?Old Earth
Date unknown; somewhere in the Eltmorian Empire
“Winfu, wake up.” He heard the voice say. Falling on his ears like a distant whisper and pulling him from his sleep. After several slow stutters his eyelids finally parted and through a watery lens he found himself looking straight into the wide and startled eyes of a swine that stared back at him. It’s gaze both cold and dead. A shiny red apple lodged tightly into its mouth.
Winfu closed his eyes again and reopened them only to find the boar was still there. Still staring at him. Suddenly it raised its head and spit the apple from its mouth. Winking at him with one eye as it squealed the distinct words, ‘eat me’! Winfu rubbed at his eyes and looked again. The glazed swine was indeed there, but it was dead and roasted. No longer moving or speaking. Apple still shoved securely in its mouth. He could smell it now and his famished stomach growled with hunger and anticipation.
“Ah, you are awake.” He heard a voice speak to him from across the room and it broke his focus on the hog and the many delicacies which surrounded it. He lifted his head to see but his sight could not yet travel that far. “Please, eat. Help yourself to whatever you wish.” Winfu recognized the voice now. The female from the dungeon. The one whom had purchased his release.
His senses returning him, he began to take notice of certain changes that had been made to him. The countless layers of dirt and grime that once covered him like a second skin, and most likely accounted for half his weight, had been washed away. His skin scented with a sweet fragrance. His hair had been cut as well. What was left was washed, groomed and pulled neatly back into a tail behind his head. And his face no longer itched with the bristly rat’s nest that once passed for an un-kept beard. The torn and dirty loin cloth that failed in its efforts to cover him now replaced by a lavender, satin tunic that kissed softly against his skin.
Winfu hesitated a leery moment before accepting the offer to eat. But only a moment. His hunger quickly overtaking his suspicion as he tore madly into the cooked swine set before him. Shoving pieces of meat into his mouth as fast as he could. Often even more than his mouth could hold or chew at the same time. There was an awkward silence that filled the chamber as his hosts sat and watched his ravenousness play out. The room filled only with the sounds of his hunger being satiated like that of a wild animal devouring its prey.
“I hope you don’t mind we took the liberty of cleaning you up. You were quite the mess.” She spoke again. (He would later learn her name to be Zyla.)
‘Indeed, and that dreadful smell.” A second voice now. Male again, but not the same as before. (He would come to know the name behind it being Kinjen-Ta. An Elf, like himself.)
His sight was getting better and he could begin to make out shapes across the room. There were five throne-like chairs set about fifteen feet or so away. Four of them were taken. There was Zyla, the human female. Kinjen-Ta, the Elf and pompous ass he would prove to be. The third was occupied by a large Orc, and the fourth belonged to a slightly obese Dwarf. It would be some time before he would learn their names.
“I suppose you are wondering why we went through all this trouble and expense to bring you here?” The Orc spoke in the deep, scratchy voice so common to his kind.
“Why have you?” Winfu asked. Finding it much easier to speak than he thought it would be. The words still scratched at his throat when they passed, but he was surprised he could form them at all. It was in that pondering that he took note of the sour aftertaste in the back of his mouth. In his rampage to fill his gullet with the juicy and delicious meat he failed to notice it before. But it was there. Hidden behind the flavor of roasted swine. Healing potions. Must have been fed to him while he was unconscious. The thought made him wonder just how long he was out. Hours? Days?
“Let’s just say we have a task that needs attending to that would be suited to someone of your…talents.” The Dwarf said.
“Why me?” Winfu spoke. The words still stinging his throat. “I am no one. Just a bad thief who got caught.” He said as he swiped a sweet roll from the table and slid it into his pocket so subtle as to be obvious.
“Come now.” Kinjen did not buy the act. “There is no need for such modesty here. You are among friends. Everyone here knows exactly who and what you are. WInfu of the bloodline Er, born in the township of Vuldinvarn in the Tal Province. Mother Sanya-Er, father unknown. I could go on, but what say you we dispense with the boring details and simply call you Tei-Shirah.”
Winfu knew the name all too well when he heard it. It was Elven for, “the Ghost.” By now he had found the wine and began pouring it into his mouth straight from the bottle faster than he could swallow. The purple nectar running out both sides of his lips and down across his face and neck. Eventually pulling the bottle away and letting out a loud and crude belch as he wiped his mouth with the satin sleeve of the tunic. “Who?” He played as dumb as he thought he could get away with. As far as he knew, and was now beginning to suspect, this was all some elaborate scheme to draw the confession from him that he never gave.
“Tei-Shirah,” Kinjen said the name again, “the infamous Master Thief. Wanted dead or alive on two continents. Just dead on two more. We all know very well who you are, my dear Winfu, and that is exactly the reason we have brought you here. The question you must now ask yourself is do you wish to know why we have called upon you, or do you wish to continue with these petty games? In which case we will simply throw you back into that vile pit we pulled you from and find another.”
Winfu’s demeanor turned more serious and Kinjen knew he had his full attention now.
“As I thought,” he sneered. Leaning back in his chair as he cusped his hands together in front of his chin. Winfu was glad to be out of the cell, there was no doubting that. And even more thankful for the meal, but his concern was beginning to grow. When threats of leverage opened what appeared to be negotiations it was never a good sign of things to come. “So, tell me, why did you go back?” Kinjen asked the seemingly random question and pulled Winfu from his thoughts.
“What do you mean?” Winfu replied. Genuinely confused by the question.
“Your last heist.” Kinjen grinned. “The one that landed you in that dank, Elven prison all those years ago. I mean, you had already successfully stolen the fabled Staff of Ulan-Ko and made your brilliant escape as always. Oh, and excellent work by the way. You have a most impressive career. But pulling off the Ulan-Ko heist was truly a masterpiece.
Still, I am curious as to why you returned to the castle. The Staff had already been discovered missing and the alarm sounded. The guards on alert. Surely you had to know you would be captured, if not killed on sight, if you went back. I can’t help but to wonder what was so important that the great and mysterious Ghost would risk getting caught for?”
“You said you needed something?” Winfu’s was visibly uncomfortable with the line of questioning and quickly moved the conversation away from it. Suddenly filled with memories he held no desire to discuss.
“Yes, quite.” Kinjen said as if growing bored. “Enough with the small talk. Never cared for it anyway. So, on to business then, shall we?”
There was a brief pause and then Kinjen continued. “There are several artifacts, six to be precise, we wish to have recovered. Your stellar career as Tei-Shirah leads us to believe you possess the skills we are looking for to find them and retrieve them for us. That is why we have pulled you from the belly of that dungeon and brought you here.”
“Sounds like something better suited for a mercenary or treasure hunter. Why a thief?”
“Yes,” Kinjen sighed, “it is true you are not the first we have employed for this task. There have been others. But as they have all failed, you now find yourself with a second chance. I suggest you take it.”
“What exactly is it I am looking for and where am I going?” Winfu asked. They had always been his first two questions when taking a job. Simple and logical questions considering what they were asking of him, but Kinjen did not seem to agree.
“What they are is of no importance to you at the moment. But rest assured you will be given that which you need to know when the time comes and as we deem fit. As for where you will begin, the most recent fellow we hired, an Orcanian mercenary, had tracked one of them to the Merrican Continent. However, it has been some time since we last heard from him and can only assume he has met an untimely demise as did the others.” Kinjen said with not even a passing note of concern in his voice. Not exactly selling Winfu on the job.
“Merrican?” Winfu thought out loud. He had been there before. Twice. A job both times. But it had been years. Perhaps decades? The question ran quick and brief across his mind as he realized he could not remember how long it had been since he was cast into the prison. What was the year? His thoughts came back to the moment. Merrican was the land of the humans. The land of Man.
“Yes,” Zyla broke in, “for the first of these artifacts you will need to travel to the Merrican Republic. Your travels in Merrican should not present you with too much trouble. Not from the Merrican authorities, anyway. Though there have been wars and tensions in the past between the humans and the elves, our governments are both currently observing a newfound treaty of peace and trade.”
“And the others?” Winfu asked.
“Unknown at this time.” Zyla answered. “Scattered around the world most likely. However, according to prophecy, by finding any one of the six pieces, the artifact will itself lead the one who holds it to the next. Then, once all six have been found and placed together they are said to form a map to a seventh location which holds a treasure and power greater than anything ever known to the five major races of the Earth.”
“None of that is your concern, thief!” Kinjen cut in sharply and you could tell by the annoyed tone in his voice he was not happy with Zyla for sharing as much as she did. Even though it really told him nothing. If anything left him more confused. “All you need to know is you will be generously compensated for your time and efforts.”
“How generous?” Now he was speaking Winfu’s language. Gold.
Kinjen made three quick and successive claps of his hands and even before the third clap finished the side door to the large, eloquently decorated chamber room opened. Two more Elves entered carrying between them a sizeable chest. They were both rather large and muscular for Elves, but even their combined strength seemed taxed by its weight. They set the chest down in front of the dining table from which he ate and unlocked it. Opening it up to reveal a mountain of gold coin within.
“A hundred thousand gold to start. Call it goodwill, an incentive bonus, or whatever you wish, but there is ten times this amount awaiting you should you find all six pieces.”
One million gold. Winfu ran the numbers in his head. That was a lot of coin. Far more than he had ever made before for a single job. Even though finding these artifacts might prove a rather daunting task. Could take months. Most likely years if scattered around the world as Zyla suggested. Still, the offer was as impressive as it was suspicious. It was his experience that such bounties were more often paid in betrayal than gold.
“Acquiring these artifacts is worth far more to us than any amount of gold or jewels.” Kinjen interrupted Winfu’s thoughts. Perhaps he was merely trying to boast of the wealth at their disposal, or their willingness to pay whatever sum it took to get the relics. Whatever the reason, he had shown his hand. He must not have had much practice dealing with professional thieves before. Or any thief for that matter. You never tell a thief that the item you are sending him to fetch is worth more to you than what you are already paying.
“Let’s say I accept the job,” Winfu started, “any skills or talents I may or may not have had at one time are surely dulled from the years spent in the dungeon keep. I will need time to recover.”
“You have three weeks.” Kinjen said very matter of fact. “At that time there will be a merchant ship arriving from Merrican. They will be docked here in Eltmore for a week before returning to the Merrican Continent. You will join them on their return trip.”
“Rest assured we will provide you with whatever you require in the meantime.” Zyla added. “Potions, doctors, alchemists, gear and weapons. All you need do is ask.”
“And where do I come out on the other end of all this?” Winfu still held tightly onto his suspicions.
“Wherever you wish.” Kinjen answered with the same condescending, uninterested tone that seemed to fill his voice each time he spoke. “Only richer. Once we have what we want what you do with yourself is of no concern to us. Take your riches and start a new life, return to being Tei-Shirah, it makes no difference. Now, do you accept our offer or shall we locate another?”
There was only one answer to give. He was going to Merrican.