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Cunningham sighed. “As fascinating as all this is, sir, might I suggest a cessation of examination and an introduction of action? The longer I stay here, the greater chance that someone above will detect my presence.”

“Of course, of course.” Pryce looked around carefully, but could still see little farther than his hands. “Where are the little ones?”

“With any luck,” said the jackalwere, “still safe in their thickets.”

“This tunnel goes all the way to the outside of the city wall?” Pryce asked, incredulous.

“It emerges near the Mark of the Question, in fact. From there you have to be quick and cautious to reach cover, but it is a far sight more safe than strolling in view of the gate eye.”

“I should think so.”

“Come,” Cunningham pressed, offering his hand. “I’ll take you back to where I found you.”

This item of news was even more surprising to Pryce than the offer of a jackalwere’s hand. “You mean you didn’t find me here?”

“Why, no, of course not. You were far closer to harm’s way, I’m told.”

‘You were told? By whom?”

“Not whom,” said the Jackalwere solemnly. “By what.” Then he stepped back, and looming into Covington’s view were the two most shocking faces he had ever laid eyes on.

The broken one was named Devolawk. “He was named after the creatures he was mingled from,” Cunningham said sadly. Pryce, never one to be particularly squeamish about the workings of his planet, studied the unclothed animal man closely. It was still dark in the tunnel, and the great Darlington Blade wouldn’t have gasped, grimaced, or scrambled away at the mere sight of a few monsters. Pathetic monsters to be sure, but monsters nonetheless.

Where the “vol” part of his name came from was clear enough. One side of his snout was constantly quivering and had pine-needle-like whiskers. The eye on the same side was small, round, and dark, but could see clearly in the gloom. At least part of this beast was descended… or stolen… from a vole. The “awk” aspect of his name could be seen in the left side. His snout was actually a beak, and the left eye was large, bluish white, and surrounded by feathers. The thing was also part hawk.

“Devolawk,” Pryce mused aloud. “What does the ‘De’ part stand for?”

The jackalwere seemed about to answer, then slowly closed his mouth and stepped back. The broken one leaned close, and his snout-beak opened. Inside, Pryce could see teeth… broken, rotting, chipped human teeth. “De-e-ead man,” came the careful, tortured voice, ending in what sounded like a vole’s squeak and a bird’s whistle.

“Dead man,” Covington breathed, unable to completely cover his distaste. Even so, he leaned closer to survey the poor thing’s body. It wasn’t even as lucky as the head, which seemed to share its three pieces relatively equally. The body, however, was a riotous mix of the person, animal, and bird it was combined from. Flesh mingled with hide mixed with feathers, sometimes in the space of a finger.

Devolawk was painfully hunched over. The top of his human spine was obviously joined by the bones of a vole. One leg was mostly hawk, while the other was mostly vole and painfully shorter, ending in an incongruous human foot.

Pryce leaned to the right and looked at the jackalwere. “He was made from a vole, a hawk, and a corpse?”

Before Cunningham could answer, Pryce felt claws and feathers on his arm. The broken one was leaning down, a human cornea gleaming in the bird’s eye. “A reeeee-sus-citated corpse,” Devolawk wheezed. “I eeeeeven hafffff mem-mor-eeeees, sometiiiimes,” it said with unmistakable wistfulness and pain, “but I do not know whooooo from!”

Pryce laid his hand on the mutated arm. Speaking was obviously torture for the thing, and understanding his words wasn’t all that pleasurable either. But despite the odd place Pryce found himself in, and the odd companions he was meeting, he recognized the possibility that he might be able to discover more leads and clues from this unusual source. Covington looked deep into the sad, tormented, mangled eyes and wondered how he looked to the animal man.

Animal men… their very existence screamed of magic gone mad. Back in Merrickarta, Pryce had used what he had heard about these victims as just one more reason magic, and magicians, should not be trusted. Broken ones were once human, but they had been used as living subjects of sorcerous experiments that were disapproved of at best, or openly forbidden at worst. The rumor that many were the result of reincarnation spells seemed validated by Devolawk’s strange heredity.

The adventurer and the jackalwere now turned their attention to the other poor monster. If the five-foot-tall Devolawk was a tragedy of magic, the seven-foot-tall mongrelman was a tragedy of nature. No sorcerer had created this misshapen beast. Only powers beyond life could have perpetrated this abomination. He was a combination of more than a dozen genetic types, from bugbears and bullywugs to ogres and ores… with just enough human hormones spooned in to make him rational.

His huge head was part hair, part hide, part scales, part flesh, and part fur. He looked vaguely like an unfinished wall of mortar, wood, and tile. His two eyes were wildly mismatched and accompanied by a stout, animal-like nose and a wide maw made up of at least three dozen different sizes and shapes of teeth.

“Geeeee,” he whistled. “Offfff,” he grunted. “Freeeee!” he shrieked, the rags that partially covered his flesh shaking. Or at least that’s what Pryce thought it said. His animal sounds left much leeway for interpretation and made both Pryce and Cunningham cringe with discomfort.

“He keeps repeating that,” Cunningham told Pryce. “I think that is what he wants to be called.”

“Gee, off, free?” Pryce echoed. The mongrelman nodded vigorously, reminding Covington of a horse. “Geeoffree,” Pryce said again. “Geoffrey! Of course!”

Cunningham smiled in recognition. “You must be correct, sir. He must have seen the name Geoffrey and thought it was pronounced gee, off, free.”

Pryce looked back at the rag-covered monster, which loomed large in the relatively cramped space of the cave. “Well, if it’s Geoffrey you want, Geoffrey it shall be.” The mongrelman lowered his head, shaking, and then, much to Pryce’s surprise, his eyes began to tear. “There, there, my fine fellow,” Pryce soothed, putting his hand on the thing’s shoulder. ‘There’s no need for that.” The mongrelman started, but when Pryce didn’t remove his hand, he finally grew still.

Cunningham shook his head. “Mongrelmen are seldom welcomed by humans. Often they are enslaved by scoundrels. Geoffrey must be overcome that you would accept his company so readily.” Pryce noted the jackalwere looking off into the darkness. No doubt he was thinking of all the human hatred he must have faced throughout his miserable life.

“Cunningham,” Pryce snapped, bringing back the jackalwere’s attention. “I’m sure that if you didn’t have an inhuman need to kill people, drink their blood, and eat them, you would have more friends, too.”

The human beast blinked, then nodded curtly. “I don’t know what it is, sir. Your presence, power, and wisdom must be havingdare I say it? a civilizing effect on me.”

Pryce shook his head in wonder. He was certain that if these three knew he was not who they thought he was, a third of him would already be residing in each of their stomachs. “Be that as it may, or may not, be,” he said to the jackalwere, “I need to know where they found me and what they saw. Perhaps we can elicit some sort of translation from their brethren.”

“They have no brethren.”

“No brethren?” Pryce said incredulously, leaning toward Cunningham. “How is that possible? I’ve heard that broken ones reside in groups of up to five dozen creatures. The mongrelmen who manage to avoid enslavement even create their own villages and communities.”

“But, sir,” the jackalwere retorted, “he is enslaved.”