Lureene, seeing his face as he went behind the bar to draw ale, sighed. He smiled all too seldom, now, since Shandril had run off. Perhaps the tales in Highmoon all these years had been true: Shandril was Gorstag’s daughter. He had brought her with him as a babe when he bought the inn, Lureene was sure. She shrugged. Ah well, perhaps someday he’d say.
Lureene remembered the hard-working, dreamy little girl snuggling down on the straw the other side of the clothes-chest, and wondered where she was now. Not so little, anymore, either…
“Ho, my pretty statue!” the carpenter Ulsinar called across the taproom. “Wine! Wine for a man whose throat is raw with thirst and calling after you! It is the gods who gave us drink-will you keep me from my poor share of it?”
Lureene chuckled and reached for the decanter she knew Ulsinar favored. “It is patience the gods gave us, to cope when drink is not at hand,” she returned in jest. “Would you neglect the one in your haste to overindulge in the other?” Other regulars nearby roared or nodded their approval
“A little patience!” one called. “A good motto for an overworked inn, eh?”
“I like it!” another said. “111 wait with good will-and a full glass, if one is to be had-for Korvan’s stuffed deer, or his roast boar!”
“Oh, aye!” another agreed. “He even makes the greens taste worth the eating!”
He fell silent, suddenly, as his wife turned a cold face upon him and inquired, “And I do not?”
Ulsinar (and not a few other men) laughed. “Let’s see you wriggle, Pardus! You’re truly in the wallow this time!”
“Wallow! Wallow!” others called enthusiastically. The wife turned an even stonier face upon them all.
“Do you ridicule my man?” she inquired. “Would you all like your teeth removed, all at once and soon?”
The roars died away. There were chuckles here and there. Gorstag strode over. “Now, Yantra,” he said with a perfectly straight face, “I can’t have this sort of trouble in The Rising Moon. Before I serve all these rude men who have insulted you and your lord, will you have the deer or the boar?”
“The boar;’ Yantra replied, mollified. “A half-portion for my husband.” Gorstag stared quickly around to quell the roars of mirth. The innkeeper winked as he met the eye of Pardus, who, seated behind his wife, was silently but frantically trying to indicate by gesture and exaggerated mouthing of words that he wanted deer, not boar, and most certainly not a half-portion.
“Why, Pardus “ Gorstag said, as if suddenly recalling something. “There’s a man left word here for any who makes saddles of quality that he’d like a single piece, but a good one, for his favorite steed. I took the liberty of recommending you, but did not presume to promise times or prices. He’s from Selgaunt and probably well on his way back there by now. Hell call by again in a few days, on his way out from Ordulin to Cormyr. Will you talk with me, in the back, over what I should tell him?” He winked again, only for an instant.
“Oh, aye,” Pardus said, understanding. There was no Sembian saddle-coveter, but he would get his half-portion of boar out here, in the taproom, and as much deer as he wanted in the back, with Gorstag standing watchful guard, a little later. He smiled. Good old Gorstag, he thought, raising his flagon to the innkeeper. Long may he run The Rising Moon. Let it be long, indeed.
Late that night, when all at last were abed, and the taproom was red and dim in the light of the dying fire, Gorstag sat alone. He raised the heavy tankard and took another fiery swallow of dark, smoky-flavored wildroot stout. What had become of Shandril? He was sick at heart at the thought of her lying dead somewhere, or raped and robbed and left to starve by the roadside… or worse, lying in her own sweat and muck in slave-chains, in the creaking, rat-infested hold of some southern slave-trader wallowing across the Inner Sea. How much longer could he bear to stay here, without at least going to look? His glance went to the axe over the bar. In an instant the burly innkeeper was up from his seat-the seat where unhappy Yantra had sat- and over a table in a heavy but fast vault. He soon stood behind the bar, the axe in his hands.
There was a little scream from behind him-a girl’s cry! Gorstag whirled as if he was a warrior half his age, snake-quick and expecting trouble. Then he relaxed, slowly. “Lureene?” he asked quietly. He couldn’t go-they needed him here, all these folk… oh, gods, bring her safe back!
His waitress saw the anguished set of his face in the firelight and came up to him quietly, her blanket about her shoulders. “Master?” she asked softly. “Gorstag? You miss her, don’t you?”
The axe trembled. Abruptly it was swept up and hung in the crook of the old innkeeper’s arm, and he came around the bar with whetstone, oil-flask, and rags with almost angry haste. “Aye, lass, I do.”
He sat down again where he’d been, and Lureene came on silent bare feet to sit beside him as he worked, turning the axe in his fingers as if it weighed no more than an empty mug. After a long minute of silence, he pushed the tankard toward her. “Drink something, Lureene. It’s good… you will be the better for it.”
Lureene sampled it, made a face, and then took another swallow. She set the tankard down, two-handed, and pushed it back. “Perhaps if I live to be your age,” she said dryly, “I’ll learn a taste for it. Perhaps.”
Gorstag chuckled. The metal of the axe flashed in his hands as he turned it again. Firelight glimmered down its edge for an instant. Lureene watched, then asked softly, “Where do you think she is now?”
The strong hands faltered and then stopped. “I know not.” Gorstag reached for the brass oil-flask and stoppered it. “I know not,” he said again. “That’s the worst of it!” Abruptly he clenched his hand; the flask in his grasp was crushed out of shape. “I want to be out there looking for her, doing something!” he whispered fiercely, and Lureene put her arm about him impulsively. She could tell Gorstag was on the edge of tears. He spoke in a tone she’d never heard from him before. “Why did she go?” he asked. “What did I do wrong that she hated it here so much?”
Lureene had no answer, so she kissed his rough cheek, and when he turned his head, startled, stilled his sobs with her lips. When at last she withdrew to breathe, he protested weakly, “Lureene! What-?”
“You can be scandalized in the morning,” she said softly and kissed him again.
(…)
The hawk circles and circles, and waits. Against most prey he will have but one strike. He waits therefore for the best chance. Be as the hawk. Watch and wait, and strike true. The People cannot afford foolish deaths in battle. War to slay, not to fight long and glorious.
Aermhar of the Tangletrees
Advice before the Council in the Elven Court
Year of the Hooded Falcon
“I-I am too tired, lady,” Narm said apologetically. “I cannot concentrate.” Jhessail nodded.
“I know you are. That is why you must. How else will you build the strength of your will to something sharper and harder than a warrior’s steel, as the old mages say?”
Jhessail’s smile was wry. “You will find, even if you never adventure from this day forth, that you will almost never have quiet, comfort, good light, or space enough to study as you are taught to do. You will always be struggling to fix spells in memory while over-tired, or sick, or wounded and in pain, or in the midst of snoring, groaning, talking, or even crying. Learn now, and you will be glad of it, then.”
“My thanks in advance, then, good lady” Narm returned as wryly. Jhessail grinned.
“You learn, you learn,” she said. “Well… why are you not staring at the pages before you? The spells will not remember themselves, you know.”
Narm shook his head, a half-smile of frustration on his face, as he said, “I simply can’t! It’s not possible!”