2
Fablemyr
On the ocean that hollows the
rocks where ye dwell,
A shadowy land has appeared,
as they tell;
…The golden clouds curtained
the deep where it lay,
And it looked like an Eden,
away, far away!
Gerald Griffin
With shock and bewilderment, Justin examined
himself. He was draped in an oiled
leather duster, walnut brown. The
rainwater was beading up and sliding off his shoulders. He felt windstrings hanging around his neck and
took off the hat to examine it. A
Stetson? A real cowboy hat with a band
of braided horse hair, which wrapped around the base of the crown. The band had a silver Concho star on the
front. The hat was the same walnut brown
as his duster.
Underneath he was
wearing a white tombstone shirt with a tan vest and sandy frontier canvas
pants. Around his waist was a tough
cowhide belt, lined with silver studs, top and bottom. The buckle was a large silver oval with a
white longhorn atop a deep brown leather.
The belt had three silver crosses, one on each side and one center of
the back.
Looking at his
feet, he saw oiled leather boots, silver plated with shiny spurs – sharp and
glinting. The cuffs of his duster were
bracers, silver studded with a silver cross on each. Fingerless gloves adorned his hands.
What in God’s green earth was going on? He replaced his hat without thinking and
looked back over his shoulder. Behind
him, a sheer cliff face rose up in jagged outcroppings. Up and up it went, into the sky, up and away
towards misty mountaintops far above. He
was on the edge of some kind of valley.
The snow-capped mountains encircled the forest like a jagged bowl. Rain continued to pelt off the brim of his
hat.
“That tree branch must’ve hit me harder than I
thought,” he murmured.
One thing was for sure, this was not East Lansing. This wasn’t even Michigan. Michigan had no mountains. So if he wasn’t where he should be, the only
logical explanation was that he was dreaming.
But… he could smell peppermint, feel the cold wind, hear the rainwater
pattering off the rocks and muddy trail.
He could see clear as day the valley before him. So he couldn’t be asleep. He had to be hallucinating.
That was it.
He had come from a party and someone must’ve put something in the beer,
or at least one of his drinks. Yeah,
that was it. Something in his
drink. Otherwise this craziness might
frighten him. But he wasn’t scared at
all. A sure sign of a hallucination… or that he was still drunk.
As he approached the foot of the sludgy trail,
thunder crashed above, echoing across the gloomy sky. A large hulking oak tree, gnarled and
twisted, rose menacingly before him. Despite
its grand size, the tree looked sickly.
It hovered before him like a diseased monstrosity, on the verge of
shivering to life and seizing him with knotted limbs. He stayed back a few paces, eyeing it
warily. Nailed to the trunk, a
weatherworn sign read:
North Lies Dreyton
A single word was smeared across the sign in dark stains, which looked
disturbingly like dried blood. It read:
Cursed
His eyes fell from the sign to the trail that
disappeared into the shadowed wood.
Alright, if he was hallucinating, this was a pretty convincing
hallucination. He had no intention of
going back to the party right now anyway, so he might as well entertain his
delusional mind by wandering around for awhile.
Who knew what other insanity might await him? He cast one last glance at the darkening sky,
squinting under the brim of his hat and started forward.
Pale white elms
spiraled up like pillars of mother nature.
Elms did not grow this way, nor this color – but the bark and the leaves
were without a doubt, elm. So curved and
looped were some of the trunks that he could see clean through some of them, especially
the ones that looked like pallid tendrils twisting up out of the earth. The pallid trees pulsed with soft light,
setting the whole forest aglow. Nestled
between the elms were odd looking silver maples, which glistened and sparkled
as if covered in dew. The smell of
peppermint was strong now. Moss and
lichen of varying shades of green covered the tree trunks and large rocks
embedded in the earth, brightened by the glow of the white elms. This place was amazing! Absolutely surreal. Beyond the white elms and silver maples, thick
broad oaks towered like dark wooden sentries, massive and gnarled, ancient
watchers of an ancient place.
The winding path
wove its way through the majestic dreamscape, hidden occasionally by lodged
boulders and tall brush. He rubbed his
throbbing temples groggily as he walked.
Hallucination or not, his headache was real enough. The heavy scent of mint, the thick mist and
the glittering trees created an environment that dazzled and disoriented. His balance was off. He felt light-headed and winced with each
throb in his head. He stopped to rest
for a minute and noticed one of the white elms had a hollow in its trunk.
A childhood memory struck him of just such a
tree. When he was a young boy, he had
played a computer game called The Black
Cauldron. In the game, there had
been a tree with a hollow. Inside the
hollow was an item. He couldn’t remember
what. Before he even realized what he
was doing, he walked over and stuck his hand in it. He fished around for a moment but only felt
dry leaves and dirt. What a dumb thing
to do. He pulled his hand out and his
fingertips brushed something smooth and cold.
He eyed them to see if they were wet, but they were not. Mildly confused, he reached back in, dug near
the entrance and removed the object, examining it in the glow of the trees.
It was a
key. A dark bronze key. The end was ornately designed with circular
wiring, forming perfect patterns. It
looked Celtic, oddly enough. He pinched
it between his fingers for a moment then he pocketed it. Why not?
It obviously opened something, perhaps even a thing nearby.
He became aware
of the sound of rushing water – a faint
roar. He now realized how thirsty he was
– not that he’d drink from a pond, but maybe a stream if it was clear. Clear water meant it was probably okay to
drink, right? His alcohol-dulled mind
didn’t seem to think anything was wrong with putting it to the test. He quickened his pace.
He passed a large boulder that jutted up like a
giant spearhead, covered in evergreen moss, and stopped to gaze through the
trees. He could see the edge of a small
lake, calm and clear. The surface of the
water sparkled under the stars like a shimmering blanket of diamonds. A circle of taller white elms ran along the
edge of the lake, like columns of marble.
A thin set of waterfalls dashed down from a slick set of smooth stepped cliffs,
spilling down into the lake.
His eyes moved to a figure that sat at the lake’s
edge. He stepped forward, squinting in
the pale moonlight. It was a girl, with
long dark hair. Her head was in her
hands, her shoulders sagged and shaking.
She was weeping. Something about
the scene made the hairs on the back of his neck rise, his heart pounding in
his chest. But slowly, the longer he
listened to the weeping, the more relaxed he became. He started to wonder if the hallucination was
wearing off and he had now found someone, like himself, who had run here to
escape her sorrow.
As he approached, nervous and wary, he could hear
her sniffling. Her voice was fair and echoed strangely, as if they were inside
a cavern. That’s weird, he thought. Her hair was impossibly long, spilling down
all around her, like a draped sheet of night pooling around her knees. Her skin was white as the moon and her face
hidden in her small hands. Still she
wept, seemingly unaware of his presence.
Lingering behind the last of the trees on the
edge of a lake, one hand resting on a boulder, he moved to step forward.
“Are ya cracked?!”
His heart launched into his throat. He jumped backwards, nearly choking. Standing on the boulder where his hand had
just been, a tiny figure stood with arms crossed and head cocked - six inches
tall, at best.
Justin stared with an open mouth.
“Ugh,” the little man uttered with disgust, “Daft
- by the look ‘o ya.”
The miniature figure was clothed in bits of dry
leaf. His skin was muddy brown and a
shock of orange hair was atop his head, pierced by two little goat horns. Disproportionately big round ginger eyes
narrowed with suspicion.
Justin was completely at a loss for words. What did he say to a… um, whatever this thing
was?
“It’s a trap,” the little man said
matter-of-factly. “Meant for muppets
like you.” He stabbed a finger at
Justin. “Even brownies do not go near her.”
Brownies?
Justin blinked stupidly. This guy
didn’t look like the little dudes from the movie Willow.
The brownie snorted, glaring at him with
indignant disbelief. “Ya haven’t got a
clue where ya are, do ya?”
Justin felt the overwhelming urge to unload his
current dilemma to this newcomer, but then realized he was talking to a six
inch faerie. So instead, he muttered,
“No.”
The brownie shook his head and sighed. “This is Fablemyr Forest, lad, oldest wood in
Athyria. Ya’ll be calling me Twig. Really we aren’t supposed to talk to the
likes of ya - I’ll have the worst of an argument with Eolande just for lettin’
ya see me. But many’s the fool that
wandered witlessly to her aid.” He gazed sourly at the weeping woman. “Upon my word, you’ll get the price ‘o yer
trouble for seeking to help that one… spiteful wench.”
Justin eyed the weeping girl who seemed to be
trying to compose herself. “She doesn’t look spiteful.”
“Well why don’t ya saunter over there and find
out, then?” Twig snapped, stomping his foot.
“Fine,” Justin retorted, “I will,” and he started
to walk.
“No, ya moron!
That was a rhetorical question!”
The brownie scowled impatiently.
“Are ya trying to meet yer end tonight?”
Justin looked back to the weeping girl, but now
there was no one there. The air about the lake was quiet once more. “Hey - she’s gone!”
Twig looked around warily. “Small drop ‘o comfort. She’s a frightful spirit, she is. Ya have to use yer ears. It’s the only thing that gives her
away.” He tapped his pointed brown ear.
Justin thought for a moment. “The echo?”
Twig’s ginger eyes widened. “Yer more clever than ya look.” Then he frowned. “But that’s not sayin’ much. Ya look like a muppet.” He turned and pointed back towards the
trail. “Don’t go wandering off the foot
path. Yer more than likely to get
yerself killed. There’s goblins about.”
Justin laughed.
“Are there lions and tigers, too?”
Twig snorted.
“Idiot. I’d like to watch ya
laugh when a tree wyrm wraps its coils about ya and squeezes the guts out of
yer skin, or stumble over a patch of Gortha grass and hear ya shriek as it
devours ya. But ‘o course, we wouldn’t
want ya dying before ya do what yer meant to do.”
Justin examined the brownie curiously. “What do you mean meant to do?”
Twig waved his little hands impatiently. “Akralon only brings people from yer world
when they are meant to do something.”
“Akralon?”
Twig spread out his arms to indicate the land
around him. “This world.”
“I thought you called it Athyria.” Justin was surprised he even remembered that.
“Athyria is the realm, what ya might call a
country. Akralon is the world.” Twig was tapping his dirt-caked foot with
growing impatience.
Justin’s head hadn’t ceased throbbing and he
found he wasn’t feeling very patient either.
“How do I get out of here?”
The brownie grimaced. “I know what’s running through yer mind. Yer not imagining me. Ya aren’t dreaming, neither.”
Caught off guard, Justin eyed the brownie in
bafflement. He could think of nothing to
say. Then he glanced at his
oiled-leather cuff, water beads still clinging to it. “If this place is real – why am I wearing
these clothes?”
“The world decides that,” Twig said
matter-of-factly. “Ya aren’t the first,
ya know. They’ve been coming from yer
world for centuries. Most of ‘em think
they’re piss drunk or completely cracked.
I wouldn’t be bothered to care, but… there’s something about ya,
stranger.”
“The name’s-” he started.
“Never use yer real name, moron!” Twig snapped.
“Ya must take a new name – an Akralon name.”
Examining himself again, a little more studiously
this time, Justin wasn’t sure which was more ridiculous, the fact that he was
wearing cowboy clothes and thinking of an alias, or that he was standing in a
sparkling forest talking to a faerie. He
decided both were equally ridiculous.
Then he decided he’d always liked that Clint Eastwood movie, High Plains Drifter. So, without much conviction, he uttered,
“Just call me Drifter.”
“Quite suitable,” Twig nodded with satisfaction,
“Considering yer wandering round witlessly.”
Justin’s swayed has his head spun
uncontrollably. Despite his intense
dizziness, he somehow knew, deep in his gut, he wasn’t dreaming. Everything was too real. He could feel the cold misty air on his skin,
the dampness of the rain, the rumble of distant thunder in his bones. He could smell the peppermint in the air,
hear the crashing waterfalls. Also,
nobody ever questioned reality in a dream, no matter how insane or impossible
the scenario, you just blindly accepted
it. If you were walking down a street
and a pod of giant purple alien whales swam in front of you, you simply waited
for them to pass before continuing on.
He turned back to the brownie, but now he too was
gone. Justin was alone again. He looked at the lake, watching it and
feeling uncomfortable in the eerie silence.
Then he returned his gaze to the muddy path. He exhaled indecisively.
If this wasn’t a hallucination, then how the hell
did he get back home? Maybe there were
other people, like the brownie said, from the real world. Maybe he could ask one of them.
Trudging reluctantly back to the path, he
sullenly followed as it wove its way through the shadowy forest, as if directing
him deeper and deeper into a dream. He
tried not to think about the fact that if he was lost, he had virtually no
survival skills. He grew up in the
city. He’d probably starve if he didn’t
find someone or someplace soon. He also
tried not to think what kind of wild animals might be roaming the woods at
night. Michigan had no dangerous
animals, save perhaps some snakes that bit.
The forests were mostly full of deer.
Who knew what lurked in the trees in this
place...
A brook wound down from the high ground to his
right, dashing over flat stones that jutted out like steps. The forest floor leveled to his left and the
waters swam quietly on their way. Across
the stream he could see where the path started up again.
The occasional
gust of wind would set the high branches moving, offering glimpses of the night
sky. With a weary sigh, he stepped
forward and plunged his leather boots into the brook. The icy waters spilled over the brims,
dousing his feet and chilling his toes. Damn, he shivered. This
water is friggin cold! He heard his
own teeth chattering as he waded across.
On the other side
he found a tall white elm where the ground was fairly dry. There he knelt and removed his boots,
emptying out the chill water. As he
tugged them back on, he caught the faint scent of smoke. There must be a town
or something close by.
The mucky path
narrowed to a trickle, making it difficult to find at times. When the land began to slope upward, he
caught glimpse of a flickering light to his left. Half-turning, he peered through the
trees. The light was golden and was
reflecting off the trees and rocks, brighter now, dimmer now.
When he turned to look back down the path, the
pale-faced girl was standing ten feet in front of him.
He froze, everything but his heart, which pounded
deafeningly in his ears. Damn she was
creepy! Her eyes were white and stared
straight ahead, as if unaware of her surroundings. Dark oily tears stained her cheeks like
ink. He couldn’t move a muscle, not
daring to rouse the statue-still figure, gowned in white. He was even afraid to exhale, lest it draw
her attention.
He could see now that she was too pale. Her skin had a bluish tone and her hair,
though long and dark, wasn’t silky but soaking wet. There was a puddle forming around her pale
feet. Oh god, he thought, is she...
Her head snapped up and she screamed so loudly
that his eardrums felt like they would burst.
He clamped his hands over his ears and staggered. Translucent veins bulged in her throat as her
rotten-toothed mouth reared open further than what should be possible. Her eyes were wide and white, devoid of
pupils.
The shriek intensified so greatly, his hands
doing nothing to soften the painful pressure growing in his skull, that his
vision blurred and shook like he was suffering a personal earthquake. He nearly passed out, staggering a few
paces. The movement renewed his vigor
and with every last ounce of strength, he ran as fast as his legs would carry
him, straight into the forest.
He ran until he could hear nothing but
silence. Then he ran some more. His nose was bleeding and he thought maybe
his ears were too, but it was too dark to tell.
He only knew that the world was spinning and swaying, like when a person
spins themselves around repeatedly and then tries to walk straight.
He staggered from tree to tree until the ghostly
tone ringing in his ears began to fade and he could breathe easier. The flickering light he had originally seen
from the path was much brighter now. He
hadn’t noticed it while he was fleeing for his life, but he hadn’t really been
focusing on anything other than not dying, either.
Unsure what else to do, and most certainly lost
beyond hope, Justin decided that following the flickering light was pretty much
the only thing to do at this point. He found that he had walked an impossibly long
distance without seeing any kind of source.
It always looked as if it were shining just ahead, but when he got
there, there were only more trees and boulders.
He followed it still, determined that he would figure this out. He had no idea how far he had gone, or in
what direction, but eventually he found himself standing between two marble
columns, one broken halfway up. Ivy
crawled up and around both. Through the
columns he could see what appeared to be some kind of ruins. The area was in a small clearing. Along the circular edges, the columns rose to
different lengths. Most were broken low
near the base, but a couple rose to their full height of ten feet. Inside the circle, marble littered the
earth. There were shattered archways,
broken pillars, crumbled and overgrown
walls. Near the center, a dried up
fountain sat alone, with a unicorn rearing up on its hind legs. Its horn pointed straight to the night
sky.
The tall white elms around the ruins made a
patchwork domed ceiling, allowing many slanting rays of silvery moonlight to
dapple the ruined temple. He guessed it
was a temple, from the way the columns appeared, but really he had no
idea. Behind the unicorn was a another
statue.
The cold stone gleamed under the starlight. The figure was garbed in flowing robes,
intricately designed bracelets hung from his wrists. A spire-like crown adorned his head. Long hair spilled over his shoulders and
sharp ears rose up to the top of his crown.
His hands clutched a great sword, the hilt at his chest and the tip of
the blade at his feet. Two crescent
shapes, shining like silver, adorned both ends of the handle, forming the
pummel and the hand-guard, a design Justin recognized as Celtic. The blade itself was a golden, translucent
crystal. Even in the moonlight, the
golden crystal shimmered with yellow light - like the reflection of water on a
cavern ceiling. He was mesmerized. Clearly, this sword was not marble like the
rest of the statue. One thing was
certain, the amber blade was the source of the glimmering light flashing in the
trees. The light bent and slithered over
the surface like golden syrup. Even
still, it made no sense that the light would bounce off the trees and reflect all
the way to the path where he’d seen it.
At the base, where the statue’s pointed boots
were planted, there was a slab of marble with writing engraved on it. The language was unknown to him, but the
letters flowed like liquid, spilling across the stone in perfect dips and
swirls. It read:
A findias tucadh claidhim
nuadad.
Ni thernadh nech uadha.
O dobetha as a intig bodha.
Ni gebtha fris.
What it meant he
could only guess at. Perhaps it was a
poem about the statue. Or maybe a riddle
to win the sword? It obviously had some
importance or no one would’ve bothered to carve it there in the first
place.
The drumming of running footsteps and rustling
brush sounded nearby, rousing him from his stupor. The forest seemed to distort the sounds,
making it impossible to tell which direction it was coming from. He tensed, not knowing what to expect,
glancing about and wondering if he shouldn’t find a safe hiding spot. But before he knew what was happening,
someone exploded from the brush and crashed into him.