Tuesday, June 30, 2020

Leaving


"My brood brother, Mellen, went south," Alpen replied to Alithea's question. Bebe nodded. "I have not seen or heard from him in ten years when he parted. Perhaps we can join their village. I want to find out what is happening in the south. Where are the Ibik herds?"
Bebe asked, "The mountains to the south. What about the wolfbear?"
Alpen looked to Fallon Neither of them knew the habits of the wolfbear, only that it was territorial. He turned back to Bebe. "We'll be fine, hon. The three of us. We have weapons." He gave her a reassuring hug, and Fallon nodded in confirmation.
Each family placed their belongings on a travois that was usually used to transport Ibik meat and injured warriors. Alithea directed Fallon to pack her grandmother's bridal quilt and the nesting crib that they would need in a few weeks for the new baby, but there was so much she had to leave behind. Fallon's priority was weapons and tools. Alithea paused at the door as they were ready to leave. Had she forgotten anything? Suddenly, she let out a wail that bounced off the walls and out into the crisp morning air. The sound upset Erthen, who reached up to her for reassurance. She gathered him in her arms and followed Fallon out to their travois.
They went to visit their loved ones in the graveyard at the southern end of the village. Bebe and Alpen had also buried a young one there. "My soul is here," Bebe cried as she knelt on the damp grass. Drindl stood in front of his mother's grave, then reached down to pluck a spring flower from the site.
Fallon touched the headstone over his folk's grave. He and Alpen had found the large rock on the cliffs of an ancient volcano to the north. One side had a smooth glassy surface of burgundy streaked with silver and aquamarine that captured the evening sun's fire. They had both hurt for days after. Alpen had joked that the rock was the bravest warrior he had ever fought. Fallon knelt at the stone and kissed the swirl of cool color. The full impact of leaving their home hit him.
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Alpen touched his shoulder. "You gave your folks the evening sun for the rest of eternity."
Fallon needed to hear that. He stood, then turned to the squeak of the Faerie as it stirred from its stupor. "No, you've had enough. You're not going to die," Fallon answered, then remembered that he had forgotten the faerie cage. Alpen had not brought one either. Drindl ran back to Fallon's house and retrieved the faerie cage. The two of them transferred the Faerie to the cage and left the skull on the ground.
As the sun climbed above the horizon, Alpen urged them to leave. They stood facing the village, pausing for one last look at their home, their refuge in the world. Alithea set Erthen on the travois, covered him and secured him to the sled. Next to him, Fallon tied the faerie cage to the sled. "Maybe Erthen will learn Faerie talk just like his father," Alithea joked.
Fallon protested, "I'm not making this up!"  He slid into the harness of the travois and took the lead. He followed the bare outline of a path beaten down by the hooves of last year's Ibik migration. The warmth of the sun was welcome in the early spring morning.

As Fallon strode forward, he thought. Turning back to Drindl, he motioned for the young warrior to come alongside him. "Did you have any energy last night?" Drindl shook his head no. "You gave some to Erthen and I gave some to the Faerie. Did Alpen take any?" Again, Drindl shook his head. "Show me the energy," he asked and Drindl fished out the energy. "There is still a good deal left. All the warriors took that much energy?" Drindl nodded. Sarten had given them a strong enough dose to overcome any reluctance as he led them to slaughter. They would share Sarten's murderous spirit and act without question. Where did he get that much energy, Fallon wondered. "I'm glad you did not join them," he said as he reached out to Drindl. "We are brothers now. Brothers of the heart and brothers of the sword."

Saturday, June 27, 2020

The Village


When Fallon rejoined the others he showed them the Faerie. "I can understand it's language somehow," he said. "That Listener in the Glade camp did something in my ear."
Alithea looked up from the skull with a skeptical expression. She reached up and flicked his cheek with her tongue, then looked down at the egg at her waist. "Your daddy hears faeries," she said. Alpen scoffed, then urged them on.
They followed Alpen's fast pace. When Bebe called after Alpen, he turned back to her, pointed at the sky and made the signal to keep silent. Fallon glanced through the trees at the sky but could not see any other faeries. Finally, they came to the outskirts of their village.
There were some forty houses, a great meeting hall and some other common buildings. The walls of the houses were large cobble and stones joined together with clay found near the mouth of the river. They paused and Bebe said, "I can't wait to lie down. A nap will be welcome."
"We will have to bring what we can and go south," Alpen said.
"Have you gone mad?! Alpen, we are not leaving our home!" Bebe insisted and stomped her hoof in the dirt.  
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Fallon stepped in front of Alpen's path and faced him in the pre-dawn light. They heard a sound and turned to watch fire licking at the night sky. They turned back to Alpen. "I've given you a warrior's respect, my friend," Fallon said. "Bebe's right. This is crazy. Explain."
"Drindl woke me. He was one of thirty or forty warriors that Sarten assembled in the middle of the night," Alpen explained. "The warriors took energy. There is only one reason. To attack in the darkness of night." Fallon nodded. "Only warriors with no eggs to care for. Sarten recognized Drindl and told him to leave." Alpen turned to Drindl. "Sarten said they would rid themselves of the Glades and their eggs." Drindl nodded in confirmation and Fallon's eyes went wide.
"No warrior – no honorable warrior," Fallon corrected himself, "kills innocent eggs."
"This is just the beginning," Alpen warned.
"But why should we leave our village?" Bebe asked in an insistent voice.

"No matter what the final outcome, there will be a bloodbath. In a few weeks, the Cawthingi will arrive from the coast to trade fish with the Glade tribe for Ibik meat. What will they find? If the Glades are destroyed, will the Cawthingi attack our people to gain access to the spring and summer herds? They certainly will. Why trade if you can take?" 
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Alithea grabbed Fallon's arm for comfort as the words spilled from Alpen. "What about the eggs in our camp?" It was a question that none of them wanted to ponder. Erthen stirred and Alithea reached for him. "I'm surprised that our boy has slept through this journey."
Drindl started to explain but Fallon made a slight shake of his head and Drindl shook off the papoose. Alithea calmed the waking boy and Drindl helped her strap the papoose to her back.
Fallon kissed the youngster, then said, "Well, that is not a reason to abandon our village, our people." The others nodded in agreement.
"Don't you see?" Alpen asked. "This land is changing and there will be continual fighting. Each year the herds grow thinner and thinner. My father's father spoke of the spring thunder, he called it, when the Ibik herds would cross into the valley and darken the plains. To the west the water now eats the land. The land of our fathers is disappearing!"
Drindl stretched to the sky and said, "The Morela fox. They arrive a few weeks before the Ibik herds. I have not seen one fox this year. Have any of you seen the fox?"
Alpen gestured to Drindl. "You see?" He looked to Fallon.
"Where should we go?" asked Alithea. She flexed under the weight of the boy who opened his eyes.  
Fallon brushed the long black hair growing from Erthen's head. The boy babbled baby talk and Fallon said, "In just a few minutes we'll be home."
Bebe looked at Fallon. "What part of that made any sense to you?"
Fallon shrugged. "He says he's hungry. He wants to know when we'll be home."
Alithea turned to face Fallon. "Faerie talk. Now babble talk? Come on, I'll feed the boy while you gather up our stuff."

Wednesday, June 24, 2020

Escape


Alpen made the hand signal to his throat, the one they had all learned as young children. Mortal and imminent danger. Be quiet. Even Fallon was frightened by the primitive warning gesture. They stayed close to the river where the vegetation afforded some cover. After turning a bend in the river, Alpen turned to his left, toward the treeline and in the direction of their home.
In the far distance, they heard the clamor of fighting, then the piercing scream of a Sprint split the night air and caused Fallon's skin to shiver. They looked to Alpen. "Hurry!" he urged. He looked skyward and Fallon followed his gaze. A lone Faerie flew above the treetop. Alpen turned to Fallon. "Drindl has some energy. Try to trap the Faerie so it cannot report us to Altiss."
Fallon was surprised but Alpen gave him the signal. No explanations. Fallon came alongside Drindl who still carried the sleeping Erthen in a papoose on his back. Fallon put his hand on the boy's head. Now he knew how Erthen had remained asleep during all this commotion. A small amount of energy made a young one sleepy. "Don't tell anyone you gave Erthen some energy," he said as they walked along. At Drindl's look of surprise, Fallon said, "I understand. You did what you thought was best in battle mode. Alithea mustn't find out." Drindl nodded. "Can I get the energy? We need to lure the Faerie down." Drindl reached to his side, undid the pouch and handed it to Fallon.
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Fallon drifted away from the group, circling wide into the clearing. From this short distance, he could see the weariness in the gait of the others. Even Drindl's supple form was bent forward under Erthen's weight. Alithea's anxiety showed as she carried their egg pouch and tried to keep up with Alpen and not stumble.
Fallon paused, casually reached into the pouch and withdrew the white piece of energy that Drindl had wrapped in a leaf. He held it to his mouth as though he were nibbling. He casually tilted his head and glanced skyward while he kept his cloak at the ready, draped over his other arm. The light was dim and he could not see the Faerie. He heard the rapid beat of the Faerie's wings above him as it swooped to steal the energy from his grasp. As the wings brushed against his forehead, he fell back and swept his cloak over the surprised Faerie and let it fall to the ground. Trapped between the cloak and the grass, the Faerie tried to escape but Fallon kept it pinned. It made a bunch of squeaking sounds below the coat as Fallon gathered it into the center. He stood up with his coat gathered into a sack. The Faerie stopped thrashing in the pocket of darkness.

"Energy, give me," is what Fallon thought he heard the Faerie say. Impossible, he thought, then he heard the words repeated. He could not speak Faerie. Even Altiss struggled with that. They did not have a faerie cage. What was he going to do with the little creature? It was bad luck to intentionally kill a Faerie, even a snooping Faerie.
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He would need to run to catch up with the others. Suddenly he saw the bleached white form of an Ibik skull on the ground. He turned it over to make sure there were no bitey stingies living in the skull. It was quite small, a yearling Ibik who had not completed the migration route with its herd. Struck with a solution to his problems, Fallon set his cloak down on the ground, keeping it closed and the Faerie trapped. He took a bit of energy and placed it in the top of the skull, then carefully moved the skull inside the sac he had created with the jacket. He felt the Faerie move into the skull to get the energy. He withdrew the cloak, being careful to use his coat to block the opening at the base of the skull. In one hand he held the skull with the Faerie and held the coat with the other. The Faerie was too large to get out the openings in front of the small skull but the coat was an awkward solution.
Fallon watched the Faerie as it feasted on the small morsel of energy. He put the energy back in the pouch, then used it to block the opening in the skull. Already the Faerie was getting relaxed as the energy took effect on the little creature. Fallon tied the pouch strings around the skull and set off to find the others.

"I won't tell sis-ah if you give me more energy," the Faerie said. Sis-ah was the name the faeries called Altiss. What a lying faerie glutton, Fallon thought. He made the sound of an Alsace bird and it echoed in the skull. The predator sound silenced the Faerie.

Sunday, June 21, 2020

Between the Shadows


When Fallon got back to the tent, he realized that he still held the energy in his hand. He stored it safely in his pouch. He ducked inside the tent and roused Alpen from a deep slumber. After a moment, Alpen signaled that he was awake. After checking on Fallon's boy, they stood outside the tent in tree shadow.
Drindl told him about the gathered warriors and the energy. Alpen silenced him with a gesture of his hand, then looked up at the tree canopy and listened. He heard the quiet rustle of the warrior's hooves as they prepared for battle. "When did they take the energy?" Alpen asked with an insistent voice. When Drindl told him, Alpen paused to calculate, then said, "We don't have much time."
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Fallon was so tired when Alpen shook him awake. "It's time already?" he mumbled. Something in Alpen's tone of voice jerked him awake and he sat up in his bedroll.
"Sarten's planning something," Alpen whispered. Fallon wanted to ask what and how he knew but Alpen gave him the battle sign. No explanations.
Fallon turned toward Drindl's bedroll. "My son," he said with concern. Alpen whispered that he was OK, then gave the battle sign again for silence. The three gathered their bedrolls and pouches. Drindl carried Erthen who slept peacefully.
They walked with the gait of warrior ghosts, making little sound. They circled at the edge of the clearing and the trees and made their way to the river. Now that they were out of their bedrolls, they had to turn their eggs frequently to ward off the cool night air.

"Bebe and Alithea? Do you know where they are in the tent?"Alpen asked. Fallon nodded and held up his hand to signal a few moments. Alpen and Drindl crouched in the tall reeds as Fallon retraced his steps to the tent and listened for the sound of any guard patrol. He jerked the rawhide string several times before he got a response from Alithea. He tapped out the most urgent code before his message, "Now. Leave. You. Bebe. Now. Leave. You. Bebe." With a stick, he propped up the tent wall to make a small opening above the ground. Bebe rolled out first, then Alithea. Fallon signaled silence and they followed him to the river. They saw Alpen and Drindl crouched in a circle. 

Thursday, June 18, 2020

An Evening's Pause


He was distracted by a touch on his arm – Alithea. She showed him the corner of the tent where she would be sleeping. She held out a string made from Ibik hide. "I will tie this around my hoof after we eat. I will leave a piece of string under the tent wall. Before the sun goes down, tap out that Erthen is all right. I will sleep better."
Fallon was not a first time dad and was patient. He was used to her rythms and familiar with her anxiety just before the birth of their baby. The women prepared a light meal and Altiss ushered him out of the tent. He didn't see the faerie.
He rejoined Drindl and Alpen. Both of them assured Fallon that the egg was fine. Fallon felt more confident taking the egg pouch for the overnight vigil. Freed of the pouch, Drindl took Erthen to a nearby hill to watch the sunset.
As the rim of the sun sank below the hills, Fallon left the tent. Staying low as he moved through the reeds near the river, Fallon approached the big tent in the dim light. He found the Ibik string and pulled. He felt Alithea's hoof move, then the string grew taut. He tapped out that Erthen was happy and their egg was warm and goodnight. She acknowledged with a tapping of affection. Fallon circled away from the tent, careful to stay out of sight of the guards.
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Drindl was stirred from his slumber. He disentangled his arm from Erthen's sleeping frame and stood, then followed the whisper outside the tent. "Sarten wants all the warriors without eggs," the voice said. The moonlight filtered through the half-naked trees as they walked toward the rear of the camp. Drindl saw a few warriors outside a large tent in a clearing between the trees. He was led to a tent where there were thirty to forty warriors packed tightly together. Someone handed him some energy. He was confused and surprised that there was any left. He turned abruptly as Sarten entered the large tent and walked to the table.
Sarten held a piece of energy into his mouth and surveyed the warriors. "Eat and let us be done with these bothersome Glades and their foul eggs." Sarten put the energy his mouth and the warriors followed suit. Drindl was so alarmed that his mouth was dry and he couldn't swallow. He looked around and saw a small urn being passed. He held up his arm to signal the warrior that he needed a drink when Sarten saw him and called out to him. Drindl ejected the energy in his hand and answered, "Sir! Drindl, your faithful warrior here." He had never been spoken to directly by the leader.

"You shake like a child at the sight of Sprints," Sarten taunted and looked to the others. Drindl blushed with shame. "Tonight is not a night for children," Sarten said. "Go back to sleep in your tent and dream of little Faeries." The other warriors laughed. As Drindl shuffled past his companions on his way to the exit, he was poked and pushed. He was relieved to make it out of the big tent.  

Wednesday, June 17, 2020

The Big Tent


Fallon turned back to Sarten. Alpen grabbed his arm and handed him some gulath. "The women have been in there for an hour. They will have eaten their last meal." The leaf pocket held Ibik meat and plants. Fallon took the meal and nodded his thanks, then stooped to kiss his boy. Being separated from his mother and father in such a short time was too much and he let out a howl. Alpen turned quickly and said, "A rabbit!" He held out his hand and the boy waved to Fallon and excitedly followed Alpen after the invisible rabbit.
Alithea's eyes grew wide when Fallon entered the tent. "Is everything all right? What are you doing here? Where is Erthen and our egg?" she asked. Fallon assured her that their boy and the egg were safe with Alpen. She was astonished that he was to be the translator. Altiss shushed them and led Fallon to a seat between the two tribes of women.
There was no food left but there was water. He listened and translated. The sound of the Glade language bounced around in his head like rocks. His tongue struggled to make some of the sounds when translating. Sometimes, the Glade women rolled their eyes. Another time, they laughed at his pronunciation.
During the negotiations, there were many deferences to status, to dignity, to each other's children. Taking turns and rules for this and that, the preparation of food with respect for each tribes tastes and ceremonies. Warriors would not waste such time on idle niceties. After several hours, the light dimmed in the great tent and they had not reached an agreement. He was relieved when Altiss asked him to leave the tent until negotiations resumed in the morning. A fairy flew in, settled on Altiss' shoulder and leaned toward her ear. She waved Fallon away. Neither fairy nor Fae were allowed in the tent during negotiations.

Monday, June 15, 2020

Bargaining Begins


By the late morning of the next day the warriors had strapped Ibik skins to the frame. The energy had worn off and the work was not as coordinated but they got the skins stretched and tied. In small groups the women from both tribes streamed into the valley. Alpen’s mate, Bebe, unwrapped her egg sling and handed the pouch and both eggs to him. Drindl was too young to take a mate. Fallon’s partner, Alithea, carried her egg pouch wrapped around her waist and their young boy sat atop her shoulders. He shifted onto Fallon’s shoulders as Alithea transferred her egg pouch to him.
After the women filed into the two separate huts, those without eggs joined the two huts with skins. They left an opening for the Listener to join the women. She would meld the discussions with her language skills. 
From the Glade camp Tall One descended and met Sarten. Each man held his sword in one hand, the other arm bound to his belly with the tribe’s banner. Where was the Listener?
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Sarten and Tall One performed the customary ritual of warriors before negotiations. Fallon scanned the hill for the Listener. His boy squirmed around on his shoulder when he saw  the Sprints on the hill. He banged his heels against Fallon's chest trying to urge his dad up the hill to see the giant spiders. Concerned for Drindl's safety, Fallon glanced around. The young warrior stood with Alpen. He didn't seem bothered by the sight of the Sprints. Must have been the energy he had eaten yesterday. 
One of Sarten's aides came over to him. Sarten needed him to translate. Burdened with an egg pouch and a boy, Fallon asked if Sarten could find someone else. Where was the Listener, he asked? That's why Sarten needs you, the aide said.
Tall One's lower jaw jutted out in defiance as Fallon drew closer. His boy thought they were going to see the Sprints on the hill and made grunting sounds of displeasure when Fallon stopped. Sarten told him to ask Tall One where the Listener was. Fallon tried to concentrate, shifting between the ugly syllables of the Glade language and the mellifluous cadences of his native Jade language. Tall One said the Listener was sick from eating purpury berries. Fallon thought he was lying. There were no berries that had ripened this early in spring. He told Sarten who wanted another Listener to translate negotiations between the women of the two tribes. No, Tall One said. There is no one else. He pointed to Fallon and said, "You translate." When Fallon relayed this to Sarten, he agreed. Fallon protested that he had an egg and a boy to take care of. 
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"Your companion can take care of your boy and your egg," Sarten said. He waved Fallon away.  Altiss pulled back a flap of skin on the treaty hut and called out to Sarten. He told her to wait a few moments. He turned back to Fallon and was insistent, "Hurry." Fallon hurried to Alpen, in the opposite direction from the Sprints, and his boy jerked up and down on his shoulders in protest. Fallon and Alpen inspected his egg pouch. No way could he keep three eggs warm.
"I could carry the pouch," Drindl offered.
"Have you ever done this before?" Fallon asked. "You have to rotate the egg every ten minutes while you are awake. When you sleep in your bedroll, you can't turn. 'Egg sleep' we call it." Drindl assured him he could do it and Alpen said he would tie Drindl down so that he could not turn over in his sleep. Alpen offered to take care of the boy.

Fallon transferred the egg pouch to Drindl's waist and made sure it was secure. He put his hands on Drindl's shoulders and looked him in the eye. "You are my brother now." Drindl nodded.


Thursday, June 11, 2020

Negotiations


Sarten looked at the opposite hill where the Glade army camped, then he scanned the valley for a neutral place where they could set up the bargaining tents for the women of both peoples. The spot had to be vulnerable to both sides and defensible in case of trickery. Each tribe would need access to the river that ran through the valley. Each day the course of the water grew wider as the snows melted near the glacier. Sarten pointed to an untreed area that was visible from each warrior camp. "We will begin tomorrow when the sun throws no shadows."
Fallon turned to the Fae warrior and gave her the instructions. She nodded, then placed the egg in her satchel and retreated up the hill toward the Glade camp.
Sarten said, "You have not eaten energy. Tend to Drindl. We will build a bargaining camp for the women." Fallon knew how quickly that would happen. They would be as one carpenter with 300 hands.
Fallon bent next to Drindl's relaxed body. His head was turned to the side, his cheek against the ground. Fallon saw that his eyes were glazed but nictating. He tried unsuccessfully to rouse the young warrior.
"He saw one of the Sprints up on the hill," Alpen said as he walked up the hill. "Some childhood nightmare? Maybe his first time consuming energy."

Fallon recognized Alpen's coat and unwound it from Drindl's feet. He used his arm to keep Drindl's hooves from making contact with the ground and gave the coat to Alpen.
"Have you ever seen this before?" Alpen asked. 
Fallon shook his head no, then looked up at Alpen, hoping he might confide his fear. "Do you think the Glades will keep their word?"
"Trust but verify," Alpen joked and walked up the hill.
Fallon removed his shirt and laid it under Drindl's feet. His face looked uncreased, like the smooth eggshell he broke out of when he came into the world. He leaned close to Drindl's ear and sang him the birth song that he had sung to his own children when they were ready to come out of their eggs. After a few minutes, he saw the first sign of response at the corner of Drindl's mouth.
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As Drindl awakened, Fallon waited patiently. He let the young warrior's hooves down to the ground. The others were far enough away. When Drindl could stand, Fallon gave him some water that Alpen had left. "Alpen and I are worried about you," Fallon said.
"I saw the Sprints on the hill," the words rushed a bit fast and Fallon urged him to drink. Drindl continued at a slower pace. "I was young when the Fae attacked us at Caphis." A bloody battle, Fallon remembered. It was only his second and he had fought the fear as the Sprints slashed their way through the Jade village.

"I had fallen as I ran from the Sprints," Drindl continued. "My mother tried to protect me. I watched as the raspy hairs from the legs of those beasts whipped her body. I tended to her but the wounds festered and she grew feverish. I helped my father bury her. She was with egg. My father never forgave me. He said I should have been more careful when I ran. My mother and the son or daughter of her egg would be alive."
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Wednesday, June 10, 2020

A Peace Offering


The soldiers moved away and conferred. Some looked at the advancing Jade army. A tall figure joined them, then turned toward Fallon. He raised his throwing axe and Fallon breathed deeply in anticipation of the killing cut of the blade.
“You said you had lost the energy,” tall man challenged Fallon. He turned to the others. “This is trickery.” 
“They step as one. Their arms and heads move as one!” Fallon threw the challenge back.
Tall One lobbed something up to the Fae warrior seated high up on the Sprint. “Tell me,” he commanded. A few moments later, Tall One caught something in his hand and Fallon heard the woman, “It is so. They move as one.” Tall One turned toward the valley and held the glass to his eyes. After a moment, he called to the others, “cut him down and clean him up. Today we will bargain.”
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The ground thundered beneath the feet of the Jade army as they moved down the hill. Altiss, the Faerie Queen, swept through the air above them and relayed what she saw to Sarten, who sent the stream of information  through the ground and into the minds of each of the warriors. Eight Sprints - hideous but lethal. 
Drindl drew back. His fear fought with the energy. “You’ve never seen one?” Alpen asked. Drindl stared at a Sprint on the crest of the hill. The slicing mandibles opened and closed. The six legs had snakes growing out of them. Drindl stood frozen, mouth agape, terrified by some childhood nightmare. Alpen had mentored several bantams in previous battles. This was new. The energy was magnifying some craziness in Drindl’s mind. 
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Sarten tapped on the mind web between warriors. He was impatient. Alpen turned to the warrior on the other side of Drindl. Together they lifted the bantam warrior from the ground to disconnect him from the warrior mind web, then laid him on his cloak on the dewy ground. A nightmare that powerful could infect the rest of them. Alpen tied his own cloak around Drindl's feet, carefully wrapping the young warrior's hooves so they would not make contact with the ground. Alpen turned his head toward the top of the opposing hill but still there was no advance from the Glade army. In case of a trick, the flanks of the Jade force split left and right in a wide circling movement that would slash through the Glade army in a pincer attack. 
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From the line of Glade warriors atop the hill, two figures emerged and began to walk down the hill to meet Sarten's forces. One figure was Fae. Alpen recognized the sinuous walk of a warrior. As they descended the hill, the Jade line readied for battle. Fallon! As soon as Alpen recognized him, the news traveled instantly through the mind meld. As they neared, the Fae warrior crouched in a signal of surrender as Fallon advanced toward his fellow warriors.
Fallon smiled as he approached Sarten and waved to Alpen. Despite the temptation to hug Fallon, Alpen did not break rank. Fallon spoke gibberish to Sarten. The Glade language with its ugly syllables! Sarten raised his sword to slay the devil that inhabited Fallon’s body. Fallon stepped back, his face creased in panic and confusion.  He spoke in the formal cadences of their fathers, the ancient warriors, “Sarten, my lord, it is I, Fallon, who fought with you at Pilates and Caphis.”
Sarten lowered his sword and held out an arm to embrace Fallon. “We thought you were dead. Then you speak in the Glade language as a man possessed. Go, take care of Drindl whom we have left behind. You have captured this Fae warrior?”
Fallon turned toward the crouching figure. “No, she comes as a sign of Glorin’s sincerity.” The sound of the Glade leader’s name was as ugly as the man himself. 
“They want to bargain?” Sarten scoffed. “What use have we of Fae? We do not use those foul Sprints in battle.”
“She bears the details of the truce,” Fallon said. As he turned, Sarten saw the wounds of capture and interrogation.
“They have put their language in your head,” Sarten said. “Have they also taken your loyalty? In a short time the Ibik herds will thunder through this valley to their breeding grounds. Food and hides for all, but not enough for two peoples. What truce?”
 “It is true that you can slaughter them all,” Fallon replied.  “That would gladden my spirit as fair retribution for their crimes to me. But certainly some of our warriors will fall in the coming battle.”

“It’s a trick, a delay,” Sarten countered.
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“No, the wives of the Glade warriors are in the camp ready to bargain,” Fallon said. Women talked. Warriors warred.
“Their eggs...” Sarten said. His eyes squinted as he looked into the heart of Fallon's words.
Fallon spoke to the Fae warrior in the Glade language. She reached into her satchel, withdrew an egg and held it out to Sarten with both hands. It was twice the size of a warrior’s fist. “The son or daughter of Glorin,” Fallon said. 
The warriors on either side of Sarten stared at the egg. They all had eggs of their own at home. It was a powerful sign of truce making. The spring generation of both Glade and Jade peoples would hatch in the next two weeks.
Sarten did not take the egg. A warrior did not handle another warrior's egg, friend or enemy. Sarten lowered his head as he deliberated. Fallon glanced left at Alpen standing in rank and mouthed a silent questioning "Drindl" to his friend. Alpen shook his head and made a gesture with his hand that Drindl would be all right. Alpen's eyes went wide as Sarten said, "We will bargain."
Fallon looked from Alpen to Sarten. What had caused alarm in Alpen?

Tuesday, June 9, 2020

The Warrior Camp



Photo by Егор Камелев on Unsplash

The deep voice hauled Fallon to his feet and pushed him out the tent. He winced at the contact with his scarred shoulders. The Listening woman was gone. Pale gray spread across the eastern sky. Fallon was in the warrior camp! 
To his left, a Fae warrior sat astride a Sprint, a spider like creature at least ten feet tall. Its eight long legs were covered with barbed hair that could cut through tall meadow grass. They had strapped several Ibik hides around the oval body to deflect a wounding sword stroke from below. 
The creature fidgeted below its Fae rider. She had not melded her will with the Sprint. Fallon looked about him. The warriors, their attendants and apprentices moved about in preparation for battle but not with the one melded mind of those who had consumed energy. He was confused.
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“Strap him to the Sprint,” deep voice said and pushed him forward to a group of soldiers. “He will lead us into battle,” he laughed. How did he understand the speech, Fallon wondered? The Fae rider held the head reins taut so that the 4’ mandibles did not slice them all.
The smell of the spidery beast made Fallon vomit. They lashed his outstretched arms and legs into the harness a few feet below the sex gland of the creature and the pasty liquid oozed onto his head. His only consolation was the certainty of his death. His belly was well within range of the killing stroke from one of his fellow warriors. 
The army moved forward and up a rise of rock and spring wildflowers. Hanging from the front of the Sprint, Fallon watched the flowers fall as the beast’s legs stepped through the grass. To his right and left he counted eight of the Sprints. He couldn’t see all the warriors but guessed that there were at least 8 dozen.  The Fae would use the Sprints as battle stations, launching their arrows and throwing axes as the two armies approached each other.
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The sun had cleared the hills to their right when they reached the crest of the hill. He raised his head to look at the far slope. His vision was blurred by sweat, blood and sex paste but what he saw advancing toward them caused his heart to leap with joy. From his soul erupted a maniacal laugh and he looked down at the soldiers below him. “They will slaughter you,” he called in a hoarse exultant voice and gesticulated with one unbound hand. “ Look, they move as one. One mind. One sword! They have eaten energy!”
Two soldiers turned to look at him. “How do you know our language?” One said. Fallon tried to shrug and felt the bite of the bird’s talons in his shoulder muscles. “You might as well kill me now. They will cut you down. Every last one of you and your hoary beasts. They will cut my ties and I will stand victorious on the putrefying body of this hell creature!”
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Monday, June 8, 2020

The Melding


Fallon felt rested when he awoke again. He was able to focus on the face above him. Not his dead mother. Another woman. Thirties. Blue gray eyes. Shining black hair. She did not look like a torturer. He told her that he would not talk. She smiled and revealed the gleam of a tiny jewel in her front tooth. She reached forward to touch his face. When he tried to grab her hand, he felt the leather thongs that bound his hands.
She cupped a hand over each ear. He jerked his head violently and tried to bite her arm. Laughing, she withdrew her hands. Another voice in the tent. A man with a deep large voice. Fallon couldn’t understand the words. They lashed a chengo strap across his forehead and the short sharp spikes bit into his skin, immobilizing his head. The man with the big head drew back and the woman leaned forward and spoke unintelligible sounds to him. The language of the Glade people was distasteful gibberish harsh to his ears. The words of a people who did not live by their word, who betrayed their own treaties.
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Again she cupped a hand over each of his ears. She inserted the tip of a finger into each ear cave and he shuddered with loathing when he felt a wet tendril search the canal deep within his ear. “Relax. There is no permanent damage,” she said. 
“You speak the language of the Jade people,” Fallon said.
“You speak the language of the Glades,” she replied. What kind of dark magic was this? He opened his mouth to speak but she shushed him as one would a babe. She closed her eyes. Fallon felt an annoying tingle on either side of his head. 
“They will attack tomorrow,” she said in a monotone voice. She was a Listener! He had thought the stories were myths. His feet struggled against their bounds. He opened his lips to scream but they were glued shut. “12 dozen warriors. Sarten is their leader.” The deep voice asked if they had energy. “He lost it when he fell from the cliff. The Fae woman has the energy.” The deep voice questioned her interpretation of Fallon’s thoughts. The Listening woman repeated herself. Perhaps the Fae warrior has kept some for herself, he asked? Listening woman shrugged. She could only say what Fallon knew. She was a mind reader, not a truth teller. The deep voice asked if Fallon’s people had warrior animals. “No. Their animals have fled south in search of food.” 
Deep voice scoffed. “Warriors without energy or animals. We will rid ourselves of these traitors and drive these pestilent people from our land. Disconnect. We will use him as a battering ram in the coming battle. Let this weakened warrior fall victim to the swords of his companions.” Fallon felt the slither of tendrils emerge from his ears and he fell unconscious.
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Alpen and Drindl donned their battle leathers and gathered their weapons. The first fingers of dawn stretched above the horizon as they emerged from the tent. All around them warriors flowed through the dirt aisles between the tents and out into the clearing between two great trees. From now until the moment of battle the few words spoken would be between a warrior and his apprentice.
The warriors took their places, lining up six feet apart. Alpen showed Drindl how to dig a foot wide hole at his feet. Drindl mimicked the warriors around them, piling the dirt outside the edge of the hole. Drindl knelt in front of his hole and put his hands palms down in the hole. He felt a tingling in his hands and feet. 
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He looked up as a woman poured water over his hands and pushed the pile of dirt into the hole.His fingertips pulsed as he kneaded the wet dirt like a dough. His fingers felt thin roots at the bottom of his hole. They caressed the tips of his fingers. His arms lengthened as he followed the roots down into the earth. He was part of the tree! Time and sky and dirt were one eternal stream. He withdrew his hands from the hole along with 12 dozen other warriors. He stood. Alpen turned to speak to him, to explain but Drindl interrupted, “I know.”
Drindl stood erect and faced forward. Along with the others he withdrew his sword. The steel glinted in the dawning sun. Forward he strode, slashing the air between himself and the warrior in front of him. Each warrior’s movement synchronized by the mind of their leader, Sarten. Each of them faced right, to the south. They would drive the conniving Glades into the ground and command the valley where the spring herds of Ibik journeyed to their summer breeding ground.
12 dozen feet fell in rhythm on the ground, causing alarm among the Faeries in their nighttime tree roosts. They flew out from the trees to the eastern hills, far from the coming conflict. As the warriors passed through the tree glen they flowed as fog between the trunks then coalesced in the meadow beyond. They lined up beside each other on the rise that sloped toward the army of the Glades. Drindl and Alpen were among those on the right of Sarten, who swung his sword like a scythe through the air. 12 dozen swords matched his killing stroke. Together they were one blade, the long blade of blood. They strode forward to meet the Glade army gathered on the opposite hill.

Saturday, June 6, 2020

Behind the Lines



A tik-tik bird pecked at Fallon’s ankle. Squatting in the brambles of the large bush, he stifled a startled cry. The curved beak opened to make its characteristic caw. The sound would attract the Glade soldiers who would want to capture the bird. It’s fruit diet made its meat sweet and succulent, a treat to soldiers on a campaign.
 He needed a diversion. He grabbed the beak, being careful not to twist the neck. He scooped up the body of the bird and launched it into the air. He heard the shout of the soldiers, then the startled bird caught wing and flew toward the stream and soldiers. Through the dense foliage of the bush, Fallon glimpsed two soldiers at the trunk of a giant buda tree. They looked up. He guessed that the confused bird sat on a branch in the canopy of the tree. One of them looked in his direction. He reached for his knife. His hand felt the empty scabbard and he jerked his head to look in disbelief. How had he not noticed? A swirl of wind rustled the grass and chilled his skin. He scanned the nearby ground for a branch, a rock, anything he could turn into a weapon.
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A faint cheap drew Fallon’s attention to the ground at his feet. He saw one chick peck at his boot, while three others huddled in the bush roots. He picked two berries from the bush, squeezed them and laid them on the ground. That would keep them quiet. The four chicks squeaked as they swarmed around the berries. The mother was sure to come back. He could only see the two soldiers. He couldn’t stay and he couldn’t leave. He gambled on their distraction and snuck away from the bush. The spring vegetation was soft and did not betray his movement as he slunk back toward the tree where he had fallen.
With a wider angle of sight he saw several soldiers. One dipped her hands in the shallow stream. Another brushed aside the reeds along the stream. What were they looking for? He turned to look at the two soldiers standing at the trunk of the tree. One soldier handed a shoulder bag to his companion, then started to climb the trunk.
Fallon’s heart sunk. They were gathering the energy that he had taken from the cliff cave. It must have fallen from his shoulder bag when he fell off the Faerie Queen. His instinct to run out of the cave had saved his life but given a big advantage to the enemy. His fear had condemned his fellow warriors to death. He deserved to die as well. If he found his knife he could take the woman warrior and the other who searched the reeds. Perhaps a third soldier before the other soldiers took his blood. He stayed hidden behind the wide tree trunk and studied the ground.
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Fallon slunk along the ground, gambling that the tall reeds would hide his movement. He glanced toward the woman in the stream, who was the closest. A shout and some talk that he didn’t understand. The woman made a gesture with her arm to the others. Fallon heard the chatter of the tik-tik bird’s beak as the three soldiers walked away downstream. Leaving? No, the woman continued upstream toward Fallon, searching the sloped ground on either side of the stream.
As Fallon waited for her to come closer, he planned his attack. The short throwing axe at her waist indicated her warrior skills. He would rush and block her arm as she reached for the axe. She would expect him to use his greater weight to overwhelm her. Instead he would come at her low, trap her legs and topple her before she could cry out to the others. With the wind knocked out of her, he could finish her. He was not practiced with a throwing axe but he could do great damage in close quarters with the other soldiers. He crouched as she neared the tree.
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She was turned slightly away when Fallon launched his attack. She turned toward him as he erupted out of the reeds. He saw her instinctively reach for her axe. Arms stretched, he lunged toward her. His right arm grazed her buttocks and he went headlong into the cobble that lined the stream bank. Baffled, he scrambled to his feet. She had disappeared. 
A sound above drew his attention. She had pulled herself up on the same branch he had shimmied down earlier. How had she jumped that quickly? She was Fae! The reeds has disguised her motion as she walked along the stream. She  crouched on the thick branch, her weight poised on her toes. She reached for the throwing axe at her waist. From this short distance, she would cleave his chest in half. 
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Fallon cast a hurried glance around him. No protection. She drew her arm back to send the killing shot. He ran toward the trunk of the buda tree, putting the branch between himself and the Fae. She snarled at him, then cupped her hand near her mouth and shrieked the call of an Alsace fledgling in mortal danger. Trickery! He had escaped those flesh tearing talons once that day.
The rustle of the leaves above signaled the descent of the predator bird through the canopy. Fallon flapped his arms and limped away from the tree as though wounded. He hoped he wasn’t so convincing that the bird would try to pick him up. He stumbled in the brush and fell to his knees. He heard the wings of the Alsace bird as it braked in the air above him. His muscles convulsed when the hot knives of the talons seized his upper back. He screamed out in rage and pain and the talons released.

As he fell forward to the ground, his arms were trapped behind his back. His jaw hit the ground but he recovered his wits and turned on his side to battle the bird. It rose in the air away from him. Through clouded vision he saw the Fae woman lean over him, then spit in his face. Next came a thud on his head and restful sleep.
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 Fallon awoke once when they lashed his wrists to a pole. His head dangled as they lifted him up.  The evening sun was low in the sky. He tried to look to his side as they carried him forward on the pole.
When he awoke, his lips and head hurt. A hand lifted his head, rubbed some ointment on his cracked lips then placed a cup to his lips. His dry throat ached as he drew the liquid into his mouth. The liquid was soothing but the effort was exhausting. The same hand placed a soft paper between his lips and he instinctively sucked at the anchloss leaf. The slight numbing of his tongue was pleasant and he felt saliva in his mouth. A cup to his lips again. The pain at the top of his head ebbed. Had his mother returned from the world of the dead to tend his wounds? He smiled and slept.

Thursday, June 4, 2020

Before the Battle


The sound of a thousand winds battered Fallon's ears as he hurtled toward the canyon far below. It was the battle cry of a hundred demons who tore at his jacket, breeches and shoulder bag. He thrust his chest forward, his legs and arms swept back from his torso to avoid being somersaulted by the rushing air.
The tree lined stream below him grew larger. He hoped the branches did not break his fall and cripple him for life. A warrior without worth. He felt a tug on his left foot, then out of the edge of his vision the face of the Faerie Queen. The wind rippled the skin on her face as she grimaced against the wind. She maneuvered below him, her arms outstretched to make her wing membrane into a taut sail. His chest touched her back and he felt the slowing of his descent. She shuddered as she took on more of his weight.
His weight and inexperience in body sailing made it difficult for her to maintain a stable profile. They rushed through the air above the trees but continued to fall. She abruptly rotated on her side and dumped him into the tree canopy.
The leaves whipped his face and the branches cracked beneath his weight. He was stunned and briefly lost consciousness. He awoke to tugging and scratching. By the time he came fully awake, a half dozen Faeries had freed the shoulder bag full of energy combs and flown away.
As he inventoried his limbs for damage, a familiar squawking pierced the muffled air around him. If he had been fully alert, he would have been terrified to meet such a foe without stone or sword as a weapon.
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The great head and curved beak of an Alsace bird. Must be a dream, he thought. When he was a child, his daddy taught him to open his mouth wide and caw like a young Alsace bird. The bird cued off the pink mouth and sound, daddy said. Fallon had practiced but was never attacked by one of the birds. Now he did it like he had practiced many years ago. At edge of his vision, three Alsace fledglings joined in the banshee chorus. The large parent bird cocked its head, peered at Fallon with its killing eye, looked at its young ones, then launched away from the tree. Its wings rustled the leaves as they beat the air.
Still in a daze he lowered himself to the ground. He hurt terribly, his clothes were torn but nothing was broken. He looked at the sky to take his bearing and set off toward camp. In the still air he heard the sound of voices ricochet off the canyon wall to his right. Drindl and Alpen? No. The language used by the Glade people. He was behind enemy lines with no weapons - more vulnerable than a maiden. He ducked below a nearby bush. He heard several footsteps in the stream ahead. Two voices. Maddening not to understand what they were saying. Had they seen him fall from the sky? He glanced down at movement in the shadows at his feet. He had picked the wrong bush for cover.
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Drindl and Alpen checked the warrior tent when they arrived at camp. The setting sun threw golden shadows on the tents. Many people milled about in the alleyways between tents, but there was no sign of Fallon. They strode to Sarten’s headquarters and asked the guard outside for news. The guard pointed them to the mess tent where the energy combs were being prepared. More guards. Alpen asked for the Faerie Queen. A guard motioned him inside but blocked Drindl from entering. Alpen held up a hand to quiet Drindl’s protest. “A minute.” Drindl sighed.
Several Faeries gorged on energy at a table near the tent wall. At a table in the center of the large tent the Faerie Queen supervised several soldiers who prepped the honeycomb morsels. The sight of Fallon’s shoulder bag lifted his spirits. He didn’t see his friend though.
“Fallon?” Alpen asked the Faerie Queen.  “The warrior you swooped out of the sky. Thank you,” he added with a respectful bow of his head. Although she was not a warrior, she had behaved like one.
“He fell off. I’m sorry. The Faeries say he died. They retrieved the energy. He didn’t die in vain.”
“They were sure?” Alpen asked. He felt a big hole inside.
“Eye test. No reaction.”
Alpen nodded. He felt a profound need to be alone, to absorb the news. He waved toward the energy on the table. “Dawn battle?” She nodded. He thanked her and turned to leave. As he neared the entrance of the tent, he saw the sated Faeries. For a short time, they would be too unsteady to fly. Unlike humans, a Faerie sickened and died if they did not consume energy for several weeks. He usually couldn’t tell one Faerie apart from the other, but he recognized the odd slant of a hair tuft that distinguished the Faerie that had led them to the cliff. When had the Faeries eaten last? They might have been anxious to retrieve Fallon’s shoulder bag. Did they really do a thorough check for life signs? 
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He shook off his doubts. False hope in battle caused a warrior to lose focus. Outside the tent, the shadows had deepened. He shook his head at Drindl’s questioning look. They hugged briefly then turned toward the tent. “Tomorrow many Glade warriors will pay for Fallon’s death,” Drindl struck his fist forward as though stabbing someone.
“Don’t let your anger keep you from sleep tonight,” Alpen warned. 
His sadness caused him to toss and turn that night. He yearned for the physical comfort of his wife. When he was awakened an hour before pre-dawn he was relieved that he had fallen asleep. He was half-dressed in the darkness when he heard Drindl’s snores. This was the younger man’s first campaign. He put his hand over Drindl’s mouth and nose, then ducked away as Drindl erupted awake, striking at his unknown assassin. The other men laughed. Most of them knew the routine.
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 The warriors formed two lines leading into the mess tent. Each received their energy allotment and a portion of a meat and grain battle gruel. Alpen held Drindl’s arm when he began to put the energy in his mouth. Some warriors complained of tiredness or a minor illness and asked for an extra allotment. Alpen explained to Drindl, “Some warriors think that extra energy will compensate for experience and valor. My mentor in my first campaign thought that. Extra does not give more. The more comes from here,” he touched his chest with a fist, “and here,” he touched his temple with a finger. 
Sarten climbed up on a table and the warriors turned to him. “Fallon, A brave warrior, gave his life for this.” With his piece of the energy honeycomb, he toasted Fallon, then put the sweet papery morsel in his mouth.
“Hear, hear, we will avenge brave Fallon,” the warriors chanted and stomped their feet three times. A lone Faerie stumbled out from under the table. Sarten roared his displeasure. Would he kick the energy drunk Faerie? Alpen worried. 
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“Rid me of this creature who steals a warrior’s share,” Sarten bellowed. A woman hurriedly scooped the bird sized Faerie into her skirt and the crowd parted to allow her to exit.
Alpen was relieved. Might be bad luck to kill a Faerie before battle. He let the morsel partially dissolve in his mouth first before swallowing, then he motioned for Drindl to do the same. He lifted the bowl of battle gruel to his lips and slurped. Drindl made a face when he tasted the gruel. “The gruel feeds your muscles not your tongue,” Alpen told him. They finished the gruel, then tossed the earthen bowls in a pile.
“Bantams forward,” Sarten called to the semi-circle of warriors. Alpen pushed Drindl forward. There were eighteen new warriors in the crowd out of the hundred fifty gathered in the tent. The crowd parted to let the bantams stand in a line. “Left leg behind you,” Sarten commanded. Each one bent his left leg and that ankle was lashed to the right leg of his neighbor. Hopping on one foot they were rounded into a circle. 
Sarten led the chant in a booming voice. “We are many who fight as one.” Three times they thundered the words as they stomped their feet. Then Sarten came forward and pushed lightly against one of the bantams in the circle. Others followed. The bantams had to sense the push as a unit and keep their straight leg bent at the knee to shift balance with their neighbor. Finally, the crowd of warriors came forward and pushed the bantams from all sides. They failed to keep their balance and fell in a heap of flailing arms. The crowd laughed. 
“We are many who fall as one,” Sarten’s voice boomed. The warriors repeated the chant while stomping their foot. They untied the bantam warriors and helped them stand up. Their tied legs had gone to sleep during the ritual.
“We are many who stand as one,” Sarten called out and the warriors joined in three times. The ceremony was over. The warriors filed out of the tent. 
Drindl limped slightly as they walked from the tent. “I can see. Dawn is coming,” he remarked.
“No. That’s your eyes. The energy is beginning to take effect,” Alpen replied. “Let’s hurry. We will begin the melding that will unite us all.”