left it a sullen snowman on
- the shore, and continued across the bridge, towards the Plaza of
- Glittering Steel.
-
- Shuffling through the crowded plaza like a sleepwalker, he was
- about to turn westwards when something began to nag at the corner of
- his awareness. There was something -- no, someone familiar somewhere
- nearby. He -- no, she was... Nescie blinked, shaking himself fully
- awake. Who...? Wha...? A flash of brown hair, that face... couldn't
- quite tell, but a gesture, and his eyes were like those of the eagles.
- Hey -- no, it couldn't be, could it?
-
- Then he was yelling, running through the crowd.
-
- * * *
-
- Shaking more than she realized, Jameson nearly collapsed against
- the bar. Littlefair regarded her with a certain amount of alarm and
- reached out a meaty hand to steady her shoulder. Through her blurred
- perceptions, a mug of something steaming suddenly appeared in his
- other hand and he brought it to her face. She drank deeply and felt
- some of the cold being driven from her body. Cold. She was cold.
- She hadn't noticed. Abruptly she began to shiver almost
- uncontrollably. Another hot mug was pressed into her hands and she
- wrapped both hands around its welcomed warmth. Hands, warm hands,
- guided her and she was soon sitting near heat. Gradually, gradually,
- the dull roaring of the fire separated itself from the quiet murmur of
- the inhabitants of the inn. Her vision resolved itself, pushing back
- the unfocused blur at the edge of her sight until it was nearly gone.
- She looked up into the worried gaze of a plump woman who reminded
- Jameson of the inn keeper. She decided this woman was probably his
- wife. Tears sprung up in her eyes at the thought. Odd. She blinked
- them back and smiled. The woman's expression immediately brightened
- and she called something positive across the room. Then she made
- clucking sounds, tucked a blanket around Jameson's legs, said
- something soothing and bustled off.
-
- After a moment, Jameson noticed the voices around her were
- babbling. Or rather, she wasn't concentrating on parsing this
- particular language. Thinking carefully, she brought it back and
- suddenly could hear all the conversations at once. Wincing, she made
- another effort, this time to restore her filters. Then, picking bits
- of sentences, she could hear clearly that things were business as
- usual. One or two men at a table to her left were nursing mugs and
- glancing at her covertly. She heard words like "fading" and "flicker"
- and "ghost" and realized she must have been incorporeal for a while.
- How frustrating. One of them leered at the others and stood, making
- as if to come over to her. He was pelted by a stale roll from an
- anonymous patron on the other side of the room. Distracted
- immediately, he surged angrily in that direction rather than hers.
- The tone of Listener's music shifted almost imperceptibly. His
- companions dragged him back down to sit on their bench and began
- discussing some bets they had lodged with on a local game to take
- their friend's mind off everything else. Gradually, he acquiesced.
-
- Leaning forward, she carefully took her bag off her shoulders so
- she could sit more comfortably. Setting it on her lap, she leaned
- back. This was nice. She felt herself relaxing, absorbing the heat
- into numb places with a pleasant tingling feeling. She was far enough
- away from the fire that its blaze didn't parch her, yet close enough
- for comfort. How long she stayed like that, she didn't know. When
- she began to feel drowsy, she tottered to her feet, and, holding her
- bag tightly in both arms, made her way slowly to her room.
-
- She slept like the dead and woke to bright skies. For a while,
- she lay quietly on the bed, thinking. So far she had accomplished
- nothing in this town other than discovering the high level power flux
- that was woven into the fabric of reality here. That and the fact
- that she hadn't entirely resolved her own feelings about the last
- death. Sighing, she rubbed her eyes gently and ran both hands through
- her hair. It was pretty tangled. With an impatient snort, she
- decided first priority was a good cleaning. But second? She had
- wanted to return Drummer's clubs to him. She scowled. Obviously fate
- had something else in mind for her in that direction... Realizing
- that, she felt her forehead clear. She was almost stunned by the
- clarity of her relief. Of course. With power flow this strong there
- was obviously going to be a variety of forces tugging each other to
- play the balance in one direction or another. Ok, something wanted
- her to do ... something. She frowned again. Great line of thought.
- Very productive.
-
- Swinging her legs off the bed, she decided that whatever
- happened, happened. This was all leading up to something. Her
- glimpses into that which was reality and that which was the rest of
- the universe, her memories coming back with such clarity ... both
- might perhaps be a way of preparing her. She shrugged, shuffled into
- her boots, leaving them unlaced, and tromped downstairs. After a
- brief wait for the washroom, she cleaned herself quickly, shouldered
- her pack and left the inn. Again, she stopped outside the doorway,
- slightly to the left to be out of the way of human traffic. This
- time, she was stubbornly set against being dragged back into visions.
- She turned right, slowly. No, that felt wrong. Strange. She turned
- back left, until she was facing straight away from the inn. Better.
- But not quite. She began to turn left. Much better. She faced
- directly west. Excellent. She continued to turn, to face the inn
- itself. No, that was definitely wrong. She turned back to the west.
- Yes. She started walking, smiling slightly to herself and humming
- softly. The snow had mostly melted with the morning. She had heard
- it almost never snowed in Generica. She kicked through the slush
- smoothly in her well-practiced swinging walk.
-
- The feeling of surety left her when she reached the Plaza of
- Glittering Steel. She slowed and stopped, uncertain. Looking around,
- the slight frown returned to between her brows. She ran a hand
- through her damp hair, mildly confused. Her abstracted mind paused
- its muddle for a moment at something familiar. Someone was calling
- her name. Here? No one knew her name, as far as she could recall.
- Odd. There it was again. She looked up.
-
- A paunchy balding man was barrelling through the crowd toward
- her. They seemed to part before him, disconcerted at having moved a
- few steps without meaning to do so, but not stopping him. Not even
- really noticing him. A cutpurse reached out, then shook his head
- violently, as if a hornets' nest was suddenly awake inside his skull.
-
- Looking into the face of the man approaching her, she thought she
- saw something familiar. The lines of someone she'd known; in the jaw,
- underneath the fleshiness; in the eyes surrounded by tiny wrinkles.
- The frown between her eyes deepened slightly. A youth. Well, a man,
- really, but he had still been awkward and gentle. And ... and ...
- brilliant? Spoiled? A friend. Could this be his father? No.
- Think, Jameson, think. How many years? Enough time to become this?
- Stars, she was feeling her age these past days. A flood of memories
- suddenly engulfed her with a rush of warm feelings. He had been her
- friend. He had held her and helped her and ... they had traveled
- together. She almost never traveled with anyone. How could she have
- forgotten? The frown cleared, like a bird taking flight.
-
- She said, firmly, "Nescie!" and smiled brilliantly, full of
- remembering.
-
- * * *
-
- "JAMESON!"
-
- Nescie couldn't remember the last time he was this happy. She
- was smiling, he was laughing, and everything was alright with the
- world. An incredibly warm feeling filled his heart and a grin split
- his face as he caught Jameson in a fierce embrace, lifted her off her
- feet and spun her around. He set her down a little unevenly, holding
- her gently around the waist.
-
- "Oooff. Shouldn't have done that..." he gasped, catching his
- breath and slipping a bit in the snow but still grinning. Ye gods, it
- looked like she hadn't changed at all in the past thirty or forty
- years. "But it's you! It really is you! Where have you _been_ all
- this time? When did you get here? Where are you staying? No, wait
- -- let's go somewhere where we can talk."
-
- He lifted one hand above their heads and swept it in a wide
- circle. The hubbub of the plaza and the chilly gusts of winter faded
- away, to be replaced by the luscious greenery of a park in springtime.
- They were sitting on a bench of white marble. Jameson looked around,
- delighted; it was just like that place on the Miskatonic University
- campus where they had often relaxed ...
-
- Nescie smiled at her, then blinked and froze, a film paused on a
- single frame. Jameson started involuntarily -- for a bare instant,
- his eyes were matte black, cold and dead -- like Mazn's -- and his
- smile a twisted evil thing, bitter and spiteful.
-
- Then it was gone and the picture moved again. Nescie returned to
- his animated chatter for a few moments, but his smile faded slightly
- at her unresponsiveness, and he looked at her with concern. "Jaime?
- Is something wrong?"
-
- Taking a deep breath she smiled at him a bit shakily. She must
- have imagined it. This was Nescie, full of natural talent and
- gentleness. "I -- no, it's nothing, Nescie." Her imagination was
- working overtime, obsessed with powerful world-rending forces.
- Besides, it had been a long time since she'd last seen him -- all
- sorts of changes might have taken place. Then she noticed she was
- shivering with a searing cold that made her bones ache and she
- couldn't take her eyes from his hands. For an irrational moment she
- was desperately afraid he might touch her and make her eyes go blank
- too, but she caught hold of herself and forced the panic to a halt.
- Taking a deep breath, she looked tentatively into his eyes. They were
- perfectly normal. With a slow, careful smile, she met his look of
- concern and asked "It's been a long time, my friend. What have you
- been doing?"
-
- ---
-
- Comments, compliments, and complaints can be conveyed to:
- Bernie Hsiung (bshsiung@eecs.umich.edu)
-
- and
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
- Kelly J. Cooper \ Tiddly-Pom.
- Tragically Hip Waif \ Comments appreciated.
- ...individual at large... \ kjc@cs.rutgers.edu
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- ...cheers!....
-