The Ring of Winter (21 page)

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Authors: James Lowder

BOOK: The Ring of Winter
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Ubtao created the barae to help him deal with those distractions, to resolve the petty demands of the throng. The seven barae were chosen from the citizens of Mezro and gifted with special powers. Over time, the barae became the rulers and defenders of the city, as well, but that was after Ubtao left the Tabaxi to find their own way in the world.

For it is also true the Tabaxi tried to make Ubtao a household god, a god who had to prove his worth by healing old men of aching joints, by settling arguments over the ownership of goats, by proving each and every day that his power could be used to make life easy. But Ubtao, who created the labyrinth that is this earthly world, made the Tabaxi to live there. He stayed in Mezro to teach them how to best pass through the maze, but he would not destroy the everyday trials that were its walls.

Finally there came a day when Ubtao said, “If the people wish to cry and complain rather than listen to my wisdom, then so be it, I will leave them to wander the halls of life without my guidance.” Then he returned to his home in the sky and refused to speak to his people again while they were mortal.

And that is why a Tabaxi must die before he may meet his maker.

The exceptions to this rule are the barae. These seven, the mighty paladins of Ubtao, live forever unless they are murdered or lose their life on the battlefield. Their wisdom and faith in Ubtao shield them from old age and sickness. In return, they must protect Ubtao’s fair city of Mezro from all harm.

If a bara is killed, another must take his place within one day. That is the only time a mortal may enter the barado, in the great Temple of Ubtao itself. In the barado, the supplicants gather so Ubtao can choose his new paladin. The one the god chooses is granted some magnificent power. Ras Nsi, one of the first seven raised up by Ubtao, was given the power to muster the dead. Mainu, she of the golden eyes, was granted control over the waters in the Olung River, which flows through the city to this day.

When I became a bara, on that terrible day when three of the paladins were slain in defense of Mezro, I was given the power to remember everything I see or hear. “These memories are safe from time, never to be like the banks that hold a fast-flowing river, worn away more and more with each passing year. What I know and what I learn remain with me always, as clear and sharp as the eyes of a jungle cat on the hunt.

It is thus I remember the coming of Dhalmass Rayburton, a lord of the distant land of Cormyr, as if it were yesterday. In truth, he arrived six hundred years ago. He was like all the other explorers who had come to Ubtao’s jungle, certain we were savages who had somehow wrested our great library and our fine buildings from some more civilized nation. Unlike the others, he soon saw how blind he was to the accomplishments of other peoples. And when he accepted the truth of the matter, he found he had no desire to return to Cormyr. Within ten years of becoming a citizen of Mezro, Rayburton placed himself in Ubtao’s hands and asked to be made a bara. He was chosen.

And that is how Dhalmass Rayburton became the first paladin of Ubtao not born of the Tabaxi….

 

Artus rested the heavy book on his lap and looked over at Lord Rayburton. The expatriate nobleman returned the puzzled stare placidly. “I suppose you’re wondering about the time frame,” Rayburton said after a moment. “I mean, the book says I arrived here six hundred years past, right? Well, King Osaw wrote the history six hundred years ago. There are more volumes, taking the thing right up to the present, if you don’t believe me.”

“Oh no,” Artus replied quickly. “It’s not that at all. I… er, it’s just so …”

“Amazing?” Rayburton smiled and nodded, making the silver triangle hanging from his right earlobe bob up and down. “Mezro is that and more. It didn’t take me long to discover how astounding this place is. Once I did, I couldn’t bring myself to leave.”

Artus put the book aside, propped himself up in the bed, and glanced around the large room that was presently serving as his hospital quarters. It was clean and filled with light from the open window and the three glowing globes that stood at various posts around the room. A tri-bladed metal fan spun briskly overhead, night and day. Aside from the wide, comfortable bed, the room held a nightstand, a larger table, two chairs, and a chest wrought of some fragrant wood. Colorful paintings of abstract designs—squares and circles and triangles in subtle and intriguing arrangements—hung on the walls.

“Thank you,” Artus said in Tabaxi, leaning close to the light globe standing upon the nightstand. The radiance dimmed. Then the globe went dark.

Inside the opaque sphere, a complicated arrangement of gears and levers ground silently to a halt, and the four tiny creatures that worked the device sat down. The light makers, or so Rayburton called them, resembled elves in their slender forms and graceful movements, but they had no faces or other features to distinguish one from another. All the globes in Mezro were powered by them.

“Are you sure these things aren’t prisoners?” Artus asked.

Rayburton shrugged. “Whenever someone builds a globe with the proper works inside, they just show up, ready to work. They don’t eat, don’t sleep. They make light and wait to make light.” He stood and peered into the globe. “Near as I can guess, they’re some sort of quasi-elemental, and the mechanical setup must summon them or act as a gate to their home plane somehow. Damned useful, whatever they are.”

Picking nervously at the corner of the book, Artus turned to Rayburton once more. “So you’ve lived this long because you are a bara of Ubtao.” He sighed. “You never found the Ring of Winter….”

The kindness fled the older man’s eyes. “No, Artus. I don’t have the ring.” Rayburton paced to the window and glanced outside, squinting against the late afternoon sunshine.

“But the society’s histories say you were searching for it when you disappeared from Cormyr,” Artus pressed. “Can you tell me anything—”

Rayburton turned so the explorer could not see his face. “You seem like a good and honorable man,” he said softly. “The Ring of Winter holds nothing for you.”

“Then the stories were right. You were searching for it in Chult,” Artus said eagerly. He pushed himself out of bed and straightened the long, shapeless shirt he wore. “Why did you think it was here?”

When he turned, Rayburton did little to conceal his anger. “You’re a fool. The Ring of Winter is a terrible force for chaos and destruction. When I lived in Cormyr, I saw its handiwork—whole villages covered in ice, the people frozen, their faces paralyzed in agony. All the wearer of the ring needed to do was imagine the place under a dozen feet of ice and snow.” He studied Artus, gauging the shock that colored the younger man’s features. “And that was a minor display, by someone who wanted to let the king know he wasn’t the only power in the land. The ring has the might to bring the whole world to its knees.”

“I never heard about the ring destroying a Cormyrian village,” Artus admitted.

“The chroniclers must have been careful to hide it. Wouldn’t have done the crown much good to look so helpless against dark sorcery, I suppose.”

“That story only makes me want the ring more,” Artus said firmly. “Such a mighty artifact should be used for good, to free people from fear and injustice.”

Rayburton smiled weakly. “A noble sentiment, but spoken like lines from a bad play.” He laid a hand on Artus’s shoulder. “Most of the people who scrambled for the ring said things like that, even in my time. But if you hunt for something long enough, you begin to desire it for no other reason than to finally possess it.”

“Gods, the thing is cursed.” Artus sagged wearily back onto the bed. “It took Pontifax’s life, and I’m no closer to finding the damned thing than I was before. He died for nothing.”

“No,” Rayburton said. “There’s no curse on the ring other than the desire it inspires in men like you.” He shook his head. “And me, as you know. I hunted for the ring for five years before I came here.”

“Then you can—”

“I’ll tell you nothing else, Artus.” Rayburton took the book from the bedside before the explorer could begin fidgeting with the binding again. “Give up the quest. The Ring of Winter is something better lost forever. The ‘civilized’ lands up north are far too barbaric for such powerful weapons.”

Artus stared at Rayburton for a time, trying to find some new tack to take, some new way to convince him to share his knowledge of the ring. At last he walked to the basin of water that rested atop the table. “Cormyr has changed a great deal in twelve hundred years,” he offered, then splashed his face.

As he perched on the edge of the bed, Rayburton scoffed, “Changed? We’ve not seen a trace of that great transmogrification here. Far from it. The teak merchants come here and rape the land. Then there are the slavers who prey upon the Tabaxi and the big game hunters who destroy any animal they can find.” He threw Artus a towel. “And this Kaverin fellow you mentioned. Is he a herald of this new, peaceful society that has taken root in the Heartlands in my absence?”

The kindliness had returned to Rayburton’s eyes, but with it had come an air of smug satisfaction. Artus ignored the question and dried his face and hands.

“The fact that people still read those dreadful books I wrote is proof enough to me that Cormyr is no more civilized now than when I left,” Rayburton added. “Those things are filled with thoughtless condemnations of many civilized people—the Shou, the Tuigan.” He shook his head. “It makes me sick to think about them.”

Artus opened the chest and took out his clothes. They had been cleaned and mended while he slept. “Some learned men are familiar with your books,” he said, “but don’t puff yourself up with too much righteous indignation. Most scholars—and I count myself among them— recognize your books for what they are. We generously write off your shortcomings as a philosopher as a reflection of your era. There’re still some useful things in the books, once you get past all the ‘thoughtless condemnations’ you dished out.”

An uncomfortable silence fell over the room. Rayburton returned to the window to stare out at the quiet side street while Artus shrugged into his clothes. As he pulled on his boots, the younger man said, “I’m sorry for the outburst, but…”

“But I deserved it,” Rayburton conceded. “It’s hard not to grow a little rigid in your thinking after a thousand years, and it’s been that long since I spoke with anyone from Cormyr.” He looked back at Artus. “Let me show you the city.”

“I’m not sure—”

“You might be able to understand why I have such strong feelings about the place if you let me show you around,” Rayburton said. “Besides, King Osaw wants to meet with you before he offers you a guide back to the coast.”

“I don’t know if I’m going back to the coast just yet,” Artus murmured. “But your offer is most gracious, Lord Rayburton.” He gestured toward the door. “Lead on.”

They left the small house that had been Artus’s hospital and emerged onto a narrow street paved in cobblestone and lined with one-and two-story buildings. One white wall of the alley gleamed in the light of the setting sun. The other was lost in shadows. Songbirds called from the roofs, the happy sound underscored by the rumble of carts and the murmur of a dozen conversations from a nearby thoroughfare.

As they walked, Rayburton explained that Mezro was laid out in four quarters. They were currently in the heart of the residential area; a young student of the city’s healers had volunteered to take Artus in and care for his wounds. The man had been so gentle and stealthy in his ministrations that the explorer had never met him. Artus had awakened after sleeping for a day and a half with bandages on his cuts and the lumps on his head packed in cool compresses. A bowl of fresh fruit and an earthenware pitcher of water rested on the table next to the bed.

Artus and Rayburton followed the alley to the left, then the right. The buildings all looked very similar—white walls and tiled roofs, shutterless windows netted against the jungle’s biting insects. Left, then right, then right once more, but still the sounds of the main thoroughfare grew no more distinct. Neither did they become more distant.

“This is like the maze in King Azoun’s gardens,” Artus noted.

“The whole residential area is a labyrinth,” Rayburton said. “You’d never have found your way out alone.”

Artus mopped the sweat from his brow. “The mazes of Ubtao, eh?”

For the first time, Rayburton seemed impressed with the young explorer. “Precisely!” He scanned the ground around the nearest home’s back door. “Here. Look at this.”

Someone had drawn a maze in a patch of sand scattered around the stoop. The pattern started simply enough, but near one corner it grew quite complicated.

“Let’s see … the child who drew this must be, oh—” Rayburton rubbed his chin “—eight or nine, I’d say.”

“How can you tell that?”

The admiration fled Rayburton’s face. “The complexity, of course. Every child learns a simple maze that represents his life. It grows more and more complicated as the years go on. When a Tabaxi dies, he must draw the completed maze for Ubtao. That’s how they gain admittance to the afterworld.” He stepped around the swatch of sand. “If they fail the test, they come back as ghosts or ghouls or the other dark things to hunt the jungle at night. Needless to say, the Tabaxi practice all the time—in the evenings, usually, after they finish working and the children are let out of school.”

“All the children go to school?” Artus asked, a bit taken aback.

Rayburton cocked an eyebrow. “Why not? All children need to learn, don’t they?”

“Well, yes,” Artus sputtered. “It’s just that, in Cormyr, the churches charge a lot to share their knowledge, so only the rich can take advantage of it. Everyone else either becomes a craftsman’s apprentice, marries well, joins the army, or ends up a cutpurse.”

“So your parents were wealthy?” Rayburton said casually, though there was disdain hidden just below the surface of the question. “That would account for the crest on your tunic, I suppose.”

Artus hopped sideways to avoid a large, complicated maze sprawling across the alley. “The crest belongs to the man who gave me the tunic,” he said curtly. “I’m no nobleman. Far from it.”

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