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          +-+--+-+--+-+     VOLUME TEN                   NUMBER FOUR
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          |           |      BITNET Fantasy-Science Fiction Fanzine 
       ___|___________|___  X-Edited by 'Orny' Liscomb <CSDAVE@MAINE>

         <>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<> 

                                 CONTENTS 
             X-Editorial                          'Orny' Liscomb 
             A Wyrm's Tale                         Ron Trenka 
             A Summer's Day: June, 2084            Sean Myles Smith
             Tattoo's                              Becki Tants
            *Worthy of the Title, Part 2           M. Wendy Hennequin


           Date: 031988                               Dist: 590 
           An "*" indicates story is part of the Dargon Project
           All original materials  copyrighted by the author(s) 
         <>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<> 

                               X-Editorial
     Hello!  Since this  issue  follows  right on  the  heels of  10-3,
 there's really  no new news  to bring up, and I honestly don't want to
 bore you  with the  standard editorial comments,  so I'll  depart from
 tradition and, as it were, editorialize a bit. 
     You  know, running  a magazine  is a  fascinating experience.  No,
 really!  The  strangest things  happen.  For  instance, for  over  two
 years readers  have been commenting  that although the  Dargon Project 
 is excellent, they'd  like to see more non-Dargon  fantasy stories and 
 more science  fiction in FSFnet.  And, for  over two years,  I've been 
 replying  with the  standard disclaimer  that  I can  only print  what
 people  submit, and  that no  one  is submitting  anything but  Dargon 
 stories.  Well,  within  the  past   two  weeks  I've  received  seven 
 non-Dargon  stories from  five  different authors,  with promises  for 
 more. It's  enough to make an  editor want to take  up something sane,
 like professional  wrestling! But don't  mind me, it's healthy  for an 
 editor to rave - it only *looks* like insanity. 
     There  are   some  interesting  differences  between   editing  an
 electronic magazine  and a  'real' one.  An electronic  magazine must, 
 by nature,  be freely  distributable, because  it is  so easy  to send 
 copies   along  to   non-subscribers.  To   offset  this,   electronic 
 magazines  do not  need  to  worry about  advertising  costs, as  most 
 network services  are glad  to make room  for a  magazine announcement 
 or information  file. There is  also a  closer tie between  the editor
 and the  readership of an emag,  due to the ease  of communication via 
 electronic mail.  But the  most noteworthy  difference is  inherent in
 the  difference between  the  phosphor screen  and  the printed  page. 
 Most  people find  that the  attention span  of an  individual reading 
 one article  from a  computer screen  is much less  than if  they were
 reading printed  text. The  repercussions this has  for emags  is that 
 their  articles should  be  short  and to  the  point, like  newspaper 
 articles, and  issues should be  small and frequent rather  than large 
 and infrequent.  Of course, FSFnet is  no exception to this  rule, and
 I'm sure that  many people simply never get to  their issues. However, 
 I find  that most people  who are serious  FSFnet readers do  not read 
 issues at a  terminal, but print them out and  read the hardcopy, thus 
 successfully avoiding the problem. 
     Well,  before I  bore  you  all to  tears  with  subjects only  an 
 editor could  enjoy, I'd better sign  off and get this  issue sent. My 
 welcome  to all  the  people  who have  recently  subscribed, and  for 
 BITNET  readers,   don't  be  shy   about  appending  to   the  FSFNET
 discussion on the server  CSNEWS@MAINE.  And, of  course, back  issues 
 are available from the server LISTSERV@TCSVM.
                     -'Orny' Liscomb  <CSDAVE@MAINE>

         <>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<> 

                              A Wyrm's Tale
     The  warrior sat  near the  mouth of  the lair  and planned.  Soon 
 would come  the time when  the wyrm would  sleep. Then there  would be 
 no time to waste. He must be swift or he would fail like the rest.
     "There,"  he thought.  "The  sunset approaches.  It  is time."  He
 gathered up  his equipment and  gingerly picked  up the weapon  he had
 spent many  years to  find and more  to secure. It  was rumored  to be 
 the only thing  that could kill the dreaded wyrm...  a creature he had
 sworn to  slay or die  in the process.  He entered into  the darkeness 
 of the cave.
     Through the darkness  he crept, moving slowly and  silently as not 
 to awaken the  wyrm. Many years had he perpared  for this moment. Only 
 if  the wyrm  slept  would he  be  able  to slip  his  blade into  the 
 creature's chest.
     "That  glow must  be  the  wyrm's chambers,"  he  said quietly  to 
 himself, "where he sleeps on his golden bed. Quietly. I mustn't fail." 

     "Hello," a  deep vioce  said as the  warrior entered  the chamber.
 The warrior  stood paralyzed as the  wyrm's massive head rose  to look 
 him straight in the eye.
     "I knew that it  was too good to be true," the  wyrm said. "It has
 been so  many years  since the  last one,  I had  hoped the  world had
 forgotten  me." The  warrior was  aghast when  a glint  showed in  the 
 wyrm's eye.
     "Ahhhh...."  the  wyrm  said,   obviously  statisfied.  "You  have 
 brought back Wirmhyr. Then you are welcome."
     "Back, horrid  wyrm," the warrior  said, drawing Wirmhyr  from its
 sheath. "Or surely this blade will find its mark!"
     "I  beg your  pardon,"  the wryrm  said. "I  think  you are  quite
 mistaken. There isn't a blade of this world that can pierce my hide."
     "I have come  to end your reign of terror,"  the warrior announced
 in a  formal challenge.  "You have murdered  your last  maiden, stolen 
 your last cattle...."
     "I think you  have come to the wrong cave,"  the wyrm said calmly.
 The warrior was somewhat taken aback.
     "Is this not the cave of Kravaxx the Golden?" the warrior asked. 
     "It is," the wyrm replied.
     "Then I have come to the right place," the warroir said flatly.
     "I beg to differ," the wyrm said.
     "You beg to what?" the warrior asked, incredously.
     "I am Kravaxx  the Golden," the wyrm  said, "but it ha  been a few 
 centuries since I  have stolen cattle and never have  I slain a maiden 
 that didn't deserve it." 
     "I do not understand," the warrior said, confused.
     "Look,"  the wyrm  said, "it  isn't difficult.  The last  maiden I
 murdered, if  you want to  call it that, was  Karita the Loud.  And if
 you ask me, it was more a mercy killing."
     The warrior then smiled and raised Wirmhyr confidently. 
     "I understand  you now,  wyrm," he  said. "You  try to  confuse me 
 and lure me  into a trap. It will  not work, for I have  heard of this 
 trick before. You are beaten, wyrm." 
     "By the  gods, you are  thick," Kravaxx  said. "Look, if  it would
 make you  happy, I  will let  you strike  once with  Wirmhyr. Anywhere
 you like,  except the face.  I put so much  work getting this  face to 
 look as perfect as it does - I wouldn't want you to scratch a scale."
     "Again you confuse me, wyrm" the warrior said. 
     "Give it your  best swing," the wyrm said. "Go  ahead. I will even
 pretend that  I am sleeping."  And with  that, the wyrm  promptly laid 
 down, as  if to  rest. The  warrior stood, wondering  what to  do, and 
 decided  that it  couldn't hurt  to give  it a  try. If  he was  fast, 
 which he  was, he could  be in and out  before the wyrm  could strike.
 So,  preparing  himself and  carefully  choosing  a likely  spot,  the
 warrior darted  in and  swung Wirmhyr  with all  his might.  The blade
 whistled through the air as it came around. 
     And  then  bounced  off  the  thick scales  of  the  wyrm  with  a 
 resounding clang. 
     The  warrior was  too scared  to even  move. The  wyrm opened  his 
 eyes and turned  its huge head toward the warrior.  Praying to his god 
 and preparing  for a blast  of the  wyrm's firery breath,  the warrior
 could only stare.
     "See, I told you so." was the only thing the wyrm said. 
                       -Ron Trenka  <SAGAPO@SBCCVM> 

         <>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<> 

                       A Summer's Day:  June, 2084
     It was wasting-time again. 
     Jason hated  wasting-time, hated  it like  poison. Not  because of 
 the wasting  itself, but because  of the messiness that  always seemed 
 to go with it.  Jason was a very clean boy,  and despised being messy.
 he would  have condemned wasting-time  altogether had it not  been for 
 the  fact  that his  birthday  was  on the  second  day  of the  third
 wasting-time  of  every  ninth  month. As  it  was,  wasting-time  was 
 hated, but tolerated. 
     Jason  slipped out  of  bed  and headed  for  the shower;  another
 reason  to  hate wasting-time.  Jason  liked  to  get  in and  out  as
 quickly  as   possible,  every  action  intentional   and  economical. 
 Instead, he  scoured himself three  times with the rough  soap, doused 
 his hair with  shampoo, rinsed himself with too much  water. Which, of
 course, was the entire purpose of a waste-day: to waste things.
     After  using two  towels to  dry off  and too  much toothpaste  to 
 clean his  teeth, Jason cleared  out of the  bathroom to make  way for 
 his  sister, Janice--  who, when  it came  to the  bathroom, used  too
 much  of   everything  anyway.   Except,  of   course,  when   it  was 
 fasting-time. Janice  brushed by him  with a  sniff and shut  the door 
 firmly behind her.
     The lights in  the hall were all on, which  meant that his parents 
 were  already up.  Jason groaned.  Whenever possible,  Jason liked  to 
 make  his own  breakfast  on waste-days,  sparing  himself the  almost
 sickening  culinary  orgy  that  was  the norm.  He  padded  into  the
 kitchen, resigning himself to the inevitable. "Hi, mom." he said.
     "Why, hello, Jason."  she answered. "Breakfast will be  ready in a 
 minute. Just  sit down at  the table--but turn  on a couple  of radios 
 while you're up."
     Jason snapped  on two of the  several radios within a  few feet of 
 him,  then sat  down.  he studied  his mother  as  she deftly  flipped 
 eggs, fried bacon,  buttered toast and English  muffins, opened canned
 fruit, poured  milk and orange  juice, and  carried out all  the other
 myriad  responsibilities  of making  breakfast  on  a waste-day.  Mrs. 
 Grady Powers  was a  tall, graceful  woman in  her late  thirties. Her
 darkish hair,  beginning to show signs  of grey, was let  down so that
 it  fell  around  her  shoulders,  one  of  the  outward  signs  of  a
 waste-day that Jason had come to notice.
     As  Jason's mother  finished  her cooking  and  began placing  the 
 heaping platters  on the table,  his father  walked in. He  raised the 
 radios' volume and turned on a third. "Smells good." he commented.
     Jason  wrinkled  his  nose  in  distaste.  His  father  reeked  of
 cologne on wasting-days. 
     "What?" asked Jason's mother. 
     "I said," repeated his father, loudly, "it smells good!"
     "Thank you!" she replied, with similar of volume. "Eat up!"
     Jason's father  sat down and  began shoveling food into  his mouth
 with his  fork. Jason did so  less rapidly. Janice came  in, sat down,
 and started complaining that waste-days ruined her diet.
     "Eat." said  Jason's father, around  a mouthful of  bacon. "You'll
 be thankful for it next time fasting-time comes around."
     "Terrific." she said, and began to eat. 
     Jason played with  his food, hoping to disguise  his reluctance to 
 consume as much as his parents and sister. 
     "You  too, Jason."  his mother  said. "A  growing boy  has got  to 
 eat." Jason scowled.  On fasting-days his mother said that  to not eat
 when one was hungry built character. 
     "I'm not hungry." he muttered sullenly. "I hate waste-days."
     "Now,  Jason." his  father  admonished. "You  know that  everybody 
 needs   a  proper   balance   of  attitudes.   That's   why  we   have
 wasting-time. If we  didn't have wasting-time, there  would be nothing
 to  balance  out fasting-time.  If  we  didn't have  lazy-time,  there 
 would be nothing to balance out work-time. If we didn't have. . ." 
     "If  we didn't  have any  times  at all,"  Jason interrupted,  "we 
 could do  whatever we wanted and  we wouldn't have to  do whatever the 
 Shrinks told us to." 
     "Jason!"  his   mother  exclaimed.  "You  should   be  ashamed  of
 yourself!  The Shrinks  only want  what is  good for  us! Eat  another 
 bagel, this instant!"
     Jason grabbed  a bagel and began  stuffing it in his  mouth. "With 
 cream cheese." his sister mocked. Jason HATED cream cheese. 
     "Shut up,  wart." he answered.  He crammed  the rest of  the bagel 
 into his mouth and swallowed hugely. 
     "Just because  you don't like doing  something is no reason  to be
 surly, young  man." Jason's  father said firmly.  "Just for  that, you
 wash your dishes last."
     "Aww,  dad. .  ." Jason  whined.  Washing your  dishes last  meant 
 waiting around  an hour  and a  half while  everyone else  did theirs.
 Jason ate in silence for five minutes, then asked to be excused. 
     His mother examined  his plate critically, then told  him he could 
 watch TVs until  it was time to wash the  dishes. "And tape something, 
 too." she called.
     Finally, two  hours later, Jason put  away the last of  his dishes 
 and  went  outside,  heading  for Robert  Bond's  house.  Jason  liked
 Robert. He could always think of neat things to do.
     Jason walked down  the street, kicking pebbles.  Robert lived only
 four houses  down, but Jason  took the  long way around,  circling the 
 block. The  cool air felt  good upon his skin.  he squinted up  at the 
 sun, enjoying  its warmth. All  in all, he decided,  a good day  to be 
 alive, except for the wasting. 
     Robert's house  was a neat  little two-story brick  edifice. Jason
 went up  the walkway  and rang  the bell. Robert  opened the  door and
 grinned when  he saw Jason.  "Hi, Jase." he  said. "I knew  you'd come 
 by. What do you want to waste today?"
     "How about time?" Jason asked, hopefully. 
     "That's  for lazy-time,  dummy."  Robert  answered. "Let's  waste,
 uh, let's waste film!"
     "Okay."  Jason  said.  Jason  liked photography--not  as  much  as 
 Robert, who  had glossy photos all  over his walls, but  enough not to 
 mind  spending the  day snapping  his shutter  at everything  he could
 find. "Get your stuff." 
     Robert ducked  inside, re-emerging  half a  minute later  with his 
 camera and a  bag full of film.  "Come on." he said.  "Let's go." They 
 walked towards Jason's house. 
     "I  wish  we  could  just  use  your  stuff."  Jason  said.  "It's
 inconvenient to have to walk back to my house." 
     "It's not that  far." returned Robert. "Besides,  rules are rules. 
 Everyone has  to waste  his own  stuff or the  Shrinks won't  know who 
 needs to be checked."
     "I guess." Jason said glumly. "You want something to drink?"
     "Yeah."  said  Robert.  "My  mom'll  kill  me.  She'll  say,  'Why
 couldn't  you  be thirsty  at  our  house?  Don't  you think  we  have 
 requirements to  meet, too ?' I  know she will. I  don't care, though. 
 What's a little lemonade between friends?"
     Jason opened the  front door. "You know where  everything is. I'll
 be right  there. Pour  me one too,  okay?" He went  down the  hall and 
 into his  room. He  heard Robert  pouring as he  found his  camera and 
 grabbed a satchel.
     "Jason?"  came his  mother's  voice from  somewhere upstairs.  "Is
 that you?"
     "Yes, mom."  he answered,  moving back into  the kitchen.  "Me and
 Robert are gonna go take pictures." 
     "Oh. Okay. Bring me back some beauties." 
     "I will, mom."  Jason crossed the kitchen to the  cabinet the film
 was stored  in. He scooped a  dozen rolls into the  satchel and turned
 to face Robert . "Ready?" he asked.
     "When you are." Robert replied, and held out a glass of lemonade. 
     "Oh,  yeah."  said  Jason.  He  took  the  glass  and  downed  the 
 contents  in three  long gulps.  The two  of them  left the  house and 
 headed down the street. 
     "Where do you want to go?" Jason asked.
     "I was thinking we could go down to the river. Near the falls." 
     "Okay by me." 
     They  followed the  road  for a  while, then  cut  across an  open 
 field. Robert  took occasional shots of  the houses, the sun,  and the 
 sky.  Jason  loaded  his  camera, but  didn't  take  pictures.  Robert
 appeared  not  to notice,  absorbed  in  his surroundings.  The  field
 ended in a  long downslope, with the river at  the bottom. They picked
 their way  carefully until they  stood on the sandy,  relatively level 
 bank. Robert began to walk upstream, and Jason followed.
     "You know what I'd like to be?" Robert asked after a while.
     "No, Robert," Jason asked, amused, "what would you like to be?" 
     "A Shrink." Robert answered. 
     "You're crazy." 
     Robert  laughed.  "That's  a  good  one."  he  replied.  "A  crazy 
 Shrink. That's  a good one." he  repeated. "No, but really,"  he said,
 sobering, "I  think I would.  When testing-time comes around  again, I 
 think I'm going to tell them that." 
     "Come  on,  Robert." Jason  said.  "Almost  nobody makes  it.  And 
 nobody  knows  why the  ones  who  do get  picked.  'The  ways of  the 
 Shrinks are downright strange.'" he said, quoting an old proverb.
     "Still," Robert insisted, "I can always try." 
     The  sound  of  the  waterfall was  getting  louder.  Jason  began 
 taking pictures  of the trees  and rocks. They  rounded a bend  in the 
 river and he  could see the waterfall, throwing  broken reflections of
 light  at  him,  all  red  and green  and  blue.  Jason  began  taking 
 pictures in earnest.
     So absorbed  was he in getting  a close-up of the  rushing waters,
 Jason failed to  notice the man sitting behind the  waterfall until he 
 stood up.  He was small,  only a couple  of inches taller  than Jason,
 and  dressed  in  tattered,  threadbare  garments.  Despite  this,  he 
 possessed  a calm  dignity  that held  Jason  semi-hypnotized for  the
 first few seconds.
     "Robert." he said, softly. "Rogue." 
     Robert  turned. His  eyes  grew wide  and his  mouth  formed an  O 
 shape.  Suddenly, his  mouth snapped  shut and  he began  to run  back 
 downstream. "Wait." called  the man, but Robert kept  running. Soon he
 was out of sight. 
     Jason   stood   paralyzed.  He   had   heard   about  rogues,   of 
 course--everyone was supposed  to be on the lookout for  them and know
 what  to do  in case  one was  spotted. But  he had  never figured  on 
 actually SEEING one.  Rogues were the dissidents, the  ones who didn't 
 believe in  the Shrinks or their  ideas. They ran away  from the crews 
 who  came  to  take  them  to attitude  training,  and  lived  in  the 
 wilderness. The  Shrinks said  that there weren't  very many  of them,
 and Jason had believed it. Surprise was all that kept him from flight. 
     Finally, after an eternity, Jason began to run. 
     "Boy. Wait."  said the rogue,  and something, the calmness  in his
 voice , maybe, but something made Jason hover, if only for an instant.
     "Hear me out." said  the rogue. "I have seen you.  I know that you 
 are  different--that you  do not  believe  the Shrinks  when they  say
 that they must control  the way you act and the way  you think. I know 
 you  want to  live  life the  way  YOU want  to live  it,  not as  the
 Shrinks would have  you. Come with me, Jason." He  became intense. His
 eyes locked on  Jason's, and spoke silently of  forgotten freedoms. "I 
 will take you  to meet others like  you," he continued, "  but we must 
 hurry. Your friend  is already on his way to  bring the authorities. " 
 The rogue held  out his hand. "There  is a better way  than you know." 
 he finished. 
     Jason  stared at  him  for  a few  moments,  unbelieving. Then  he
 turned, and ran from the rogue faster than he'd ever run in his life. 
     He was nearly to  his house when he heard the  sirens, and he knew
 the  rogue would  get away.  It  was easy  to  hide in  the woods.  He
 slowed down,  and saw Robert waiting  for him on the  steps leading to
 his door. 
     "God." said Robert. "I've never been so scared in my life."
     "Me too." Jason panted. "I don't much  feel like  taking  pictures 
  anymore."
     "Neither do I." said Robert, and headed towards his house.
     Jason  was grilled  about the  event at  the dinner  table by  his 
 parents, and  again later  that evening  by the  police. He  told them
 both the same thing.  "I got so scared I couldn't  move." he said. "He
 started  talking  crazy,  and  I  ran  before  he  could  grab  me  or 
 somethin'."  Both his  parents and  the police  seemed satisfied.  The 
 sergeant who  interviewed him  said that they  didn't expect  to catch
 the rogue,  that they were usually  experts at hiding, but  that there 
 was  little chance  he'd be  hanging around  this area,  either. Jason
 was relieved. 
     And the  next morning, the second day of the first wasting-time of
 the sixth month, Jason ate everything on his plate and asked for more.
                   -Sean Myles Smith  <SSSMIT@MACALSTR> 

         <>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<> 

                                 Tattoo's 
     As  Kara  walked onto  the  bridge,  all  the crew's  eyes  turned 
 toward  her. She  looked disheveled,  with  burn marks  on her  ripped
 clothing and  her face streaked  with ash. Her  hair was a  mess, full
 of knots and singed spots.
     "What should I  expect", she thought, "I look like  I've been thru
 hell and back. It was only a little revolution." 
     Little  revolution.  Amazing  how  easy it  had  become  to  write 
 things like that  off. Only killed a few million  people, no big deal. 
 Slowly but surely,  these ties to the Fifth  Horsemen Mercenary Troops 
 were getting to her. 
     "How do they  get me INTO things like that???"  she asked herself. 
 Yet  she knew  the  answer already.  It was  Cross.  Damian Cross.  As
 usual,  he  had asked  her  for  help and  she  had  brought her  ship 
 running to his  aid. And he didn't  even need her this  time (altho he 
 got  some kind  of  joy out  of watching  her  fight like  that...just
 sitting up in his HoverTank watching her lead her men. 
     "Well, at  least they  respect me.",  she thought.  "Anyways, back
 to work."
     "Navigator,  plot a  course to  Delta Mynas  II. Security,  report 
 status, both ship and crew."
     "Security  reporting Ma'am.  Ship security  tight and  unbreached. 
 Seems they can't get  off the planet down there. What  did you guys do
 to them?"
     "Never mind,"  she said, snickering  a little about the  ease with 
 which they  had immobilized the  Space Port. The Horsemen  were famous 
 for such  great planning as that.  "I'll tell you all  about it later. 
 How about the crew?" 
     "Well, as you know,  we lost 45 men down on planet,  and 3 more of 
 the  injured have  died since  we brought  them back  up here  to high 
 port. The rest  are expected to be  OK. That leaves us  with about 102
 soldiers and the normal on board personal." 
     "Damn. That's a lot  to loose. I'm going to my  cabin to clean up. 
 Send a  message to Cross  that he's invited to  dinner over here  in 2
 hours. Let me know what he says." 
     "Yes Ma'am."
     "Ma'am,"  the navigator  piped  up. What  a  weaselly little  man.
 Maybe  I'll send  him on  combat duty  soon...see if  that strengthens
 his character. 
     "Yes, Johnson, what."
     "Ma'am, the course is plotted and laid in."
     "Good, we  won't be  leaving for  about 3  hours, so  double check 
 your   figures.  No   mistakes  allowed   this  time.   I  think   the
 sharpshooters need  some moving target  practice." With a  snicker she
 remembered the  time they had  ended up  at exactly a  180degree angle 
 from  where they  were headed  because he  reversed a  couple figures. 
 God what an idiot.  That got him his pay docked for  months to pay for
 the  time lost  and the  job passed  on. This  time she  wasn't in  as
 patient a mood.
     "Yes Ma'am." Johnson said with a cringe. She'd done it before.

     God was it nice to be alone. 
     For  the first  time  in days,  she could  get  undressed, take  a
 slow,  leisurely shower,  and not  be surrounded  by hot,  sweaty men.
 The  way  they  all looked  at  her  was  enough  to drive  any  woman
 bonkers.  Stepping out  of the  shower, in  front of  the full  length 
 mirror,  she acknowledge  that maybe  they had  a reason  to gawk  her 
 like that.  Maybe. Maybe  if she  were just some  normal bimbo  on the
 street. But  she wasn't.  She was in  command of the  Iron Fox  III, a
 name passed from  generation to generation of ship's  captains. One of
 the finest  mercenary ships in  this part  of the galaxy,  second only 
 to the  Horsemen. The shouldn't gawk  her like some street  whore. She 
 was a  pretty  woman,  but  15  years of  leading  this group  through 
 uncounted  battles  have  left  their marks.  Scars  marred  the  once
 beautiful face giving  her a very rough look. Lines  from worrying and
 from fighting made  her look years older then she  was. Her figure was 
 as slim,  lithe and strong  as ever, but as  scarred as her  face. And
 then there was the tattoo.
     The shape  of the Fifth  Horseman's symbol, small, dark,  shown on 
 the side  of her  hip. The sign  of a female  possession of  theirs. A 
 permanent mark for all the world to see. 
     She  had been  found on  a  devastated planet,  her father's  ship
 destroyed by an  attack of the Horseman.  She was 15 at  the time, and 
 some of  the horsemen  had decided  he wanted her  as their  pet. They
 tattooed her,  and put her  to work  onboard their ship,  serving food
 and sleeping her  way up thru the  command ranks in an  attempt to get 
 out. When she  met Damian, he saw  some potential in her.  He gave her 
 the chance to  learn ships operations and mercenary  actions. Soon she 
 was  a strong  commander  and  an even  stronger  soldier,  so when  a 
 derelict  (but still  flying)  ship was  found,  Damian convinced  the
 other leaders  to let her  have it.  (A simple feat,  considering that
 they had been  watching her to make sure she  didn't organize a revolt
 among the  servants for quite  some time.)  From there she'd  made her
 own way.  Getting the ship  fixed up,  getting a crew,  and eventually
 getting some  soldiers together  took the  better part  of the  next 6
 years.  But  she  did  it. Alone.  Never,  however,  forgetting  about
 Damian. he'd  given her the  chance. And he  called that one  in every
 time he could.
     "Stop  daydreaming and  get dressed!"  Kara said  out loud,  as if
 saying it out  loud would change the fact that  she was still somewhat 
 lost in her own thoughts.
     The  battles of  the past  few days  was still  very fresh  in her
 mind. She and  her men had merely been extra  numbers, not needed, but 
 it  looked good.  The  Horsemen rarely  NEEDED the  help.  They had  a
 beautifully  laid  and executed  plan.  The  world involved,  Altilles 
 Planet,  had  a  dependence  on outside  fuel  sources.  The  Horsemen 
 merely ran  them dry, let  a shipment get thru,  and then blew  up the
 ground side space  port with all the  fuel in it. Made  a rather large 
 crater  of the  capital  city,  killed most  of  the major  government 
 figures  (as  was  their  contract with  the  neighboring  planet  who 
 wanted  the  agricultural land  there)  and  left  the path  open  for
 takeovers. Of  course, they  took more  then their  share of  loot off
 the  place. They  always do.  But then  again we  did too.  That's the
 mercenary way. 
     After  three  days of  cleaning  up  the  last of  the  straggling
 government  and   sending  them  all   to  their  makers   (in  rather 
 imaginative ways),  it's time  to move  on. And  count the  loses. One
 third  of my  mercs  on a  battle  that we  weren't  even needed  for. 
 Damian had better clear this debt now. They would be hard to replace. 

     Half an  hour later,  dressed in her  normal black  jumpsuit, with
 her long wavy red hair down for once, Kara was back on the bridge. 
     "Cross  will  be  arriving  in 15  minutes  Ma'am.  Everything  is
 prepared for your dinner in the Main Conference Room."
     "Thank  you,  Stevens. I'm  headed  down  there now.  If  anything
 should happen while I'm there, buzz me."
     "Oh, and  Johnson, tell Port  Control that  we will be  leaving in 
 exactly 2 hours. Get the clearance." 
     "Yes Ma'am.",  Johnson said, as she  turned and walked out  of the
 room. Breathing a sigh of relief, he turned back to his calculations.

     When Damian  walked in the room,  she was standing facing  out the
 port hole,  not really at anything,  but just out. Away  from him. She
 knew  what  would happen  when  she  turned  around.  He would  be  in 
 control.  The only  man that  had ever been  able to control her.  She
 wasn't even sure if she resented that fact or not.
     "Evening. You  wanted to see me?",  Damian said, as he  walked in, 
 poured himself a drink, and sat down at the head of the table. 
     "Yes.", she  said, turning  around to  face him  where he  sat. "I
 seem to  have lost  a lot of  men in  the past few  days over  a silly
 squabble that  you didn't  even really  need me for.  Now why  did you 
 really bring me here?"
     "If I  said because  I wanted  to get  laid would  you get  mad at
 me?", he asked, with a smile so sarcastic, it was almost painful.
     "Yes, I would. I  do have jobs of my own you  realize. I hope this 
 absolves  any debt  you  feel I  still  owe you.  You've  been paid  a 
 million times over for it." 
     "That tattoo  you bare  on your hip  tells me when  you owe  me no 
 more. As  long as  it's still  there, you still  owe me."  Putting his 
 feet  up on  the table,  he picked  up his  plate and  started eating, 
 completely ignoring her.
     Furious, she  turned away from  him and  stared out the  port hole
 again until  she was calm  enough to talk  again. "Damian, me, you may 
 feel you own. The  battered hull of this ship you own.  But I lost 1/3 
 of my crew  down there and you do  NOT own them. Now I  need some kind 
 of recompense for this. Otherwise next time I won't come."
     "You haven't  checked your  bank account  recently. Money  for the 
 men you lost  is in there. And as  far as you go, dear, I  do own you.
 Don't you  ever forget that  fact. In the  meantime, I just  wanted to 
 let you  know that  I won't be  needing your help  for a  while. We're
 taking some  time off and  you need to train  some new men.  I'll call 
 when I  need you. Have  a nice  day." Out of  his mouth, "have  a nice
 day" sounded like a string of obscenities. 
     He got up  to leave, but as  he reached the door,  he looked back. 
 Walking across  the room to  where Kara  was standing, he  grabbed her 
 and gave her  a rather rough, but passionate kiss.  Then he turned and
 walked out. Again.
     After  eating, she  headed  back up  to the  bridge,  all the  way
 saying to  herself "Damn, he  did it to me  again." But that's  how it 
 always went, and  altho it put her in  a foul humor for a  day or two, 
 it never changed.
     Arriving on the bridge, she did the only thing possible. 
     "Johnson, get us out of here now. And you'd better get it right!" 

     Later  that night,  after  safely getting  underway  on the  right
 course, Kara  wandered back to  her room. She wasn't  furious anymore,
 just in that  state of mind where  nobody wanted to cross  her. It was 
 written all  over her  face. Needless  to say, most  of the  crew gave 
 her a wide berth as she walked down the hall. 
     Arriving back in  her quarters, she was surprised to  see a bit of 
 a  glow  coming from  around  the  corner,  her bedroom.  Drawing  her
 Neural Paralyzer,  she quietly  moved up to  the corner.  "Nice little 
 weapon" she  thought, as she  set it on  one of it's  lesser settings. 
 These weapons had  been known to cause insanity, or  at the very least 
 extreme pain  to those hit by  it. Perfect for anyone  sneaking around 
 in the Captain's  quarters. She swung around the  corner, weapon going
 first, ready to fire.
     "So, what took  you so long?", Damian said,  apparently unfazed by 
 the fact that she had a weapon in hand.
     "Damnit,  what are  you doing  here????? I  thought you'd  crawled 
 back in  your hole by  now." He was  sitting, well actually  lying, on
 her bed  with her favorite  wine on the table  next to it  and candles
 glowing in the candle globes she  kept scattered  around the  room for 
 relaxation.
     "I told  you. We're  taking a  vacation. So put  the gun  down and 
 come over here. I've already poured you some wine."
     "Damn."  she  thought, as  she  put  the  weapon down  and  walked
 across the room to him.  Here we go again. 
                     -Becki Tants  <RETANTS@SUNRISE> 

         <>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<> 

                           Worthy of the Title
     "You might  as well go out  and see the festival,  now that you're
 here,"  Lord  Clifton  Dargon  had   suggested  as  his  twin  cousins 
 finished breakfast. "Melrin only comes once a year." 
     "Yes," Luthias  had agreed practically,  but his voice  was heavy.
 "We might as well."
     "What's going on  today in the Melrin, Bartol?"  Roisart asked his
 cousin Dargon's bard.
     "Oh,  final  competition  for  the Bardic  Crown,"  the  bard  cum 
 bodyguard announced enthusiastically. "Today at noontime." 
     "What else?"  Luthias wondered. While bardic  tales could interest
 Luthias, hours upon hours of sung tales drove him to distraction.
     Bartol gave  him a strange,  appalled look. "What  else?" demanded
 Bartol, gazing  at the young  noble as if  he were insane.  "What else
 is there?"
     Roisart looked  at his twin  and smiled. Luthias rolled  his eyes.
 Then  he turned  to  his  cousin, the  lord.  "Clifton,  do you  think
 you'll be all right here after what happened to our father yesterday?" 
     Clifton  had laughed  then;  Roisart smiled.  "Come on,  Luthias,"
 his brother urged.  "Think about it. What would Clifton,  with all his 
 guards,  need  us  for?  Considering  the men  who  attacked  us  this 
 morning,"  Roisart continued,  turning his  eyes towards  his cousins,
 "we may need guarding ourselves."
     But  Clifton had  smiled  and  shaken his  head.  "You'll be  safe
 enough in  the festival," the Lord  of Dargon ventured. "And  the city
 guard is out  in full should you need assistance."  The smiled widened 
 and the skin  around Dargon's brown eyes  crinkled slightly. "Besides,
 you two didn't do all that badly this morning."
     So  it  was with  this  assurance  the  Roisart and  Luthias  left
 Dargon  Keep and  strolled into  the Middle  City, where  most of  the 
 Melrin  was taking  place. There  were as  yet three  hours until  the 
 Bardic Crown  competition was to  take place, so Luthias  suggested to
 his  brother,  "Let's go  down  to  the  docks.  There's bound  to  be
 something happening there." 
     "Yes,  Father used  to take  us there  when we  got to  the Melrin
 early," Roisart sighed.  Luthias frowned; he too  missed their father. 
 Then Roisart brightened a bit. "Maybe the races are today." 
     The noble  twins walked  a little more  quickly toward  the docks, 
 past the  side shows  and food  stands that were  just setting  up for
 the fourth day  of Melrin. Roisart noted curiosities along  the way: a 
 bearded lady, a steer  the size of a small house,  a fortune teller or
 two, a  seller of rare books...many  things that he and  Luthias would
 have to see. It  would have been easier if their  father had been with
 them; the  late Baron was much  like Roisart in his  zest for oddities 
 and stories. Luthias  was not as interested such things,  for which he 
 could find no  real use. Then Roisart spotted the  booth of an armoire
 come  all the  way from  Magnus for  Melrin, and  decided it  would be
 easier than he had anticipated to drag Luthias back. 
     They  arrived  at  the  docks   very  early,  so  the  docks  were
 deserted, except  for old  Simon, the  Stew Man,  and his  monkey, who
 chattered  at the  twins in  a primate  greeting. Luthias  played with
 the jovial  creature, and  Roisart began  eagerly to  ask the  old man 
 about a sea  legend he had recently  read and whether or  not it could 
 have any truth to  it. Finally, as the crowds began  to press onto the 
 docks,  Luthias slipped  the  monkey a  sovereign  and pulled  Roisart 
 away to find a good view for the race.
     It was  a spectacular race,  with Captain Kent's  "Victory Chimes"
 taking the  honors at  the end.  When it  was over  and the  crowd was
 thinning, Roisart  told his  brother, "I  saw some  interesting booths 
 over by the market. Let's go look them over."
     Luthias shrugged  his shoulders  and together  they left  the dock 
 areas for the  Middle City, near the market. As  Roisart had expected, 
 Luthias  was not  particularly interested  in the  side shows,  but he
 became very  enthusiastic when he  saw the  display of the  best sword
 maker  of Dargon.  While Luthias  inspected the  blades, Roisart  paid 
 two coppers to  see the steer as big  as a house and played  a game of 
 toss, though he  won no prizes. Still, Roisart made  sure at all times
 that he knew exactly where his brother was. 
     Luthias watched Roisart  as well, saw him duck into  the tent with 
 the exaggerated  steer. "I'll  take this  one," he  said to  the sword 
 maker, choosing  the best blade  of the lot,  but keeping his  eyes on 
 the tent. "And  a scabbard, too." Roisart emerged  from the attraction
 and moved  over to  his brother. "Look,  Roisart," Luthias  bragged as 
 he paid for his new toy, "see this!"
     The  pride was  well-founded; the  sword  was very  well made  and
 decorated. "You going to fight with that?" Roisart laughed.
     "That's what swords are for," Luthias said, a gleam in his eye.
     "But that's  too nice  to fight  with," Roisart  argued. "Besides,
 in a pinch, you're used to your old blade." 
     Luthias grimaced. "We  had better stick together,  twin. I thought 
 I saw someone following us on the docks." 
     "You worry  too much," Roisart  chided his brother  lightly. "Come 
 over here, Luthias.  Let's take a look at this  scribe's cart. Did you 
 see the books?" 
     Luthias took  his sword from its  maker and nodded. "I  saw them," 
 Luthias confirmed as they crossed the street. "Very old." 
     Roisart  arrived  at  the  cart and  immediately  began  rummaging 
 through the titles. "These aren't so old, Luthias."
     "I meant  the scribe," joked  his brother, picking up  a red-bound
 volume inscribed  with blue. He opened  it, looked at the  title page, 
 then called over the scribe. "How much is this?"
     "Do you have 'History of the Ancient World'?" Roisart wondered. 
     The scribe shook  his head. "I'm sorry, young sir.  And you, young 
 sir...." He  looked from  Roisart to Luthias,  then back  again. Then, 
 to  Luthias,  he gave  the  price  of  the  book, which  Luthias  paid 
 laconically and turned away to flip through it as Roisart browsed. 
     After  a  minute,  Roisart  peered over  his  brother's  shoulder. 
 "What's that you've bought?"
     "Meresan's  'Lives  of  Lords  and Princes',"  Luthias  told  him.
 "We're going to need the examples if one of us is going to be baron."
     Roisart sighed. "If we can ever decide who is to be baron."
     Luthias  looked  into  his  brother's brown  eyes.  "I  think  you 
 should be baron." 
     "What?"  laughed Roisart.  "But I'm  not much  of a  leader, or  a 
 fighter. Men  would follow  you, Luthias. In  an emergency,  you think
 fast and act." 
     "But that would be  deadly to me if I were  judging a legal case," 
 Luthias  replied, closing  the book  with  a decided  thump. "I  would
 think too  quickly. You'd delve  into the  matter until the  truth was 
 found. I  might take  the truth  at the surface.  And what  about law, 
 Roisart? I know nothing of laws." 
     "If only we could both be baron," sighed Roisart dismally.
     "I  know that  that is  against  the law,"  Luthias chuckled.  "We 
 can't both be baron." 
     "I know,  but we both have  qualities that are so  necessary to be 
 one," Roisart  replied. "And it's hard  to tell which one  of us would 
 better serve Clifton."
     "Clifton,"  muttered  Luthias, beginning  to  move  away from  the 
 scribe's cart. "Now, about him I am very worried." 
     "You  worry too  much,"  Roisart laughed.  Then  he sobered.  "But
 something's got to be done. Clifton can't let this continue."
     "There's  nothing we  can do  about it,  though," Luthias  pointed
 out. "We'll just have to decide which of us should be baron."
     There was  a moment of  silence, then Roisart  announced suddenly, 
 "Luthias, I'm hungry."
     Luthias smiled.  "So am I.  I think there's  a tavern on  the next 
 street over. It's been a long time since breakfast."
     "I hope  it's a good tavern,"  Roisart said. "I don't  want to get
 sick before the ball tomorrow." 
     Slowly,  the  twins made  their  way  through  the crowds  to  the 
 nearby  street. The  tavern  which Luthias  had  earlier spotted,  the
 Rogue and  Quiver, was  full, and  seemed rather  dirty. So  they kept 
 walking  and  searching, until  Roisart  spotted  a large  sign  which 
 advertised, "Belisandra's."
     Luthias  gave the  place a  cursory inspection.  "It looks  clean,
 and the food smells good. Let's eat."
     Together, the twins  ducked into the darkened  tavern, scanned the 
 room and  its patrons (neither seemed  too bad), and found  a table in 
 the corner nearest  the door. Luthias pointed it out,  and motioned to 
 his  brother. Roisart  nodded,  knowing the  location's advantages  as
 well  as Luthias  did;  it  allowed no  attack  from  behind, and  the 
 proximity  to  the  door  made  the  twins  difficult  to  spot  as  a 
 potential killer's eyes adjusted to the semi-darkness.
     A  sharp-eyed  serving  wench  had  spotted  the  brothers  almost 
 immediately  and   hustled  over  to   their  table  as   they  seated
 themselves.  She   was  a  small   girl,  only  reaching   the  twins'
 shoulders, but  she dressed  neatly and wore  a pleasant  smile. "Good 
 Melrin to  you, sirs,"  she greeted  the twins  politely. "What  may I 
 serve you?"
     Roisart began  to smile in  a lazy  way which triggered  alarms in 
 Luthias'  brain.  Roisart was  having  an  infatuation again.  Luthias 
 sighed  mentally.  Well, at  least  the  girl  wasn't a  peasant;  her
 speech was  clear and  free of  the peasant accent,  and she  wore her 
 clothes  like a  decent woman,  unlike  another serving  wench on  the
 other side  of the room.  Still....Luthias nudged his  brother beneath
 the table  and spoke.  "Two ales,  to begin  with. What's  the special
 for luncheon?"
     The girl's  smile spread. "Belisandra's Secret  Stew. The recipe's
 older than  the Keep. It's  the best stew  in Dargon. And  it's fresh;
 Belisandra   made   it   just   this   morning."   The   girl   nodded 
 enthusiastically  to  a buxom  woman  nearing  middle age,  who  stood
 behind the  bar, tending it  and a large  cauldron of stew  behind it. 
 "It comes with fresh  bread and butter and greens, and  I can bring it
 to you right away."
     "Perfect," Luthias' stomach answered. "Bring two of those please."
     The  girl nodded  and turned  away with  a natural,  unflirtateous 
 bounce. "Too  young for  you, Roisart,"  muttered Luthias.  "She can't
 be more than fourteen."
     "She's very sweet," Roisart argued.
     "Yes, but  she's not  for you."  Roisart sighed  with resignation;
 his brother smiled affectionately. "You give your heart too easily." 
     "Whoever is baron could choose his own woman," Roisart realized.
     "If only  we could choose  a baron,"  Luthias laughed as  the girl 
 returned with two bowls  of stew, a plate of fresh bread  and a pat of
 butter,  and a  bowl  of greens.  Wondering how  she  could carry  all
 that,  Luthias  continued,  "There's   absolutely  no  way  to  choose
 between us."
     The girl  was setting  the dishes down.  "Belisandra will  be over 
 with the  ales in a  minute," she promised.  She leaned back  a moment 
 and  surveyed the  young  brothers with  an  appraising look.  "Choose 
 between  you? How  could any  girl  choose between  you?" She  blushed
 then, perhaps feeling  immodest. Both twins, blushing  as well, smiled 
 at her as she continued. "Maybe your lucky lady should see Corambis."
     The  tavern  mistress  Belisandra,  bearing two  ales,  came  from
 behind the girl as Luthias asked, "Who is Corambis?"
     "You don't know  Corambis?" the girl asked, her eyes  now wide. "I
 thought everyone  knew Corambis.  He's the  Sage in  the market-place. 
 Your lady should see him today to see which of you she should choose." 
     Belisandra set the  ales down with two distinctive  thumps. "Go to 
 him  today? Mika,  he  may never  come  back!" She  gave  the twins  a 
 motherly gaze. "He's been gone all winter, without a trace, and--"
     "He got  back yesterday,"  Mika protested.  "He read  my horoscope
 for me this morning, Belisandra." 
     She  turned  again  to  the  twins, and  began  to  continue,  but 
 Belisandra interrupted. "Where was he this time?" 
     Mika took  a moment to recall  the information. "He went  off with 
 a  young man  for  a few  days,  then stayed  with  relatives for  the
 winter, he  said. But he  is back,"  she assured Roisart  and Luthias,
 "and you  can go and  make an appointment  for your lady  friend. He's 
 right in the market."
     Luthias faced his brother. "Do you think we should?" 
     Roisart  shrugged.  "Why  not,  Luthias?  We've  tried  everything
 else." He then asked Mika and her lady, "Where can we find Corambis?" 
     "Oh,  he's   easy  to   find,  my  lords,"   Belisandra  explained
 helpfully. "It's the  only closed booth in the main  market place. You
 can't miss it, young sirs." 
     "I'll think we'll try it," Luthias decided. "Thank you." 
     Mika  smiled  engagingly;   Belisandra  nodded,  pleased.  "You're
 welcome, my lords," Belisandra answered. "Good Melrin." 
     "Good Melrin," Roisart returned politely.
     Belisandra went  back to her bar  and her stew and  left Mika with
 the twins.  "Enjoy your meal," the  girl said pleasantly. "Call  me if 
 you'd like anything else, milords." 
     Luthias  nodded  and smiled  at  her,  and  then Mika  also  left. 
 Luthias  turned to  his stew  and greens  and began  to eat  hungrily.
 Then he  laughed, his mouth  full. Aware  of his manners,  he stopped,
 swallowed, then said,  "I can't  believe  I'm  actually going to see a 
 fortune-teller!"
     "Why not?"  Roisart answered,  stirring his hot  stew to  cool it.
 "Didn't she say he was a Sage? Sages are very wise men, Luthias." 
     Still Luthias shook his head. "Leaving a barony to a horoscope..."
     Roisart laughed. "Be  practical, twin, just as you  always tell me 
 to be. We're going  for advice, not for a decision.  That will have to
 be made by you and me."
     For a  moment, Luthias  was quiet.  Then he said  in a  low voice,
 "We should be  more careful what we say in  public, Roisart. The girl,
 Mika,  didn't  guess  what  we  really  meant,  but  if  someone  were 
 searching for us..." 
     "It wouldn't  be that hard,"  Roisart countered. "I'd bet  that we
 were the only twins in mourning blue in a festival city." 
     Luthias attacked  the greens. "Still,  we don't need the  whole of
 Dargon knowing about us and about...our cousin's troubles." 
     Roisart swallowed and  nodded. "Agreed. But we should  go see this 
 Corambis. We need all the help we can get."
     "It certainly couldn't hurt," Luthias concurred. 

     About   mid-afternoon,   Luthias   and  Roisart   finished   their 
 leisurely  meal, and  after paying  Belisandra and  generously tipping 
 the  girl Mika,  they made  their  way to  the main  market square  in
 search  of Corambis  the Sage.  As Mika  predicted, his  stall in  the
 market place,  the only one  that was  closed in completely,  was easy
 to find.  Luckily for the twins,  the people of Dargon,  accustomed to
 Corambis,  were   exploiting  other  fortune  tellers   today.  A  bit 
 self-consciously, Luthias knocked  on the door, and  the nervous twins
 were  admitted  into   the  booth  by  a  young   woman  whom  Roisart
 recognized as  being one of  the serving wenches at  Belisandra's. She
 smiled  at the  twins provocatively,  and in  a sugary  voice informed 
 them that  Corambis was with another  querent, but would be  free very 
 soon.  Both  twins  nodded  soberly at  this  information  and  seated
 themselves gingerly on a wooden bench. 
     After a  minute, a middle-aged man  dressed in a gay  shade of red 
 came  through the  door directly  opposite  the twins.  A young  woman 
 followed him,  apparently in tears. She  slipped the man a  gold piece
 and then  slipped out the door.  The man then turned  his attention to
 the twins. "Who  are these men, Thuna?" he asked  the girl, giving her 
 a stern, suspicious look.
     The wench Thuna shrugged coyly. "They've come for you, Corambis."
     The  Sage  looked  visibly  relieved.  "Come  in,  gentlemen,"  he 
 invited,  motioning  toward the  plain,  still-open  door. In  unison, 
 Roisart and Luthias rose and walked toward the room.
     The  cubicle was  dark,  despite the  afternoon daylight  outside, 
 and  from   what  the  twins   could  tell,  somewhat   bare.  Candles 
 illuminated  a small,  circular table.  Roisart recognized  it as  the
 Wheel  of Life,  a divination  device.  After a  moment, Luthias  also
 recalled  the Wheel.  Roisart noticed  two chairs  in opposing  points
 around the table.  He indicated it to Luthias, who  shook his head, so
 Roisart sat down. 
     After  a few  quick words  of instruction  to Thuna,  Corambis the
 Sage  joined them.  "I  apologize  about Thuna,"  the  Sage began.  "I 
 thought that perhaps  she had fallen into old habits  again." The Sage
 looked at  Luthias, who was still  standing. "I'm sorry, sir.  I don't 
 have another chair." 
     "It's all  right," Luthias  assured him. "Don't  trouble yourself. 
 I don't mind standing."
     "All  right," the  Sage agreed.  He  looked at  Roisart then,  and
 again at Luthias. "How may I help you, gentlemen?" 
     "We would have you tell our horoscope," Roisart answered quickly.
     Corambis  at  once appeared  surprised  and  flattered. "It's  not
 often men  of nobility come to  me," he chuckled, beginning  to smile. 
 "They don't often trust their problems to strangers." 
     "This is an exceptional problem," Luthias revealed. 
     "You  may  confide  in  me,  my  lords,"  Corambis  declared  with 
 dignity. "I will not reveal your secrets. Why have you come to me?"
     Roisart smiled. "I suppose we had no where left to go." 
     Corambis' eyebrows raised. "Sir?" 
     "My  brother and  I," began  Luthias, "have  come to  you with  an
 unusual problem,  sir. When we were  born, our mother died,  and so no 
 one noted which was the elder."
     "And   your   father   has    just   perished?"   Corambis   asked
 sympathetically, gazing at  the blue-grey mourning dress.  "I see. You 
 have no idea  which of you is heir." Roisart  and Luthias both nodded.
 "My lords, have you brought your case before Lord Dargon?" 
     Roisart and  Luthias looked each  other in  the eye a  moment, and 
 Luthias  had his  doubts. But  Roisart trusted  the Sage,  and Luthias 
 gave his  consent, so Roisart  revealed the entire story  to Corambis.
 To  the  twins'  astonishment,  the  Sage was  not  surprised  by  the
 information.  "I have  been seeing  that in  the stars  lately," mused 
 Corambis.  He sighed,  then  looked at  Roisart,  sitting across  from
 him, and then  at Luthias. "Well, my  lords, I shall do what  I can to 
 help you."
     The Sage  rose and turned  to a  little cubby-hole in  the corner.
 >From it,  he withdrew a  small, velvet bag.  He opened it,  rummaged a
 moment,  then  turned back  to  the  cubby-hole.  He reached  into  it 
 again, and tossed something across the room to Luthias.
     Luthias caught the  thing deftly, then opened his  hand to examine 
 the object. It was a small red chip. 
     Corambis seated himself  once more. With one hand,  he offered the 
 velvet  bag, and  another  red chip  to Roisart.  With  the other,  he
 beckoned Luthias  closer. "It  isn't often I  do readings  for twins," 
 he mused, "but  I often read for couples. Lord  Roisart, take half the
 chips, and do not look at them. Give the rest to your brother."
     "What's the red chip for?" Luthias asked.
     "Put  that on  your  birth sign,  the  Oak," Corambis  instructed.
 "You too, Lord  Roisart." The twins obeyed. Roisart took  a handful of
 chips, and  gave the rest to  Luthias. Corambis spun the  wheel. "Drop
 them when you are ready." 
     Without any  outward signal, the twins  simultaneously dropped the 
 blue  chips  onto the  whirling  Wheel  of  Life.  It spun  and  spun;
 Luthias knelt  next to  the table  to see better.  The Wheel  spun and
 spun  and  spun.  Roisart  put  a  hand  on  his  brother's  shoulder. 
 Corambis stared at the whirling Wheel. The Wheel stopped. 
     Corambis  stared at  the Wheel,  with its  scattered chips  of red 
 and blue,  for a  moment. "Unusual,"  he said.  "Look here,  my lords.
 The  two birth  chips have  separated. One  has stayed  on the  Oak, a
 sign of  strength and long  life. The other  has strayed to  the Ship, 
 as if he were going to make a journey away from the other." 
     "What's that blue one on the Ship?" Roisart asked, fascinated. 
     Corambis scrutinized the  symbol. "A new ally, come  from afar, it 
 seems." He  gazed at the other  chips. "You will need  him, along with 
 this ally--"  Corambis pointed  to a chip  straddling the  elements of 
 Fire and  Sword. "--to combat  these two. Two very  dangerous enemies, 
 one caught  between deceit  and caring...probably  a woman,"  he mused 
 to himself.  "And another, on the  sign of the Fox--"  Again, Corambis
 pointed. "He is a dangerous, cunning man, and I would be wary of him. 
     "The  outcome..."  Corambis  looked  at the  chips.  "It  will  be
 decided soon,  my lords.  There are  chips in the  present and  in the 
 near future."
     "But which one of us?" demanded Luthias. 
     The Sage shrugged  his shoulders slightly. "I know  not, my lords.
 But I  can tell you  this," he promised, pointing  to the sign  of the 
 Knight, which  held two chips,  "the decision will  be made by  an act 
 of extreme valor." 
     Luthias looked  up at his  twin. "I  should have known  that there
 would be no easy answer, my brother," sighed Luthias.
     "So should I," smiled Roisart.
     Corambis  shrugged  pleasantly. "I  can  assure  you of  this,  my
 young lords.  The sign of the  outcome is on the  Mistweaver. Whatever
 happens in your case will be a fufillment of destiny."
     "Do you mean that the elder will gain the barony?" Roisart asked.
     "The  Wheel is  not specific,"  sighed Corambis.  "It is  never as 
 specific as  I would  like. As you  said, my lord,  there are  no easy
 answers in the affairs of destiny." The Sage smiled.
     Both twins  returned the smile  with crooked, somewhat  sad grins.
 Luthias  rose,  and Roisart  rose  with  him. "Thank  you,  Corambis," 
 Roisart said respectfully. "We appreciate your time." 
     "How much do we owe you, sir?" Luthias inquired.
     "Nothing," said  Corambis amiably. "It  isn't often I get  to tell
 the future of the Baron of Connall and the Lord of Dargon."
     "Please," Roisart  insisted, "let us  give you something  for your
 trouble. You lost other Festival customers by telling our fortune." 
     "Doubtless  there are  other  fortune tellers  in  Dargon for  the 
 festival," Corambis smirked. "No, my lords, you need not pay me." 
     "But we want to," Luthias said, with the tone of a demand. 
     Corambis rolled  his eyes. "Oh,  all right," he  conceded. Luthias
 gave him  two sovereigns. Corambis looked  at the coins, then  back at
 the  twins. "I  suppose you  won't  let me  put  up a  fuss about  the
 amount,  my  lords?" Luthias  gave  him  a wild,  wicked,  challenging 
 grin.  "I didn't  think so."  Corambis sighed.  "Well, good  Melrin to
 you, lords, and be careful." 
     "Good  Melrin,"  echoed  Roisart,  and  Luthias  nodded  a  silent 
 farewell as they  stepped out the door. A little  old lady rushed past 
 them to see Corambis. They heard a hysterical weeping as he door shut. 
     "Poor woman,"  said Roisart  sympathetically. Luthias took  a deep 
 breath. The twins  crossed the room and left  Corambis' booth. Roisart 
 looked at his brother. "Well, twin, what do you think?" 
     Luthias shrugged  his large shoulders elaborately.  "What should I
 think, Roisart?"
     "I think you'll be the next baron," Roisart announced flatly. 
     "Me?  Why me?"  wondered Luthias.  "Haven't we  already spoken  of
 this, Roisart?"
     "The Sage  said it would be  decided by an act  of valor," Roisart
 reminded  his  brother.  "You  excel in  matters  of  bravery,  twin,"
 Roisart praised with a confident, affectionate smile.
     Luthias'  faced  echoed  the  smile falsely;  Luthias'  smile  was 
 introverted,  private, but  it retained  the happiness  shared by  his 
 brother. "Roisart," Luthias told him, "there are many sorts of valor." 
     The  two wandered  in  silence  for a  few  moments, then  Roisart 
 wondered, "What shall we do now, Luthias?"
     Luthias gazed up  at the sky. The sun was  just above the horizon. 
 Funny, but  it didn't  seem as if  it should be  that late.  Lunch and
 finding Corambis must  have taken longer than he  thought. The reading
 was certainly quick.
     Due  to the  setting sun,  people were  clearing the  streets. The
 merchants were  closing and barring  their shops and booths;  the side 
 show people  were packing their  equipment. Tomorrow was the  last day
 of Melrin and the  best day for business. One could  not take a chance 
 on one's  equipment being  stolen in  the twilight.  Luthias grimaced.
 If humble merchants took that much care....
     "Roisart,  perhaps we'd  best go  back to  our cousin's,"  Luthias 
 suggested, carefully  omitting their cousin's noble  name. "After what
 happened this morning..." 
     Roisart appeared  disappointed (he had  heard that there  would be 
 firework s  that evening),  but then thought  about the  situation. "I
 agree, my brother. Let's go home."
     The twins were  a little over a  mile and a half from  the keep, a
 nice  leisurely walk  in the  twilight.  Roisart did  a little  mental 
 calculation and figured  that he and his twin brother  would arrive at
 Dargon  Keep about  the time  of  the sunset.  Perfect, just  perfect. 
 Roisart  again thought  about  that morning's  escapade  and began  to
 feel apprehensive.  These murderers  after Clifton, he  thought, don't
 even wait  until after  the dark.  Just a  deserted place.  They don't
 mind the twilight.
     Another thing  occurred to  Roisart. He  was unarmed.  Luthias had
 bought  the fine,  new  sword  at the  bazaar,  but  he, Roisart,  had 
 brought  no weapon.  Only  the city  guard was  allowed  to wear  arms 
 during the festival,  a mandate Clifton had issued  for public safety.
 Luthias,  therefore,  carried his  new  sword,  snug in  its  fabulous 
 scabbard, in his hand, and by the blade. 
     That morning, the two of them had ridden prepared. But now...
     Apparently,  Luthias had  shared his  brother's thoughts.  Luthias
 gazed  at  the  covered  sword,  and at  his  brother's  hands,  which 
 carried only the book Luthias had purchased. "Let's hurry, twin."
     "You worry too much," Roisart said automatically. 
     "I don't want to lose you, Roisart," Luthias answered, sotto voce. 
     Yes, Luthias worried  too much. After all, what  assassin would be 
 stupid enough to try the same trick twice in the same day? 
     Still,  Roisart gave  his twin  a watery  smile, then  gripped the
 book tighter  as the pair  quickened their pace slightly.  The streets
 were  becoming deserted.  Luthias  took  a step  closer  to his  twin. 
 Roisart  noticed that  the knuckles  of the  hand clutching  the sword 
 has paled. Grim, Roisart quickened the pace again. 
     It was getting dark quickly. 
     Roisart looked  at the setting  sun, red  and round, like  a ripe,
 round apple, then at his brother's face, bathed in red light. 
     Something moved behind Luthias. 
     "Roisart, fall!" cried Luthias suddenly.
     Instinctively  reverting   to  the   fighting  lessons   they  had 
 received under  their father's  auspices, Roisart trusted  his brother 
 and  collapsed carefully  onto  the  ground. He  rolled  to the  side, 
 looked up.  Luthias swung at  a thief, bearing a  knife in one  hand a 
 rope in  the other, and  bloodied the man's nose  with a sweep  of the
 sword. The  one behind Luthias, whom  Roisart had seen move,  moved to 
 strike, but  Roisart pulled his  brother's leg, tripping  him. Luthias 
 stumbled, but was unhurt.
     Roisart  rose, put  his back  against Luthias',  and observed  the
 numbers. Six. And  thieves again. Roisart wondered at one  of them; he 
 seemed  familiar,  but  the  light,  as  well  as  the  observer,  was
 uncertain.  He  heard something  clatter  to  the ground  behind  him;
 Luthias had unsheathed  his sword. Roisart cringed. Six to  two, and I 
 am unarmed.  He took a  good hold on the  book. Not a  peasant weapon, 
 the unexpected thought came, but certainly an odd one. 
     Suddenly, there  was a  cry from  the shadows,  and four  more men
 joined the scene.
     Luthias lunged  forward and  impaled a thief  in one  sure thrust. 
 Roisart leapt  toward one of  the attackers, and clubbed  him clumsily
 with  Luthias'  new book.  The  thief  stumbled, more  surprised  than
 hurt,  but he  shook  his head  and kept  coming.  Roisart kicked  him
 soundly in  the groin,  and when  he fell, he  clubbed him  again with
 "Lives of Lords and Princes." 
     Roisart  lunged from  the knife  of  his attacker,  but the  thief 
 dodged  despite the  pain.  Roisart  fell to  the  ground, losing  his 
 breath. Some  strong arms roughly  grabbed him  and hauled him  to his
 feet. "Master Roisart, are you all right?" Bartol's voice hissed.
     "Bartol!"  cried  Roisart. "Thank  God!"  Then,  in the  darkening
 twilight, Roisart saw movement again. "Bartol, look out!"
     Deftly, the  bard turned to  defend himself. Roisart  crouched, to
 try to  ward off any attackers  with hand-to-hand combat. He  left the 
 book in the dust; it was of no use to him in this situation.
     Six of them, six of us, Roisart thought. Fair odds. 
     One of  the thieves  lay on  the road,  bleeding from  wounds from 
 Luthias' sword.  Another's head was  crushed on  one side from  a blow 
 from  one of  Bartol's  three  guards. But  one  of  Bartol's men  was
 still,  the slit  in his  neck  allowing all  life to  gush from  him.
 Roisart checked around. One, two, three--where is the fourth---?
     A crushing blow  to the neck gave Roisart his  answer. Behind him. 
 Dazed,  Roisart fell.  Far away,  he heard  Luthias' voice,  "Roisart! 
 ROISART!" Far  away, he  felt rough,  rough hands  tying his  arms and 
 feet  with  coarse,  chafing  ropes.  Not far  away,  he  saw  through
 blurred eyes another  of Bartol's men fall. He saw  Luthias, trying to
 fight off  three thieves.  The other,  probably the  one who  had tied
 him, was  being defeated by Bartol  and the last of  his men. Bartol's 
 last  guard  fell, leaving  the  bard  alone. And  Luthias,  defending
 himself against three thieves. 
     Bartol  fell,  clutching  his  sword-arm.  The  thief  kicked  him
 soundly, and ran to join his comrades, fighting Luthias. 
     Luthias,  Roisart  tried to  cry  out.  His mouth  wouldn't  move.
 Luthias! Bartol, help him. 
     Bartol was bleeding. Roisart couldn't even see Luthias any more.
     There was a strange battle cry.
     Suddenly, a blue  and white clad stranger leapt into  the midst of
 the four fighting  Luthias. One, he stabbed in the  back. Luthias made
 a lucky thrust into  one of the others. The other  two backed off, but 
 did not  run. The  strange, a  short, young  man, Roisart  judged him,
 swung  an odd  curved sword  above  his head  and charged  one of  the
 thieves. Encouraged, Luthias  sprang at the other, who  was ready. The
 thief stabbed at  Luthias, and Roisart heard his brother  cry out. The 
 stranger's opponent fell. 
     The stranger  saw Luthias clutch  his side and quickly  went after
 the thief. One slash  rid the thief of his arm.  Another robbed him of
 his life. 
     Roisart  regained  his  breath  and began  to  fidget.  The  ropes 
 irritated his  wrists, which had  been bound tightly. He  heard Bartol
 moan. It was becoming difficult to see.
     "Are you all right?" asked the stranger in accented words. 
     "It's not deep," Luthias said. "But my brother...Bartol..." 
     Luthias  took a  few steps  toward  his brother  and knelt  beside
 him. "Roisart?" he asked, tentatively touching his brother's forehead. 
     "Untie me," Roisart demanded irritably. 
     Luthias slit the bonds. "Are you all right?"
     Roisart  pushed on  the ground  and managed  to get  on his  feet.
 "Yes, I'm all right. Bartol?"
     "A cut,"  the stranger answered.  He was binding it.  "A physician 
 should be able to repair it."
     Luthias  put his  hand  on  his brother's  arm  and together  they
 joined  the bard  and the  stranger. "We  are indebted  to you,  sir,"
 Luthias  said politely.  "We--my  brother, Bartol,  and I--would  have
 died here without your help. Thank you." 
     "Prease," said  the stranger,  "do not  make fuss  over it.  I saw 
 that the  thieves attacked you, and  like any honorable man,  I wished
 to help."
     "How can we ever repay you?" Roisart asked.
     "Prease,"  the  stranger  begged,  "I  do  it  out  of  honor  and
 decency. I need no reward." 
     "At  least come  to sup  with the  masters and  their cousin,  the 
 Lord of Dargon," the bard urged. "We at least owe you that much, sir?"
     The stranger  took a step  back and  bowed. "I am  Ittosai Michiya
 of Bichu." 
     "I am  honored, Michiya-san,"  Roisart answered, bowing  and using 
 the  suffix he  had learned  in books.  To his  surprise, Mocha  bowed
 again and  smiled. "I am Roisart  Connall. My brother, whose  life you 
 saved, is  Luthias Connall. The  other man is," here  Roisart smirked, 
 "apparently our new body guard."
     Bartol frowned. "Yes,  Lord Dargon sent me and the  others to look 
 after you two." 
     "We should be leaving this place," Ittosai recommended.
     "I agree,"  Luthias replied gravely.  "Do come to dinner  with us, 
 sir," he urged.  "You did us a  great favor this night,  and the least 
 you deserve is our thanks and our hospitality."
     "You  do me  honor to  invite  me to  the house  of Dargon,"  said 
 Ittosai. "I will go."
     "Quickly," said Bartol, clutching his arm. 
     Quickly, they returned to the keep. 

     Roisart, rubbing  his rope-burned  wrists, and  Luthias, clutching 
 his thinly-sliced  side, rushed though  the gates of Dargon  Keep with
 Bartol the  bard and Ittosai Michiya,  the noble from Bichu,  in close 
 attendance. The city  of Dargon had stealthily and  swiftly snuck into
 the dark,  night hours.  From their experience  at the  morning's dawn 
 and this evening's twilight, the twins knew they were no longer safe. 
     Roisart's  head was  throbbing  miserably.  Stubborn blood  seeped 
 slowly  through  Luthias'  clenched  fingers.  Both  twins  hurt,  but
 Roisart  knew by  instinct  that he  did not  have  a concussion,  and 
 Luthias'  wound was  only  skin  deep, as  much  as  it was  bleeding.
 Bartol also  nursed a  minor flesh  wound in his  sword arm;  the bard
 sincerely hoped  that all  tendons were  intact. Ittosai  was slightly
 winded, nothing more. 
     Guards quickly ushered  the wounded party to the  presence of Lord 
 Dargon,  who was  waiting  for  the return  of  his  noble cousins  of
 Connall.  As soon  as  he saw  them,  he rose.  "God,  not again!"  He
 looked at the twins, then at Bartol. "Bartol, I gave you orders--"
     Bartol  wore   an  obstinate  mask.   "My  lord,  the   three  you 
 instructed to  take with me are  dead. If it  were not for my  lord of 
 Bichu, Master Roisart and Master Luthias would have died too."
     Dargon grimaced  and went to  the door. "Bring Griswald,"  he told 
 the nearest  servant, who  nodded once and  went immediately  to fetch
 the  old physician.  He  shut the  door and  returned  to his  guests.
 "Forgive  me, cousins,"  he said  to Roisart  and Luthias.  "I thought
 you would be safe in the city." 
     "They  waited until  sunset," Luthias  informed him.  "The streets 
 were almost deserted. This man, Ittosai Mich...Michiya? saved us." 
     Dargon  bowed to  the Bichurian  in the  style of  the foreigner's 
 homeland. "I  am honored  to meet  with you  again, Lord  Ittosai. You 
 honor  my  household." Past  the  formalities,  Dargon then  said,  "I 
 thank  you for  saving the  lives of  my cousins,  Lord Ittosai.  I am
 indebted to you." 
     Ittosai himself bowed  to Dargon's lord. "I do what  any man would
 do, Lord of Dargon." 
     "I have offered  the hospitality of your household to  the Lord of 
 Bichu," Bartol informed his lord.
     "You  did  right, Bartol,"  Dargon  replied.  He again  turned  to
 Ittosai Michiya.  "You are welcome here,  Lord Ittosai, not only  as a
 hero, but as a noble of a great land."
     Griswald almost seemed  to choose this moment to  enter the lord's 
 study--without  knocking. He  looked  from Bartol  to  the twins,  and
 groaned, "Gods  and gods,  what have  you two  been doing  this time?" 
 Dargon unconsciously  frowned at  the disrespect of  Griswald's words,
 but  said nothing,  as he  thought  that the  old man  meant no  harm.
 "Bartol,  what happened  to you?"  Griswald quickly  snatched an  herb 
 and some  cloth out of  his bag and bound  the bard's arm.  "It should
 heal quickly.  Don't overuse it."  He turned  then to Luthias  and did 
 the same. "And what happened to you?" he finally asked Roisart.
     "I  was clubbed  from behind,"  explained Roisart.  Roisart turned
 to his cousin.
     Griswald  grunted by  way of  reply,  and probed  the boy's  skull
 with dexterous fingers. "No lump. Were you unconscious?" 
     Roisart  gingerly   shook  his  head.  "It's   sore,  though,"  he 
 admitted. Roisart turned  to his cousin. "They  were careful, Clifton.
 They didn't  want me harmed. They  clubbed me hard, but  it didn't put
 me  to  sleep.  And  then...they  tied  my  hands."  Clifton  frowned,
 exchanged  a   glance  with   Luthias.  Luthias  gravely   nodded  the 
 confirmation of the event and his understanding of its implications. 
     Griswald  seemed   unaffected.  "Can  you  see   all  right?  Feel 
 nauseous? Tired?"
     Again, Roisart carefully shook his head.
     "Then  don't  worry   about  it  until  you   do,"  the  physician
 instructed  in  harsh, laconic  tones.  Griswald  then turned  to  his
 lord. "If you'll  not be needing me,  I'm going to bed. You  got me up 
 very  early this  morning."  Without waiting  for Dargon's  dismissal,
 Griswald abruptly left. 
     "He hasn't  been himself for  days," Dargon revealed,  having seen
 Ittosai's perplexed expression following the physician. 
     "Can a man not be himself?" Ittosai wondered, no less confused.
     "It's an  expression," Roisart explained  with a smile.  "It means
 he is not acting as he usually does."
     "Let's go  to dinner," Luthias  suggested. "It's been a  long time
 since Roisart and I ate lunch."
     Dargon  nodded, and  Bartol went  to hold  the door  open for  the 
 Lord of  Dargon and his noble  guests. As Dargon followed  Ittosai out 
 the  door, he  said, "You  will be  coming to  the Melrin  ball, won't
 you,  Lord  Ittosai?"  When   the  Bichurian  didn't  answer,  Clifton
 continued, "You  are invited, as  my guest, as  the worthy noble  of a
 distant land."
     "I fear I am not versed in your past-times," Michiya admitted. 
     Roisart smiled.  "But it's simple,  Michiya-san. You smile  at the 
 pretty women--" 
     "And try  not to  fall in  love with  them," Luthias  finished for
 his brother. 
     "A strange expression  is falling in love, as if  one were to fall
 into a pit," Ittosai noted. 
     "Please do  come, Lord  Ittosai," Dargon repeated  his invitation. 
 "The people  of Dargon are very  curious about your nation  across the
 sea, and want to have better relations with you and your people." 
     "I  am not  the best  speaker  of my  people," Ittosai  protested, 
 "but I will come."
     "Thank you,"  said the Lord  of Dargon. "Please accept  my house's
 hospitality for  this night, and  for tomorrow night, after  the ball. 
 You wouldn't want to miss any part of it." 
     "Yes," Roisart said. "I imagine it will be a night to remember."
                 -M. Wendy Hennequin  <HENNEQUI@CTSTATEU>

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               -M. Wendy Hennequin  <HENNEQUI@CTSTATEU>