Arch-Bishop Cirius started at the ringing of the bell, which signalled the arrival of a pilgrim with a problem to throw at him. It was always a problem. Nobody ever came to say the hymns with him... Or say happy birthday. He couldn’t even remember what his birthday was, though his bones screamed “old” every time he tried to get up too fast, or tried anything faster than a quick shuffle. Getting his cane, he pushed himself upright, pride cutting short the agonized groan before it passed his lips. Walking to the door, he prepped himself, and then shuffled out into the hallway outside his bedroom, which, due to the wisdom of the ancestors before him, had been built relatively closely to the speaking chamber. Sighting an initiate walking down the hallway towards him, he straightened and lengthened his gait, trying less to look like he was relying on his cane, but more that he had it for fashion. The novice passed, seeing an old man in his prime, and the Arch-Bishop slumped back into his shuffling gait. Reaching the door to the audience chamber, he took a deep breath, and pushed open the door, his hand sliding along the smooth spot on the rock where he had pushed open the door in the same way over so, so many years. Moving into the chamber, he gently closed the door behind him, and slumped into the seat designed for him, just as the door opened.
The temple had been designed simply for that purpose – the visitor to the temple taking enough time, at an average walk, to reach the audience chamber after the arch-bishop had entered the other side. Cirius remembered a time when he used to enter the audience chamber well before the pilgrim, or pilgrims arrived. He could even, if he quickened his pace, walk around the shortened hallway the guards use to expel troublemakers, to the other side of the audience chamber. Once, in his reckless and heady youth, he had – running around to meet the dwarf personally when they opened the door. He had nearly fainted from shock.
Cirius was jolted from his reverie when the gentle scraping of a chair on the other side of the grating announced the pilgrim. He waited a second, and then pulled a lever which opened a small aperture, so that a painting of the Arch-Bishop was revealed to the person on the other side. The painting showed only Cirius’s face, locked in an expression of casual interest, and wrapped around a cylinder, to make it appear more lifelike. When seen through the window and gauze from the other side, it could easily be mistaken for Cirius himself.
Hearing nothing from the other side, Cirius leaned forward to the speaking tube.
“Something troubles you, my son?”
A quiet shuffling could be heard at the other end, followed by almost a half-minute of silence.
“Um...”
The silence continued. Cirius settled in further to his seat and pulled out his nail file.
MEANWHILE
“Wow”, Motev exclaimed, examining the walls as they walked further into the temple complex. “These walls are actually really well engraved. I could almost call that one a masterful work!”
Adil chuckled. “I didn’t know you were such a lover of art.”
Motev turned to regard him dryly. “I’ve crept into enough major fortresses to know what’s good and what’s not.” Turning to regard them, he said “The places with the great art usually have the noble’s kids.”
Adil stopped his chuckles, his reprimand clear. Motev was still an expert, and a very callous individual. The fact that he appreciated art just made him more dwarven. Turning, he asked. “So, where are all of these guards? We haven’t passed a patrol for a while.” Turen stopped. “I hadn’t thought of that. We must be getting close.”
“Must be? Didn’t Motev have the map?”
“Why would he take the map into the place we were about to raid?”
“Then why didn’t you memorise it?”
“Hey, You’re the one with the good memory!”
“All right! Let me think!”
Adil looked around, trying to get his bearings.
“Ok. We passed to hallways close to each other twenty seconds ago. The first one was it.”
Turen Sighed. “Ok, then what”.
“By the map, his bedroom should be close; we’ll drag him in there, dose him, question him, and get out quiet like. No quick and messy this time”
All three nodded on cue, and they turned around back to the hallway.
Cirius stopped playing cup-and-ball, and again looked at the parchment next to him. For trivial entertainment (trans. lulz), he had decided to write down a list of words that the obviously shy dwarf on the other side had uttered since the meeting began. So far the list was contained to: Um; I’m; Hi; I’m; my name; Problem; Um. Cirius sighed deeply. This dwarf had some problems. Meanwhile, the door behind him quietly opened, to accommodate three dwarves – Motev with a gag-rope held stretched between two tightly clenched fists. Turen moved to the side and started imitating an old man’s harsh coughing as the pair quickly converged on Cirius. Soon, the old man (dwarf?) was bound and slung easily between the two. A knock on the door sounded, and the whole party tensed as a voice called out. “Are you right, Your excellency?” Turen moved towards the chair, and, imitating the harsher voice of an elder, he called out “I’m fine”.
“I could get you a glass of water if you wish”
“I’m in an audience. I don’t need anything just yet”
“Are you sure?”
“Yes!”
At this, Turen paused, and hearing no reply at the other end prompted him to add an extra “Thank you”.
“Oh, okay. I’ll see you later, your Excellency”.
Turen waited for a few long seconds, then ran to the door, opened it, and checked both ways down the corridor before gesturing wildly to the two and keeping the door open so that they could hustle out the door with the bound Arch-Bishop, and run down the hallway. Turen closed the door, walked over to the chair, and pulled aside the cylinder so that Tanesh could see his face. Leaning forward, he tapped on the speaking tube a few times, before saying. “Hey, I’m standing in for the old man. Hopefully the guards will just hear a mumbled conversation, and we can get out of here without much fuss, eh?”
His reply – “Turen... Hi”.
Adil and Motev moved quickly into the bedroom, and closed the door behind them. Placing the old man in the chair, Adil reconsidered, and placed a cushion on the chair before replacing him, and untying most of his bonds, re-tying him to the chair. Leaning down close to Cirius’s ear, Adil whispered. “You either speak quietly, or you don’t speak. Understood?” At the Arch-Bishop’s nod, they removed the gag.
“A cushion. I never thought of that. Much more comfortable”
Motev paused in puzzlement.
“You don’t seem very fazed”
“I’m just trying to ascertain why you’d kidnap the leader of the most powerful religious orders in this area”
Adil cut in: “Wait... Most powerful?”
Motev turned to regard him. “You didn’t look at the artwork? Hmm... Well, this entire temple is dedicated to Armok”
Adil stiffened, and stared at Motev.
“Shit” He said over the rising chuckles of the Arch-Bishop.
Looking over at the Arch-Bishop, Adil pulled out his vial and popped the cork.
“Turen and I are going to have a very long and serious discussion. Here, old man, drink up. It seems we don’t have as much time as I believed.”
Turen, meanwhile, was sitting and having a very one-sided conversation with Tanesh. A knock at the door suddenly made him pause. Turning around, he called. “Who is it?”
“Your water”
“I said I didn’t want any”
“Now now, If I don’t look after your health, who would?” said the young human as he opened the door. Seeing a young, scarred and very armed dwarf sitting there gave him sudden pause. Dropping the glass, he squeaked “Guards”.
Tanesh, hearing the conversation, and the door open, stood up. Once the word “Guards” came through the tube, he sighed, stepped to the side twice, and, bracing his feet, slammed his palms into the wall, breaking the stone and knocking that section of the wall in. Pulling free his sword and hand-axe, he strode into the audience chamber, just as four guards rushed in around the boy from the other side.
Outside, the guards still engaged in flirty conversation with Siira suddenly stiffened as a resounding crash came from inside the temple. The guards gave a quick apology and moved to run towards the temple, like many of the guards and, the now surprisingly well armed monks, were doing at that time. Siira stopped the leader with a hand on his arm, and, in her most bright and innocent voice, said. “Don’t worry, It’s just my friends. Everything is fine.”
The guards, however, stiffened at the word “friends”, and, turning, brought their weapons to bear on the pair. Servu turned, regarding the elf with open shock. “Honestly... sometimes you just...”
Letting out an angry groan, Servu stomped his foot, before letting out an ear-piercing whistle. Suddenly the growling in the back of the caravan, which had, until then been a background noise, became louder threefold, and a huge dark shape leapt from the wagon, pivoted, and leapt right over the infuriated dwarf. The “dog”, easily as high as the dwarf’s ribcage at the shoulder, looked up at the guards, teeth bared, and as Siira unsheathed her two wrist-knives, and Servu pulled out his mace, the guards were too busy wondering how so much rage could be fit into just one, baleful eye.