Home Genre tragedy To Forge a New Dawn

2.2 - Shelter

To Forge a New Dawn vsphelix 12915Words 2024-03-27 12:42

  The wheelbarrow tray shone like newly forged iron in the torchlight, though from the look of the wooden handle, the wheelbarrow itself had been built two or three decades ago—ancient, yet no more than half the age that its owner looked to be. The Scholar touched the side of the tray, marveling at the liquid-like smoothness of the grey metal. The Sorcerer must have cast some powerful spell upon the wheelbarrow to preserve it over the years. He was not just a Sorcerer, then, if he knew such methods of warding metal from the wears of time, but an Alchemist as well.

  The distant village rooftops grew into humble farmers` huts and shacks, many with collapsed chimneys or termite-eaten walls. The Scholar shivered from a stiff breeze that blew between the small houses. This was not a thriving village, as the Scholar had expected, but an empty town.

  The Alchemist wheeled the Scholar to a building that towered above the rest of the village. The sign over the front door proclaimed, in lettering of faded gold, that herein resided the mayor. By the abandoned state of the rest of the town, the original mayor had long since handed over his house to new management. The Alchemist helped the Scholar out of the wheelbarrow, steadying him when his legs threatened to collapse.

  Inside was a sparsely decorated meeting hall with a large table, its surface completely covered in pouches and jars, and several chairs stacked on the side. A faded blue rug with gold embroidery had been rolled up and stashed in the corner nearest to the dark fireplace. Two side doors led off from the main hall, one on either side of the room. The Alchemist led the Scholar to the door on the left side, and they entered a cluttered workshop that seemed to double as a storeroom.

  The Alchemist deposited the Scholar in the middle of this workshop and disappeared into the main hall. The Scholar sank to the ground beside a low wooden table, relieved to no longer be supporting his own weight. The tabletop had unidentifiable jars, tools, and pieces of wood. Near one edge sat a long, curved strip of blackened metal with a string tied to one end and a narrow, arm-length rectangle in the middle. Glyphs from an unidentifiable language were partly engraved along the inner surface of the curve, and a pen-like etching tool sat beside the marks. A contraption with glass circles, thin metal tubes, and a crank was attached to one side. The Scholar puzzled over the shapes for a time, but the purpose of the intricate attachment remained unclear. He finally decided that it must be some sort of fishing pole and reel.

  The walls and floor of the workshop were covered in racks and shelves, respectively, upon which countless pieces of wood, metal, and stone were stored. The few open segments of wall were filled with pieces of slate decorated in chalk sketches. The only clear floor spaces were by the table, where the Scholar currently sat, and a small path leading from the doorway to the unlit fireplace. The Scholar shivered, wishing for a fire to dry his sodden travel clothes before the rot could set in. He inched closer to a shelf of rocks, but he could not tell which ones might be able to create sparks.

  The Alchemist entered the room again, this time carrying the rolled-up rug, an armful of cloth rags, and a cup of water. The water he offered to the Scholar. It tasted clean and fresh in the Scholar`s parched mouth, though it held the faint bitterness of medicinal herbs. Unfortunately, the cool temperature soon had the Scholar shivering even more.

  The Alchemist arranged the carpet and a few larger cloth pieces to form a makeshift bed. He then held up a bundle of small cloth strips.

  "Bandages," said the Alchemist, setting the bundle on the floor. He crouched by the dark fireplace, and a wisp of flame leapt up between his hands.

  Warmth reached the Scholar immediately. He moved closer to the fireplace, attempting to soak in as much heat as possible. The Alchemist seemed to understand, and he moved aside, allowing the Scholar to sprawl fully in front of the hearth. They sat there for a time, the Scholar absorbing heat while the Alchemist prodded the fire into a more prominent blaze. Once the Scholar`s shivering had abated, he decided that he ought to communicate with his rescuer.

  "I noticed your fancy fishing pole," the Scholar said, waving at the table. "It has a unique design, but where could you possibly go fishing? This area only seems to have tiny creeks."

  The Alchemist laughed.

  "To think that, all these years, I have been shooting arrows from fishing poles! It seems that I have much to learn from you, good Scholar." Humor, or perhaps madness, danced in the eerie patterns of firelight that reflected off the Alchemist`s eyes. "This is a crossbow—a weapon commonly used by hunters in the far north. This prototype has a few enhancements of my own design." He fiddled with a clear glass circle as he spoke, aligning it over one of the round insets in the project. The room beyond appeared somehow magnified when viewed through the circle.

  "Cross... bow?" It was an unfamiliar term to the Scholar. The device was indeed cross-shaped, but it did not resemble any shortbow or longbow that he had ever seen. The Scholar looked away, searching for a way to salvage the conversation. A rack of shiny metal implements hanging on the wall caught his attention. If small talk did not work, perhaps outright flattery would convince the Alchemist to spare him. The Scholar nodded at the rack. "You have an impressive collection of weapons."

  "What weapons? Those are only tools for my experiments. When testing explosive compounds, it is unwise to handle the chemicals directly." The Alchemist set aside the crossbow and lenses, instead picking a long metal spoon from its hanging place on the wall. He poured two powders onto the surface and added a drop of clear liquid. With a sound like thunder, brilliant green flared through the room.Unauthorized usage: this narrative is on Amazon without the author`s consent. Report any sightings.

  "Sorcery," the Scholar gasped. A dark spot remained in his vision long after the light faded.

  "Alchemy." The Alchemist`s smile was patient and bemused. Soon after speaking, however, his face fell. The Scholar had raised his hand to block out the sudden flash, but now that hand was trembling in midair. When the Alchemist saw this shaking hand, he seemed to come to a realization.

  "Ah, pardon my lack of hospitality..." The Alchemist left the room in a hurry.

  Alone now, the Scholar pressed a hand to his forehead and shuddered. Sorcery and dark magicks belonged in old stories, not in reality, yet this Alchemist used them with the same ease as the Scholar might use a pen. With such power at his fingertips, the Alchemist would be a valuable ally in the Scholar`s quest to unveil the falsehood and corruption of the Empire.

  The Alchemist soon returned with a pot of stew. Once the stew warmed, the Scholar discovered it to be a hearty blend of tubers, meat, and more bitter herbs. The food chased back some of the Scholar`s fatigue and numbed the soreness of his wilderness travels. It was the first real meal that he had eaten in days, not counting the stale biscuit that the soldiers had tossed at the Scholar at midday, and it brought great relief to his empty stomach While he ate, the Alchemist cleared tools off the floor, opening a slightly larger walkable space within the workshop.

  After eating, the Scholar introduced himself with a sanitized account of the last few days. A scribe by trade, he had a conflict with his employers, ran afoul of the City Guard, and was threatened with imprisonment or execution. He fled the city, managing to survive in the wilderness for several days, but the soldiers caught up to him on the outskirts of this village. He knew not where this village was relative to the Empire, and he hoped only that any surviving soldiers would not call for reinforcements soon.

  The Alchemist accepted this tale with a nod.

  "We are west of the Capital but still within the Empire`s borders. This village has been my home for some years now. You need not fear your captors; they shall never again walk among the living."

  The Scholar closed his eyes, releasing a shaky exhale. He had guessed as much, by the cries of the soldiers as the Alchemist dispatched each with the same ease as a lumberjack chopping wood, but the words only confirmed the depth of his predicament. A man who spoke the truth about a government`s flaws might be forgiven by a sensible official, but a man responsible for murder would not be allowed to walk the city streets. He could never return to his hometown or see his little daughter again.

  "Tell me, Scholar—how does a learned man earn the ire of the City Guard?"

  The full tale spilled forth: the Scholar`s discovery in the Archives, his attempts to rectify the doctored reports, and his excommunication. Later, he had made pamphlets and speeches in an attempt to enlighten the public. Instead, he brought the wrath of the City Guard upon those open-minded enough to consider his words. At the end of this tale, the Scholar buried his head in his hands and told of the paper peddler`s misfortune—an unrelated incident, yet still one that he could not erase from his mind.

  "All my life, I have only ever wanted to serve the Empire. Then, I found out that the Empire was fundamentally broken. And when I tried to fix it, they called me the problem," the Scholar said mournfully. "Those in power have exploited the people`s trust for too long without challenge. Truth is obscured from the eyes of the curious. Fairness is discouraged among the ambitious. Power is determined by the heaviness of one`s purse, rather than the sharpness of one`s wit. Honest men exhaust their lives in the shadow of petty gold-grubbers without principles."

  "The outside world has become far worse in my absence," the Alchemist said, agreement written on every inch of him. "When I left, it was already sliding downhill."

  He launched into his own tale of woe, wherein a loyal and honest soldier fell victim to the petty agendas of his superiors.

  "When I served in the Imperial Army, my unit was sent against a bandit infestation. We torched their stronghold in record time—no soldiers lost, all outlaws defeated. For that victory, I was dismissed from the Army. I humbly went to the Military Council for an explanation. They said, You set fire to the brigands` treasure stash. Under your watch, half of the stolen jewels melted, all of the looted brocade burnt to ashes, and you salvaged nothing.`"

  The Alchemist`s fist slammed upon the table, sending it clattering across the floor. When his hand lifted, a depression two inches in diameter marred the wooden surface.

  "We executed every last bandit, yet all the Council cared about was riches. Though the authorities don the guise of patriotism, their true loyalties show—to think that leaders value material wealth more than the extermination of lawbreakers! Such greed is a blight upon our nation." The Alchemist stilled, regaining his center in the space of a silent breath. When he spoke again, his voice was calm and resolute. "Back then, I did not challenge the Council. I thought they would see their own errors in time. Yet from your account, I see that the Empire is indeed beyond redemption. If time cannot correct our nation`s course, then we must stage a more direct intervention."

  The Scholar nodded. "Exactly my thoughts. I have long dreamed of a better world. Though I am but one insignificant Scholar, I see the path clear as the sun in the sky," began the Scholar. Thus, he spun a vision of a new order—a world in which the people would know the truth and understand; a world where the talented, not the well-connected, would gain power and status based on earned merit; a world alike to what the Empire already boasted itself to be, yet different from reality in that the new nation would indeed be as virtuous as it claimed.

  In this new order, the nation ought to take precedence over the self always. To accomplish this, the Scholar proposed radical refurbishment of all positions. Low or high, civil or military—all ought to be investigated for corruption, and, if found wanting, removed or replaced by more effective stations. Even the Emperor himself, if unwilling to accept the change needed to purify the Empire, ought to be overturned. A thorough redesign of the existing system was vital to the renewal of the Empire.

  The Alchemist listened, solemn and resolute, and he absorbed every word. By the time the Scholar had quite exhausted himself of ideas, the Alchemist peered into the fireplace with the thoughtful expression of a man who had seen light for the first time in years.

  "As my old teacher once said, When the rot is deep, it must be excised before healing may begin.` Your words are the very definition of treason, but I cannot deny their necessity."

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