Part 16 (1/2)

”Come in,” came the crisp reply from beyond.

With a deep breath Tyveris opened the door and stepped inside, though he was forced to turn sideways a bit to squeeze his broad shoulders through the portal. He was not a tall man, but his sheer size was astonis.h.i.+ng. The thin brown homespun of his simple robe did little to conceal the thick, heavy muscles that were roped about his powerful frame, and his dusky brown skin marked him as a foreigner in these lands. Altogether, he was a rather remarkable individual for the backward Everard Abbey.

And that was a great part of the problem.

”Oh, do stop standing there filling up the doorway and come sit down,” Mother Melisende said in her typically brisk tone. The abbess was a tiny woman, with bright, dark eyes and wispy white hair. She sat before a fireplace, clad in a simple but elegant robe of soft dove gray. Despite her diminutive stature, a mantle of authority seemed to rest comfortably upon her small shoulders.

”Yes, Mother Melisende.” Though he made an effort to speak softly, Tyveris's deep voice rattled the gla.s.s in the windowpanes. He sat down. A cheery fire was blazing on the hearth to drive back the autumn chill. Melisende poured steaming tea into a pair of delicate porcelain cups and handed one to Tyveris. He stared at the fragile teacup worriedly, holding it with exaggerated care in his big hand. He swallowed hard.

Melisende sipped her tea, regarding Tyveris with a wise expression. ”I won't keep this from you,” she said after a moment's quiet. ”Several of the loremasters have come to speak to me this past tenday. They have asked that I dismiss you from the abbey.”

Tyveris's dark eyes widened behind his wire-rimmed spectacles. ”Have I done something wrong, Mother Melisende?”

The abbess sighed. ”No, Tyveris, it is nothing you have done.” She smiled fleetingly. ”In fact, I daresay we've never had a handyman about the abbey who was as useful as you. The chapel ceiling no longer leaks onto the pulpit, the new hinges on the gate open without a creak, and the drains in the kitchen are working properly for the first time in a century.” Her smile faded, replaced by a scowl. ”No, it's not what you've done that some of the loremasters don't care for. You wear a monk's robe now, but I'm afraid that doesn't change what you are in their eyes-a sell-sword, a man dedicated to violence, not knowledge.”

”But they have nothing to fear from me, Mother Melisende,” he boomed earnestly. ”I can control myself. I swear it!”

There was a clear, delicate snap as the teacup shattered in Tyveris's hand. He stared down at the broken shards in horror. ”I've ruined your cup,” he said despairingly.

”Forget the teacup, Tyveris,” Melisende said, taking the broken pieces from his hand and setting them aside. ”It is simply a thing. Completely replaceable.” She took his big hands into her tiny ones. He almost pulled away in surprise, but she gripped him tightly. ”Look at these, Tyveris. What do you see?”

Unsure what she meant he looked down at his hands. They were huge, big-knuckled, the dark skin crisscrossed with even darker scars and welts. They were a fighter's hands. Hands that had taken more lives than he could count. He told her so.

”Really?” the abbess answered. ”That's peculiar. For I see a pair of hands that are gentle even in their strength. I see hands that have embraced children, hands that have freely given alms to those in need, hands that have held a book for the first time as their owner learned to read in this very room. No, Tyveris, I don't believe these are a warrior's hands at all.”

He pulled away from her. ”But the other loremasters don't believe that, do they?”

”Some don't,” Melisende answered solemnly. ”A few. Loremaster Orven speaks loudest among them. I'm afraid they fear that one day you won't be able to control your temper, and that violence will result.”

”Maybe they're right,” Tyveris replied, his voice just slightly bitter. Why not? he thought. It had happened often enough in the past, when he had been both slave and soldier and the only thing that had mattered was to kill his foe, so that he wouldn't be killed himself.

Melisende's eyes flashed brightly with anger. ”I don't expect to hear any more such nonsense from you. I don't let just anybody into my abbey, you know. You're here because I believed you belong here. That hasn't changed.” She picked up her teacup again. ”I'll speak with those who have been troubled by your presence. Perhaps I can allay their fears.”

Tyveris's heart leapt in his chest. ”You will?” he rumbled gratefully.

”Did I not say so?” Melisende snapped. The abbess didn't like having to repeat herself.

”But what about Loremaster Orven?” he asked tentatively.

”I will concern myself with him. You may go now. Attend to your work.” Tyveris knew that one didn't hesitate when dismissed by the abbess. He hastily stood and bowed before hurrying from the chamber.

”And, Tyveris,” Melisende called after him. ”Do try to stay out of trouble.”

Tyveris spent the rest of the day repairing cracks in the abbey's outer stone wall. After he had finished the day's work he made his way to the dim, dusty library to read for a time in the quiet chamber. Outside the window the day was fading to twilight as the deep tones of a bronze bell sounded Vespers. The shadowed plains rolled southward into the far purple distance, toward a single twinkling gem on the horizon-the Caravan City of Iriaebor.

Had Tyveris been looking, the city's lights might have been a reminder of his past, of the days when Iriaebor had been his home and the sword had been his way of life. But he was focused on something else, another, more comforting past. Tyveris flipped idly through the colorfully illuminated ma.n.u.script resting on the table before him, a historical treatise concerning the founding of the Church of Oghma. He could hardly imagine a time when he couldn't read, but in truth he had only learned a few short months before.

The library was not a terribly large room, but it was filled from floor to ceiling with books, so many that Tyveris suspected it would take a pair of lifetimes just to read them all. The abbey was devoted to the G.o.d Oghma, the Binder, who was the warden of all knowledge, and its library was its greatest pride. In fact, the abbey even took its name from Everard Fa.r.s.eer, a king of an ancient, forgotten land whom legend told gave his life to protect a library from marauders who sought to burn the books within.

Tyveris cringed at the memory of the countless buildings he himself had set ablaze in the days when he had been driven into battle with whips at his back. How many precious books had been consumed in the flames and lost forever?

To atone for that destruction, Tyveris had spent the last decade as part of a small band of adventurers based in Iriaebor, men and women who had done their best to work against tyranny in the Caravan Cities between Waterdeep to the far west and Cormyr to the east. But even then he'd simply been a well-trained swordarm. And when the group disbanded a year ago, Tyveris found he had no purpose.

There was no one to tell him who to fight, or where or when. Alone once more, he discovered that all his good deeds had done nothing to a.s.suage his guilty conscience. Then, in the grips of a dark despair, he came to the abbey's gates on a rainy spring day....

A fierce look crossed Tyveris's face as he banished the memories. He wasn't going to let anyone force him to leave Everard Abbey. Not Loremaster Orven. Not anyone.

A place at the abbey was the one thing Tyveris knew he was still willing to fight for.

He bent his head over the tome once more, content to lose himself in its pages. Twilight dwindled outside the window, and night gathered its ebon mantle about the abbey, secure within its walls on the hill above the moonlit plains.

”Reading dusty old books hardly seems like a proper pastime for a warrior,” a voice said, startling Tyveris. Yellow light flared up as a candle was touched to the wick of an oil lamp.

Tyveris spun around, dreading to see Loremaster Orven behind him. But instead he found himself gazing into the hard gray eyes of an acerbic-looking, harshly thin man. Patriarch Alamric.

Tyveris cleared his throat gruffly. ”No one is a warrior within these walls, Patriarch Alamric,” he rumbled.

”So the abbess is fond of saying,” Alamric said in his sharp voice. ”A pity.”

Tyveris watched Alamric in wary confusion as the skeletal man sat at the table opposite him. He had not had many dealings with the old man since coming to the abbey. Alamric was a patriarch in the Church of Oghma, second at the abbey to only Melisende herself. Yet Tyveris had often had the disconcerting feeling that Alamric was watching him. It appeared that feeling had been justified, for the patriarch now gazed at him intently, interest sparking in his sharp gray eyes.

”Not all who wors.h.i.+p Oghma tremble foolishly at the sight of a warrior, like our poor Loremaster Orven,” Alamric went on. His voice had a hissing edge to it, like a knife drawn through silk. Tyveris looked at him dubiously.

”You doubt me, but it is true,” Alamric said with a tight, thin-lipped expression that was more grimace than smile. ”I am a powerful man, Tyveris. There are many in the church who obey my orders. But even so, I admire you. No, I envy you.” His eyes glowed with a strange, fierce light. ”From the time I was young I wanted more than anything to lead others, to let my wisdom and my will be their own. I dreamed of riding into glorious battles, raising my sword in the cause of righteousness.” He paused and sighed deeply. ”But I'm afraid the G.o.ds have mocked my pride by granting me this frail form. I've had to content myself with spiritual battles. You are lucky, Tyveris.”

”No,” Tyveris said, shaking his head. ”No, don't envy me, Patriarch. I would give anything to change what I am.” He reverently touched the open book before him. ”This is something far greater than battles or swords.”

Alamric s.n.a.t.c.hed the book up in his bony hand and tossed it carelessly aside, a look of disdain on his severe visage. Tyveris stared at him in shock. ”Knowledge is not the only thing sacred to Oghma! No, there is something even more holy, and that is Truth. Knowledge comes in tomes, but there's only one way to carry Truth to people, and that's by deed.” A ruddy, unwholesome flush came to Alamric's cheeks. He didn't seem to be gazing at Tyveris anymore; instead his eyes were turned to the darkened window as if he saw a glorious vision there, invisible to mundane eyes.

”Unbelievers can cast books aside all too easily,” Alamric went on, his voice chantlike. ”But if we armed our priests, not with parchment scrolls, but with swords, nothing could stand before us in our quest to bring Truth to all the lands of Faerun!”

Tyveris felt a chill run up his spine. ”What 'truth' do you mean, Patriarch?” he dared to ask.

Alamric's gaze bored hotly into Tyveris. ”The Truth. Don't you see? People will no longer need to read books to learn what to think. We will think for them. We will tell them what they must know.”

”There will be people who will resist you,” Tyveris said carefully. ”There always are.”

Alamric waved a hand dismissively. ”Not all souls can be saved, Tyveris. But that's the price we must pay for the benefit of all. Mother Melisende and those like her may not see far enough into the future to realize the great good in this, but there are those in the church who will. I shall be the one to carry the message to them.” He clutched Tyveris's wrist. His fingers felt strangely warm. ”But we will need holy warriors to become the bearers of the Truth. You could be one of the first.”

Tyveris pulled his hand away, rubbing his wrist as if he'd been burned. ”I'm sorry. I don't think I can be ... what you want.”

Alamric's exultant expression did not waver. ”Very well, Tyveris. We'll let that stand as your answer-for now. But I have faith that you will soon see the light and join me. I have great faith.”

After Patriarch Alamric left, Tyveris found he had no more heart for reading. He put away the book and made his way to the abbey's stable, where he kept a room in the loft. He lay in the darkness for a long time-even past midnight, by the stars outside the window-but he could not sleep. Alamric's strange words kept echoing in his head.

Finally he threw off his blanket and fumbled about in the dark until he found a stump of a candle. He lit it with a flint and a bit of tinder. A warm golden glow filled the loft.

He dug beneath his bed of hay until he reached the floorboards. One was loose, and he pulled it up to reveal a shadowed recess beneath. He drew out a long object and unwound the thick cloth that covered it. A sword gleamed in the candlelight, sharp and clean. For a time Tyveris stared at the blade, trying to see the faces of those he'd slain, to draw them forth like a magical s.h.i.+eld against the patriarch's words. After an hour, he rewrapped the sword and put it away.