Dragonlance Tales II, Vol. 2 – The Cataclysm

a stranger came down the road, I’d ask him where he’d been.

And he’d talk about Tarsis by the sea, or the temples of Xak

Tsaroth, and one even showed me a machine from Mount

Nevermind, where the gnomes live. The machine didn’t

work, of course, but it was a lovely little thing, all gears and

sprockets and wires.

“But one and all, dusty from the road and tired from

travel, told me about Krinneor, and the more I heard, the

more I wanted to see it.” Graym’s eyes shone. “Golden

towers! Marble doors! And excellent drains.” He looked at

them all earnestly. “I hear that’s very important for a city.”

They nodded. Graym went on. “After the Claychasm – ”

“Cataclysm,” Darll snapped.

“Cataclysm, thank you, sir. I keep forgetting. After that

night, when the ground shook and the western sky was all

fire, people were frightened. They quit buying barrels,

saying that trade was too risky. That’s when I realized that

no one was coming down the road from Krinneor, and no

one was going there.”

He tapped the bowl of Skull-Splitter, which he had

emptied again. “And that’s when I realized there was no

more good Sarem ale going from Sarem to Krinneor. The

poor beggars there would be as dry as a sand pit in no time.

“So I made these.” He thumped the broken barrel,

refilled the bowl from it. “Extra thick staves, double-

caulked, double-banded. Bungs four fingers deep. Heads of

the last vallenwoods in stock this far west. Harder than any

man has seen. I spent everything I had making them, then

borrowed from you all to finish them. And when the bailey

heard we were going, he asked me to take you, sir, to the

Bailey of Krinneor for safekeeping.” He nodded

respectfully to Darll.

“For prison, you fat fool,” Darll said. “I can’t believe I

let a man like that capture me, especially after I beat the

town soldiery. A scrawny, bald-headed, weak-armed man

with no more strength in him than in a dead dwarf’s left – ”

“You wouldn’t have if you hadn’t been drunk,” Jarek

pointed out. He looked at Darll admiringly. “Single-handed,

and you beat them all. If you hadn’t been drunk – ”

Graym interrupted. “And I hope it serves to remind you,

sir, that ale is not only a blessing, but can also be a curse,

and not to be taken lightly.” He downed the bowl of Skull-

Splitter. “Back to my story. I took you, sir, and the tenpiece

from the bailey – ”

“Then we got the ale,” Jarek said. “And the horses,” Fen

and Fan said together. “Without paying for them,” Darll

finished. “And I gathered victuals and water and spare

clothes and knapsacks, and off we set” – Graym pointed to

the east – “down the long, dangerous road! Facing

hardship! Facing hunger and thirst…” He broke off. “Not as

much thirst as I thought, apparently, but some thirst. Facing

the unknown! Facing a ruined world! And for what?” He

looked around at the watching faces. “I ask you, for what?”

Jarek blinked. “For Krinneor.”

“True enough. For the golden spires, the marble towers,

the excellent drains, and the fortunes that made them. Think

of it!” Graym waved an arm unsteadily. “A city with all the

gold you can dream of, and nothing to drink. And us with a

cart full.” He glanced to one side. “A cart HALF full of the

best ale left in the world!”

“Our fortunes are made. We can ask what we want for

it, and they’ll pay twice what we ask. One barrel of Sarem

ale will be worth the world to them, and five barrels leaves

us one apiece.”

Darll looked up, startled. “You’re counting me?”

“You did your share on the road, sir,” Graym said.

“Each of us gets profits from one barrel of ale. And, if we’re

all clever – ” he looked at Jarek and amended hastily, ” – or

at least if we stick together, we get exclusive Sarem trade

rights to Krinneor. We’ll have all the food we want, and

houses.”

“And a sword?” Jarek asked eagerly. “I’ve always

wanted a sword. My mother wouldn’t let me have anything

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