Dragonlance Tales II, Vol. 2 – The Cataclysm

village. Even after the Cataclysm, when everyone else

turned from the gods in scorn and hatred, Gylar’s mother

continued her evening prayers with increasing earnestness.

What did she, of all people, do to deserve such punishment?

What did any of them do to deserve it? Was everyone on

Krynn going to die, then? Was that it?

Gylar was young, but he wasn’t stupid. He’d heard his

parents talking about all the other awful things now

happening to people who’d survived the tremors and floods.

Didn’t the gods care about mortals anymore?

Caught up in a slam of emotions, Gylar turned and ran

from the house. He ran to the edge of the new bog and

yelled up at the sky in his rage.

“Why? If you hate us so much, why’d you even make us

in the first place?”

Gylar collapsed to his knees with a sob. Why? It was

the only thing he could really think of to ask. It all hinged

on that. Why the Cataclysm? How could humans have been

evil enough to deserve this? How could anyone?

For a long moment he just slumped there, as though

some unseen chain were dragging at his neck, joining the

one already pulling at his heart. Gylar sniffled a little and

ran his forearm quickly across his nose.

Stumbling to his feet, he looked at the sky again.

Clouds were rolling in to obscure the sun, threatening a

storm. Gylar sighed. Although he had nowhere else to go,

he didn’t want to stay in this place of death. His eyes swept

over Mount Phineous. The towering mountain still looked

over-poweringly out of place, like a sentinel sent by the

gods to watch over the low, hilly country. The top fourth of

it was swept by clouds. Another result of the Cataclysm, the

mountain seemed a counterpart of the new swamp. Brutal

and imposing, powerful, the towering rock was the opposite

of the silent, sneaky swamp of death.

His fatigue overcame his sadness and revulsion, at least

for the moment. Slowly, he made his way back to the house,

back to the dead house. Stopping in the doorway, Gylar

turned around to look at the land that was growing cold with

winter. It was likely going to snow today.

He turned and slammed the door shut behind him. It

didn’t matter. Nothing much mattered anymore. His limbs

dragged at him heavily. Sleep, he thought, that’s all. Sleep,

then, when I wake up – if I wake up – I’ll figure out what to

do.

So, for the first time in three days, Gylar slept.

*****

Eyes focused on his prey, Marakion stilled his

breathing, though a haze of white drifted slowly from his

mouth. The scruffy man before him leaned heavily against

the tree, huffing frosty air as he tried to recover from the

run. Although exhausted, the man never once turned his

fearful eyes from Marakion.

“A merry chase, my friend,” Marakion said in a voice

that was anything but merry. “Tell me what I wish to know.

This will end.”

The man stared in disbelief. Marakion was barely winded.

The man gulped another breath and answered frantically, “I

told you! I never heard of no ‘Knight-killer Marauders!'”

Marakion hovered over the thief, his eyes black and

impenetrable, his lip twitching, barely holding his rage in

check. The bare blade of his sword glimmered dully.

“Knightsbane Marauders,” he rumbled in a low voice. The

scruffy man quivered under the smoldering anger. “You are

a brigand, just like them. You must know of them. Tell me

where they are.”

“I told you!” The thief cringed against the tree. “I don’t

know!”

In brutal silence, Marakion let loose his pent up rage.

One instant his sword, Glint, was at his side, and the next,

the flat of it smashed into the man’s neck. The thief was so

surprised by the attack that he barely had time to blink. The

strike sent him reeling. Two more clubbing strokes dropped

him to the frosty earth, unconscious.

“Then you live,” Marakion said, breathing a bit harder.

Leaning down, he searched the body thoroughly for the

insignia that gave his life burning purpose.

There was none to be found.

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