Dragonlance Tales II, Vol. 2 – The Cataclysm

Orestes. The finding will save your life and make the past .

. . unchangeable.”

I thanked her for her healing and her oracle, and she

gave me one last gift – her knowledge.

“Although now you may regret your blood,” she said,

“remember that you are the son of a bard. There is power in

all words, and in yours especially.”

It was just more puzzlement.

We climbed, Mother and I, into the sled, moving

quickly over thick ice on our way back to the cottage.

Mother slept, and I guided the dogs and looked into the

cloudless skies, where Solinari and Lunitari tilted across the

heavens. Between them somewhere rode the black abscess

of Nuitari, though I could not see it.

The black moon was like the past: an absence waiting to

be filled. And looking on the skies, the four big dogs

grumbling and snorting as they drew us within sight of the

cottage, I began to understand my scars and my inheritance.

*****

Frantically, as I gathered my clothing in the cottage,

Mother told me more: that my grandfather, Pyrrhus Alecto

was no villain. He had kept the Solamnic Oath, had fallen in

the Seventh Rebellion of Caergoth, in the two hundred and

fiftieth year since the Cataclysm. She showed me the oldest

poem, the one that Arion had taken and transformed. The

old parchment was eloquent. I read it aloud:

“Lord Pyrrhus Alecto

light of the coast

arm of Caergoth

father to dreaming

fell to the peasants

in the time of the Rending

fell in the vanguard

of his glittering armies

and over his lapsing eye

wheeled constellations

the scale of Hiddukel

riding west to the garrisoned city.

“And that was all?” I asked. “All of this trouble over a

poem?” I hated poetry.

I gave voice to her answer as she held forth rapidly, as

the words slipped from her fingers into my breath and

voice. “No, Trugon, not over that, over the other one.”

She did not know the words of the other poem. She had

not even seen or heard it. It was the poem of trouble, she

insisted, crouching nervously by the door of our cottage. It

was the poem that Father . . .

“Changed?”

She nodded, moving toward Father’s old strongbox.

“Then Father lied as well as betrayed?”

Mother shook her head, brushed her hair back. She

opened the strongbox.

I knew what was inside. Three books, a penny whistle,

a damaged harp. I had never asked to see them. I hated

poetry.

Mother held up one of the books.

It was the story of the times since the Rending, since

the world had opened under Istar. The work of the bard

Arion, it was, but more. It was his words and the words of

others before him: remote names like Gwion and Henricus

and Naso, out of the time when Solamnia was in confusion.

The book was battered, its leather spine scratched and

cracked. As Mother held it out to me, it opened by nature to

a page near its end, as though use and care had trained it to

fall at the same spot, to the same lines.

She gestured that the lines were in Father’s hand.

Indeed, the whole book was in Father’s hand, for neither

Arion nor any of the bards before him had written down

their songs and tales, preferring to pass them on to a

listening apprentice, storing their songs in the long

dreaming vaults of their memories. But Father thought he

was heirless and alone, and had written them all – every

poem and song and lay, from the edicts to the first shaking

of the city, down through the dark years unto this time. A

dozen lines or so of one verse he had worried over,

scratched out, revised, and replaced, only to go back to the

first version, to his first choice of wording.

I mouthed the lines, then read them aloud:

“DOWN IN THE ARM OF CAERGOTH HE RODE:

PYRRHUS ALECTO, THE KNIGHT ON THE NIGHT OF BETRAYALS.

WHEN A FIREBRAND OF BURNING HAD CLOUDED THE

STRAITS OF HYLO.

LIKE OIL ON WATER, HE SOOTHED THE IGNITED COUNTRY.

FOREVER AND EVER THE VILLAGES LEARN HIS PASSAGE

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