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								|   | FSFNET Fantasy Sci- fi magazine Vol.11 #2From [email protected] Mon Jul 18 20:55:16 1988Received: by NADC.ARPA (5.51/1.0 )
 id AA20731; Mon, 18 Jul 88 20:53:51 EDT
 Received: from plaid.Sun.COM by Sun.COM (4.0/SMI-4.0)
 id AA05414; Mon, 18 Jul 88 17:31:33 PDT
 Received: by plaid.Sun.COM (4.0/SMI-4.0)
 id AA06271; Mon, 18 Jul 88 17:32:56 PDT
 Date: Mon, 18 Jul 88 17:32:56 PDT
 From: [email protected] (Chuq Von Rospach)
 Message-Id: <[email protected]>
 To: fanzine%[email protected]
 Subject: FSFNET Vol 11 #2
 Status: RO
 
 +-+  +-+  +-+
 +-+--+-+--+-+     VOLUME ELEVEN                 NUMBER TWO
 |           |    ==========================================
 +___________+     FFFFF   SSS   FFFFF  N   N  EEEEE  TTTTT
 |      ++ |      F      S      F      NN  N  E        T
 |      ++ |      FFF     SSS   FFF    N N N  EEE      T
 |         |      F          S  F      N  NN  E        T
 |_________|      F       SSS   F      N   N  EEEEE    T
 /___________\    ==========================================
 |           |      BITNET Fantasy-Science Fiction Fanzine
 ___|___________|___  X-Edited by 'Orny' Liscomb <CSDAVE@MAINE>
 
 <>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>
 
 CONTENTS
 X-Editorial                          'Orny' Liscomb
 Your Order...                         Paul A. Clayton
 *A Sudden Storm                        Becki Tants
 DNA For Sale, Slightly Used...        Peter Scott
 *Unlikely Partners, Part 1             Max Khaytsus
 
 Date: 070688                               Dist: 672
 An "*" indicates story is part of the Dargon Project
 All original materials  copyrighted by the author(s)
 <>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>
 
 X-Editorial
 Many of you  are probably unaware just what is  going to happen to
 FSFnet within the  next couple months, beyond what  has been mentioned
 in recent issues about my graduation. The current plans go like this:
 In late August, I will be graduating from UMaine, and coincidental
 with that,  FSFnet will stop  production. However, before I  alarm you
 too much, let  me mention that the Dargon Project  will continue under
 new leadership,  and there  are plans  to begin  a new  magazine after
 FSFnet ends, and all users who are subscribed to FSFnet at the time of
 its last  issue will automatically  be subscribed to the  new magazine
 when it  begins publication. The new  magazine will be edited  by John
 White  <WHITE@DUVM>,  and will  publish  Dargon  Project stories,  and
 everyone who is subscribed to  FSFnet will automatically be subscribed
 to the  new magazine. Several  people I've  talked to have  asked "Why
 bother ending FSFnet  and starting a new magazine if  they're going to
 be so similar?" In a discussion in FSFNET CSNOTICE (available from the
 server  CSNEWS@MAINE) I  talked about  why I  think it  better to  end
 FSFnet; what follows is a reprint  of that discussion. All readers are
 welcome to join the discussion and add their comments via CSNEWS.
 
 First  of  all, let  me  mention  that  running  a magazine  is  a
 gratifying experience. It would be silly of me (or any editor) to deny
 some degree of  emotional attachment to his  magazine, particularly if
 the  magazine is  successful.  With  that in  mind,  here's the  basic
 reasons why I think the 'new' magazine should be considered a separate
 entity from FSFnet, even though they will be almost identical in their
 basic nature, as Leo pointed out.
 Firstly, but not necessarily most importantly, I'm posessive about
 it. I'm rather attached  to it, and the thought of  turning it over to
 another editor, whom I don't know and  over whom I have no control, is
 difficult  for me  to accept.  This is  putting things  a little  more
 bluntly   than  is   actually   the   case,  but   I   do  feel   some
 defensiveness/protectiveness  about it,  and  that's  natural for  any
 editor to feel.
 The flip side of this is  the real reasoning behind ending FSFnet.
 Presumably, if FSFnet  continued, a new editor would  be recruited and
 be forced  to adhere to formats  and policies which I  set three years
 ago. I mentioned that editing a magazine is a personal experience, yet
 I suspect that editing  a magazine which, in the end,  is not your own
 creation, lessens this tie. The new editor would probably find running
 FSFnet much less rewarding and put less effort into it than if he were
 running a magazine which was his  own creation, and could make his own
 policy decisions  from scratch. Sure,  the two magazines will  be very
 similar (particularly with  the continuation of the  Dargon Project in
 the new mag), but  because of the change in editors,  they will not be
 identical,  and  separating them  (at  least  theoretically) into  two
 distinct magazines will make both parties happier.
 So, what appears to be best for everyone, is to discontinue FSFnet
 as such, while starting up another (very similar) magazine to fill its
 void. Let the old editor have his wish of not letting someone else get
 their hands  on 'his' magazine,  and let the  new editor start  a zine
 which he can take pride in and truly call his own, without being bound
 by the policies of the old.  Keep the readers involved by allowing the
 new zine to make use of the  same mailing list. The key to improvement
 is to  not to be afraid  of changes, and I  feel that a change  in (at
 least)  the name  of  the magazine  will permit  the  new editor  more
 freedom to improve than if he were bound to a set of guidelines not of
 his own choosing.
 
 So that should  give you a fair  idea of what is  going to happen,
 and why.  I'll keep producing  issues as  frequently as I  have enough
 material (hint hint), and I  anticipate perhaps two more issues before
 the end  of summer. Speaking  of which,  there will be  a (hopefullly)
 large gathering of FSFnet people at  the Pennsic War this year, and if
 anyone is  going to be around,  drop me a  line to be included  in the
 planning.  But  back  to  the  matters  at  hand;  we've  got  a  very
 interesting issue here.  It includes two very  entertaining SF shorts,
 Becki Tants' newest installment, and  the first in an excellent series
 by Max Khaytsus; I'm sure you'll enjoy it.
 -'Orny' Liscomb  <CSDAVE@MAINE>
 
 <>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>
 
 Your Order...
 "Rhadhishe  Sheffield  will be  with  you  momentarily," said  the
 attractive young woman. "Can I do anything for you while you wait?"
 "Yes, you  can answer  a few more  questions," the  chief delegate
 said, "To start with, how is it that one in her early twenties is part
 of the famous diplomatic corps of S'lah?"
 "I am not  really a member yet," the woman  replied, "but I belong
 to Sheffield, and  I am training to be a  rhadhishe. Is there anything
 else you wish to ask?"
 "Uh--no," the delegate said, forgetting his other questions in the
 surprise caused by her answer.
 "Well, then I shall leave," the woman said, pressing a small green
 button  causing the  door  to slide  open, "If  you  have any  further
 questions, you can ask Rhadhishe Sheffield, himself."
 The woman left the room, and the chief delegate turned to face the
 six other delegates from his world as the door to the room closed.
 "Did you hear that?" he  asked, "Apparently, this culture has some
 peculiarities  that  were not  mentioned  in  the briefing,  including
 slavery.  I suggest  we be  especially careful  to avoid  breaking any
 tabus."
 The delegates  mumbled their agreement,  and then broke  back into
 grumbling about the clothing that had been provided for them.
 "This stuff looks  so silly. I mean, look at  this pattern of vine
 and long-bodied fish with black splotches that look like oil stains."
 "Mine isn't much better. Do we really have to wear these clothes?"
 "Yes. It's  part of  the tradition of  peace negotiations  here on
 S'lah  that  all  parties  wear these  diplomatic  clothes.  They  are
 symbolic of fair treatment for all  sides of a dispute. And, remember,
 the N'rr said that we should do our utmost to secure a FAIR peace. You
 wouldn't want  to fail  her over  such a  trivial matter  as clothing,
 would you?"
 "No. It's just that these clothes are so--"
 A  short  buzz  came  from  the control  panel  beside  the  door,
 interrupting the delegates  speech. The chief delegate  walked over to
 the panel, pressed a small button, and spoke at the panel.
 "Who is it?"
 "This is Rhadhishe  Sheffield. I have come to  guide the delegates
 from Kruetos to the Meeting."
 "Hello. Enter."
 The  chief delegate  pressed  a  button and  the  door slid  open,
 admitting a short, cheerful-looking man wearing a dull red robe with a
 white sash hanging from his right shoulder to his left side.
 "Hello. I am Rhadhishe Sheffield, but  you may call me Sheff," the
 man said, "I see  you have put on the clothes  we have provided. Good.
 You do realize, of course, the significance of these clothes?"
 "Yes," the chief delegate said,  "that was covered in the standard
 briefing."
 "Good.  Many  do  not  realize their  significance.  They  do  not
 remember  that  for many  years  our  people  were tossed  by  warring
 neighbors and  that we  developed our diplomatic  policy as  a defense
 response. The clothes  that you now wear ensure fair  treatment to all
 the delegates and put you under a  very strict code of conduct. If any
 one of you breaks  part of the code, not only  the individual, but his
 entire people will be liable to punishment. This ensures the safety of
 the other delegates and the safety  of our world from retaliation if a
 delegate should come to harm.
 "Do you have any questions to ask  before we go to the Meeting? It
 is my  responsibility to inform you  on any matters that  interest you
 concerning our culture in general or the nature of the Meeting."
 "We presently only have a few short questions," the chief delegate
 said, "You can answer them while guiding us to the Meeting."
 "As you wish. Shall we leave then?"
 The chief delegate nodded, and Sheff began to lead them away.
 "You said  that you  have some  questions that  you would  like to
 ask," the rhadhishe said, "What would you like to know?"
 "Well, first," the chief delegate asked, "the woman who came to us
 to announce your coming said that  she "belonged" to you. What exactly
 did she mean?"
 "Oh," the rhadhishe  said, mildly surprised by  the question, "She
 is my  cumbre--you might call  her an  indentured servant. I  am quite
 fortunate  to have  her; the  queue for  such intelligent  and readily
 trainable servants is quite long. In fact, colloquially they are known
 as line-servants because one must usually  wait so long before one can
 buy one.
 "You shouldn't consider us less civilized because we practice this
 form  of  slavery," the  rhadhishe  said,  catching  the look  on  the
 delegates' faces, "It is the only way we have found to ensure that the
 poor are not  thrust into poverty. Our laws protect  the rights of all
 cumbres and ensure  that they are fairly treated. The  demand for such
 servants  keeps the  prices  high;  and our  laws  prevent any  single
 contract longer than seven years and ensure the servant's right to buy
 himself out  of any  remaining time;  and, of  course, only  a willing
 citizen can become a cumbre. In addition  to being a path for the poor
 to  escape poverty,  this ensures  a  high standard  of education  and
 allows gifted individuals to receive special training. Admittedly, not
 all   individuals  have   equal   opportunity  nor   are  all   owners
 exceptionally kind to  their servants, but our system seems  to us the
 best of  the systems  to which  we have  been exposed.  Remember, this
 system has ensured the stability of our society for almost two hundred
 years; few  other societies  at our advanced  level of  technology can
 make such a claim about their social systems.
 "At  any  rate, I  think  that  answers  your question.  Is  there
 anything else that you would like to know?"
 The chief  delegate asked  Sheff several  more questions  which he
 answered at some  length. Then, after a brief moment  of no questions,
 the chief delegate spoke again.
 "Oh, yes," the chief delegate paused before he continued speaking,
 "As you  may know, the N'rr,  the leader of all  Kruetos, ordered this
 gathering as she  lay on her deathbed. For this  reason we are obliged
 to attempt  to make peace with  our enemy, though all  indications are
 that we could start an invasion of B'konbi itself within the next year
 and thus ensure  victory; but we must be certain  that the treaty will
 be fair,  otherwise we will be  forced to settle our  dispute with the
 weapons of war. We have heard that a Terran will be presiding over the
 Meeting; is this true?"
 "We are  almost at the  place where the  meeting will be  held. Is
 this your last question?"
 "Yes." the chief delegate nodded.
 "Well, then follow me."
 The  rhadhishe turned  at  a  fork of  a  type  particular to  the
 architecture of S'lah and led them  into a small rectangular room with
 a large window offering a view of  the room that had been prepared for
 the Meeting.
 "There, in  the center of  the room, is  the one who  will preside
 over this gathering," the rhadhishe  said, pointing through the window
 at the bowl-shaped room beyond.
 The room had trees, shrubs, and other plants spread throughout it.
 It  was filled  with greens,  as was  the custom  among the  people of
 S'lah. At its center, sitting behind a small, curved table which faced
 the seats for both delegations, was  a woman whose long brown hair was
 streaked with grey and who looked  at once both above all concerns and
 open to the concerns of others.
 "Her name is  Sherry Mato, though she prefers to  be called by her
 middle name  of Theresa," the  rhadhishe continued, "As you  may know,
 our world has significant  economic interests on B'konbi-- significant
 enough  that these  interests might  make one  of our  diplomats favor
 their  side, or,  in an  effort to  avoid this,  favor your  own side.
 Fortunately, we  are prepared for  such problems.  We make a  habit of
 adopting people from other worlds, and training them, in a politically
 neutral environment, to deal with these relatively rare situations.
 "To answer  your question, yes,  she is  a Terran, though  she was
 adopted at a very early age and  has received the same training as all
 native  arbitrators.  She was  picked  especially  for this  gathering
 because of her special  understanding of the underlying circumstances.
 You need have no worries that she is less well trained or in any other
 way less ripe for this situation than a native arbitrator would be."
 "Are you  ready to enter  the Meeting?"  Sheff asked after  a long
 period of silence.
 The chief delegate nodded, and Sheff led them back to the corridor
 from which they had come and into the Meeting-room.
 Once all the delegates had  seated themselves the arbitrator stood
 and addressed them.
 "Now that  the Kruetons and  the B'konbits have arrived  in S'lahd
 dressings, let us begin. . . ."
 -Paul A. Clayton  <P5C2@WUGOLD>
 (with Jason Malkoff, Bryan Paschke and Thomas Payerle)
 
 <>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>
 
 A Sudden Storm
 Arrangements didn't take long. The next night, a young dock worker
 named Johan  was waiting for  her at the door  and walked all  the way
 home with  her. He was  a nice enough young  man, about her  age, with
 dark hair and fiery blue eyes.  Nice and muscular too. She immediately
 got the feeling he had been handpicked by Karina or Camron as not only
 a good body guard, but a good  husband candidate as well. He seemed to
 have the same idea.
 "So, I hear you're new to the  city" he said. Interested in a tour
 sometime? I've lived  here all my life and could  show you some really
 beautiful spots."
 "That's really very nice of you,"  Ariel said, ducking just out of
 reach as he tried to put his arm around her. He saved the gesture from
 looking  stupid by  going into  his  pouch with  his hand  as it  came
 around, but  that didn't stop  a couple  passers-by from giving  him a
 look and  a chuckle. Ariel blushed,  amazed at how unworldly  city men
 could be. "I  really don't think I'll have time.  Camron is keeping me
 very busy."
 "Well  that's OK,"  Johan said,  "Uncle Camron  will be  more than
 happy if we went for a picnic sometime."
 "Uncle Camron?" Ariel said with  a sinking feeling. She KNEW she'd
 been set up.
 "Ya. He suggested  I walk you home because I  know where my sister
 Karina's house is. So what about that picnic?" Johan asked.
 Luckily  the walk  home  wasn't long  and she  was  able to  claim
 fatigue to get out of answering  the question. She climbed the stairs,
 mildly cursing  Karina for setting  that one up.  Her and her  idea of
 getting  Ariel "properly  married". Unfortunately,  her thoughts  were
 overrun by the ache in her legs from the previous night's run. Opening
 her door,  she was  about to  collapse on her  bed, when  she stopped,
 staring at the man sitting on the edge of her bed.
 "Good evening,  Ariel. Come in,  close the  door and sit  down. We
 have quite a bit  to discuss." he said. He was an  older man, not very
 out of the  ordinary looking, but it didn't matter.  All she could see
 was the symbol of Haargon hanging about his neck.
 "Like it?" he asked, holding up the pendent, "It took 7 long years
 of searching for  the stone and weeks spent in  the smithy and jewlers
 shops to make it.  I made it myself, so that I would  know it had been
 done right. Would you like to see it closer?"
 Ariel couldn't  take her eyes off  the pendent. She began  to move
 forward toward  it with a faltering  step. There was a  nagging in the
 back of  her mind that  said she should run  away, but it  was quickly
 fading away as she got closer to the amulet.
 "Good. Come  here, touch  it if  you like. You  may hold  it. It's
 really  the only  way  to  examine the  excellent  workmanship of  the
 amulet." the old priest said, with a wonderful, friendly smile.
 Ariel began to reach up for the  medallion, to pick it up and look
 at it,  when she caught  sight of Stefan's ring  on her finger  in the
 candle  light. With  a start,  she came  back to  herself, out  of the
 drug-like stupor she  had been in and snapped  upright, taking several
 steps backwards  to the wall.  "What are  you doing here?"  she asked,
 panic in her voice.
 "I see you are a bit stronger then I thought. it takes quite a bit
 of power  to break  a mind lock.  So be  it." he said,  as he  put his
 amulet back on and walked to the door.
 "I just  came to  see for myself  who you were  and what  you were
 like. I do so  hate killing people who are no threat.  So messy. But I
 see now that you are a viable  concern. Therefore I will give you this
 warning and  this offer. My god  Haargon has commanded your  death. he
 says you are a grave danger to  myself and my followers. I give you 48
 hours before I kill you to decide on one thing. You have the potential
 to be  an extremely  talented mage.  I would  rather not  destroy that
 potential. So I ask you to join  us. I will train you myself. You have
 48 hours to  decide. At the end  of that time, I will  return for your
 decision. Remember tho, that if your decision is wrong, you will die."
 He walked out of the room and closed the door. Panicing for Karina and
 Marcus' sake, she ran  to the door and opened it,  looking for him, to
 make sure he  didn't harm them. He  was nowhere to be seen.  It was as
 though he had disappeared.
 Walking back into  her room, she collapsed onto her  bed in tears.
 She felt so  powerless. What could she do against  someone who had the
 power to disappear like  that? She was so caught up  in her tears that
 she  jumped when  Marcus knocked  on the  half open  door, saying  " I
 thought I heard voices up here." One  look at her face tho, and he was
 immediately at  her side, with  an arm around her  trembling shoulders
 saying "It's OK now." and smoothing her hair.
 By the time  she had calmed down,  Karina had come up  to see what
 was wrong. Karina  sat with her, while Marcus went  and made some tea.
 When he came back, he asked her  the question she had known was coming
 but dreaded. "OK,  Ariel.. We'd like the whole story  now. All of it."
 he said as he handed her the cup.
 Taking a long  slow drink, she began her explanation.  By the time
 she had finished,  the tea was cold  in the pot, yet  she continued to
 drink it.
 "Why didn't you tell us in the first place?" Karina asked.
 "Several reasons. I hoped that it was over and I could settle back
 down to being a normal person again.  I didn't want to worry you. Most
 of all I was afraid you wouldn't believe me." Ariel said.
 Karina came over  and gave her a  hug. "Well, I admit it  is a bit
 out of the ordinary, but I don't  believe you to be a liar. We'll help
 you." Marcus nodded in agreement.
 "No!" Ariel  protested. "You've  done too  much already.  And now,
 because of  me, you're in  danger. I must leave.  Maybe I could  go to
 Baranur. Find a job there. Maybe they'll leave me alone then."
 Marcus spoke  up for the first  time since he initially  came into
 the room.  "Ariel, you heard what  the priest said. You're  special in
 some way. They  won't leave you alone...ever. You're going  to have to
 fight them, one way or another. At  least let us give you what help we
 can. Camron might be able to  get some information on this other cult.
 And we  can go to one  of the fortune tellers  on the dock and  see if
 they have any guidance for us. I hear Corambis recently returned. He's
 the best they say." He was in his fatherly tone. Caring, but firm. She
 knew better then to go against him.  "And we'll get that young man who
 walked you home to  stay with you all the time.  We'll work this out."
 He gave her a  hug, saying "Now you go to  bed. You're exhausted. I'll
 go talk to Camron  first thing in the morning so  he doesn't worry and
 can get things moving."
 "OK," she said, "you're right. I  do need some sleep." She quickly
 crawled under the covers as Karina came over, gave her another hug and
 tucked her in. "Good Night" she said as they closed the door.
 She waited until after she knew they were in bed and asleep before
 getting  up.  It took  Ariel  less  then 5  minutes  to  pack her  few
 belongings and quietly walk down the  stairs. In the kitchen, she took
 a loaf  of bread, some cheese,  and a wine  skin, and added it  to her
 pack. Then she left a quick note on the table for them.
 
 I'm sorry, but  I can't stay here. My  presence puts you
 in danger,  and I  care too much  for you to  do that.  I am
 going  to find  myself somewhere  to live  where I  won't be
 hurting anyone.  You can  reach me at  Camron's, as  I still
 have to work for at least the next couple of days. Thank you
 for everything.
 Ariel.
 
 Folding the note  and placing it where she knew  it would be seen,
 she took  one last fond glance  around the kitchen before  walking out
 into the night and off to find somewhere to stay.
 Marcus shook his head as the  door closed, swore under his breath,
 and followed her out the door into the night air.
 He wasn't the only one.
 -Becki Tants  <RETANTS@SUVM>
 
 <>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>
 
 DNA For Sale, Slightly Used...
 
 Changing technology doesn't mean changing people...
 ...but the problems may vary...
 
 2800 Whitney Drive
 Denver, CO
 General Genetics Corporation
 14000 Michigan Way
 Research Triangle Park, NJ
 
 To Whom It May Concern:
 
 I have  recently taken care of  four thousand square feet  of your
 "Everlush Living Carpet", impressed by the salesman's demonstration of
 its ability  to devour cigarette  butts, cookie crumbs,  and household
 dust, turning same into natural  pine scent and negative ionization. I
 was  initially pleased  with the  carpeting,  and even  wrote off  its
 propensity  to leach  out the  cellulose from  newspapers as  a timely
 reminder not  to be  untidy. Later,  I noticed that  it had  also been
 absorbing the feet  of wooden furniture, so I installed  steel caps on
 the legs of those chairs and tables.
 Last week,  however, my youngest  son tripped and dropped  a large
 pepperoni pizza  on the hearth rug,  which promptly gulped it  down. I
 could forgive this indecent haste for  cleanliness were it not for the
 fact that it  was a sudden swell  in the carpet that caused  my son to
 trip  in the  first  place,  and the  carpet  had  been making  subtle
 advances towards the kitchen for the previous ten days.
 Things  have now  gone too  far. Yesterday  my prize  rubber plant
 disappeared, and there is a new springiness to the carpet (I leave the
 obvious inference to your imagination). Visitors have been discouraged
 from  entering  ever  since  the  welcome mat  developed  a  habit  of
 dissolving  their shoelaces.  The pile  is now  over a  foot thick  in
 places and  my daughter's dachshund has  not been heard for  two days.
 And while I find a small quantity of negative ions to be beneficial to
 the health, I  don't think it appropriate that there  should be arcing
 between the wall sockets.  I am not writing at this  time to request a
 refund,  but I  would  be  profoundly grateful  if  you  would ship  a
 sufficient quantity of specific  weedkiller to eradicate your Everlush
 carpet before I call out the National Guard.
 
 Yours sincerely,
 
 Nathaniel S. Horner, M.D.
 
 -------------------
 
 141 Podunk Drive
 Poughkeepsie, NY
 General Genetics Corporation
 14000 Michigan Way
 Research Triangle Park, NJ
 
 To The Boss:
 
 See  here,  I'm  not  looking  for trouble  or  nothin',  but  one
 afternoon Ira  brings home this gizmo  he says is a  "Biogulp" organic
 vacuum cleaner. What do I care, it picks up schmutz and there ain't no
 bag to change.
 The first day  it's here, Amos 'n  Andy -- the kittens  -- mark it
 for a stranger  and pounce. Why not,  I said, they could  use the fun.
 But now it's hiding in the closet under the stairs and refuses to come
 out. I call your service man, he  comes and talks to it, and says it's
 gotten  neurotic. Then  he says  the  warranty don't  cover repair  of
 "malicious damage",  but any schmuck  can see  it's only got  a coupla
 scratches.  That  ain't  no  reason   for  it  to  be  whimpering  and
 complaining about the spiders.
 My husband  says you're supposed  to find the psychos  before they
 leave the factory,  and that I have a prima  facie case (whatever that
 is) for a full refund.
 Yours,
 
 Irma Goldstein (Mrs.)
 
 -------------------
 
 General Genetics Corporation INTEROFFICE MEMORANDUM
 
 To:     Departmental Manager, Quality Control
 From:   Director of Field Inspection
 
 Ed, your  boys have got  to stay on  their toes more!  My division
 doesn't like  playing quis custodiet any  more than the next  man, but
 yesterday  they earned  their pay.  Regs say  that any  spillage in  a
 storehouse means everything in the  room gets cancelled, but yesterday
 your  people  knocked  over  a box  of  self-regenerating  tampon  RNA
 substrate and  a vial  of Magic  Mix Cocktail  Shaker base  and didn't
 sterilize for  thirty minutes!  You know  I hate  to get  officious --
 besides, I've  joined in the poker  game myself, won a  few beads from
 your people at times -- but this was one time when the size of the pot
 shouldn't keep  the men from  their work. Fortunately, the  only thing
 shipped out during  that half hour was  a box of towels,  but it could
 have been a lot worse. 'Nuff said, Ed?
 
 -- Mike
 
 -------------------
 
 10231 Sunset Boulevard
 Beverly Hills, CA
 General Genetics Corporation
 14000 Michigan Way
 Research Triangle Park, NJ
 
 Hi:
 
 I just want you to know right off that this is not a complaint, in
 fact quite the opposite, I simply  had to write and compliment you for
 the wonderful quality  of your "Sta-Warm" self-heating  body wraps. In
 the movie business  a girl's kept working a fourteen-hour  day most of
 the time, a hot bath is about the  only luxury I can expect when I get
 home, and  when there's no-one around  to dry me off,  your towels are
 really better than the  usual cheap kinds that make you  do all of the
 work yourself.
 I must confess  I was unprepared for some of  the things the towel
 did, but I've  grown used to it  since then. The towel  seems to enjoy
 it, too: more than once it has snuck into my bedroom after a hard day;
 and although it did  try to strangle my director when  he called to go
 over the next day's script with me there was no harm done in the end.
 Love,
 
 Mitzy Moreno (Ms)
 
 -------------------
 
 1200 Madison Ave Suite 501
 New York, NY
 President
 General Genetics Corporation
 14000 Michigan Way
 Research Triangle Park, NJ
 
 Sir:
 
 As you know,  Consolidated has grown into Fortune 500  status in a
 record period, and I'm writing to share with you one of the secrets of
 our success, seeing as indirectly, you brought it about.
 At the  beginning of this  year we  were facing a  projected first
 quarter loss  of $27 million, and  as part of  the cost cuts I  had to
 halve my secretary's hours. Well, to  cut a long story short, I bought
 the latest telephone answering machine from your AI division, figuring
 that it would be good for telling people when I would be back, fobbing
 off salesmen, maybe even pacifying my wife.
 Your  literature leaves  the  limits of  the machine's  capability
 rather  open-ended (don't  worry --  you're  not the  first to  market
 before  you've researched:  just common  business practice),  but does
 mention that they depend on "heuristic factors". At the time I thought
 that meant something to do with background noise; anyway, I plugged it
 into the listed line  and left it for a few days. Now,  I get a lot of
 calls. Most of  them at that time  from people I owed money  to. I was
 pleasantly  surprised to  discover that  the machine  had developed  a
 smart strategy for  handling these people by playing  them off against
 each other. I was still strapped for time, so I let it have the run of
 the whole board. For  a week it was doing a great  job -- even learned
 to imitate  my voice  -- until  one day  I caught  it haggling  with a
 distributor  over his  contract. I  listened to  it for  a while,  and
 discovered it was actually a pretty shrewd operator!
 Anyway, that must have given it  some ideas, because the next week
 it told  me I  had a  10:30 appointment  with Higgins  of Amalgamated.
 "You're wrong," I said, "I haven't talked with Higgins in five years".
 It turned  out that the  machine had made  the appointment so  I could
 rubber-stamp a merger deal it had made! I didn't mind making it a full
 partner -- in fact, if it bucks for the chair, it can have it. I still
 have my stock and that's all I need...
 
 Regards,
 
 Hiram X. Hamilton III
 
 -------------------
 
 7343 Waterside Avenue
 Norfolk, VA
 General Genetics Corporation
 14000 Michigan Way
 Research Triangle Park, NJ
 
 Dear Sir or Madam:
 
 I  am returning  my  "Adapta-Mirra" to  my  dealer forthwith,  and
 advise  you that  I  will be  consulting  various consumer  protection
 groups as to the safety of  this product. Your mirror functioned quite
 adequately in wiping condensation off  itself, dimpling into a shaving
 mirror  for my  husband, and  giving the  time-honored response  to my
 teen-age daughter  whenever she  asked it to  identify The  Fairest Of
 Them All.
 However, when my  daughter woke up one day with  a small pimple on
 her  nose, she  was aghast  to see  in the  mirror a  malignant fungus
 spreading over half her face. I did  not think it funny when my mother
 visited and the mirror shrieked loudly and pretended to shatter in its
 frame. Nor do I find it amusing that your mirror chooses to portray me
 variously as a wizened old hag, a pregnant sow, or Tyrannosaurus Rex.
 I have raised my family never to shirk away from reality, and this
 has  been a  traumatic experience  for us  all. We  may seek  punitive
 damages.
 Yours,
 
 Sylvia Foster
 
 -------------------
 
 1102 Forest Drive
 Carson City, NV
 General Genetics Corporation
 14000 Michigan Way
 Research Triangle Park, NJ
 
 Dear Sir or Madam:
 
 I am writing on behalf of my  wife and myself to tell you about an
 application of your "Slumber-Rite" active-deforming beds which you may
 not yet be aware of.
 When we bought the bed, Adele and I were on such bad terms that we
 even discussed at the same time who  would get custody of it. Sex was,
 frankly, the  only thing keeping us  together at that time  (if you'll
 pardon the  crude pun),  and that  hadn't much life  left in  it. That
 night as  we glared at  each other  across the pillows,  wondering who
 would  draw  first,  your   bed  coughed  apologetically  through  its
 diagnostic vocoder, and asked us how  long things had been that bad. I
 started to snap, "None of your business!", but Adele -- who always had
 a way  with machines --  gave it an honest  answer. Soon we  were both
 talking with the bed, which proved to have a considerate and urbane...
 well, bedside manner.
 Well, the  rest is  history. We  sold the house  to take  a second
 honeymoon, and  gave the bed to  a pair of friends  whose relationship
 seemed headed for the rocks, and that set us wondering: could your bed
 be certified as  a bona fide marriage counselor? Come  to think of it,
 formal recognition might spoil the surprise value of its approach. Hey
 maybe you guys had more to do with this than we thought!
 
 Nuptially yours,
 
 George Miller
 
 -------------------
 
 "Bramleigh"
 Old Farm Road
 Pebblesworth
 Herts., G.B.
 General Genetics Corporation
 14000 Michigan Way
 Research Triangle Park, NJ
 
 Sirs:
 
 What with the recession forcing us  to close down the east wing of
 the old  homestead, and  my having  to lay  off the  groundskeeper, we
 considered  ourselves somewhat  fortunate  to acquire  your new  model
 "Genetigardener" on very reasonable terms, but there have been several
 slight problems that I think you ought to know about.
 Firstly, it has a most inconvenient allergy to tea. What's the use
 of having a gardner that doubles as a manservant if the wretched thing
 throws up all  over the serving tray every afternoon?  First time this
 happened was  when we were entertaining  the Buffington-Joneses. Can't
 tell you how embarrassing it was...
 Secondly, it's  quite obvious that  the thing was educated  in the
 colonies, since it can't tell the difference between game and poultry.
 Discovered this after  I found the best grouse being  pecked to pieces
 in the chicken  coop where the blasted thing had  herded them. And why
 should it keep  asking me where the swimming pool  is? Elizabeth and I
 haven't touched  the waters since a  spot of paddling at  Blackpool in
 '69!
 Talking of  the mem-sah'b, this  brings me to the  most perplexing
 problem. A few weeks ago, she started spending an inordinate amount of
 time  in the  gardner's shed  teaching  it how  to behave  in the  Old
 Country. Then, one day, both she and  the thing were gone! I can't get
 a word out of the butler and the maid about the whole affair. What the
 deuce d'you suppose is going on?
 
 Yours faithfully,
 
 Major Harrington Dexter-Smythe (ret'd)
 
 -------------------
 
 General Genetics Corporation INTEROFFICE MEMORANDUM
 
 To:     All Operations Staff
 From:   Director, Security
 
 Last night Research  had an accident in the  bio-electronic lab: a
 prototype intelligent television was fed several 1950's 'B' movies and
 got  the  idea  to  break  out.  Unfortunately  it  contains  the  new
 controlled mutation genes, and there  may be problems with recognizing
 it. Please  look out for an  object that resembles at  various times a
 gelatinous blob,  a giant fly  in a double-breasted suit,  Godzilla or
 the Smog Monster, or an Egyptian mummy.
 Since it also saw both editions  of "The Thing", all personnel are
 to report to Medical for a full check-up after clocking-on.
 
 -------------------
 
 -Peter Scott  (PJS%[email protected])
 
 <>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>X<>
 
 Unlikely Partners
 "A  very rare  form of  lycanthropy is  mutation into  a
 wolf.  This  should  not,  however,  be  confused  with  the
 legendary lore of werewolves. A wolfling, as commonly called
 by mystics,  this lycanthrope  is a product  of fusion  of a
 werewolf  and  a wolf  by  a  group  of mad  alchemists  and
 wizards. Three quarters  wolf blood, this animal  is a blood
 thirsty, vicious killer that by  bite can repopulate its own
 kind. A sort of venomous substance will, on contact with its
 victim, begin  the incredible transformation of  man to near
 wolf. This ferocious, large creature  has been know to bring
 beasts as large  as bears to the ground  with sheer strength
 alone.  Being  an  intelligent  creature,  a  wolfling  will
 selectively attack and kill only those it can not convert to
 its own species..."
 -Ilyan, alchemist to King Dillas of Gledon, "A Discourse
 on Alchemy, Magic and the Consequences of Their Use",
 pages 181-182.
 
 "It has come to my attention that in centuries past more
 myth  has  been  developed  around the  prospect  of  a  man
 becoming a wolf than of  the actual strength of the Fretheod
 Empire. Being  a historian,  I feel  that I  do not  need to
 exaggerate  the facts,  as often  done  by Bards,  and as  a
 scientist, I  feel I  can understand the  facts that  lie in
 this terrible affliction.
 "Let me begin  by saying that there is  no such creature
 as a  werewolf. A transformation  of a human (or  any other)
 body  to  creature  such   as  that  is  simply  impossible,
 particularly  two times  in one  night. A  wolfling, on  the
 other hand is a diseased man that over a long period of time
 becomes a wolf.
 "My personal research and experimentation has shown that
 such a transition is possible, though not for all creatures,
 to experience the mutation  specified above. Let me reprint,
 for your information  an exerpt from the  journal of perhaps
 the first man to come across the condition described:
 
 "...I can  no longer  discern between  what is  real and
 what is not.  My dreams have become primitive  in nature and
 bloodthirsty in content. I feel myself slowly going mad.
 "The potion I created weeks ago to cure the madness dogs
 carry works, but  it also adjusts the  organisms that imbibe
 it to that of a dog. Already the animals that I experimented
 on died  of the severe  changes to their  metabolisms. Their
 fate did  not become  mine. Though cured  of one  disease, I
 carry the  other. My  skin is becoming  grey and  covered by
 thicker hair. I noticed that my teeth are much sharper and I
 am growing fangs. Yesterday I  woke up to blood, carnage and
 a  partially gnawed  animal in  my house.  The blood  on the
 floor was also on my hands and face.
 "To these  ends, I am  leaving my  home, to live  out my
 life in the woods as far from human life as possible. I feel
 that if I do  not find a cure soon, I  may become the father
 of a new 'human' race..."
 
 "This was  written by  Aran Leigh,  an alchemist  in the
 city of Kevra.
 "There  is  no longer  evidence  of  the potion  or  its
 ingredients that are  mentioned, but it is  quite clear that
 the disease  is in  no way  supernatural or  a wrath  of the
 Gods. It is simply an  infection that can be transmited from
 one individul  to another, such  as a cold. While  not being
 one  hundred per  cent  certain of  the  precise methods  of
 transfer, I feel  I can unerringly say that  by the transfer
 of  body fluids,  such  as when  bitten, would  successfully
 infect others.
 "The disease itself can take  anywhere from a few months
 to a full  year to come to completion. In  its progress, the
 only  species  known  not  to  die  before  the  process  is
 completed, is  humans. Perhaps it is  because of stubborness
 to live or that the original  potion was designed to work on
 humans only,  but all  other animals for  which a  record of
 this disease exists, died very quickly. Humans infected most
 often go  mad from the  striking changes they go  through in
 the progrees of the mutation..."
 -Bistra, head chronicler, city of Shakin, "The Realities
 of Myths", pages 33-37.
 
 Rien  jumped  off  his  horse  near  a  squeaky  old  cart  labled
 'Salamagundi Stew'.  Its owner was busy  with a sailor, making  a sale
 and took little notice of Rien, who in his turn became fascinated with
 a monkey sitting atop the stew cart.  He carefully put out his hand in
 front of  the animal,  allowing it  to examine  his riding  glove. The
 monkey pulled at his fingers and uttered a loud scream.
 "Looks like Skeebo  doesn't like the animal that gave  up its hide
 for that glove."
 "Skeebo?" Rien looked up at the preprietor, puzzled.
 "The monkey! I'm Simon Salamagundi. What can I do for you?"
 "Stew?"
 "Ah!" Simon  exclaimed. "Regular, sweet and  sun-sweet. Which will
 it be?"
 Rien looked  at the three kettles,  as a sailor approached  at the
 side. "A sweet stew, Simon!" the man exclaimed.
 With an adroit move  Simon scooped up a bowl and  handed it to the
 sailor, not once  changing his focus of attention. The  sailor paid to
 Skeebo and left.
 "Regular," Rien said. "Seems to be the least traveled of the lot."
 "Least traveled because it's so regular," Simon smiled, picking up
 a bowl.
 Skeebo screamed  as Rien was  violently pushed aside by  a running
 girl.  Simon stretched  out  the bowl  of stew  as  Rien regained  his
 balance. "On the  house," he said, seeing Rien reaching  for his pouch
 with coins. "She's got it," he  pointed to the girl moving through the
 crowd. "Just take the stew and forget her."
 "Watch my horse," Rien growled, his crystal eyes fading to grey.
 "I wouldn't if  I were you..." Simon called after  him, but Rien's
 heart was  already set on  his action. He  chased the girl  across the
 docks and into  a maze of alleys.  She did not seem aware  of him, but
 this did not mean his guard could be let down.
 Rien drew  his long dagger on  the run, following the  girl into a
 less than respectible neighborhood. What  did Simon mean 'forget about
 her'? The answer was just around the corner.
 Making  the  turn,  Rien  spotted three  well  armed  cut  throats
 blocking his advance to the girl.  She dangled his purse in a teasing,
 you-won't-get-it manner and Rien reached for his sword.
 "This isn't  worth it," he  thought aloud, realizing his  sword is
 was still strapped on his horse. "Damn fool!"
 "Ain't worth  it's right,"  one of  the cut  throats uttered  in a
 drunken voice. "No challange at all!" and threw his sword to Rien.
 "Still ain't no  challange!" the second thug  roared. His laughter
 ended in a cry of pain as the 'borrowed' sword cut deep into his side.
 The third rogue charged Rien in frenzied anger. His charge was cut
 short by the dagger. Rien took  his time letting the wounded man slide
 off the blade. He stared at the one who gave up his sword. "LEAVE" and
 the man charged past him like a bat out of hell.
 "Next time  pick friends who  are not  drunk," Rien turned  to the
 girl. "If there is a next  time." He slowly advanced towards the girl,
 who now backed herself into a wall.
 A few more steps and...
 A sharp pain spread through his  leg and Rien spun around, letting
 out an abrupt cry.  The grey in his eyes disolved  to his normal shade
 of crystal  blue. He grasped  his calf, coming  nose to muzzle  with a
 growling dog.  He swung  his dagger, losing  his balance,  but avoided
 being bit again by the dog. Rien  rolled and stood up, expecting to be
 attacked, but was surprised to see the animal lying on the ground with
 a crossbow bolt  in its side. Down the alley  a town guardsman lowered
 his weapon as  three people rushed past him. Two  were dressed in town
 guard uniforms, but the third was  elderly and dressed in lose fitting
 clothing.
 The man knelt over the dog  and produced a white sphere that begun
 to glow green after  a short chant. "This is the  animal," he stood up
 and looked at the guards. "Dispose of it. Burn it."
 One of the  guards pulled out a sack and  started wraping the dog,
 while the  other two  looked over  the alley.  "What happend  here?" a
 guard asked  Rien, who was diligently  searching the other end  of the
 alley for the girl. Both she and his money were gone.
 "I was ambushed while taking a shortcut."
 The guard nodded. "There's a reward  for the capture of those two,
 you know."
 Rien shrugged. "I wasn't aware of  that. There were three of them.
 This is the last man's sword."
 The guard took the weapon and looked it over. Not finding anything
 distinct in it, he passed it to one of the other guards. "Burn the dog
 and find a physician who'll treat them," he instructed.
 "What's with the dog?" Rien asked.
 "It did not hurt you, did it?"  the guard asked and called the old
 man over.
 "No, no it didn't, but shooting it  and burning its body on such a
 suspicion does seem a bit extreme."
 "Burning a  creature diseased with  lycanthropy is no  crime," the
 old man  said to Rien  as he  approached. "A lycanthrope's  bite makes
 others into lycanthropes."
 "You mean like those stories  about men turning into werewolfs and
 howling at the moon?"
 "That IS a myth. Being a wolfling is not."
 Rien made a mental note to check into this later and accepting the
 small reward, bid them farewell.
 He returned to the spot where he last saw the girl and scanned the
 area  again. She  could  have  left in  any  direction,  while he  was
 struggling with the dog. No chance of finding her now.
 As Rien  was preparing to leave,  he heard a voice  behind him and
 spun about. The grey haired wizard was still standing in the alley.
 "The dog bit you." The old man's words were a statement.
 "Who are you?" Rien asked.
 "Taishent, the mage," the man bowed low.
 "Yes, the dog bit me. What's it to you?"
 "Why so hostile? You will need  my council if you are to survive,"
 the wizard said and again produced the white sphere. The glow about it
 was faint green. "You have the disease. You have only a few months."
 "All  this  wolfling-werewolf  talk  strikes  me  as  stories  for
 children, not a sickness."
 "When magic goes  bad, it becomes a curse,"  the wizard responded.
 "You do  believe in magic?"  he asked and  not waiting for  an answer,
 turned to leave.
 "Is there  a cure?" Rien stopped  the old man, not  quite ready to
 believe that  he would be  howling at the moon  a few months  down the
 road, but wanting to know more.
 "If there was, I  would have given it to that  poor animal. I wish
 you luck." He walked out of the alley and disppeared down the street.
 
 An hour later  Rien found Simon's stew cart and  his horse. Skeebo
 was jumping  up and down  in the saddle,  with the realization  that a
 hard enough landing would make the horse stir.
 The surprised Simon looked at a smiling Rien.
 "Regular,  please," Rien  said and  handed a  coin to  Skeebo. The
 monkey jumped off the horse and handed the pay to Simon.
 "Good show,"  the vendor laughed.  "Not many get their  money back
 from her."
 "Many aren't persistant," Rien grinned. He may not have gotten HIS
 money back, but was working on it. "What's her deal anyway?"
 "I'm sure  you know  every town has  some problems,"  Simon began.
 "Dargon just  happens to have a  monopoly on them. Kera,  the girl who
 took your purse, is  the legal ward of Lord Liriss,  who is rumored to
 be the man behind  a lot of the crime in this town.  I'd watch out for
 his men. Bad things happen to those who cross him, I hear."
 "Why doesn't the  local Duke do anything about  the problem?" Rien
 shifted, sipping the spicy stew.
 "What can he do? Lord Dargon is rumored to have enough problems of
 his own.  Liriss is  but a  small problem compared  to what  is really
 going on in this town."
 "And what is really going on?" inquired Rien.
 Simon  looked   about  uncomfortably.   "They  say  there   is  an
 assassination plot against  Lord Dargon. There've been  some deaths in
 nobility  recently.  Slowly, but  surely,  the  assassins are  getting
 closer to him."
 "Sounds like the town guard has its hands very full..." Rien said.
 "It's  only a  rumor,"  Simon replied.  "What's  your interest  in
 Dargon anyway? What do you do?"
 Now it was  Rien's turn to look about uncomfortably.  "Just out to
 have an adventuresome vacation... You wouldn't  be able to point me to
 a local alchemist, would you?"
 
 Terell was a tall, young man,  dressed very commonly, so as not to
 reveal  his life's  calling. Besides,  no one  wore the  "traditional"
 starscape cap and robe in real life anyway - no reason unless you were
 a showman or  a fraud. He looked about absent  mindedly as Rien pushed
 open the door to the alchemy shop. "What can I do for you, young man?"
 Rien stopped dead in his  tracks. 'Young man'? Right. "I'm looking
 for Terell, the alchemist...this is his shop?"
 "You found 'im!"
 This caused Rien to pause even longer. "You?" he finally asked.
 "Been m'self for up over sixty years."
 Sixty? This man  looks well preserved for someone  his age, though
 he does act it.
 "So what can I do for you?" the man presisted.
 "I am interested in what you can tell me about lycanthropes," Rien
 said, leaning on the counter across from Terell.
 The alchemist smiled. "Heard o'  that crazy dog Taishent captured,
 have you? Well,  there isn't much I can tell  you about that. Taishent
 is said  to o've  been casting  his cards  for the  town when  he came
 across the dog.  No one knows where  it came from or how  it got 'ere,
 but town guard's always pleased to shoot some'ing."
 "I meant the  disease," Rien explained his need,  grateful for the
 alchemist's loose mouth. "Do you know anyhing about the curse?"
 Terell paced his  lab for a minute. "The disease  can be passed in
 many ways. Most common is bite. The infected either die or mutate into
 those beasts - wolflings. Takes different amount of time for different
 people, but it  get's 'em all. I never  heard of a cure for  it, but I
 just know I  could find one if  I'd have a sample!  Ah, they sh'uldn't
 've killed that dog!"
 Rien thought for a moment. If  there was the slightest chance of a
 cure, he  was in desprate need  of finding it, but  telling someone of
 the disease was just about as intellignet as running naked through the
 middle of  the market  place, screaming  about having  leprosy. Terell
 looked young for  his supposed age. Thirty at the  most and that means
 that his potions  really do work. Sometimes risks have  to be taken in
 life...
 "What if I  can get you a subject?" Rien  asked the alchemist, who
 was now reorganizing the vials on his counter.
 Startled,  the man  dropped one  of the  glass vessels.  "And just
 where d'you propose to come up with one?" he asked, ignoring the smoky
 vapor raising up toward the ceiling.
 "Let's just say," Rien smiled, "that  I can locate one. What would
 be in it for me?"
 I'll pay you!" Terell exclaimed, his old-like tones dissipating.
 "I'll be rich and you'll be famous..." Rien said slowly.
 "Precisely!"
 "No," Rien  shook his head. "I  don't want money. The  deal is you
 cure the subject. Then you can have your fame."
 "All right,"  Terell agreed.  "I'll make a  profit either  way and
 you'll have a cure for who ever you want to aid. Yes?"
 "Yes," Rien nodded.
 "So where is my subject?"
 Rien could not believe that this old man could act so young. "I am
 he," he answered, almost expecting death.
 Terell made a step back in shock.
 "I won't bite you, honest," Rien promised.
 
 Kera snuck up on a fat man leaning over a table with trinkets. The
 items appeared cheap,  but since he intended to buy  something, he had
 some funds. Besides, anyone that fat  had to have money to support his
 belly.
 Kera looked  over the man's  shoulder at the assortment  of glass,
 clay and  metal statuettes of  people and  animals. Her left  hand ran
 across the belt  pouch on the man's right hip,  while her right picked
 up a  crystal clear unicorn. Neither  the fat man nor  the booth owner
 noticed  what she  did. Kera  smiled,  pocketing both  her prizes  and
 allowed a young  child to squeeze in before her.  Her "profit" for the
 day was already  well above average and thinking that  Liriss would be
 pleased, she turned and left the market place.
 Kera had been working for Liriss ever since she could remember. He
 picked her up off  the streets as an orphan and  trained her to steal.
 Liriss provided everything she needed, even luxuries at times. Perhaps
 there was  a better  life somewhere,  but it certainly  was not  as an
 orphan  in  the  Fifth  Quarter.   She  even  had  Liriss'  thugs  for
 protection, when she needed them...like the day before.
 Oh, Liriss was mad to learn what happend! Not only were his guards
 drunk, but they also got trashed by a single man and later arrested by
 the town guard. Still, that last  purse she lifted would more than pay
 for new hirelings;  especially in the Fifth Quarter.  It's the stupid,
 careless people who provide the most profit.
 Kera  turned into  an  alley, winding  up face  to  face with  the
 stupid, careless person she just  been thinking about. Stupid and over
 confident. He hadn't camped out here all day, did he?
 "Just your luck," Rien smiled, grabbing her arm.
 "You're hurting me!" Kera screamed trying to wriggle free.
 Rien's grip did not lessen. "You're hurting yourself."
 Kera stopped trying  to pull free. "Bastard! I'll  have you killed
 for this!"
 "I don't  think so," Rien smiled  again. "You used the  same alley
 twice too often. Your body guards will not be able to help you today."
 Stealthily Kera pulled out her  stolen unicorn figurine and jabbed
 it into  Rien's hand, the  one that was  holding her, horn  first. The
 glass snapped and  with a curse Rien withdrew his  hand. Kera took off
 down the alley. For the first time in her life, she wished she had not
 neglected carrying weapons  on her person. She  desperately hoped that
 Rien had  lied about  Liriss' guards  not being able  to help  her. It
 wouldn't look good to lose two sets of men on consecutive days.
 Right about  then she went  sprawling to  the ground over  the out
 stretched arm of one of the downed  guards. He lay on a pile of trash,
 with his companion not far away.
 Kera picked  herself up, surprised  that Rien was already  next to
 her.  His eyes  were a  strange shade  of grey,  producing a  hypnotic
 effect,  as he  thrust her  into the  wall. 'Weren't  they blue?'  she
 thought, bending over from pain. The  jolt gave her the right state of
 mind to shrug  the useless thoughts off. With the  last of her breath,
 Kera screamed "Help, rape!"
 She saw a  red streak before her and Rien's  hand clamped over her
 mouth. She turned her head, spitting  blood and smearing it across her
 right cheek. A finger of her  assailant passed across her lips and she
 bit into it.
 Rien looked startled. Kera could have slipped away, but the change
 of color in his eyes kept her watching. His hand slipped off her face.
 "I could have killed you..."
 Kera shrunk further into the wall behind her.
 "The dog  that bit me..." Rien  continued, "you saw it  happen. It
 was a  lycanthrope. I have the  disease and now that  you've tasted my
 blood, so do you.  I tell you this becase you have  the right to know,
 nothing else."
 Kera looked  at the broken statuette  still in her hand.  The horn
 and part  of the  head were missing.  She let the  figure fall  to the
 ground, where  it shattered completely.  "I have no reason  to believe
 you!" Her defiant eyes challanged Rien.
 "No," he said,  "but then I have  no reason to lie to  you. I only
 want my money back."
 "You're not  getting it back,  so you  might as well  kill me...or
 whatever it is you do!"
 "I am not going to hurt you if you cooperate."
 "I don't have your money. Liriss has it."
 "Then I'll just take what you've collected today," Rien said.
 "The hell you will!"
 Rien held up the pouch containing her days work. "I already have."
 "You bastard!" she tried to grab it, but missed.
 Without saying anything, Rien turned to leave.
 "Hey!" Kera screamed.
 "I have a name."
 After a moment of hesitation, Kera  caught up to Rien. "May I know
 what it is?" she asked, wiping the blood off her face.
 "Rien Keegan," he answered without hesitation.
 "Mine's Kera."
 Rien did not respond.
 "If  I don't  bring  Liriss  what I  stole  today,  he'll have  me
 punished," Kera said. "I am not going to entertain his troops again!"
 "Should have thought  of that earlier. Just be sure  and tell them
 what disease you have so they can decide if they want it."
 "Damn you! Please? It's too late to start over."
 Rien shrugged. "That's your problem."
 Kera  clenched  Rien's arm.  "If  I  have  some disease,  you  are
 responsible for it!"
 "You'll try every approach until you find one that works, eh?"
 She smiled. "Did this one work?"
 Rien shrugged. "Let me think about it."
 "If I don't have anything to show for my day's work, I'm not going
 back," Kera stated.
 "Then don't," Rien answered. "Why do work like that at all?"
 "It's the  only thing I  know how to  do well," Kera  answered. "I
 would have run away long ago if I'd be assured of a better future."
 "How old are you?"
 "Twenty. And you?"
 "Even if  Liriss had some  wardship over  you before, you  are old
 enough to leave now," Rien ignorred the counter question.
 "Where would I go?" Kera asked. "The only life I know is what most
 would consider to  be the wrong sid of the  fence. Besides, he'll have
 me hunted down and killed."
 "How can you live in that environment," Rien wondered aloud.
 "The punishment may be great, but so are the rewards."
 "Oh? The guards get to entertain you if they screw up their job?"
 Kera threw a disapproving glance at Rien. "Sometimes," she finally
 said, casting down her eyes. "There are other rewards too."
 "Like what? Doing the boss?"
 Kera stopped dead in her tracks. "That's damn unfair!"
 Rien stopped to look at her. "But it's true, isn't it?"
 "Yes," Kera said after a moment and burst into tears.
 In spite  of himself Rien  gave her a hug  and held her  until she
 calmed  down. This  was certainly  not a  good way  to earn  someone's
 trust, but perhaps there could be  a second chance... "I am sorry," he
 finally said. "That was unfair."
 "I'll go  with you where ever  you're going," Kera said.  "I don't
 want to stay here any longer."
 That was a sudden change. "I am planning to remain in Dargon until
 I find a cure for the disease," Rien stated flatly.
 "It's real..." Kera whispered. "You're a warrior, right?"
 "You could say that."
 "If  you're willing  to  take the  risk, I'm  willing  to be  your
 apprentice." Kera looked hopeful.
 Rien needed an  apprentice about as much as a  cow needs a saddle.
 When he was apprenticed in his arts,  it was expected that he would do
 housework as much as learn what  he was there for. Granted, the master
 may  have wanted  some payment  for the  services rendered  and skills
 taught, but for some reason that just didn't sit well with Rien. If he
 was going to agree, the deal would have to be changed...a little.
 Of  course there  was  a second  problem as  well.  The risk  Kera
 mentioned. Naturally Liriss  would not be happy to  lose an investment
 that just  the day before  brought in such a  yield. Taking on  two or
 three of his drunk guards was no  problem, but a dozen sober men could
 be a  bit more risky.  "I'll bite them,"  Rien smirked to  himself and
 unnoticeably chuckled.
 "Are you sure that's what you want?" Rien finally asked.
 "Yes," Kera answered  without hesitation. "I think it  was you who
 made the point that my life could be better."
 "Then you have a mentor. Come, it's beginning to get dark."
 "What about my things?" Kera stopped him.
 "Is there anything irreplaceable?" Rien  asked, trying not to seem
 impatient, but wanting to leave the alley.
 Kera thought for a moment, then  shrugged. "I suppose not. I tried
 not to grow too attached to my things for some reason. What about your
 money?"
 "If Liriss has any intelligence at all," Rien said, "he would have
 hid or invested that  some place by now. Don't worry  about it. I have
 enough funds to draw on."
 "I'm really sorry  about that," Kera continued. "I'll  try to make
 that up to you."
 "That will be a lot of pockets to pick," Rien smiled. "Come."
 -Max Khaytsus  <KHAYTSUS%[email protected]>
 
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