A horse came charging up, and as Erec looked up he could have sworn he saw Alistair, dismounting and running over. He wondered if her were seeing things. Alistair? How could she possibly be here?
She knelt down beside Erec, and held him in her arms. Erec could feel her love for him as she sobbed, the tears dripping down onto his face.
She held his face in her palms, leaned down and kissed his forehead.
“My Lord,” she said, sadly.
As Erec felt the world grow lighter, whiter, the last thing he saw was Alistair, looking down at him with kind, compassionate eyes. He saw her lift her palms, and saw an intense blue light radiate from them. It was the most intense light he had ever seen, and he watched as she closed her eyes and laid her palms on his wound.
As she did, he felt his entire body filling with light and warmth. He felt his wounds healing within him, felt himself being brought back from the dead.
All the soldiers looked over at Alistair as the intense light grew brighter and brighter, encapsulating them both in a magic orb of light.
Erec, feeling stronger by the second, looked up into Alistair’s mystical eyes and got lost in them. As he felt himself drifting into a healing sleep, he had enough energy for one final thought was:
Who is she ?
Gwendolyn opened her eyes slowly, her head throbbing from the welt on her temple where she had been hit by the thieves. She looked around, and realized she was sitting on the forest floor, bound to a tree with coarse ropes. She wiggled, but they would not give. Sitting across from her, perhaps ten feet away, was Steffen, bound to a tree as well.
She heard muted laughter coming from somewhere, and she turned and looked over to see the group of a dozen thieves huddled over a small bonfire in the forest, roasting some sort of small animal, perhaps a rabbit. They shoveled food into their mouths and chewed with their mouths open, chasing it with sacks of wine, and laughing. They laughed too loud, elbowing each other, and were clearly all vulgar individuals.
“My lady,” Steffen whispered urgently. “Are you okay?”
She nodded slowly back, getting her bearings.
“I’m sorry I let you down,” he said, looking down to the floor in shame.
“You fought bravely,” she said. “We were outnumbered.”
“I have a plan,” he said. “Play along with it.”
Suddenly, the thieves turned their way.
“What have we here?” one of them called out. “The Queen and the midget are awake! Good morning, sleeping beauty!”
A chorus of crude laughter erupted, and the group jumped to its feet and began strutting their way. Gwen could see the daggers sitting openly in their belts, while some held daggers to their teeth, picking out bits of food and spitting them on the forest floor.
One of them walked up to her and kicked Gwen hard in the calf, while another kicked Steffen in his ribs.
“You too can talk all you want,” one of them said, using the crude accent of the Southern Ring. “But you’re not going anywhere. You see, will we finish this meal, and when we are done with our wine, we are going to take pleasure in torturing each of you. But first we are going to have a long night of pleasure with you, my lady,” one of them said, stepping back and taking off his hat in an exaggerated bow, to the laughter of them all.
“Me first,” said one.
“No you don’t,” said another. “You had the last one first. This one is mine.”
The two of them shoved each other, then cursing, wrestling each other to the floor; finally, one punched the other, knocking him out, and stood. He was a huge, crude brute, with a big belly and a bald head, and he licked his lips as he looked over at Gwendolyn.
“I’m going to enjoy you,” he said to her.
“You can have your way with us,” Steffen suddenly called out. “But that would be the biggest mistake of your lives.”
They all turned to him, then broke out in laughter.
“And why is that, little man?” one of them asked. “Are you going to do something about it?”
“It is not what I’m going to do,” Steffen said. “It is what you are going to lose.”
The thieves looked at each other with stupid, crude faces, lips hanging open, confused.
“Lose?” one asked.
“You see,” Steffen said, “Gwendolyn here is not just a princess. She’s a Queen. Of the entire Western Kingdom of the Ring. She has enough riches at her disposal to make all of you kings and queens yourselves, for the rest of your lives.”
The thieves all looked at each other, then turned and looked at Gwendolyn with a new respect. They seemed unsure.
“And how is she going to produce this gold?” one asked. “She going to shake it from the trees?”
They all started laughing.
Steffen cleared his throat, undeterred.
“We are on our way to the Tower of Refuge,” Steffen said. “I am sure you know of it. It is not far from here. The Queen’s attendants will be waiting to greet us. They have chests of gold there. More than enough to buy her ransom and more. That is, if she is untouched. If we arrive there hurt in any way, or if we never arrive at all, I assure you, there will be nothing for you. You choose. Bring us to the Tower and become rich men—or harm us and remain in this forest as thieves and paupers for the rest of your days.”
The thieves all looked to each other with a new expression. At first it was one of uncertainty; but then it morphed to greed.
“He’s lying,” one said.
“What if he’s not?” another answered. “With if the little dwarf is right?”
“I can use that kind of gold,” said one.
“So can I,” said another.
“Forget the gold,” yelled the big man. “I don’t need more gold. What I want is to have my way with her. She’s the prettiest piece I’ve seen in a long time. Maybe ever.”
He began walking towards Gwendolyn, removing his belt—when another one of the thieves, unshaven with long hair, suddenly pulled a dagger and snuck up behind him and held it to his throat.
“Don’t touch the girl,” he warned, as the bald man stood still for fear of the blade. “We’re getting that gold.”
The big man, deferring to this one’s authority, swallowed hard, and took a step back.
The leader with the long hair turned and pointed the tip of his dagger to Steffen.
“For your sake, your words best be true. If not, I will cut off your jewels myself, and feed you both to the bears.”
* * *
Gwendolyn and Steffen were marched side-by-side, wrists bound with rope, led by the group of a dozen thieves, shoved as they stumbled forward, approaching the Tower of Refuge. They all emerged from the woods and entered the clearing surrounding the tower. The tower was immaculate, ancient and mysterious, built of a shining black stone. It was narrow, perhaps only a hundred feet in diameter, and it soared hundreds of feet high into the sky, a magical structure in the middle of nowhere.
Gwen felt the energy radiating off of it. This was clearly a sacred place.
The tower was built with but a single door, an arched, black door with no markings and no handle.
The thieves all prodded them into the clearing and closer to the door, until finally the leader stopped them, about twenty yards away.
“We’re not going any closer,” he said to Steffen, “until your people come out now—with the gold. You got one minute. Otherwise, we kill her. And you.”
Steffen swallowed hard, then looked to Gwendolyn. She nodded back, understanding.
“I will summon my attendants,” she said to the thieves.
Gwen recalled what Argon had told her, about how to summon the Keepers of the Tower. She leaned back and called out.
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