Play Speak
The Ravener was in the fae wild.
It was a theory.
Only a theory.
But, if it was true? Much could now be explained.
Weeks spent searching Thamelandâevery river, hill, mountain, forest and glen they could findâhad turned up nothing. No Ravener. No sign of Uldarâs body. No sign of his throne.
But what if the Ravener had never been in the Material World in Thameland?
They could have searched for a thousand years and never found it.
âShit, that explains why those Ravener-spawn disappeared outside Uldarâs Rise!â Theresa cried. âThey slipped away throughâŠbut wait, we didnât find any fae gates near there.â
âFae gates can be impermanent,â Baelin said, running a hand through his beard. âThey are tales of mushroom-circles appearing one night and being gone the next.â
âTrueâŠâ Alex said, âAnd I donât remember any mushroom circles around when the Guide was hunting me. He could just slip in and out of the fae wild whenever he wanted, bringing Gabrian and anyone else he wanted with him. Gwyllain didnât seem to need a fae gate to appear near the Research Castle either.â
âTrue, but they are fae.â Prince Khalik pointed out. âI cannot imagine Ravener-spawn being able to slip in and out of the fae wild on their own power.â He looked at Merzhin. âWere there any records in the past of the Ravener making its home in the fae wild? Or of Ravener-spawn travelling to-and-from there?â
âNo.â Merzhin shook his head. âAs far as I am aware, the only connection between the Ravener and the fae is that Uldar had dealings with both. Unless, the original Ravenerâthe demon lord twisted by fae magicâhad that power. âŠwas there anything in Uldarâs notes that would let it travel between the fae wild and the material world?â
Alex shook his head. âWe didnât find anything like that.â
âNo ability to transport itself, except by flight,â Baelin mused. âThough, it seems it can gain incredible control over the space within itself by diverting its power to its core.â
âI see,â Merzhin said. âThen the Ravener seems to have no ability to travel between Thameland and Och Tir Nog without a fae gate. And the army has been using Lord Aenflynnâs gates to travel between the material world and the fae wild. But they have not mentioned seeing Ravener-spawn there.â
Drestra gasped, her eyes growing wide. âOhâŠoh by the spirits. By the Traveller! There are Ravener-spawn in the fae wild!â
âWhatâre you talking about?â Alex asked
âAye, whatâs all this, Drestra?â Cedric asked.
âCedric! Hart!â Drestra hissed. âWhat did we give Lord Aenflynn? What did we give him instead of Thamelandâs children?â
Cedric stopped dead.
Hartâs large eyes grew even larger. âShit! Shit! That tricky bastard!â
âWe gave âim bloody Ravener-spawn,â Cedric murmured.
Alex fell silent as his mind worked.
A key turned in a lock within his mind, and he shuddered, feeling as though the icy waters of a wintry sea had been poured on him.
The Ravener had stolen Uldarâs throne.
Hadnât it?
What evidence did they have for that?
Ravener-spawn tracks. Muddy Ravener-spawn tracks. Muddy Ravener-spawn tracks that utterly disappeared in the wilderness, without a trace.
âWe gave him bone-chargers,â Drestraâs voice crackled, simmering anger and shame in her tone. âThere were otherRavener-spawn tracks in Uldarâs sanctum butâŠâ
âIf the Ravener is in the fae wild, then how would it be there without Aenflynn knowing?â Khalik asked. âIf it does not have his blessing, then at least, it must have his tolerance.â
âWhat were the exact words of the deal you made with the fae?â Baelinâs voice was soft, but his gaze was piercing and his eyes hard as stone.
âOne hundred and twenty of your monsters, to be given once per moon in groups of thirty or more, not less. In return, you will have the service of one of my fae warriors for every three monsters you provide me.â Drestra quoted the fae lord, her voice crackling. âIn addition, you Heroes will have full access to the fae gates, letting you cross the five highways of my realm and quickening your travels across Thameland. Your armies will have use of the same, though you will all be under fae law while travelling through the fae wild. If any of you violate our laws, you will be subject to our punishments.â
Cedric spoke up. âI added: anâ if we betray you, then you will command your fae warriors to set on us and rip us to shreds. If ya betray us, then any Ravener-spawn weâve gifted tâ ya will make things nasty for ya. Weâll also have folk ready tâcare fer yer elderly changelings in two moonsâ time.â
Baelin stared at them for a long moment.
He sighed.
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Deeply.
âYou were doing your best, and I sincerely respect that. ButâŠthat was not the best deal, my young friends.â
âWhat do you mean?â Hart asked.
The night seemed darker.
âDeals with devils and fae are tricky things: games of words and intentions. One thing you must always remember is thatâwhen a deal is made somewhat adversariallyâthat the words themselves are far more important than the intention behind them.â
âWords only have power because of the meaning we give them,â Alex whispered, his mind working faster and faster. Every stream of consciousness seemed to spasm in his mind. âBut meaning is given by the speaker of a word and by the listener.â
âIndeed,â Khalik added. âYou taught us to convey meaning with our bodies.â
âAye, but whatâs this got tâdo witâ thâdeal?â Cedric sounded near panic. âWhy was it a bad one?â
âBecause you gave the word betrayal no meaning within the deal you made,â Baelin said grimly. âIt is up to your understanding of the word. AndâŠthe understanding of the fae lord you dealt with.â
âBetrayalâs betrayal!â Cedric insisted. âAinât no two ways about it.â
âIs there not?â Baelin raised an eyebrow. âIf Aenflynn were to simply allow the Ravener to hide in his realm, would that be a betrayal?â
âAye, it would!â Cedric shouted. âHeâd be helpinâ our kingdomâs enemy!â
âWould he?â the chancellor asked. âOr would he be simply allowing it to do as it wished? Further, even if one could make that argument, is he betraying you or the kingdom of Thameland? If ya betray us is what you said you bound him withâŠwho is âusâ, precisely? Likelyâto a faeâthat means the ones making the deal with him: you, Drestra, and Hart. You were the ones there at the time. You made the deal. Not the kingdom of Thameland. Not the king. Not Alex. Not Merzhin. You.â
âIâŠbutâŠRavener-spawnâve been tryinâ tâkill us!â Cedric insisted.
âAnd yet you have only grown stronger in the face of such trials,â Baelin pointed out. âA fae could argue that byâshielding the Ravener long enough for you to be challengedâhe has helped you.â
âOh, by the TravellerâŠâ Drestraâs voice sounded pained.
âYeah, just like you helped us by sending us against monsters in the Barrens of Kravernus,â Alex murmured. freewđbnđšđđđč.đ°đđș
âPrecisely, and the moment you can argue meaning within such a contract as this, thatâs the moment youâve lost,â the chancellor said darkly. âThere is no court to hear arguments, or barristers to argue for meaning and intent when it comes to Old Magic. The closest things to arbitrators for fae pacts areâin factâthe lords of the fae.â
âShit!â Cedric swore.
âBut it gets worse,â Baelin said.
âHow?â Hart demanded.
âAnâ if we betray you, then you will command your fae warriors to set on us and rip us to shreds. If ya betray us, then any Ravener-spawn weâve gifted tâ ya will make things nasty for ya,â Baelin repeated. âYou did not define what âbetrayalâ meansâŠbut you did define the consequences. Old Magic will punish those who violate a pact. Usually. However, in your phrasing, you forsook Old Magicâs potential punishments by saying that punishment will lie in your own hands. Essentially, all that the fae lord will need to worry aboutâif he were to violate your deal, even by his own interpretationâis for you to become aware and then have full right to have your bone-chargers âmake things nasty for himâ. He has little to fear from such creatures. Meanwhile, he has full right to set his armies upon you. Further, âIf any of you violate our laws, you will be subject to our punishments,â is what he added to the deal. You are now bound by fae law, and will suffer its esoteric punishments if you break it. Now, fae laws concern the faeâŠbut that likely means that if you were to take any action against Aenflynn or his kingdom, you would be subject to terrible magical punishments.â
âButâŠâ Drestraâs voice crackled. âWe needed their army at the time, and ways to transport ours. So many more would be dead if we hadnât made that deal.â
âAdmirable, and your intentions were good. You simply lacked experience with such matters to properly protect yourselves in such a pact. As such, we have to be open to the possibility that Aenflynn might not only be tolerating the Ravener in his realm, but actively sheltering it.â
âAnd maybe it might help him in return: after all, he knew Uldar. So, if Aenflynn has access to more Ravener-spawn because the Ravener decided to help him, thenâŠwhat if he stole the throne?â Alex said. âRavener-spawn could have gotten into the sanctum, taken what they were after, and then the fae whisked them into the fae wild once they were in the woods.â
âSo, uh,â Thundar mumbled. âWhat could a fae lord do with the corpse of a god and his throne?â
âMuch.â Was all Baelin said. âAnd heâs had them for months, if this is all true.â
âWeâll have to make sure whether itâs true or not,â Hart said. âLetâs go to the fae wild right now andââ
âNo,â Alex said.â Not yet. If Aenflynn or the Ravener have done anything with that throne, we need to be completely ready. The Ravenerâs made its first move, trying to cull us: the last thing we need is for it to annihilate our kingdom while weâre rushing into the fae wild half-ready. We donât have a lot of time, and our allies need to know whatâs going on.â
âBut, if Aenflynnâs got Uldarâs throneââ Cedric said.
âThen we need to get it away from him,â Alex said. âBut we have an advantage: he doesnât know that we suspect him yet.â
âHe might soon enough,â Drestra whispered. âHe knew a lot about all of us. I wouldnât be surprised if he has spies everywhere: the moment we picked up that mushroom and figured out what was going on, we have to assume that some fae saw, and ran off to tell their lord what happened here. Oh shit, thatâs why heâs been avoiding meeting with us. He didnât want to give anything away.â
âBut he will have no reason to hide once he knows that we know,â Khalik said. âAnd if he unites with the full power of the RavenerâŠâ
âThen weâre cooked,â Alex said. âBut we haveâŠI donât knowâŠminutes? Hours? Weâll have to get our equipment: and inform the king and the army, so theyâre prepared for an attack from the Ravener and our fae âalliesâ. We donât want them getting slaughtered.â
âAt the same time, I am going to return to Generasi and my personal domain to gather resources,â Baelin said. âAssuming that this fae lord or the Ravener has somehow accessed the divinity locked in Uldarâs throneâŠthen this fight will be one we will need all of our resources for. And the moment we step into the fae wild, we should assume that both the Ravener and Och Tir Nogâs full fury will be directed at us.â
âWeâll need everything we have access to, then. The king and the army have to be warned, and anything we can gather from Generasi will be useful.
âMaybeâŠToraka ShaleâŠcan lend youâŠsome golemsâŠâ Claygon suggested.
âYeah, thatâs not a bad idea,â Alex said. âProfessor Jules should be told, maybe we can hire monster hunters from Generasi to increase our numbersâŠâ
âI suspect I might be able to convince Councillor Kartika to lend resources to this battle,â Baelin offered. âThameland is allied with Generasi, and this will be a most crucial point in that alliance.â
âYeah,â Alex said. âOkay, then. Everyone, Iâm going to be doing a lot of teleporting. Make sure you regenerate your mana. We donât know exactlywhat weâre about to face, but weâll need every ounce of our strength to face it.â
In the uppermost chamber of a castle in the fae wilds, a lean figure sat upon a white throne. His eyes were fixed on the closest window and the starry horizon outside, while his concentration was bent on the seat of power beneath him.
âThank you old friend,â he whispered once again.
He waved a hand and smiled at something beyond the horizon.
Suddenly, there was a pounding on the chamber door.
âYes?â he called pleasantly. He was in a fine mood, indeed.
âSire, there is a Ravener-spawn at the gate!â his servant called through the door. âIt requests an audience.â
âShow it in,â Lord Aenflynn said smoothly. âI am curious as to why our new ally needs me at this hour.â
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