The War of the Lance by Weis, Margaret

“Keep lookin’.”

“Ow! Get off a my foot!”

Thump. Clatter.

“Sh!”

“Somebody fall down again.”

“SH!

They were travelers. They had been travelers since long

before any of them could remember, which was not very

long unless the thing to remember was truly worth

remembering: traveling generally was not. It was just

something they did, something they had always done,

something their parents and their ancestors had done. Few

of them had any idea why they traveled, or why their

travels – more often than not – tended to be westward.

For the few among them who might occasionally

wonder about such things, the answer was simple and

extremely vague. They traveled because they were in

search of the Promised Place.

Where was the Promised Place? Nobody had the

slightest idea.

Why did they seek the Promised Place? No one really

knew that, either. Someone, a long time ago – some

Highbulp, probably, since it was usually the Highbulp

who initiated unfathomable ventures – had gotten the

notion that there was a Promised Place, to the west, and it

was their destiny to find it. That had been generations

back – an unthinkable time to people who usually

recognized only two days other than today: yesterday and

tomorrow. But once the pilgrimage was begun, it just kept

going.

That was the nature of the Aghar – the people most

others called gully dwarves. One of their strongest driving

forces was simple inertia.

The size and shape of the group changed constantly as

they made their way through the ruins of the city, tending

upward toward its center. Here and there, now and then,

by ones and threes and fives, various among them lost

interest in following along and took off on side

expeditions, searching and gawking, usually rejoining the

main group somewhere farther along.

There was no way to know whether all of them came

back. None among them had any real idea of how many of

them there were, except that there were more than two – a

lot more than two. Maybe fifty times two, though such

concepts were beyond even the wisest of them. Numbers

greater than two were seldom considered worth worrying

about.

Gradually, the stragglers converged upon the higher

levels of the ruined city. Here the fallen building stones

were more massive – huge, smoke-darkened blocks that

lay aslant against one another, creating tunnels and gullies

roofed by shattered rubble. Here they found more dead

things – humans and animals, corpses mutilated, stripped

and burned, the brutal residue of battle. They crept around

these at a distance, their eyes wide with dread. Something

fearful had happened here, and the pall of it hung in the

silent air of the place like a tangible fear.

At a place where a flanking wall had fallen, some of

them paused to stare at a tumble of great, iron-bound

timbers that might once have been some piece of giant

furniture but now was a shattered ruin. The thing lay as

though it had fallen from high above, its members and

parts in disarray. Having not the faintest idea of what it

might be, most of them crept past and went on. One,

though, remained, walking around the huge thing,

frowning in thought.

His name was Tagg, and an odd bit of memory

tugged at him as his eyes traced the dimensions of the

fallen thing. He had seen something like it before . . .

somewhere. Tugging at his lip, Tagg circled entirely

around the thing. A few others were with him now. They

had seen his curiosity and returned, curious themselves.

“Got a arm,” he muttered, squatting to reason out the

placement of a great timber jutting outward from the

device. Within the twisted structure itself, the timber was

bound to a sort of big, wooden drum, with heavy rope

wrapped around it and a set of massive gears at its hub.

“Fling-thing,” he said, beginning to remember. It was

like something he had seen from a distance, atop some

human structure his people had skirted long ago in their

travels. He remembered it because he had seen the Talls

operate it, and had been impressed. It was a wooden tower

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