The doorkeepers held abreast and ready a brace of heart-crossed battle pikes. Now each rapped his own two together twelve times in a duel of hard knocks to announce their guests. By this were the guests held in rapt attention with no choice but to listen. Nor had they a hope to avoid the vision of hosts of apparitions sprung from the chamber’s phantom lamplight just for the chance to dance for them.
Ghosts of a hidden history… were we never let to tell our story… but for the shadows upon these walls… where we evermore dwell…
Done, the rappers sang a song, a torch song of hellish welcome:
Had you a good wife?
A strong, young son?
Beautiful daughters
Chased yet virgin?
Questioned guest
Pale ghost, pale ghost
Cornered beast
Pale ghost
We see soft hands, signs
Of rich lands owned,
Fine fabrics your skin,
Fat flesh on bone
Hapless guest
Pale ghost, pale ghost
Captured beast
Pale ghost
And in some safe haven
Of holywood,
For what is your treasure
Of gold now good?
Helpless guest
Pale ghost, pale ghost
Hogtied beast
Pale ghost
“This pelt be of value”
“For marrow, his bones”
“Hang him till tomorrow”
“All blood let and run”
No marrow tomorrow
Your hide be gone
The last of your ‘morrows
Bled on this ground
Sorrow tomorrow
Six feet down
Death bed made
No sound
Screamless guest
Pale ghost, pale ghost
Dreamless guest
Pale ghost, pale ghost
Hopeless guest
Pale ghost, pale ghost
Lifeless beast
Pale ghost
So into darkness the three were thrown, over the crown of ghastly glow.
Morio must have felt that his shoes had gone loose for he bent at the belly to tie them. His plump hands nimbly found the soft, weathered boven-hide leather and laces but something sharp as well.
“Wow! Oh! Ho, that smarts!” he exclaimed with a wince of pain.
It was a needle still stuck from the Liar’s Tree.
He checked his pricked finger and saw that it bled, thick as hooven soup but red. So he kissed it and sucked at the running blood all the while yet doubled over.
“You make a good point,” he said to the stickler as if engaged in some civil debate. “But if you don’t mind I’d like a retraction. Better that than dicker or bring legal action to force a divorce and secede from this union made by the blade of an iron-willed faction against a mere fancy-free, footloose sole.”
Morio paused for dramatic effect. But, hearing no rebuttal back, the porkster mustered all his pluck and unstuck his pockmarked folk shoe.
“Ah,” he exhaled. “I smell defeat!”
Unluckily as he dethorned himself his system of checks and balances failed — so ironically though no longer nailed, the shift of state sent him a-sail, and thanks to the crooked planks on the floor, each one a conspirator and all at odds and war, he was at last toppled, order upset, governing body over head. Betrayed by the rules of a natural law that was traitor to his constitution, Morio found the upright overthrown and in the throes of revolution.
“Divided we fall after all…”
He tumbled away from the storied door and rolled downhill to the parallel wall. Thump, thump, thump, thump, thump, thump, thud.
John Cap called, “Okay there ‘O?” No response. “Morio?”
Then a slow and woozy voice. “This place… is surely full of pitfalls… truly unruly… but… O the thrills…”
“I guess, if that’s what you’re looking for.”
“I’ll bet this is some kind of play-house or pen…”
“Really dude, are you alright?”
“A funfair for children to frolic in…”
“More like an amusement park from hell.”
“To make us feel like boys again…”
“Only because you bumped your head.”
“Dizzy with dreams from way back when…”
“That’s just your concussion talking, man.”
“When we rode on the wings of the wind… in a magical land of mirth and men… where anything could happen…”
Suddenly a painful expression washed across Morio’s hazy face. As if his brain had been picked, his ears bent, or eyes peeled. Something had woken him up.
He listed left then let out an “Ooo!” and pulled the freed needle from his behind. “Yet you, my friend, are no magic wand.” He studied the silver spike in his hand, turning it over several times. “And still…”
From the deepest depths of a bottomless pocket hidden within his handy pants, Morio conjured a swaddle cloth and wrapped the needle in it. “Since you’ve stuck with me this long… I suppose we should try to keep keeping on.” Then he stuffed the bundle away.
At that moment time came to a crossroads it seemed. As if at a fork in the void. Awaiting. What could have been years or a second or two…
And there without warning, omen, or clue, but for a stirring of air in the room, the wizard’s hand cast upon Morio’s wall transformed from its hollow and bitter vein blue to warm, sweet, summer, butter yellow — soft and pure as a pixie’s whisper promising gold to come. Though those riches came at the cost of magic, which fled the advancing sun.
The cowardly moon turned tail and ran too.
Now all was bathed in a whole new light revealing much before concealed. A naked truth not so poetic, but plainly worth a look.
“What the heck?!”
John Cap’s sharp eyes opened wide as he pointed due north of Morio’s head. “Where did all those come from?”
The cause of the young man’s sudden surprise was the sight of a hundred vines, which had just appeared from out of nowhere where before there had been but one. They hung down in lengths all over the map as if snipped by a mischievous child — bobbed for no obvious reason or rhyme — though most were still furry like the first. And many of them were also damp with an ugly sheen in the new-found light or dangled dark drops from fraying ends that fell into old, moldy rings of black-green. The tipsy floorwood, already unsteady, was littered with these soggy spots, moist patches of rot that smelled of must. They let off a perfume of decay that mingled with some other secret stink and turned the air pungent and thick. It was hard not to choke from a whiff of it.
Both men turned their gaze from here to look highward and trace the odd cords on their climb to the ceiling. Up, up, up they spun, one after another, by hair-raising turns each rose to the roof. Their spiral locks in twisted braids made mock of a circular stairway to heaven.
At last by accord were all ascended, man vicariously through vine. And there they discovered a webwork of cracks that resembled a mapmaker’s handicraft… a plotting of paths on the chamber roof by a million imagined milky ways now aglow from the honey sun pouring in… like long-sought trade routes blazed in the sky to dreamlands of spice and gilded things.
The travelers crossed them by mind’s eye to reach the far wall where their third yet slept. But descending that side they first found something fearsome hanging above her head. Another deathly array of spikeful machines — more morbid than those they saw before. Devices that few but a devil could love.
Morio mumbled soft worries aloud. “Be careful Miss Vaam… something looms…”
John Cap, however, did not seem concerned. Clearly he had other matter in mind.
He stepped toward the space she displaced and spoke, his voice turned a tender hush. “It’s morning Vaam. Time to find your way back.”
A thin stream of blue, one last lingering mo
onbeam, seemed locked upon the young woman’s face. As if from another world it spilled to show her in some form of sleep. She sat on edge of a tiny platform — a place just big enough for one — back straight, palms up, legs crossed and tucked, pilgrim-style like those who quest for blessing, her eyes wide open yet all but missing. They were a blur as though submerged and fading off into a distance. In fact her whole shape looked drowned under water, submersed in a small oval pool around her. She floated below the surface of it. It rippled, distorting her form.
Still, she stirred not. She made no wake.
The vines, though, went to wag like a hundred tongues talking — a chorus commemorating the scene. Or ten tens tellers of a tale, whispering words such as these as they swung:
Astride like a knight rides in the day
This prince of light our treasured sun
So charming in his starry armor
Chasing the gray girl’s blues away
A golden kiss upon those lips
The purple of sleepy beauty
Then just as the moody blue was gone, she blinked and her handsome friend could see a pair of emeralds, lucent green, rising from the liquid deep. She broke the surface with a shudder and uttered the slightest sigh.
The young man looked caringly in her eyes. “I’m sorry,” he mouthed, moving near to her.
She drank in the air then exhaled long and slow, as if she’d been holding her breath forever.
“It’s alright,” she said to reassure him.
The shape-shifting pool had receded behind her, although a trace of it remained. The hint of a faint gray glow.
John Cap’s eyes said he had more to say. He started, “I missed…” but stopped himself there.
He saw that Vaam’s thoughts were still elsewhere. A distant lost home. A time slipped away.
In mindless motion she reached for her throat and clutched at something her high collar hid. She smiled when her fingers found it. And a calm washed over her flawless face in a way that drained her cares away and revealed how very innocent and young she really was.
Then Vaam gently drew from her hiding place a most unusual necklace, and her calm overcame the room.
It was a pendant about the size of an eye, a glossy object of reddest rosewood, mounted on a cord of hide from the side of an animal skinned and dyed. The icon was smooth looking worn from time in the palms of many possessed. The cord was crude against her skin.
To the naked eye the strange figurine mocked the shape of a priestly being — behooded, kneeling, arms concealed — like a sacred relic from holier times or hallowed jewel baptized in blood, so ruby-enrobed it was. But who could tell with so much wear…
Vaam herself left no room for doubt. She cradled the thing in her slender hand and felt it with her fingertips. It looked like she hoped to coax magic from it or perhaps just reminders of the past. What came out was a mingling of them both, here and now spellbound in her grasp.
Maid of mirage she was. Shy by trials yet untold. Still statuesque even as she sat.
Absently she closed her eyes and quietly began to sing. She sang a beautiful, haunting song… the spirit of a shadow’s dream… a shapeless, enrapturing melody that wrapped the mind in mystery… the echo of some ancient lullaby calling from deep inside…
O you my little love, my child
Were born a flower of the field
Your perfumed hair so soft, so sweet
The gold of summer long adored
Adorned in ribbons, O yet wild
Bright-eyed, no darkness have you seen
But kissed of sun, caressed in rain
Brushed by the wind upon the field
My ever love, my only love
My child, my flower of the field
They say your petals ride the wind
One and a thousand leagues away
My ever love, my only love
My heart, my flower of the field
They say your petals sail the sea
Two and two thousand leagues away
My ever love, my only love
My soul, my flower of the field
They say your petals grace a land
Three and three thousand leagues away
Tonight my love, the stars above
Show me my flower of the field
Your petals cast across the sky
Long gone my love yet ever here
As her ballad’s last notes drifted off in the air, Vaam pressed her lips to the toy statuette and tucked it inside the neck of her frock, hidden away and safe again. Then she raised her downcast eyes.
“Tell me, John, of all I’ve missed.”
But he’d been charmed speechless, so all enthralled.
And Morio’s face was wet with warm tears.
“O hearthland! Dear Merth! You’ve taken me back. Beckoned again to the days of my youth and the fair, green farmlands where we played — I see them even now in sounds, reborne homeward bound by your incantation.”
Morio wiped his chubby cheeks and pressed both eyes with the heels of his hands. His face was red when he pulled them away.
Vaam peered at him. “Are you unwell, Uncle M?”
Morio let go a few more tears but he was less wistful now than proud. “I cry for my beloved country… Oh child, Miss Vaam, so pure of heart, your hymn has made mine beat again refilled with the blood of a native son. It pours from your voice and through my veins, unmeasured by rhythm or rhyme.”
“It’s a song my father sang to me… at bedtime as I fell asleep… wherever we hid that night…” Vaam’s voice faded off into soft nothingness, as if drained of all it had to give.
“Your father, your father,” he nodded his head. “My all-but-brother and dearest friend. The bravest heart of the Underland and comrade-in-ogs so true… Oh how I miss him so.”
“Yes, Uncle M. I miss him too.”
John Cap briefly touched her hand and found his voice again. “We learned some more about this place and these folks or whatever they’re called. They’re tough. They know what hard times are for sure — the elderly ones especially. Their story and how they got here is good. A long, hard road but they survived…”
“Even thrived,” chimed a cheery Morio, heartily joining in. “Yes, a long and winding road of death that left just the fittest alive at the end to build this stronghold on a hill. We’re all but experts now Miss Vaam. The locked door, it turns out, is the key to knowledge. Come and I shall show you…”
“In time, Uncle M, in time. But mostly we must know if your findings alter the map of our mission at all. From what you both have said I say not.”
Vaam unwound her long crossed legs and shifted position with ease in place, half springing up to crouch a-heel. Something in the way she moved seemed to prove her a creature of force and grace, a little cat-like in a way.
The narrow platform she made her lair was but the one flat spot in the room. Nothing else was on the level.
“Remember that I was here once before — a fortnight ago, though not for long — and imagined our plan of attack based on that…”
“No, no indeed! Yes of course I recall. But, just for the record, how did that go?”
Vaam gave him half a grin. “Just for the record…” she began. “Under cover of dark on the stormiest night I came to scout this settlement out and unlock its secrets for our quest. The rain and the hour had driven all in, whether gentle folk or beastly men, so without a single soul in sight the road was left to me alone. I soon found myself in the heart of a square, their marketplace by every sign, at the site of a tall, round tent pitched there. Yet still unmet I slipped inside and by the low glow of an oil lamp tried to see what I could see. A strange chamber of shadows spun circles around me, casting all in murky gold. The old dreams of bygone souls. It seemed to be a meeting place with a ring of cushions on the floor and room for standing many more all along the walls. Everything here was wood and bone but hard as any heavy metal. Hoping to find some scroll or book that might give a clue or hold a k
ey, I crept further in to an alcove or den that looked to be hidden at the rear. I neared it quiet as a thief. Then I lifted the tattered patchwork flap they’d made to be its door.
“There on the ground to my surprise was a light-sleeping man who awoke as I spied. But by fortune or luck or trick of the light, which flickered and faked flaring firefly-like, he mistook me for something entirely else. I was to him the ghost of a queen, some songstress from treasured antiquity for whom he feverishly bent a knee to bow and vow fidelity. A siren of legend, the sweet of his dreams…
“Then it struck me, the trick that I almost missed and something more precious than gold in this. His mistake meant that there was advantage to take of this phantom operation. So I used his delusion and played along for the price of a song to help our cause. He mumbled some words about being unworthy… ‘Even as leader of my people… despite my red hair… my family name…’ Yes this was the very same iron-eyed man, the steely jawboned and rust-bearded one, who would meet us so hard in the field tonight… two weeks later and worse for wear riding herd on his wounded beast. It was I who sent him on that errant mission, on a chase through the wild with a goose, as John says. Yet it was all truly the man’s own idea, a test that he already had in mind…”
“A wild goose chase,” confirmed John Cap. “Vaam, how wicked smart was that?!” He gave her a wry and admiring look. “We couldn’t have diagrammed it better if this were all a game. A game of thrown matches and catches, I mean.” The young man turned to his friend on the floor. “It was more than luck that snuck us in. That’s why there were lazy boys on the walls — just a couple manning them — instead of a few good men. And why the regular guards weren’t here to see us land out on the plain then walk through the gates and blend right in.”
The Lore Anthology: Lore of the Underlings: Episodes 1 - 5 Page 9