Personal Diary, Vabok Oltaratham, 11 Galena, 296Outside duties have kept me busy-- as both chief miner and chief medical dwarf, I have little time to pursue my research. The health of this community is my first concern, and it's a community made up of individuals. I have to be careful not to miss the trees for the forest, to turn a well-worn phrase on its head.
The new hospital is almost complete. Two more traction beds and a handful of doors. It will serve as a daycare while my research continues-- there is much danger for children in Lanterndark while Zulban remains confined. We've been planning a little party for the Comtessa and her beau for the opening.
I've been digging a well and cistern as well. I fear the stream water may be responsible for the infections that have plagued various patients of mine. Not to mention the incredible inconvenience of having to travel so far for a drink, or to clean blood off my feet. I am planning a lovely well directly off the central staircase. I've asked Etur to design a floodgate for it. Oh how floodgates delight me!
Personal Diary, Vabok Oltaratham, 15 Timber, 296I had a troubling dream Sandstone 21st. Aban stood at the foot of my bed, as dessicate as salted mule meat. She said not a word, but stood pointing a finger at me. I woke panting and parched, with a troubling vision in my mind-- slate, yes, and bloodstone, and emerald. The well would have to wait.
I worked in a daze for a month. On Timber 13th, I completed Erar Nosing. She will crown the cistern; she will control the water for all of Lanterndark.
Personal Diary, Vabok Oltaratham, 22 Sandstone, 297We've completed the second experiment. I hesitate to mention it. Something terrible has happened.
The Comtessa had promised me special test subjects, and I didn't know what to expect. It was a surprise. Giant eagles? Rhinoceros? I had no idea. They were already in the chamber. I dropped the bait (a guinea cock, in this case) and ran to the window to observe.
It was two goblins. One, dressed for arctic operations, with robe, cap, hood, trousers, gloves, sandals and socks; the other, completely nude, but still clutching the leather bag it with which it attempted to enter Lanterndark.
"Unlock the doors! Now!" I cried, over and over again. Oddom, who was assisting, looked confused, but complied.
Both goblins raced out of the test chambers, through the decontamination trench. The clothed one made it through first, and was captured in the fail safe cage trap. But I only made one trap.
The nude one seemed to have been washed by the trench of any dust-- but her corpse was found, fewer than 60 steps from where she escaped. Goblin steps, not elephant steps, which, while covering the same area, seem to occur much more rapidly.
No trace of dust remained on her, nor any wound. A trail of blood lay along her last four steps.
The clothed goblin is dead as well, collapsed in her cage. A thin precipitate of white dust has coated the decontamination trench.
* * *
Kol Itonvudthar was planting cave wheat in the garden. She looked like a stalk of cave wheat herself, pale and thin.
"Comtessa—" I began.
"Duchess."
"What?"
"The liason visited. You may be as pleased as I am to hear that Lanterndark is now a duchy." She smiled then, something soft and understated, and Vabok Oltaratham was reminded that it was love for her that held Lanterndark together.
"Congratulations are in order. But Comtessa-- Duchess--"
"Please, Mr. Oltaratham, feel free to address me however you please. Comtessa is fine. Kol would be fine too." Her eyes twinkled.
"Yes. Kol. Duchess. It's about the test subjects you sent."
"Oh, Uzol told me I should leave the loincloth on! I told him that you were a doctor. Now I'm so embarassed!" She looked terrified then, so penitent, a Duchess with dirty knees, apologizing to a stooped old man. Vabok found it hard to maintain his sense of righteous indignation.
"Naked or clothed, it doesn't matter. I mean, it does. Experimentation on unconsenting sentients is unethical."
"But, it was a goblin!"
"It was a she. Ngerxung was a she. So was Bosa. I didn't discover until it was too late. They're dead now."
"But, I don't understand..."
"I am sorry, Duchess. Kol. I understand that you meant no insult. But I need you to know that I can conduct no experiments with goblin subjects."
Kol dropped her eyes and dug her fingers in the mud. "I'm sorry, doctor. It won't happen again."
Vabok turned on his heel with as much indignation as he could muster. His shoes were falling apart. It was hard to be proud in rotting clothes, but he stepped as haughtily as he could to the door. His hand was on the handle when the Duchess spoke again.
"Do you know why they come here, Vabok? It's not for the riches. Look at what they wear-- they wouldn't know quality if it bit them in the nose.
"They come here for the children, Vabok. Their own are twisted.
They come here for our children."