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Theolus' Company
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Denali
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1. Theolus' Company
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She jingled the few coins left in the little pouch that Saul had given her, and stared at his back as he rode a few paces in front of her. There were soldiers surrounding them, and she wanted to talk to him about this journey, but did not want to be overheard and could hardly think of what to say. He was angry, and she was quiet, and the Brindian commander rode beside them and did not say anything, either.

They were paid prisoners on this adventure, and it did not take any great means of observation to know that Saul hated the commander, and hated the restraint. Having been a captive before, and an unpaid one, Malorik did not mind so much. There was more freedom now, and she had her blades, and that was enough to suit her for now. When they reached Lahkis she could decide for herself what she should do, if she should continue to help the Brindians or take the box and her contract fee, as she'd planned all along, but it was her choice.

Everything now was her choice, and it was a slightly frightening thought.

When dawn broke and the sky was nearly light, they stopped and made camp to the side of the Desert Road. Saul had brought his own supplies, but everything, along with her horse, had been provided to her. The commander motioned for them to stay near the center of camp, and Mal glanced at Saul before digging through her packs and finding her own tent. She did not feel in danger, sleeping by herself, but she was nonetheless relieved when he set his tent beside hers, if only because he was the only person here who was not a stranger.

The soldiers set about making camp and the morning meal, and Mal sat outside her tent and watched them move about. They were much more organized than the caravan had been, and far more than the mercenaries, and that was reassuring and troublesome at once. They would be harder to escape from, if that was the decision she chose to make, but there were weeks until they reached Lahkis, and she did not have to worry about that now. For now, Saul was climbing out of his tent and moving to stand beside her, and Mal glanced up at him.

"This will not be so bad, Saul."

Date: Feb 12, 2005 on 06:01 p.m.
Solenis
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2. Re:Theolus' Company
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Saul finished with the tent and crawled out. Malorik was sitting outside her own tent and watching the rest of camp, and when he stood up she looked up at him.

"This will not be so bad, Saul," she said placatingly.

Saul did not look down at her. "You think the Brindian is just going to let us go when he's done with us? Your cargo could be halfway to Kalendeta by now, or on its way back to Guildsport in someone else's hands. What do you think the good commander will do if we are no longer of use to him?"

Date: Feb 12, 2005 on 08:14 p.m.
Denali
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3. Re:Theolus' Company
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Malorik sighed, but did not look at him again. "He will know nothing of the box or its whereabouts until we reach Lahkis, or perhaps longer after that. And he will keep us 'til then." She let her gaze wander around the camp, and her voice grew quieter. "Lahkis is a large enough holding, and we are only two people. We have horses and swords and the Indall is nearby, as are the mountains. He cannot keep us if we do not want to be kept."
Date: Feb 12, 2005 on 08:27 p.m.
Solenis
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4. Re:Theolus' Company
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Saul said nothing to that. If she was truthfully considering escape, it would do them no good to discuss it, and if she had some ulterior motive he did not want to compromise himself so easily.

"Were you telling the truth about the woman hiring you as a guide?" he asked instead and sat down next to her.

Date: Feb 12, 2005 on 08:41 p.m.
Solenis
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5. Re:Theolus' Company
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His question surprised her, and she turned her attention back to him. "Yes," she said, then sighed again and leaned her elbows on her knees. "And what good it did me. Had I listened to him, I would have been in Lahkis weeks ago, with gold and a partner, but now I am here with neither."

Her voice was bitter at the end, and she fell silent. It was not something she could move past yet, her guilt at ignoring Reno, at bringing this trouble upon them, and her lips drew down at the corners. He said nothing, and finally she looked to him. "Where would you be, if not for this?"

Date: Feb 12, 2005 on 09:05 p.m.
Solenis
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6. Re:Theolus' Company
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Saul considered the question. "If you had been the dead Suna, I would be on my way to Chon at the foot of the Sleeping Mountains with Vidon." There they would have purchased supplies necessary to thread the chain of passes and reach the far side. Verol had no family to notify, but he would have gone with Vidon as far as his mother's house to stand with him while she was told of her older son's death and then to Laro's wife and told her himself. Now it would be Vidon and not Saul who brought that news, and that shamed him. There were duties that a leader should not delegate.

He scowled. "It is useless to think these things when they cannot be changed."

Date: Feb 13, 2005 on 08:14 a.m.
Solenis
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7. Re:Theolus' Company
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He was right, that it did no good to dwell on the past, but that did not make it any easier to forget it. She had nothing but the past now, with thoughts of home and Reno and the life they had made here, and the future held none of these things. It was better to be angry about her losses than to focus on that uncertain future, and her expression darkened.

"It is one thing to give such fine advice, and another to follow it," she said coldly, "and easier still for someone who has nothing to mourn."

Date: Feb 13, 2005 on 09:02 a.m.
Solenis
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8. Re:Theolus' Company
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Saul looked at her increduously. "I lost seven men on that journey," he said as quietly as his anger would permit, "and all of them good warriors."
Date: Feb 13, 2005 on 09:36 a.m.
Denali
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9. Re:Theolus' Company
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"And I lost the only family I had," she said, with just as much anger. "I do not think you would counsel your man Vidon not to dwell on the death of his brother, so do not counsel me to do the same for the loss of my cousin. And when this is over, at least you are a man and a mercenary, with something to rely upon. I, as you have told me before, have no worth as a courier any longer, and nothing to bargain with."
Date: Feb 13, 2005 on 09:47 a.m.
Solenis
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10. Re:Theolus' Company
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"I do not counsel you at all, Malorik. You are a woman and this is not my fault," he replied stonily. "You should be a wife someplace, not out here like a man trying to make his way. It is not my fault you are not equipped like one. Even if we don't find your package, you won't starve. Even the Brindians have uses for women now and then."
Date: Feb 13, 2005 on 10:36 a.m.
Denali
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11. Re:Theolus' Company
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She should have known that was the answer she would get. It was the same answer that any clansman would have given her, the same rebuke that her mother had told her before she left the Kaolin, the same thought that any man would have when looking at a woman like her, and her eyes narrowed.

"I should have expected a man to say such a thing," she said, with such terrible disdain. "I left so that I would not be sold in marriage, and you, who claims to hate slavery, have made it very obvious that you do not think so harshly of it as you would once have me believe."

She stood then, with her hands resting on the hilts of her blades, and looked down at him flatly. "And perhaps the Brindians will have a better use for you if I am not here at all."

Date: Feb 13, 2005 on 10:49 a.m.
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12. Re:Theolus' Company
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Saul was relieved when she got up and left. It meant he didn't have to look at her anymore and it saved him the trouble of replying. He had heard of women who did not wish to be married, even a few who had run away because of it, but if they were not killed they came home far quieter than when they had left. They were not punished, merely puzzled over, and they were harder to find husbands for. He did not understand what slavery had to do with marriage. In the mountains it was the woman's family who bought the man with her dowry, a man to take care of the woman and provide for her. It was a responsibility not to be taken lightly, and any woman who shunned the protection and safety a husband provided suffered for her foolishness.

Malorik had some skill with her swords, but she would never be a man, so what did it matter? She did not like men but she wanted to act like one. If she survived she would be too old to be married in a few years, and with no husband and no children she would die unmourned and alone. It seemed sad and pointless, and Saul shook his head to clear it and stood to go collect his meal.

Date: Feb 13, 2005 on 11:36 a.m.
Denali
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13. Re:Theolus' Company
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Malorik avoided Saul for several days after that, riding behind him and eating alone in her tent. She wanted to think, without distraction or his opinion in any of her thoughts, and she spent those days deep in quiet contemplation.

What she should do after all of this was something she had to face, whether she wanted to or not. It was frightening and exhilarating, all at once, knowing that she was an independent woman now. The gold in Reno's accounts had been willed over to her at the time of his death, and when combined with her own accounts, made her surprisingly wealthy.

There would be no worry about money, and without Reno, or ties of any kind, she was free to do whatever she desired, and go wherever she chose. She was not ready to settle down yet, to buy a home and be bound to a place; the urge to wander made her dream of the many places she could travel. Her homeland was not an option, but there were other continents, and cities she had only heard about.

Such freedom cooled her anger toward Saul. He was only a man, born in this land and content to stay here, and she shouldn't hate him for not understanding her. Many people felt that way-- even Reno had expressed a desire to find a wife and a home-- but she did not, and that was alright, too. By the fourth day she even smiled at him, as she stepped out of her tent to sit beside him for the evening meal, and though it was small there was no anger or malice to it.

"Hello," she said simply, and nodded to him in greeting.

Date: Feb 13, 2005 on 09:28 p.m.
Solenis
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14. Re:Theolus' Company
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Saul settled into the pace the Brindian set and used the time as wisely as he could, trying to decide what he would do when they reached Lahkis.

If they could recover the box and return with it then it was possible that all would be well. Saul didn't think that was very likely Unless one of his men made off with it first, the caravan leader would have it open, by force if necessary. If Malorik was right and it was something valuable, it would be sold or hidden, and they would have to follow it. If Alaran Cale was lucky enough to find it before the rest of his crew and conceal it from them then maybe it would all go to a single buyer. If not it might be split up several ways, unless it was something that could not be divided and maintain its value. There were far too many possibilities for Saul to think that it would be as easy as walking up to the caravan leader and demanding the box.

He knew a few people in Lahkis, though whether they would be there and able or willing to help him make an escape if it came to that he had no way of telling. He finally admitted to himself that he could make no plans until they reached Lahkis and settled instead on observing the Brindians.

They were disciplined to the point of servitude, and Saul was both repelled and impressed by their obedient efficiency. Theolus ordered and it was done, and the men rushed to follow his directives as if their lives were dependent on it. They were like slaves who did not know they were slaves. The company made good time because of it, and Saul made sure he did what he could to improve their speed. The faster they reached Lahkis the less time the box had to travel out of their reach.

He had retrieved his evening meal and sat eating it outside his tent several evenings out of guildsport when the woman sat down next to him with her own plate. He looked at her briefly when she sat down and then back at the camp around them.

"Hello," she said peaceably enough.

He looked at her sideways and nodded back. She had been quiet and left him alone since their last conversation, and now it appeared that quiet time was over. She did not ask him anything, though, and when he had finished his meal and washed and returned the plate she was still sitting outside her tent. He started to crawl into his own and then stopped and sat down as well.

"Do you know what is in the box?"

Date: Feb 14, 2005 on 11:57 a.m.
Denali
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15. Re:Theolus' Company
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They finished their meal and she was certain he was going to leave without speaking to her, but after a moment he sat down again outside of his tent and she looked at him expectantly.

"Do you know what is in the box?"

Malorik shook her head. "No. It is part of the contract that I do not ask and do not look. I never know what it is I transport." She remembered her conversation with Reno, and shaking the box; now she wished she'd gone against rules and looked, but that might have caused even more trouble than this. She didn't know how that could be possible, but somehow it would have been, and she frowned. "You didn't know either? I thought you did."

Date: Feb 14, 2005 on 12:27 p.m.
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16. Re:Theolus' Company
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"No. I was hired to bring the box back to Lahkis, not look in it," he replied defensively, and the continued with his questions. "You said that the Sunas hired you to guide them across the desert. Did they ever ask you about the box?"
Date: Feb 15, 2005 on 01:17 p.m.
Denali
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17. Re:Theolus' Company
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She was tired of not having the answers to his questions, but there was nothing to be done about that.

"No. I don't think Devona knew I had the box; it was delivered to me before we took them on, and was well hidden in our gear. And if she did know, somehow, she never mentioned it." Her tone was just as defensive. "I did not even know they were Suna, 'else I would not have taken them. I do not have the answers to your questions about this."

Date: Feb 15, 2005 on 01:25 p.m.
Solenis
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18. Re:Theolus' Company
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"You think a Suna noble and her slave just happened to ask you to guide them across the Vesari?" Saul asked skeptically. "Maybe. At least she is dead now and the Brindians won't have another reason to keep us after we find the box."
Date: Feb 15, 2005 on 02:54 p.m.
Denali
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19. Re:Theolus' Company
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His tone indicated that he thought it highly unlikely that Devona had not known about the box, and Malorik shrugged, but was finding it difficult to be too concerned about it. Despite the coincidences, there was something about the entire situation that just didn't make sense to her, and not in the way that he thought. Devona had wanted to get Raspeth safely to Lahkis, not endanger her, and if she'd known about the packages that both Malorik and the caravan carried she would not have bought on with either of them. That, and the bounty had been for Raspeth, not for the box, and the other noblewoman had said nothing of it. No, this was a different matter entirely.

She did not tell him that Raspeth was alive, because she did not know if the girl had survived the rest of the journey. Chances were the girl was perfectly alright, but Mal did not want to endanger her, even by telling Saul, and so said nothing.

"I suppose you are right," was all she would answer.

Date: Feb 15, 2005 on 03:19 p.m.
Theolus' Company
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