Postby Felix » Tue Jun 10, 2008 9:08 pm
[font="Book Antiqua"][SIZE="5"]Chapter 2[/SIZE][/font]
[font="Book Antiqua"]…in which we learn about the chest, and a journey begins.[/font]
[font="Book Antiqua"][SIZE="6"]I[/SIZE][/font]t was often said in the village that the Chest had always been there since the beginning of time, and perhaps even before that. It was certainly there long before this story began. The chest was a legend, you see, the source of many myths and moontales. It sat like sentinel at one end of the village, high on a grassy knoll. There was a cobble path that wound its way up the knoll to where the chest rested comfortably in a bed of spongy grass. Layers of ivy had crept all over the chest, hundreds of years ago, so thick and tight that it could not be removed by even the strongest men. Because of the ivy, nobody could remember what the chest underneath even looked like anymore. The only part of the chest that remained untouched by the ivy was the unblinking eye that was the keyhole. It stared out over the knoll, day after day – perhaps wistfully, perhaps not – at the village and its inhabitants as they went about their day to day business.
It was often said that the Key had always been there since the beginning of time, and perhaps even before that. If what was often said about the Chest was true, then what was often said about the Key must also have been true, because a chest is not very useful without a key, and likewise a key is not very useful without a chest, so a reasonably intellectual man can conclude that they both must have come into existence at roughly the same point in time.
Tragically, however, or perhaps in league with fate (since both tragedy and fate tend to have a nasty habit of messing things up), the Key was separated from the Chest, sometime between the beginning of time and today, and the Key became the Lost Key, which is a fitting name since it is, indeed, lost. Many, many ambitious explorers and adventurers have searched for the Lost Key through the pages of history, but none have come close to finding it, for the Key remains safely tucked away in fate’s hands, and as a storyteller like myself knows very well, fate has another nasty habit, which is to pick the most ordinary and most unlikely candidates to fulfill its, well, fate.
Which reminds me why I’m here: to tell Tal’s tale. Let’s check in on him, shall we?
~^~
Tal was walking toward village’s south gate, which was usually kept locked because the southern lands were considered dangerous. Tal, who was not quite as brazen and unthinking as Elder had fictionally claimed, had gone home and packed some simple provisions into a satchel that was now slung over his shoulder. He paused near the base of the knoll and looked up at the Chest, which stared back at him earnestly as if to say please find the Key, Tal, so I can finally be opened.
Tal lowered his head, possibly out of respect but more likely because the sun was in his eyes, and turned to the gate, where a new character awaited him.
The man was a guard, some of the time at least. He is not quite important enough to be included in the main cast, but he is important enough to have a name, which puts him an arm, a leg, and maybe even a toe above the rest of the extra characters. His name was Raj-jad, and when you say it you slur the two j’s together so that it sounds more like Rajad.
Raj-jad folded his arms when Tal approached and said, in his thick accent, “Whet d’ yew whan’, Tal?” When he said Tal it sounded like Tahul. “Yew know yew’re nut s’pose t’ come tharough hare.”
“I know, Raj-jad,” Tal said, “But I have to get to the Neighbor village because someone there knows where the Lost Key is.”
Raj-jad scrutinized Tal thoughtfully. “Theh Los’ Key, eh? Theh woon fer theh Ches’?”
Tal nodded.
Raj-jad squinted one of his eyes, “Naybhor veelage, yew say?” Suddenly he slapped his knee with one of his big hands and burst into a great chuckling guffaw. “Ah, Tal yew lunk! Naybhor veelage is to th’ Neorth! Hwah hwah hwa hwah.” He continued to laugh, pointing towards the north gate.
Abashed, Tal muttered a quick thank you and slipped away from Raj-jad with as much dignity as he could muster. He walked back through the heart of the village and soon came to the north gate, which was never locked. It was while Tal was opening the gate that he encountered Julia for the second time that day.
She approached like a cat. “Where ya going, Tal?”
Tal pushed open the gate and walked through, barely glancing over his shoulder at Julia. “I’m going to the village of Neighbor to find the Lost Key.”
Julia assumed a more normal stance. She followed Tal through the gate and fell into stride beside him. “Oh, that sounds exciting.”
“Yep,” Tal agreed. They walked in silence for several minutes, then Tal said, “Julia, do you have business in Neighbor?”
Julia shrugged her shoulders slightly, “No, not really, but I thought I would tag along with you,” she paused and winked luxuriously at him, “if that’s okay with you.”
“Sure,” Tal said noncommittally.
They trekked for an hour or so, along paths and beside streams and over hills and through valleys, making idle conversation from time to time but mostly keeping to themselves. Tal had never had much of a reason to be interested in the girls of the village (he always considered them to be more trouble than they’re worth), but Julia, at least, seemed be showing some interest in Tal. It was a strange thing at that, because Tal, although handsome enough, had always been a little bit shy and a little bit awkward, and Julia was considered to be the prettiest girl in the village and was quite the envy of many of the single young men, and even of some of the older married men.
Nevertheless, Tal refused to be distracted from his quest, and so he kept his eyes eagerly peeled for any sign of Neighbor village. Any sign of Neighbor village came soon enough in the form of a grubby fence that peeked at them through the woods. Tal and Julia angled towards it, and shortly emerged near the gate into the village of Neighbor. The word gate, when applied to this particular gate, must be stretched very much indeed, or perhaps it must be shrunk, for the gate into Neighbor was a very small and ramshackle affair that could probably have been easily knocked over by the bugle of a giant Blowbug (quite galeful creatures, you see) or by the breath of a small giant.
There was no guard at the gate, so Tal pushed it open on its rickety hinges and he and Julia entered Neighbor, where information on the oh-so-elusive key was somewhere hiding away. They had not gone far into the village when something happened that could not have been reasonably expected, most especially in a village that bore the name of Neighbor.
~^~
But what that reasonably unexpected something is will have to wait until Chapter 3. Yes, I know, I’m very sorry, but you will just have to be patient. This is what’s known in many circles as “leaving the reader hanging,” and I must assure you that it is a very useful tool for making positive that my readers will continue to, well, read.
So, to summarize, in Chapter 2 we have been educated about the history and the mysterious nature of the Key and the Chest, and we have met a new character who is fairly unimportant (though just important enough to be named). We have also followed Tal while he begins his quest and through Julia’s actions we have learned some of her true feelings toward Tal. On top of that, we have been left hanging in a most abrupt fashion. However, it is because of this that I am fully convinced I will be seeing you in the next chapter. You may get a snack if you must, but don’t change the channel, because Chapter 3 will be coming up right after the break!