The Freelance Hunters came to the village of Corn Hall looking for a unicorn. Rumors of the illusive beast had flooded every tavern in Elanterra, it seemed, and all three of them were hunting the beast for a different reason.
“I’ve heard unicorns have razor-sharp hooves, and their horns can rend the strongest armor!” Joachim said, brandishing his fearsome spear, Incisor. “They will battle anyone unworthy of them to the death!”
“Just don’t go busting its forehead lance too much. It’s worth flash loot on the slack,” said Bingo, their tracker.
“You two are not going to kill that noble and beautiful creature!” Glory the Mage declared. “Unicorns are among the rarest creatures on the great island. If I can study one, or better yet, capture it alive, I’ll be the toast of the Academy!”
“I’ve heard only a fair maiden can capture one. What are our chances, Glory?” Joachim asked. She thumped him on the back of the leg with her staff in reply.
When they finally reached the town, they found a festival atmosphere, complete with pantomime unicorns, booths selling every kind of food with corn in it imaginable, and all manner of charms and tokens for sale, each one ‘guaranteed’ to help catch the beast. Joachim gleefully consumed a prodigious amount of the local whiskey, and the others hired a local fellow by the name of Finnegan to act as guide. They left the fair well alone, and headed out into the fields the next morning.
At first, signs of the beast were slim. Finnegan knew the area well, but he was a farmer, not a tracker, and it was difficult for Bingo to pick up much of anything in the rows, until they found the track. The print was deep, and not more than two hours old. The hunt was on, although Bingo frowned as he started towards the forest.
“What is it?” Glory asked.
“It’s probably nothing, but something’s got me fifteen puzzled.”
“Is something wrong with the track?”
“No, that’s got to be our target, but I’ll be hanged if that hoof weren’t shoed.”
“Interesting,” Glory said. They kept walking. Joachim was the only one to notice, out of the corner of his eye, their guide stumble and catch himself nervously.
They followed the trail for two days, always frustratingly close to the creature. The unicorn was tireless, and seemed to slip away every time they got close. They caught a glimpse of it when they stopped to rest that night, just a shadow against the stars. It was largest equine any of them had ever seen, and the horn poked straight from the top of its head. They renewed their efforts. Bingo set some traps and breaks in the forest. The unicorn cannily avoided them, but before long, they had it cornered in a little glade in the woods, sheltered by rises on all sides.
The Freelance Hunters descended into the valley. The beast was there, drinking from a brook that trickled between two boulders. Late afternoon sunlight drifted through the high branches, filling the glade with majesty and awe. And then the creature looked up and stared at them. The hunters stared back. Neither moved for a long time.
“Glory,” Joachim said at last. “There isn’t any magic here, right? This isn’t an illusion or anything?”
“Nope.”
“And you all see it too, it’s not just me?”
“Nope.”
“So it’s really…” e trailed off.
“A huge white horse,” Glory began
“With an ear of corn fixed to his head,” Bingo finished. All three of them turned to look at their guide. He grinned sheepishly.
“The village had a bumper crop, last year,” Finnegan said, as though this explained everything.
“Go on,” Joachim said, adjusting the grip on his spear.
“We-we-we sold so much corn, the price went through the floor! Corn’s just about the only thing we grow out here, and with corn being almost worthless, the village needed money!” The farmer stammered, backing into a rock wall. “The elder came up with a plan, though. When he was a boy, the Corn Hall was threatened by a manticore that came down from the mountains. Monster slayers came from all over to slay it. So…”
“So you invented another monster.” Glory finished.
“The elder thought the whole thing up! Bronco down there is the fastest horse for miles around. We didn’t think anyone would be able to catch him!” The Freelance Hunters returned to the village of Corn Hall that evening. They did not stop at the fair or playhouse. They made a brief visit to the Elder’s house, so that they could show him the prized horn they had recovered, and what could be done with it.
The story of that visit is occasionally recounted by a few of the more risqué troubadours in the area. After that, there were no more monster sightings in Corn Hall for many, many years.
Tales of the Freelance Hunters, Season One: The Least Unicorn
November 26, 2023
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Everyday Drabbles #1040: Cocoon
November 20, 2023
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She felt the change come upon her and cocooned herself, hiding in a safe and hidden spot hanging from a hard to reach branch.
Once she was secure and the imperative could no longer be ignored, she let herself go.
She dreamed of what she might become. She didn’t know if she would be beautiful, or graceful, or terrible or powerful. She didn’t know if she would have jewel-scaled wings or poisonous dust. She didn’t know if she would have barbs or fangs or fuzzy antenna. She didn’t know what the change would be.
So she decided she’d take everything.
The Mountain’s Shadow is now available from Amazon and Smashwords!
Tales of the Freelance Hunters: Season One – Blocked!
November 19, 2023
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Hello Readers!
For the next few months, I’ll be showcasing stories from my Fantasy Adventure Series, “The Freelance Hunters,” in this space on Sundays. The Freelance Hunters are three adventurers making a living taking the jobs honest heroes won’t touch, and smart mercenaries avoid. The first collection of their exploits, Spells and Delivery, will be coming out in print and ebook in Spring of 2024.
Blocked! was originally published in Bards and Sages Quarterly in April, 2013.
Blocked!
Joachim Verne strained under the weight of the heavy stone block. His massive six-foot-six frame tensed, his boots slid back along the dusty floor and he grunted as the grind of stone on stone reverberated through the passage. It was the first time in millennia that it had done so. The block was as big as he was, but it was a bit closer to chalked spot in the center of the room.
“Any progress on the translations, Magus?” He took a break and wiped the sweat from his brow. He eyed the petite woman up and down. She was just over half his height, which made her average for her people. Glory looked up from the corner where she huddled with her manuscripts under a hovering ball of dim light.
“A bit. This ancient writing is a bit of a bugbear, but we were right about this chamber being a test. Although I still say that the mechanisms have worn down, the basic function should still be intact, if Bingo’s assessment was correct.”
“It is!” Called a high, piping voice from out of sight down the tunnels. Their lookout and trap-finder was watching the stairs. As far as they could tell, the Goblin tribe squatting closer to the surface hadn’t followed them down this far. They regarded the lower portions of the temple as either cursed or sacred. It hadn’t been clear which, but for the moment they were past pursuit. Getting back to the surface might prove to be a problem, however.
“So what can you tell me?” Joachim asked, taking a breath. Hidden below the earth, the chamber had resisted the flow of time, but the intricate carvings meant nothing to the warrior. All he knew was that a set of giant stone blocks rested on the floor and that he could move them. He left the rest to his cohorts.
“I think I’ve figured out the puzzle. This is a test of strength, and I think that word is ‘cunning,’ but it was some kind of religious festival for a god unknown in the modern era. This could be huge. We could crack the mystery of all the ancient ruins that dot Elanterra! We could be heroes! I could get tenure!” Her normally calm, restrained tones practically quivered with excitement. Wizards. The former sellsword set his shoulder back against the block and began again. It must have been expertly cut to slide as it did against the stone floor.
“If that’s the case,” he grunted. “Why am I doing the pushing?”
She giggled. “Because you’re the big strong human, right? There’s still some lingering magic here. I hesitate to move the blocks by will. That, I suspect, would be cheating.”
“Of course.” He gave the stone block another shove.
“It says here that those worthy would be brought into the sanctum of the holy idol, the ideal form, the great one! We might even find an inscribed name! Do you realize what this means?”
“Not really, but I hope it’s not poison gas.” He gave a final push, and there was the faint click of a pressure plate. He tensed, waiting to be ‘brought into the presence of god’ through violent means, but the chug of ancient counterweights merely opened a hidden door in the far wall. Glory, excited as a schoolgirl, dashed through the opening. Choking dust filled the room, but it was harmless. Joachim waited for it to clear until he heard his partner scream.
“Glory!” Joachim called after her and dived into the inner chamber. He found her sitting on the floor, breathing and uninjured, but looking up in horror at the altar at the center of the room.
“This? This is the pure form the ancients idolized? I can’t publish with this! I’ll be a laughingstock!” Joachim looked up at the idol and laughed. Upon the altar was the perfect form of a stone cube.
The Mountain’s Shadow is now available from Amazon and Smashwords!
Everyday Drabbles #1039: Wings
November 17, 2023
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They guided him to what they believed to be his destiny by placing walls in his path. Rather than leading him by the hand, they slowly and surely bricked up every other road he could take.
Better, they said, to ready him for what was to come in life than to let him get tangled in distractions. He should have his feet firmly on the ground, and keep his head out of the clouds.
But he knew that the path they had set him on didn’t lead to his destination.
Instead of walking the labyrinth, he grew wings and flew.
Come see me this weekend at Lil-Con in Lockport, NY!
Everyday Drabbles #1038: Christmas Decorations
November 14, 2023
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Every year, the Christmas displays went up earlier and earlier. He didn’t mind, exactly, but he worried that folks were entering the holidays with the wrong spirit.
The town had had an influx of new residents, many with more diverse backgrounds, and there had been a push by some residents to keep the town’s ‘traditional values.’ The decorations felt less like a celebration and more of a declaration of intent.
Retailers were pushing things forward too, bringing out plastic candy canes and strings of lights earlier every year.
Was it so much to ask to leave space for Independence Day?
The Mountain’s Shadow is now available from Amazon and Smashwords!
Everyday Drabbles #1037: The Squirrel
November 8, 2023
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The squirrel sat on the branch and looked out at the falling snow. In a few weeks, he would curl up in the bole of a tree and sink into warm hibernation for a few months, emerging into a new spring.
But for now, he had to sit and freeze. His mind remembered the dim echo of sitting in front of a roaring fire as snow swirled outside a thickly insulated window.
His new claws, although adept at climbing and leaping, had forgotten the trick of making things.
It was one of the few times he regretted the witch’s bargain.
The Mountain’s Shadow is now available from Amazon and Smashwords!
The Resurrectionist
November 6, 2023
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“I need some fast gold, and I heard you were the man to talk to.”
The stranger in the tavern looked up at me. There was a weighing look in his eyes. “Sign the contract, and you get your gold,” he said.
“And then?”
“At the time of your death, which may be many years from now, I’ll take possession of the body.”
“But how will you find it?” I asked.
He grinned wolfishly. “Don’t worry about that. I have my ways.”
I hesitated, but what choice did I have? I took the pen and donated my body to necromancy.
The Mountain’s Shadow is now available from Amazon and Smashwords!
Everyday Drabbles #1035: Endless Summer
November 5, 2023
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That summer seemed to last forever, packed with golden afternoons, soft breezes, and gentle rain that fell overnight as the town slept.
August came and went, with weather as perfect as a postcard. When school resumed, they had to run the air conditioners all through September. The leaves fell in 80-degree heat, leaving the birds unsure weather to migrate or not. Children trick-or-treated without jackets for the first time in living memory.
People commented on the fine weather, but didn’t start to worry until November arrived without snow in the forecast.
We didn’t find the weather control machine until December.
The Mountain’s Shadow is now available from Amazon and Smashwords!
Everyday Drabbles #1034: Celestials
November 4, 2023
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As a child, her mother told her stories of the Celestials. To keep her entertained as they pulled what they could from the polluted earth, she told them of the magic people and their sky cities.
When her mother lay dying, sick and poisoned, she told the stories back to her.
She’d never believed her mother’s stories. But she followed the strange light in the sky to a strange silver craft and the beautiful people who emerged.
They looked as human as herself.
She sneaked aboard the ship, vowing to discover the truth and lay her mother’s soul to rest.
The Mountain’s Shadow is now available from Amazon and Smashwords!
Everyday Drabbles #1033: Bucket List
November 3, 2023
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After he came home from the doctor’s office, he made the list.
He carefully examined each potential entry, weighing their pros and cons, and considering what was necessary and what was superfluous. Then he saved it and sent it out.
He expected to be nervous, but completing the list felt freeing, like he’d let go of something he’d been holding onto for a long time. The next day, he received an email from the reviews editor. His article was approved. He had always wanted to be published in that fishing magazine, and they had agreed to publish his bucket list.
The Mountain’s Shadow is now available from Amazon and Smashwords!
