Dragonlance Tales II, Vol. 2 – The Cataclysm

always find new dreams. And I am certainly not ready to

give up bargaining. I’ll make my fortune yet, you’ll see.”

Trevarre laughed, a sound like music. “I have no doubt

of that”

They were silent for a time, but then Matya spoke

softly. “You would do the same again, wouldn’t you, if you

heard a call for help?”

Trevarre shrugged. “The Measure is not something I

can follow only when it suits me. It is my life, Matya, for

good or ill. It is what I am.”

Matya nodded, as if this confirmed something for her.

“The tales are right then. The Knights of Solamnia ARE

little better than fools.” She smiled mischievously. “But

there’s one more bargain that must be struck.”

“Which is?” Trevarre asked, raising an eyebrow.

“What are you going to give me in return for taking

you to Garnet?” Matya asked slyly.

“I’ll give you five gold pieces,” Trevarre said flatly.

“I’ll not take less than fifty!” Matya replied, indignant.

“Fifty? Why, that’s highway robbery,” Trevarre

growled.

“All right,” Matya said briskly. “I’m in a kindly mood,

so I’ll make it twenty, but not one copper less.”

Trevarre stroked his moustache

thoughtfully. “Very well. I will accept

your offer, Matya, but on one condition.”

“Which is?” Matya asked, skeptical.

A smile touched Trevarre’s lips. “You must allow

me this.” He took Matya’s hand, brought it

to his lips, and kissed it.

The bargain had been struck.

SEEKERS

TODD FAHNESTOCK

Gylar Radilan, of Lader’s Knoll, set his mother’s hand back onto her

chest, over the rumpled blanket. It was done then. Gylar wasn’t sure

whether to be relieved or to crumple into the corner and cry. Finally,

though, it was done. Stepping back, he fell into the chair he’d put by

her bed, the chair he’d sat upon all night while holding her hand.

His head bowed for a moment as he thought about the

past few days. The Silent Death had swept through the

entire village, killing everyone. It had been impossible to

detect its coming. There were no early symptoms. One

minute, people were laughing and playing – like Lutha, the

girl he had known – and the next, they were in bed,

complaining weakly of the icy cold they felt, but burning to

the touch. Their skin darkened to a ghastly purple as they

coughed up thicker and thicker phlegm, and in a few hours

their bodies locked up as with rigor mortis.

Poor Lutha. Gylar swallowed and sniffed back tears.

She’d been the first one, the one who had brought about the

downfall of the village. Gylar could remember going with

her into the new marsh, the marsh that hadn’t been there

before the world shook. People had told their children

repeatedly not to go in. They said it had all sorts of evils in

it, but that had never stopped Lutha. She’d never listened to

her parents much, and once she got something into her

head, there was no balking her. She’d had to know about

their tree, his and her tree.

Now she was dead. Now everyone was dead. Everyone,

of course, except Gylar. For some reason, he hadn’t been

affected, or at least not yet. His parents had seemed to be

immune as well, until the day they collapsed in their beds,

shivering.

Gylar rose and crossed the room. He looked out the

window to the new day that was shining its light across the

hazy horizon and sifting down over the trees skirting the

new marsh. He clenched his teeth as a tear finally fell from

his eye. If it hadn’t been for the marsh, none of this would

have happened! Lutha never would have brought the evil

back with her, and everyone would be okay. But, no, the

gods had thrown the fiery mountain. They’d cracked the

earth, and the warm water had come up from below, and

with it whatever had killed the town.

Gylar banged his small hand on the windowsill. Why

did they do it? The villagers all had been good people.

Paladine had been their patron; Gylar’s mother had been

meticulously devoted to her god, teaching Gylar to be the

same. She had loved Paladine, more than anyone in the

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