Party at Castle Grof (2 page)

Read Party at Castle Grof Online

Authors: Kira Morgana

BOOK: Party at Castle Grof
3.65Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“There! That’s the bugger who assaulted me, Officer!” See, he’s sitting with his friends now!”

“Right then.” The Officer strode over to the table, tucking the soft cloth away. “I arrest all of you in the name of King Groilin who, as all who value their lives know, is King of Valdir. The charges facing you are: one count of assault; two counts of causing an affray and one count of damaging private property.”

“What?” Ariana blinked.

“Boys, bring them down to the Watch House!” The Officer snapped his fingers and three of the burly guards grabbed Aranok.

“Hang on a minute, I broke up the fight, I didn’t start it. The dwarf did,” Aranok protested, pulling away from the men, who had almost lifted him from his stool.

The dwarf growled. “The Barbarian was th’one who emptied his flagon on me.”

“And I stopped him from beating you senseless. I had nothing to do with what he did.” The guards grabbed his arms. He flung them off again. “Leave me alone.”

“Doesn’t matter who did what; you’re coming with us. If in the course of our investigations, we discover your story is true, then we’ll let you out. It shouldn’t take more than a couple of months,” the officer replied, waving a lazy hand in greeting at the Tavern Keeper.

Another couple of men grabbed Grald, slinging the groaning barbarian between them.

“You’re joking. Ask the mage at the bar, he’s the one who asked us to break it up! Hoi, magic boy; sort this out!” Aranok shouted at Shilir, who he could just see at the bar.

Ariana was politely, if firmly, urged out of her seat by another pair of guards.

“A couple of months? That’s ridiculous,” she declared, her outrage making her hands glow with suppressed power.

The officer frowned. “Now you watch yourself, Miss. We pride ourselves as being fair on prisoners and if you do something rash, I may be forced to do something you may come to regret.”

“Shilir?” Grald called out weakly “What’s going on?”

Shilir turned round and his eyes widened.

“Sweet Fiörna!” He started struggling through the crowd calling out to the barbarian, “I’ll sort this out, Grald. Just don’t do anything foolish.”

Aranok continued to protest their innocence and some of the Tavern’s other customers took up the cry on his behalf.

“Leave them alone!”

“They didn’t do anything!”

The Watch dragged Grald, Ariana and Aranok out of the tavern.

Many of the drinkers from the tavern boiled out onto the street, following the watchmen. Outside, the people on the street swelled the group around the prisoners, gawking at the show.

“Bloody Dwarves, they always start fights in Valdez, should be banned,” one man yelled at the Watch Captain, who ignored the comment.

“How dare ye blame the Dwarves? Blame the humans, they’re a contentious lot!” Avinger howled with rage and ploughed into the crowd toward the speaker, an elf wearing a mercenary uniform.

A few people threw tomatoes snatched up from a nearby stall, the fruit splattering on the back plates of the guards holding Ariana.

“Hey.” The mage shrieked as the juice splashed onto her white robes. “Have you any idea how hard it is to get tomato juice out of white wool?”

The two guards dropped her arms and backed away, hands held palm up toward her.

“It wasn’t us, lady…” one of them said.

“Fancy manhandling a gentlewoman like that,” a female voice said from the crowd. “How dare they? Let her go.”

Several other women chimed in and there was a surge toward Ariana as the women endeavoured to free her. Her guards stopped trying to catch hold of her again and concentrated on stopping the crowd from pulling Ariana away from them.

A tall, slim dark skinned elf, her face hidden in the shadow of her cloak’s hood slipped into the edges of the crowd surrounding the kerfuffle.
Those two can’t seem to go anywhere without getting into trouble. Maybe I should help them out of this one…
She raised one hand.

As the Captain turned to deal with the threatening riot, there was a shout from a fair way behind them. A bright light whooshed overhead to impact against a nearby Fishmongers cart. There was a soft hissing noise and anyone who understood what it was headed for the floor.

Satisfied, Erendell slid away again and sought shelter beside a leatherworker’s stall, crouching down. Everyone else carried on as they were; fighting, yelling and generally causing trouble.

The cart exploded, showering everyone nearby in fish. The guards cursed, but hung onto Aranok. Ariana’s guards frowned, looking at her.

“It wasn’t me,” she told them. “My mana is all out, the trick with my hands is genetic.”

A huge salmon thwacked into Grald’s face, bringing him fully awake.

“What in all the Gods names is goin’ on?” he hollered and with a few well-placed thumps managed to get free.

The crowd surrounding them cheered.

“Freedom for barbarians,” someone yelled. “No more using us as mercenaries!”

The officer swung round, panic covering his face and he completely turned his back on the crowd as he saw Grald knock his guards out. “Grab the Barbarian!”

“Get ready!” a voice called from the back of the crowd.

Ariana frowned.
That voice sounds familiar.

Another light ball flew over the top of the throng to hit the pompous officer on the back of the head and splintered into a thousand shimmering sparks. The officer groaned and slumped to the ground.

“Who did that?” the Officer’s second in command yelled.

“I think he went that way,” a woman wearing a seamstress’ wrap said. She pointed down the street toward the main market.

“Thank you, ma’am.” The watchman saluted her and frowned. “We’d better catch whoever it was, lads. Two of you get the Captain and take him back to the watch house.”

“What about these three?” one of the patrol asked.

The Lieutenant sighed and turned to Aranok.

“As I’ve never seen you in the city before and this is likely your first offence in Valdez, I’ll let you go with a caution; you’re not to cause any more trouble in the city or I will personally slam you in the cells.”

Aranok and Ariana nodded their thanks. Dragging Grald away from his tussle with the guards, the three of them took advantage of the confusion to retrieve their belongings from the tavern, before following Grald over to a nearby alley.

Erendell dissolved the illusion of the seamstress she’d wrapped around herself and watched the little group disappear down the alley.
This can’t be the cause of this damned itch in my bones. Something a bit bigger than a barroom brawl is afoot here and those two are going to get themselves killed unless I tag along.

“Great. Now we can’t go back there,” Ariana groused, adjusting one of the straps on her satchel.

“We’ll just have to find somewhere else for tonight.” Aranok didn’t seem concerned.

“Look, I’m sorry about all that,” Grald said. “Shilir’s pulled me out of a few scrapes since he turned up on my doorstep in Jinra Village, but I’ve never got anyone else in trouble before.”

“That’s all right,” Ariana smiled at the big barbarian.

“If you come from Jinra Village, what on earth are you doing in Valdez?” Aranok asked, as he attached his quiver to his belt.

“Shilir would be the best one to ask about that.” Grald looked around and spotted the skinny mage across the street. “There he is. Let’s go and talk to him.”

They crossed to another alley where Shilir waited. In the distance, they could hear the shouts and whistles of the Watch.

“What in Lady Hel’s name was that all about?” Aranok fumed at the mage. “Why didn’t you help us? You said this was your home town.”

“I’m sorry. My employer often sorts things like that out for me. That’s why I said for you to hang on.” Shilir apologised as he led them down the alley. “Grald is a peaceable man, but anyone smaller than him seems to get upset with him, especially when he’s drunk. Why he drinks Windang’s is beyond me, especially when he knows the effect it has on him, but...” and he shrugged holding his hands out palm up.

Grald looked embarrassed. “Sorry, Shilir.”

“So what are you two doing in Valdez? I wasn’t aware that the Guild of Mages had any elven representatives.” The mage sat himself on a crate.

“I’m not Elven. I’m human.” Ariana crossed her arms.

“But you are from Alethdariel?” The other mage looked slightly worried. “I’m sure I heard you mention the Heir to the Alethdariel throne earlier.”

“How did you hear that? I didn’t speak that loudly.” Aranok’s brows lowered. Ariana smacked him in the ribs and he rubbed his side. “Ow, what did you do that for?”

She turned back to Shilir. “You were well away from us during that conversation. What gives you the right to listen in on us using a spell?”

“Um…” Shilir looked down at his feet. “I’ve had a tracking and listening spell on Grald ever since we went through Jirit and he managed to get himself abducted by a group of Giranathian slavers. I just happened to overhear your conversation about Princess Liana and growing up together, that’s all, I wasn’t deliberately eavesdropping.”

“Why are you interested in where we are from or what we are doing?” Aranok asked. “We just helped you out in a fight that wasn’t ours.”

“We were waiting for some friends of mine, but none of them have turned up.” Grald looked worried. “They were taking the shortcut through the Heart Mountains from Jirshan.”

“Dangerous route that one, it goes straight past Tower Lake,” Aranok said.

“Well, there were four of them. A mage, a cleric and two warriors, it should have been safe enough.” He sighed. “I said I would meet them here at the Mountain’s Shadow and in theory they should have been here first. Only because Shilir insisted on going the long way round…” Grald looked at the mage who looked up at the sky and shrugged.

“That’s all very well, but you haven’t answered my question, Shilir. Why were you eavesdropping?” Ariana’s hands began glowing again.

“We’ve been waiting for Grald’s friends since early this morning. As they haven’t turned up, I was trying to see if you’d be interested in a proposition.” Shilir scooted backward as Ariana stalked toward him, her glowing hands clenched into fists.

“It’s against Guild rules to use magic to eavesdrop in a public place, Shilir.” She extended one hand, her index finger pointing at Shilir’s long nose. “Why didn’t you just ask?”

“I needed to know if you are trustworthy.” Shilir leaned against the wall, eyes crossing as he kept his gaze on her finger. “Anyone who talks about Princess Liana in such familiar terms…” he flinched and fell off his crate as Aranok launched himself at him.

Ariana sighed and grabbed her brother. “Aranok, don’t get carried away again.”

“But…” Aranok let her pull him away from the trembling mage who had scrambled to hide behind Grald.

“I know. It’s your duty. Behave yourself or do you want to end up in a cell?” Ariana swung back to glare at Shilir and Grald. “Now, tell us what in the Healing Lady’s name you are going on about.”

“Look. I’ll be honest with you. Grald won’t go into the Dungeon of Doom my employer found without a full party…”

Aranok blinked and scowled at the mage.

“A Dungeon of Doom?” Ariana looked troubled. “The Guild said something about that. Who is your employer that he can afford the Guild of Mages intervention?”

“Lord Harnez has the king’s backing as well as a lot of money. There is something particular that the Guild wants from the Dungeon though.” Shilir’s eyes looked hunted. “That was how I got involved with the quest.”

“Quest?” Aranok said.

“Shilir, let’s take them to see Lord Harnez,” Grald suggested. “He’s the one who wants me to go into the Dungeon and he’d be the best one to explain exactly what is going on.”

“Wonderful idea, Grald.” Shilir’s voice held a slight sneer. “Didn’t think you had such intelligence in you.”

Grald still recovering from the fight, didn’t catch the second half of Shilir’s comment and frowned. “What? Oh, never mind.” He turned to Ariana. “Will you come to see Lord Harnez at least?”

She bit her bottom lip.
We really ought to be restocking and getting back home. Mother will be getting worried.
“I don’t know. We’ll have to talk it over.”

“How much information do you need?” Shilir burst out. “You’re adventurers aren’t you? This wouldn’t be any different to what you do normally.”

Aranok’s eyes narrowed. “Actually, I’m Ariana’s Mage Protector. We don’t normally travel far from Alethdariel. If my sister wants to discuss with me whether or not we should even be talking to your employer, then I am not going to gainsay her. Besides, I don’t like your tone.”

Shilir threw up his hands and stalked away muttering.

Grald grinned. “For someone who came close to death on his last trip into a dungeon, he’s not particularly cautious. I understand why you’d hesitate. We’ll be over here when you come to your decision.” He joined Shilir. “I’ll make sure he doesn’t eavesdrop this time.”

Ariana turned her back on the barbarian and mage.

Other books

Without Faith by Leslie J. Sherrod
Gazza: My Story by Paul Gascoigne
Project Enterprise by Pauline Baird Jones
The Thorn of Dentonhill by Marshall Ryan Maresca
Killers for Hire by Tori Richards
The Last Man by Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley
The Viking Hero's Wife by DeVore, Catherine
Reunification by Timothy L. Cerepaka