paizo.com Recent Blog Posts in James L. Sutterpaizo.com Recent Blog Posts in James L. Sutter2016-01-20T18:53:58Z2016-01-20T18:53:58ZFree Pathfinder Tales Audiobook!https://paizo.com/community/blog/v5748dyo5lie1?Free-Pathfinder-Tales-Audiobook2016-01-20T20:00:00Z<blockquote>
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<div class = "blurbCenter"><a href = "/pathfindertales"><img src = "//static4.paizo.com/image/content/Logos/PathfinderTales_360.jpeg"></a></div>
<h1 itemprop="headline">Free Pathfinder Tales Audiobook!</h1>
<p class="date">Wednesday, January 20, 2016</p>
<div itemprop="articleBody">
<div class="blurb180"><a href="http://audible.com/DeathsHeretic" target="_blank"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/product/catalog/PZO/PZO8506_180.jpeg"></a></div>
<p itemprop="description">Audible has just released the second wave of Pathfinder Tales novels, which means that every Pathfinder Tales novel published to date is <a href = "http://audible.com/pathfinder" target = "_blank">now available on Audible.com</a>! Yet there's even a bigger announcement that I've been waiting for months to spill, and now I finally can:</p>
<p><b><a href = "http://audible.com/DeathsHeretic" target = "_blank">For the next month, Paizo and Audible are giving away the audiobook of <em>Death's Heretic</em> for free!</a></b></p>
<p>Yeah, you read that right—there's no subscription or purchase required. Just follow the link above any time between now and February 16th to grab the audiobook version of <em>Death's Heretic</em>—the Pathfinder Tales novel that Barnes & Noble called the third-best fantasy release of 2011—for free.</p>
<p>Of course, it's our hope that once you listen to one Pathfinder novel on Audible, you'll want to check out the rest. But first and foremost, we're just excited to have all the Pathfinder Tales available, and from such a wide range of awesome narrators—it's been an exciting project that we've been working on for a very long time.</p>
<p>On a personal note, as the author of <em>Death's Heretic</em>, well... it's a rare privilege to be allowed to give the book out for free. So please take a listen, review it, and spread the word. After all, who doesn't need more free audiobooks in their life?</p>
<p>And if you're not already an audiobook addict like me—this is your chance to give it a try for free, and fill those boring parts of everyday life with sweet, sweet fantasy action! Listen in the car! On the bus! While exercising! While grocery shopping! While waiting at the altar for your fiancé to walk down the aisle! The possibilities are endless.</p>
<p>Go grab the <a href = "http://audible.com/DeathsHeretic" target = "_blank">free <em>Death's Heretic</em> audiobook</a>, then hit the comments below and let us know what you think!</a></p>
<p>James L. Sutter<br />
<i>Executive Editor</i></p>
</div>
</blockquote>
<!— tags: Pathfinder Tales, James L. Sutter —><p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales">Pathfinder Tales</a></p><blockquote>
<br />
<div class = "blurbCenter"><a href = "/pathfindertales"><img src = "//static4.paizo.com/image/content/Logos/PathfinderTales_360.jpeg"></a></div>
<h1 itemprop="headline">Free Pathfinder Tales Audiobook!</h1>
<p class="date">Wednesday, January 20, 2016</p>
<div itemprop="articleBody">
<div class="blurb180"><a href="http://audible.com/DeathsHeretic" target="_blank"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/product/catalog/PZO/PZO8506_180.jpeg"></a></div>
<p itemprop="description">Audible has just released the second wave of Pathfinder Tales novels, which means that every Pathfinder Tales novel published to date is <a href = "http://audible.com/pathfinder" target = "_blank">now available on Audible.com</a>! Yet there's even a bigger announcement that I've been waiting for months to spill, and now I finally can:</p>
<p><b><a href = "http://audible.com/DeathsHeretic" target = "_blank">For the next month, Paizo and Audible are giving away the audiobook of <em>Death's Heretic</em> for free!</a></b></p>
<p>Yeah, you read that right—there's no subscription or purchase required. Just follow the link above any time between now and February 16th to grab the audiobook version of <em>Death's Heretic</em>—the Pathfinder Tales novel that Barnes & Noble called the third-best fantasy release of 2011—for free.</p>
<p>Of course, it's our hope that once you listen to one Pathfinder novel on Audible, you'll want to check out the rest. But first and foremost, we're just excited to have all the Pathfinder Tales available, and from such a wide range of awesome narrators—it's been an exciting project that we've been working on for a very long time.</p>
<p>On a personal note, as the author of <em>Death's Heretic</em>, well... it's a rare privilege to be allowed to give the book out for free. So please take a listen, review it, and spread the word. After all, who doesn't need more free audiobooks in their life?</p>
<p>And if you're not already an audiobook addict like me—this is your chance to give it a try for free, and fill those boring parts of everyday life with sweet, sweet fantasy action! Listen in the car! On the bus! While exercising! While grocery shopping! While waiting at the altar for your fiancé to walk down the aisle! The possibilities are endless.</p>
<p>Go grab the <a href = "http://audible.com/DeathsHeretic" target = "_blank">free <em>Death's Heretic</em> audiobook</a>, then hit the comments below and let us know what you think!</a></p>
<p>James L. Sutter<br />
<i>Executive Editor</i></p>
</div>
</blockquote>
<!— tags: Pathfinder Tales, James L. Sutter —><p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales">Pathfinder Tales</a></p>2016-01-20T20:00:00ZBoar and Rabbithttps://paizo.com/community/blog/v5748dyo5lg4n?Boar-and-Rabbit2014-05-21T17:00:00Z<blockquote>
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<h1 itemprop="headline">Boar and Rabbit</h1>
<p class="date">by James L. Sutter</p>
<h2>Chapter Four: The Succession Sword</h2>
<div itemprop="articleBody">
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<p><span itemprop="description">Roshad stood speechless, unable to parse the words, and even less able to handle the melancholy smile.</span></p>
<p>"You're not wearing your veil," Bors noted.</p>
<p>The wound Roshad had been salving with action tore open anew. He wanted to slap Bors, to scream at him, to fall into the big man's arms and be comforted.</p>
<p><i>Stick to the plan</i>. Roshad reached back into the satchel on his back and pulled out the chain.</p>
<p>"Remember this?" He held it out, letting its links hang down. "This is the promise we made, Bors. Shared mind, shared heart. Always." He dropped the chain between them, letting it clatter to the floor. "Have you forgotten that?"</p>
<p>Bors was no longer smiling. "They were going to kill you, Roshad."</p>
<p>"So you did it for them?" Roshad felt the heat building in his face, the tears starting their slow treks down his cheeks. "Because that's what this is, Bors. If you cut a man in half, both halves die. Together, we're szerik. Apart, we're nothing. Did you think I would let you kill us both?"</p>
<p>"No."</p>
<p>"Well, too bad, you bastard, because I'm not—" Roshad paused. "What did you say?"</p>
<p>"No, I never thought you would stay away. That was the point."</p>
<p>Roshad grimaced. "But when you said it was over—I saw it in your eyes. You meant it."</p>
<p>"Of <i>course</i> I meant it! Anything less would have gotten you killed. If I wanted my father to believe it, I needed you to believe it, too. <i>I</i> had to believe it."</p>
<p>"Then how did you know I'd come back?"</p>
<p>Bors smiled, and now there was nothing sad in it. "Because I know you, Roshad. You're as stubborn as a half-trained camel. You'd never be able to let me go—not without at least getting the last word."</p>
<p>Then he opened his arms, and Roshad was in them, face pressed against the warm lacquered scales guarding the big man's chest. "I thought..." he whispered, and then his voice caught. "So why did you look so gods-damned <i>sad</i> when you saw me at the window?"</p>
<p>Bors's stubbled cheek pressed down against the top of Roshad's head. "Because I had to hurt you, Rabbit. That should never be easy."</p>
<p>"Damn straight."</p>
<p>They stood together then for a long moment, neither saying anything. At last Bors unwrapped his arms and pushed Roshad away. He reached for his true sword. "Come on. It'll be dawn soon."</p>
<p>Roshad felt hope bloom inside his chest. "We're leaving?"</p>
<p>"Of course we're leaving. Isn't that what I said? Now that my father's convinced I've given up, we can make our escape. You have your climbing spell?"</p>
<p>"Already cast."</p>
<p>Bors grinned. "That'll make it easier."</p>
<p>"But not easy enough."</p>
<p>Both men spun at the voice. Ulzhan stood in the room's doorway, bow drawn and arrow nocked. She wore her armor as well, along with a blue sash to complement Bors's red. With her heel, she kicked the door closed. "I thought this might happen, so I had a servant listen at your door."</p>
<div class="blurb360">
<a href="https://paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8500-RedemptionEngine-Ulzhan.jpg">
<img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8500-RedemptionEngine-Ulzhan_360.jpeg" border="0"></a>
<br />Ulzhan does what's best for the tribe. Always.</div>
<p>Roshad started to raise his hands, ready to burn the woman to cinders, but Bors slapped them down. "No!"</p>
<p>"He's right," Ulzhan said. "We have many things to discuss, but if you try to cast a spell, I'll shut your mouth with an arrow and render this conversation moot."</p>
<p>Roshad let his hands drop. "What conversation?"</p>
<p>Seemingly satisfied that Roshad was pacified, Ulzhan dismissed him, turning her attention to Bors. "My prince, I'm going to go ahead and assume you're less than thrilled about our marriage."</p>
<p>Bors's face was back to its normal, stone-hewn blankness. "It's nothing personal."</p>
<p>"I believe you. Maybe if you were differently inclined, I'd be offended, but no matter. The point is, I'm not your father. I can see your love and respect it. But this marriage has to happen, for the good of the tribe. So I'll make you this offer: marry me, and I'll turn a blind eye to your man." Her head tilted to indicate Roshad. "The tribe can never know—I won't let you undermine our authority or give other tribes a lever to use against us—but you can arrange whatever rendezvous you desire. You don't need to take my bed except to give us an heir."</p>
<p>"How generous," Roshad spat, but Bors touched his arm. The prince nodded his head to Ulzhan, almost a bow.</p>
<p>"You honor me, Ulzhan. Under other circumstances, I would have been honored to stand at your side. But I can't lead the tribe."</p>
<p>Ulzhan's gaze hardened. "I thought better of you, Bors. You're the heir. There's no alternative."</p>
<p>"Actually, I think there is." Bors gestured to the dagger in Roshad's belt. "May I?"</p>
<p>Ulzhan drew the fletching back to her cheek, the arrow's steel point in line with Roshad's eye. "No tricks." But the arrow bobbed a gesture for him to continue.</p>
<p>Bors reached down and drew the dagger. In one smooth move, he slit his palm, then held it out to Ulzhan.</p>
<p>Roshad gaped. "What are you doing?"</p>
<p>"What does it look like I'm doing?" Bors held the dagger out to Ulzhan, hilt-first. "I'm marrying her."</p>
<p>Ulzhan stared at him, and then a smile spread across her face. Roshad wouldn't have said it transformed her features, but as with Bors, a face that rarely smiled was all the brighter when it did. She lowered the bow. "I see."</p>
<p>"I don't!" Roshad moved between them. "After all this, you're going to marry her now, an hour before the damned wedding?"</p>
<p>"She's right, Roshad. Only the hakan's blood can challenge him for the throne. But as soon as I marry Ulzhan, my blood becomes hers. She can challenge him. And from what I've heard, she'd lead the tribe better than I would."</p>
<p>"A wise assessment, my prince." Ulzhan let the bowstring go slack, and with a final mistrustful glance at Roshad set it down against the wall. She took the proffered dagger and slit her own palm, then reached forward to clasp Bors's hand.</p>
<p>"Gods," Roshad whispered. "I can't believe you're marrying her."</p>
<p>"What's a marriage, Rabbit?" Bors squeezed Ulzhan's hand, then pulled it back and showed Roshad the wound in his palm. "In the lands beyond the sea, this is just another scar."</p>
<p>"The lands beyond the sea..." Roshad grinned. "I guess you're right."</p>
<p>Bors reached up and tugged loose the yellow armband, then carefully wiped both his blood and Ulzhan's on it. She let him tie it around her wrist, the embroidered horse showing through the orange-red stain.</p>
<p>"It's done, then." Roshad said.</p>
<p>"Not quite." Bors reached down and drew the wooden sword from his sash. He held it out on flat palms, offering it to Ulzhan. "The Succession Sword. Lead the tribe well for me, Ulzhan."</p>
<p>Ulzhan stared unbelieving at the sword, then slowly took it, holding it upright before her face. "No," she said. "Not for you. The Horse Throne won't survive an absentee hakan. Once I challenge your father, I'll rule in my own name."</p>
<p>"Of course." Bors smiled. "You're the son he always wanted. Once he gets over the shock, I hope he sees the gift I've given him. And the tribe."</p>
<p>Ulzhan's eyes gleamed. She lowered the sword. "You're a strange man, Bors Kaskyrbai. But you would have made a fine husband." Swiftly, she stepped forward and kissed him on the lips, then pulled back a few inches to meet his gaze. "Don't come back."</p>
<p>Bors laughed. "Don't worry."</p>
<p>And then Ulzhan was through the door and gone.</p>
<p>Bors turned to Roshad. "Shall we?"</p>
<p>A laugh exploded from Roshad. "I can't believe you're married!"</p>
<p>"I believe I already was." Bors stooped and picked up the chain, then held it out to Roshad. "Are we leaving or not?"</p>
<p>"Oh, we're leaving all right." Roshad shoved the chain into his satchel, then turned around and braced his hands on his legs. "Your steed, my prince."</p>
<p>"Not prince." Bors secured his helm and sword and settled his bulk piggyback on Roshad. "Not anymore."</p>
<p>Then they were out the window, moving quickly down the stone wall. At the ground, they broke apart and moved swiftly over to the curtain wall, keeping the palace between them and the wedding pavilion. Figuring the time for subterfuge was past, Roshad grabbed the top and levered himself up and over, Bors just behind him.</p>
<p>"My horse is hidden on the south side of the camp," he said.</p>
<p>"And are you sentimentally attached to her?" Bors asked.</p>
<p>"What? No, why—"</p>
<p>But Bors was already whistling. In response, a herd of a dozen horses appeared from behind a screen of tents, the stallion at its head leading them right up to Bors. He scratched the beast's nose.</p>
<p>"That's amazing," Roshad said.</p>
<p>"What did you think it meant to be a horse prince?" Bors pulled himself up onto the stallion's back. He held out a hand for Roshad, and the sorcerer let himself be pulled up, seating himself in front. Bors dug in his heels, and they began to ride quickly through the tents. In moments, they were through the last of them and out onto the open steppe. Behind them, the sun rose above the hills in earnest, casting their shadow long in front of them.</p>
<p>"We'll never outrun them riding double," Roshad noted.</p>
<p>"We won't have to," Bors said. "I don't think they'll be coming after us again."</p>
<p>"You think your father will allow it?"</p>
<p>Bors laughed. "Honestly, it's a better arrangement than he could have hoped. But even he can't step away from a challenge. Ulzhan has the Succession Sword, and by the time he realizes I'm gone, she'll have issued the challenge. If she's half as good as everyone says, she'll take him apart. By the time he can see straight again, she'll be firmly on the Horse Throne, and we'll be over the horizon."</p>
<p>Roshad leaned back against Bors's chest. "And then?"</p>
<p>Bors wrapped one armored arm around him, holding him close.</p>
<p>"And then we'll see what there is to see."
<p align="center"><b>Want more Bors and Roshad?</b></p>
<p align="center">Read the first three chapters of "Boar and Rabbit" <a href="http://paizo.com/paizo/blog/v5748dyo5lg30?Boar-and-Rabbit">here</a>, <a href="http://paizo.com/paizo/blog/v5748dyo5lg3o?Boar-and-Rabbit">here</a>, and <a href="http://paizo.com/paizo/blog/v5748dyo5lg42?Boar-and-Rabbit">here</a>, or check out their further adventures in the new novel <a href="http://paizo.com/products/btpy94r3?Pathfinder-Tales-The-Redemption-Engine"><i>The Redemption Engine</i></a>!</p>
<p align="Center"><b>Coming Next Week</b>: The return of Darvin and Fife in Lucien Soulban's "The Tide of Blood"!</p>
<p><i>James L. Sutter is the Managing Editor for Paizo Publishing and a co-creator of the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game. He is the author of the Pathfinder Tales novels Death's Heretic and The Redemption Engine, the former of which was #3 on Barnes & Noble's list of the Best Fantasy Releases of 2011 and a finalist for the Compton Crook Award for Best First Novel. He's written short stories for such publications as </i>Escape Pod, Apex Magazine, Beneath Ceaseless Skies<i>, and the #1 Amazon best-seller </i>Machine of Death<i>. His anthology </i>Before They Were Giants<i> pairs the first published short stories of science fiction luminaries with new interviews and writing advice from the authors themselves. In addition, he's published a wealth of gaming material for both Dungeons & Dragons and the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game, including such fan-favorite Pathfinder Campaign Setting books as </i>Distant Worlds<i> and </i>City of Strangers<i>. For more information, check out <a href="http://jameslsutter.com" target="_blank">jameslsutter.com</a> or follow him on Twitter at <a href="http://twitter.com/#!/jameslsutter" target="_blank">@jameslsutter</a>.</i></p>
<p>Illustration by Eric Belisle</p>
</div>
</blockquote>
<!— tags: Eric Belisle, James L. Sutter, Pathfinder Tales —><p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/artists/ericBelisle">Eric Belisle</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales">Pathfinder Tales</a></p><blockquote>
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<div class="blurbCenter"><a href="https://paizo.com/pathfindertales"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/Logos/PathfinderTales_360.jpeg" border="0"></a></div>
<h1 itemprop="headline">Boar and Rabbit</h1>
<p class="date">by James L. Sutter</p>
<h2>Chapter Four: The Succession Sword</h2>
<div itemprop="articleBody">
<! — Insert some text here —>
<p><span itemprop="description">Roshad stood speechless, unable to parse the words, and even less able to handle the melancholy smile.</span></p>
<p>"You're not wearing your veil," Bors noted.</p>
<p>The wound Roshad had been salving with action tore open anew. He wanted to slap Bors, to scream at him, to fall into the big man's arms and be comforted.</p>
<p><i>Stick to the plan</i>. Roshad reached back into the satchel on his back and pulled out the chain.</p>
<p>"Remember this?" He held it out, letting its links hang down. "This is the promise we made, Bors. Shared mind, shared heart. Always." He dropped the chain between them, letting it clatter to the floor. "Have you forgotten that?"</p>
<p>Bors was no longer smiling. "They were going to kill you, Roshad."</p>
<p>"So you did it for them?" Roshad felt the heat building in his face, the tears starting their slow treks down his cheeks. "Because that's what this is, Bors. If you cut a man in half, both halves die. Together, we're szerik. Apart, we're nothing. Did you think I would let you kill us both?"</p>
<p>"No."</p>
<p>"Well, too bad, you bastard, because I'm not—" Roshad paused. "What did you say?"</p>
<p>"No, I never thought you would stay away. That was the point."</p>
<p>Roshad grimaced. "But when you said it was over—I saw it in your eyes. You meant it."</p>
<p>"Of <i>course</i> I meant it! Anything less would have gotten you killed. If I wanted my father to believe it, I needed you to believe it, too. <i>I</i> had to believe it."</p>
<p>"Then how did you know I'd come back?"</p>
<p>Bors smiled, and now there was nothing sad in it. "Because I know you, Roshad. You're as stubborn as a half-trained camel. You'd never be able to let me go—not without at least getting the last word."</p>
<p>Then he opened his arms, and Roshad was in them, face pressed against the warm lacquered scales guarding the big man's chest. "I thought..." he whispered, and then his voice caught. "So why did you look so gods-damned <i>sad</i> when you saw me at the window?"</p>
<p>Bors's stubbled cheek pressed down against the top of Roshad's head. "Because I had to hurt you, Rabbit. That should never be easy."</p>
<p>"Damn straight."</p>
<p>They stood together then for a long moment, neither saying anything. At last Bors unwrapped his arms and pushed Roshad away. He reached for his true sword. "Come on. It'll be dawn soon."</p>
<p>Roshad felt hope bloom inside his chest. "We're leaving?"</p>
<p>"Of course we're leaving. Isn't that what I said? Now that my father's convinced I've given up, we can make our escape. You have your climbing spell?"</p>
<p>"Already cast."</p>
<p>Bors grinned. "That'll make it easier."</p>
<p>"But not easy enough."</p>
<p>Both men spun at the voice. Ulzhan stood in the room's doorway, bow drawn and arrow nocked. She wore her armor as well, along with a blue sash to complement Bors's red. With her heel, she kicked the door closed. "I thought this might happen, so I had a servant listen at your door."</p>
<div class="blurb360">
<a href="https://paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8500-RedemptionEngine-Ulzhan.jpg">
<img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8500-RedemptionEngine-Ulzhan_360.jpeg" border="0"></a>
<br />Ulzhan does what's best for the tribe. Always.</div>
<p>Roshad started to raise his hands, ready to burn the woman to cinders, but Bors slapped them down. "No!"</p>
<p>"He's right," Ulzhan said. "We have many things to discuss, but if you try to cast a spell, I'll shut your mouth with an arrow and render this conversation moot."</p>
<p>Roshad let his hands drop. "What conversation?"</p>
<p>Seemingly satisfied that Roshad was pacified, Ulzhan dismissed him, turning her attention to Bors. "My prince, I'm going to go ahead and assume you're less than thrilled about our marriage."</p>
<p>Bors's face was back to its normal, stone-hewn blankness. "It's nothing personal."</p>
<p>"I believe you. Maybe if you were differently inclined, I'd be offended, but no matter. The point is, I'm not your father. I can see your love and respect it. But this marriage has to happen, for the good of the tribe. So I'll make you this offer: marry me, and I'll turn a blind eye to your man." Her head tilted to indicate Roshad. "The tribe can never know—I won't let you undermine our authority or give other tribes a lever to use against us—but you can arrange whatever rendezvous you desire. You don't need to take my bed except to give us an heir."</p>
<p>"How generous," Roshad spat, but Bors touched his arm. The prince nodded his head to Ulzhan, almost a bow.</p>
<p>"You honor me, Ulzhan. Under other circumstances, I would have been honored to stand at your side. But I can't lead the tribe."</p>
<p>Ulzhan's gaze hardened. "I thought better of you, Bors. You're the heir. There's no alternative."</p>
<p>"Actually, I think there is." Bors gestured to the dagger in Roshad's belt. "May I?"</p>
<p>Ulzhan drew the fletching back to her cheek, the arrow's steel point in line with Roshad's eye. "No tricks." But the arrow bobbed a gesture for him to continue.</p>
<p>Bors reached down and drew the dagger. In one smooth move, he slit his palm, then held it out to Ulzhan.</p>
<p>Roshad gaped. "What are you doing?"</p>
<p>"What does it look like I'm doing?" Bors held the dagger out to Ulzhan, hilt-first. "I'm marrying her."</p>
<p>Ulzhan stared at him, and then a smile spread across her face. Roshad wouldn't have said it transformed her features, but as with Bors, a face that rarely smiled was all the brighter when it did. She lowered the bow. "I see."</p>
<p>"I don't!" Roshad moved between them. "After all this, you're going to marry her now, an hour before the damned wedding?"</p>
<p>"She's right, Roshad. Only the hakan's blood can challenge him for the throne. But as soon as I marry Ulzhan, my blood becomes hers. She can challenge him. And from what I've heard, she'd lead the tribe better than I would."</p>
<p>"A wise assessment, my prince." Ulzhan let the bowstring go slack, and with a final mistrustful glance at Roshad set it down against the wall. She took the proffered dagger and slit her own palm, then reached forward to clasp Bors's hand.</p>
<p>"Gods," Roshad whispered. "I can't believe you're marrying her."</p>
<p>"What's a marriage, Rabbit?" Bors squeezed Ulzhan's hand, then pulled it back and showed Roshad the wound in his palm. "In the lands beyond the sea, this is just another scar."</p>
<p>"The lands beyond the sea..." Roshad grinned. "I guess you're right."</p>
<p>Bors reached up and tugged loose the yellow armband, then carefully wiped both his blood and Ulzhan's on it. She let him tie it around her wrist, the embroidered horse showing through the orange-red stain.</p>
<p>"It's done, then." Roshad said.</p>
<p>"Not quite." Bors reached down and drew the wooden sword from his sash. He held it out on flat palms, offering it to Ulzhan. "The Succession Sword. Lead the tribe well for me, Ulzhan."</p>
<p>Ulzhan stared unbelieving at the sword, then slowly took it, holding it upright before her face. "No," she said. "Not for you. The Horse Throne won't survive an absentee hakan. Once I challenge your father, I'll rule in my own name."</p>
<p>"Of course." Bors smiled. "You're the son he always wanted. Once he gets over the shock, I hope he sees the gift I've given him. And the tribe."</p>
<p>Ulzhan's eyes gleamed. She lowered the sword. "You're a strange man, Bors Kaskyrbai. But you would have made a fine husband." Swiftly, she stepped forward and kissed him on the lips, then pulled back a few inches to meet his gaze. "Don't come back."</p>
<p>Bors laughed. "Don't worry."</p>
<p>And then Ulzhan was through the door and gone.</p>
<p>Bors turned to Roshad. "Shall we?"</p>
<p>A laugh exploded from Roshad. "I can't believe you're married!"</p>
<p>"I believe I already was." Bors stooped and picked up the chain, then held it out to Roshad. "Are we leaving or not?"</p>
<p>"Oh, we're leaving all right." Roshad shoved the chain into his satchel, then turned around and braced his hands on his legs. "Your steed, my prince."</p>
<p>"Not prince." Bors secured his helm and sword and settled his bulk piggyback on Roshad. "Not anymore."</p>
<p>Then they were out the window, moving quickly down the stone wall. At the ground, they broke apart and moved swiftly over to the curtain wall, keeping the palace between them and the wedding pavilion. Figuring the time for subterfuge was past, Roshad grabbed the top and levered himself up and over, Bors just behind him.</p>
<p>"My horse is hidden on the south side of the camp," he said.</p>
<p>"And are you sentimentally attached to her?" Bors asked.</p>
<p>"What? No, why—"</p>
<p>But Bors was already whistling. In response, a herd of a dozen horses appeared from behind a screen of tents, the stallion at its head leading them right up to Bors. He scratched the beast's nose.</p>
<p>"That's amazing," Roshad said.</p>
<p>"What did you think it meant to be a horse prince?" Bors pulled himself up onto the stallion's back. He held out a hand for Roshad, and the sorcerer let himself be pulled up, seating himself in front. Bors dug in his heels, and they began to ride quickly through the tents. In moments, they were through the last of them and out onto the open steppe. Behind them, the sun rose above the hills in earnest, casting their shadow long in front of them.</p>
<p>"We'll never outrun them riding double," Roshad noted.</p>
<p>"We won't have to," Bors said. "I don't think they'll be coming after us again."</p>
<p>"You think your father will allow it?"</p>
<p>Bors laughed. "Honestly, it's a better arrangement than he could have hoped. But even he can't step away from a challenge. Ulzhan has the Succession Sword, and by the time he realizes I'm gone, she'll have issued the challenge. If she's half as good as everyone says, she'll take him apart. By the time he can see straight again, she'll be firmly on the Horse Throne, and we'll be over the horizon."</p>
<p>Roshad leaned back against Bors's chest. "And then?"</p>
<p>Bors wrapped one armored arm around him, holding him close.</p>
<p>"And then we'll see what there is to see."
<p align="center"><b>Want more Bors and Roshad?</b></p>
<p align="center">Read the first three chapters of "Boar and Rabbit" <a href="http://paizo.com/paizo/blog/v5748dyo5lg30?Boar-and-Rabbit">here</a>, <a href="http://paizo.com/paizo/blog/v5748dyo5lg3o?Boar-and-Rabbit">here</a>, and <a href="http://paizo.com/paizo/blog/v5748dyo5lg42?Boar-and-Rabbit">here</a>, or check out their further adventures in the new novel <a href="http://paizo.com/products/btpy94r3?Pathfinder-Tales-The-Redemption-Engine"><i>The Redemption Engine</i></a>!</p>
<p align="Center"><b>Coming Next Week</b>: The return of Darvin and Fife in Lucien Soulban's "The Tide of Blood"!</p>
<p><i>James L. Sutter is the Managing Editor for Paizo Publishing and a co-creator of the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game. He is the author of the Pathfinder Tales novels Death's Heretic and The Redemption Engine, the former of which was #3 on Barnes & Noble's list of the Best Fantasy Releases of 2011 and a finalist for the Compton Crook Award for Best First Novel. He's written short stories for such publications as </i>Escape Pod, Apex Magazine, Beneath Ceaseless Skies<i>, and the #1 Amazon best-seller </i>Machine of Death<i>. His anthology </i>Before They Were Giants<i> pairs the first published short stories of science fiction luminaries with new interviews and writing advice from the authors themselves. In addition, he's published a wealth of gaming material for both Dungeons & Dragons and the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game, including such fan-favorite Pathfinder Campaign Setting books as </i>Distant Worlds<i> and </i>City of Strangers<i>. For more information, check out <a href="http://jameslsutter.com" target="_blank">jameslsutter.com</a> or follow him on Twitter at <a href="http://twitter.com/#!/jameslsutter" target="_blank">@jameslsutter</a>.</i></p>
<p>Illustration by Eric Belisle</p>
</div>
</blockquote>
<!— tags: Eric Belisle, James L. Sutter, Pathfinder Tales —><p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/artists/ericBelisle">Eric Belisle</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales">Pathfinder Tales</a></p>2014-05-21T17:00:00ZBoar and Rabbithttps://paizo.com/community/blog/v5748dyo5lg42?Boar-and-Rabbit2014-05-14T17:00:00Z<blockquote>
<br />
<div class="blurbCenter"><a href="https://paizo.com/pathfindertales"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/Logos/PathfinderTales_360.jpeg" border="0"></a></div>
<h1 itemprop="headline">Boar and Rabbit</h1>
<p class="date">by James L. Sutter</p>
<h2>Chapter Three: The Freedom of the Dead</h2>
<div itemprop="articleBody">
<p><span itemprop="description">A contingent of horse warriors escorted Roshad back to the city, following at a respectful distance but doing nothing to disguise their presence. At the Gate of Winds, they finally closed and encircled him, not moving until he dismounted and handed back the reins of the horse he'd stolen in his flight. Then they turned and rode back north without saying a word.</span></p>
<p>Which was just fine with Roshad. He had the feeling that if they'd said anything, he would have burned them all where they sat, and promises to Bors be damned.</p>
<p>But then, did a promise to Bors mean anything anymore? It certainly didn't seem that the horse prince had much regard for the words they'd whispered in beds and barrooms, on rooftops under the moon.</p>
<p><i>And should I be surprised?</i> After all, who was Roshad to lay claim to the heir to the Horse Throne?</p>
<p>Roshad passed through the city gates without incident, though without Bors at his side the gray wrappings and loose chain around his waist drew stares. After a moment he removed the chain from his collar and coiled it over his shoulder.</p>
<p>Before him, Ular Kel, greatest city of Karazh, rolled out its majesty. The slope from north to south lent him a god's-eye view of the sea of rooftops. From here, he could see the grand crossroads that gave the Caravan City its life, each of the four great gates birthing roads that would take him places he knew only from stories: Avistan. Garund. The great Castrovin Sea. All his life, he had longed to set foot on those roads, to follow them to the mysteries at their ends. Yet the knowledge of what he was—a citified street-rat with an inconveniently sharp tongue and only half a knack for magic—had always kept him here.</p>
<p>Until Bors. Bors, who hadn't laughed at his dreams but shared them. Who had followed him into his filthy haunts and hidey-holes, stolen with him, learned the language of the streets. And who had told him all about life on the steppe, the sunsets over fields of grass stretching on without end, where a man could ride for days and never see another soul. Bors, who had dreamed them a life beyond Ular Kel.</p>
<p>And now he was gone.</p>
<div class="blurb360">
<a href="https://paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8500-RedemptionEngine-Bors.jpg">
<img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8500-RedemptionEngine-Bors_360.jpeg" border="0"></a>
<br />Bors isn't one to mince words.</div>
<p>Roshad screamed, startling a procession of shaven-headed priests. He ignored them and sprinted flat-out at a cart filled with dawn melons. One foot caught the wheel, the other the cart's side, and then he was airborne and pulling himself up onto a stone-carver's awning. He made a short jump to a window, startling the woman cooking flatbread inside, then swung up onto the roof.</p>
<p>He ran, not caring where he went, just needing to move. He hurtled over gaps that would normally have given him pause, sometimes dropping half a story to lower roofs, tucking into a roll to distribute the impact. He didn't bother with magic, free climbing up the mud-brick walls with only his hands and feet.</p>
<p>He was nearing the center of the city, the grand market where the caravan routes met. Above him rose the city's great landmarks, guiding him in. There were the Water Houses, the fortress-cisterns of the Water Lords who owned the city, their life-giving aqueducts stretching out like spiderwebs. And there was the Spire of Azi, a thin needle of gold stabbing into the sky, where mystics blinded themselves staring at the sun in an effort to understand Sarenrae's divine will. </p>
<p>And then he saw where his path had led him. Roshad didn't fight it, just let the momentum carry him across the ledge and down through the window.</p>
<p>Into stillness. Silence. Sunbeams caught motes of dust, yet nothing else moved in the little apartment.</p>
<p>Apartment, hell—it was nothing but a squat, and Roshad knew he shouldn't kid himself. A pallet on the floor. A lantern. A few buckets and a screen for privacy. Most importantly, a door that had been boarded up by its landlord after the Ghost Plague and never unsealed. </p>
<p>And just like that, the frantic energy left him. Roshad ripped the veil from his face—what was the point, now?—and collapsed onto the pallet. He pulled the ragged blanket into a puddle and buried his face in it, shutting out the light.</p>
<p>No relief there. The cloth was heady with the smell of Bors, the sweet stink of man and horse. It invaded Roshad's silence, until finally he cast it away and rolled onto his back, staring at the cracked ceiling.</p>
<p>Why? How, after all this time—after so many stolen afternoons, the constant game of excuses and evasions—how could Bors look at him and say it was over?</p>
<p>Roshad understood, of course. It was to protect Roshad. Bors wasn't one for idle threats, and Roshad doubted very much that the hakan of the horse tribes was any better. No, Bors knew that if he didn't accede to his father's demands, the hakan would simply have Roshad killed.</p>
<p>If that was it, they could have worked with that—played along until the hakan let his guard down, then made one last escape. But that wasn't what Roshad had seen in Bors's eyes. In that canvas-topped throne room, Bors had understood that they had never really fooled his father, and that any attempt at subterfuge would just result in Roshad's death. If he wanted to save Roshad's life, he had to say goodbye.</p>
<p>And he had to mean it.</p>
<p>Roshad reached up to wipe the tears from his eyes, and the coiled chain dug painfully into his shoulder. He pulled it off and let it run through his fingers, clicking off links like prayer beads.</p>
<p>Tomorrow at dawn, Bors would be married. Roshad could close his eyes and picture it: The open tent, the slit palms mingling blood. The tying of the cloth. And as soon as it was done, Bors's father would push him into the challenge, making him draw the wooden Succession Sword and fight for leadership of the tribe. The older man was eager to pass his burden and secure the tribe's future, and that meant Bors. </p>
<p>The future. Did Roshad even <i>have</i> a future, without Bors? He could ride out with the next caravan, but what was the point? In his heart, he'd still be here. Chain links bit into his palm as his fists clenched.</p>
<p><i>Be the chain</i>. That's what they'd sworn, watching the Iridian Fold men in the darkness. To be one mind, one spirit. Without Bors, Roshad might as well be dead.</p>
<p>Slowly, damp cheeks twisted into a smile. </p>
<p>If he was already dead, then what did he have to lose?</p>
<p align="center">∗ ∗ ∗</p>
<p>The sun was still below the horizon, but already the grasses of the steppe were lightening, waving in the breeze. Ahead, the nomad camp was just beginning to stir, the silence of sleep broken by the snort of horses, the flap of canvas, and the small sounds of cookfires being kindled. </p>
<p>There was little cover out here, save for the long grass. Roshad crouched low and moved as quickly as he could. Once in the shadows of the first few tents, he straightened and began walking normally. A half-repaired saddle sitting unattended near one of the tents caught his eye, and he hoisted it onto his shoulder. Better and better.</p>
<p>He felt naked, walking with his face exposed like this, but the veil and grays would have been an instant giveaway. Instead, he wore one of the long caftans the nomads called <i>deels</i>, a patchy fur jacket, and a small satchel—all dull, threadbare, and purchased for three times their value from an ex-nomad back in the city. Roshad's blue eyes might still give him away if anyone looked closely—such things were rare among the horse tribes—but he hoped the predawn shadows would hide them for now.</p>
<p>Long before Roshad had begun to discover sorcery, life on the streets had taught him an even more fundamental magic trick: walk with purpose—preferably with a uniform or artisan's tools—and you can go anywhere. A tradesman at work is invisible, beneath the notice of all but children.</p>
<p>So he walked, carrying his broken saddle, past old women boiling water and the tent-muffled sounds of waking. In moments, he was standing before the curtain wall ringing the Trade Palace.</p>
<p>Here the easy part ended. At the break in the wall stood an armed guard. Beyond him, the grounds were busier than the rest of the camp, with workers passing to and fro. On the right side of the palace, Roshad could see people constructing a large tent over a raised platform and altar.</p>
<p><i>The wedding pavilion</i>. Roshad ground his teeth, but there was no time to think about that now. He could haul himself up and over the wall in an eyeblink—no doubt the horse tribes considered any wall tall enough to stop cavalry sufficient defense—but that would attract too much attention. Instead, he approached the guard. "You! Can you return this saddle for me?"</p>
<p>The guard eyed him suspiciously. "What?"</p>
<p>"This saddle." Roshad tossed the thing on the ground at the man's feet. As the guard's gaze followed it, Roshad quickly twisted his hand into the correct gesture and coughed to cover the final words of the incantation.</p>
<p>The man's face changed. Suspicion drained away like water, replaced by a round-cheeked smile. "I know you, don't I?"</p>
<p>Roshad smiled back. "Of course you do. We rode down those horse thieves two years back." He took in the bags under the man's eyes, the flushed skin. "Don't tell me you drank so much at the celebration that you forgot me?"</p>
<p>"Me? Drink too much? You sound like my wife!" The man laughed, then looked down at the saddle. His smile turned to a look of genuine apology. "I'm sorry, though—I can't leave my post."</p>
<p>"Still as lazy as ever, I see. Fair enough—just let me past, then, hey?"</p>
<p>The guard looked uncertain. "I don't know if—"</p>
<p>"Damn it, man!" Roshad jabbed a finger at the saddle. "If I don't return this to the prince before the wedding, who knows when he'll find time to pay me? I'll be eating grass with the horses."</p>
<p>"Well..."</p>
<p>"Besides, we're all going to be in here once the sun rises anyway. The only difference is that other people will have had time to dress properly, while I'll look like a half-plucked chicken."</p>
<p>The guard made up his mind. "Fine, but be quick about it. And you owe me a drink." </p>
<p>"Done." Roshad picked up the saddle and slapped the man on the back. "Where are the prince's quarters?"</p>
<p>The guard pointed to the side of the palace opposite the wedding construction. "Around the back there. Second story, I think."</p>
<p>Roshad grunted appreciatively and took up the saddle again, then walked quickly through the bustle.</p>
<p>No point trying for the main doors—inside the fortress there'd be too many people for a simple charm spell to be effective, and the servants in charge of the wedding preparations would be too likely to know who was supposed to be where. That left the direct approach.</p>
<p>Roshad reached the indicated spot. Here on the western side of the palace, the shadows were still long. </p>
<p>Perfect. Roshad dropped the saddle, glanced around to make sure no one was watching, then cast the spell. There was no outward effect, but as he touched the stone he felt the effortless security of his hold. Reaching up, he began to climb.</p>
<p>This part of the palace was fully stone, with no canvas anywhere. At the first set of windows, arched and glassless, Roshad paused and peeked through, moving his head slowly so as not to attract attention. Below him, men and women bustled about kneading dough and using paddles to move pastries in and out of a great stone oven. Roshad's spirits rose—royal quarters would of course be near the kitchen chimneys for easy heating on cold nights.</p>
<p>He kept climbing. The second set of windows was almost at the top of the wall. Once more, he peeked through.</p>
<p>Bors stood in an opulent bedchamber, its stone hung with tapestries depicting herds of horses and branching royal lineages. He was dressed in his usual armor, but it had been polished to a mirror shine and augmented with a bright red sash. A brilliant yellow armband embroidered with a horse sigil wrapped around his right bicep, and his huge two-handed sword stood scabbarded against the wall, a smaller but intricately carved wooden practice sword thrust through his sash instead. His helmet was off, and he was leaning on a table with both hands, staring into a large oval mirror.</p>
<p>Roshad slipped silently through the window, then stopped, uncertain. Up until this moment, he'd been filled with purpose, but now, seeing Bors...</p>
<p>Bors turned slowly, casually, and gave Roshad a sad smile.</p>
<p>"What took you so long?"</p>
<p align="center"><b>Want more Bors and Roshad?</b></p>
<p align="center">Read the first two chapters of "Boar and Rabbit" <a href="http://paizo.com/paizo/blog/v5748dyo5lg30?Boar-and-Rabbit">here</a> and <a href="http://paizo.com/paizo/blog/v5748dyo5lg3o?Boar-and-Rabbit">here</a>, or check out their further adventures in the new novel <a href="http://paizo.com/products/btpy94r3?Pathfinder-Tales-The-Redemption-Engine"><i>The Redemption Engine</i></a>!</p>
<p align="center"><b>Coming Next Week</b>: A wedding in blood in Chapter Four of James L. Sutter's "Boar and Rabbit"!</p>
<p><i>James L. Sutter is the Managing Editor for Paizo Publishing and a co-creator of the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game. He is the author of the Pathfinder Tales novels Death's Heretic and The Redemption Engine, the former of which was #3 on Barnes & Noble's list of the Best Fantasy Releases of 2011 and a finalist for the Compton Crook Award for Best First Novel. He's written short stories for such publications as </i>Escape Pod, Apex Magazine, Beneath Ceaseless Skies<i>, and the #1 Amazon best-seller </i>Machine of Death<i>. His anthology </i>Before They Were Giants<i> pairs the first published short stories of science fiction luminaries with new interviews and writing advice from the authors themselves. In addition, he's published a wealth of gaming material for both Dungeons & Dragons and the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game, including such fan-favorite Pathfinder Campaign Setting books as </i>Distant Worlds<i> and </i>City of Strangers<i>. For more information, check out <a href="http://jameslsutter.com" target="_blank">jameslsutter.com</a> or follow him on Twitter at <a href="http://twitter.com/#!/jameslsutter" target="_blank">@jameslsutter</a>.</i></p>
<p>Illustration by Eric Belisle</p>
</div>
</blockquote>
<!— tags: Eric Belisle, James L. Sutter, Pathfinder Tales —>
<p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/artists/ericBelisle">Eric Belisle</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales">Pathfinder Tales</a></p><blockquote>
<br />
<div class="blurbCenter"><a href="https://paizo.com/pathfindertales"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/Logos/PathfinderTales_360.jpeg" border="0"></a></div>
<h1 itemprop="headline">Boar and Rabbit</h1>
<p class="date">by James L. Sutter</p>
<h2>Chapter Three: The Freedom of the Dead</h2>
<div itemprop="articleBody">
<p><span itemprop="description">A contingent of horse warriors escorted Roshad back to the city, following at a respectful distance but doing nothing to disguise their presence. At the Gate of Winds, they finally closed and encircled him, not moving until he dismounted and handed back the reins of the horse he'd stolen in his flight. Then they turned and rode back north without saying a word.</span></p>
<p>Which was just fine with Roshad. He had the feeling that if they'd said anything, he would have burned them all where they sat, and promises to Bors be damned.</p>
<p>But then, did a promise to Bors mean anything anymore? It certainly didn't seem that the horse prince had much regard for the words they'd whispered in beds and barrooms, on rooftops under the moon.</p>
<p><i>And should I be surprised?</i> After all, who was Roshad to lay claim to the heir to the Horse Throne?</p>
<p>Roshad passed through the city gates without incident, though without Bors at his side the gray wrappings and loose chain around his waist drew stares. After a moment he removed the chain from his collar and coiled it over his shoulder.</p>
<p>Before him, Ular Kel, greatest city of Karazh, rolled out its majesty. The slope from north to south lent him a god's-eye view of the sea of rooftops. From here, he could see the grand crossroads that gave the Caravan City its life, each of the four great gates birthing roads that would take him places he knew only from stories: Avistan. Garund. The great Castrovin Sea. All his life, he had longed to set foot on those roads, to follow them to the mysteries at their ends. Yet the knowledge of what he was—a citified street-rat with an inconveniently sharp tongue and only half a knack for magic—had always kept him here.</p>
<p>Until Bors. Bors, who hadn't laughed at his dreams but shared them. Who had followed him into his filthy haunts and hidey-holes, stolen with him, learned the language of the streets. And who had told him all about life on the steppe, the sunsets over fields of grass stretching on without end, where a man could ride for days and never see another soul. Bors, who had dreamed them a life beyond Ular Kel.</p>
<p>And now he was gone.</p>
<div class="blurb360">
<a href="https://paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8500-RedemptionEngine-Bors.jpg">
<img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8500-RedemptionEngine-Bors_360.jpeg" border="0"></a>
<br />Bors isn't one to mince words.</div>
<p>Roshad screamed, startling a procession of shaven-headed priests. He ignored them and sprinted flat-out at a cart filled with dawn melons. One foot caught the wheel, the other the cart's side, and then he was airborne and pulling himself up onto a stone-carver's awning. He made a short jump to a window, startling the woman cooking flatbread inside, then swung up onto the roof.</p>
<p>He ran, not caring where he went, just needing to move. He hurtled over gaps that would normally have given him pause, sometimes dropping half a story to lower roofs, tucking into a roll to distribute the impact. He didn't bother with magic, free climbing up the mud-brick walls with only his hands and feet.</p>
<p>He was nearing the center of the city, the grand market where the caravan routes met. Above him rose the city's great landmarks, guiding him in. There were the Water Houses, the fortress-cisterns of the Water Lords who owned the city, their life-giving aqueducts stretching out like spiderwebs. And there was the Spire of Azi, a thin needle of gold stabbing into the sky, where mystics blinded themselves staring at the sun in an effort to understand Sarenrae's divine will. </p>
<p>And then he saw where his path had led him. Roshad didn't fight it, just let the momentum carry him across the ledge and down through the window.</p>
<p>Into stillness. Silence. Sunbeams caught motes of dust, yet nothing else moved in the little apartment.</p>
<p>Apartment, hell—it was nothing but a squat, and Roshad knew he shouldn't kid himself. A pallet on the floor. A lantern. A few buckets and a screen for privacy. Most importantly, a door that had been boarded up by its landlord after the Ghost Plague and never unsealed. </p>
<p>And just like that, the frantic energy left him. Roshad ripped the veil from his face—what was the point, now?—and collapsed onto the pallet. He pulled the ragged blanket into a puddle and buried his face in it, shutting out the light.</p>
<p>No relief there. The cloth was heady with the smell of Bors, the sweet stink of man and horse. It invaded Roshad's silence, until finally he cast it away and rolled onto his back, staring at the cracked ceiling.</p>
<p>Why? How, after all this time—after so many stolen afternoons, the constant game of excuses and evasions—how could Bors look at him and say it was over?</p>
<p>Roshad understood, of course. It was to protect Roshad. Bors wasn't one for idle threats, and Roshad doubted very much that the hakan of the horse tribes was any better. No, Bors knew that if he didn't accede to his father's demands, the hakan would simply have Roshad killed.</p>
<p>If that was it, they could have worked with that—played along until the hakan let his guard down, then made one last escape. But that wasn't what Roshad had seen in Bors's eyes. In that canvas-topped throne room, Bors had understood that they had never really fooled his father, and that any attempt at subterfuge would just result in Roshad's death. If he wanted to save Roshad's life, he had to say goodbye.</p>
<p>And he had to mean it.</p>
<p>Roshad reached up to wipe the tears from his eyes, and the coiled chain dug painfully into his shoulder. He pulled it off and let it run through his fingers, clicking off links like prayer beads.</p>
<p>Tomorrow at dawn, Bors would be married. Roshad could close his eyes and picture it: The open tent, the slit palms mingling blood. The tying of the cloth. And as soon as it was done, Bors's father would push him into the challenge, making him draw the wooden Succession Sword and fight for leadership of the tribe. The older man was eager to pass his burden and secure the tribe's future, and that meant Bors. </p>
<p>The future. Did Roshad even <i>have</i> a future, without Bors? He could ride out with the next caravan, but what was the point? In his heart, he'd still be here. Chain links bit into his palm as his fists clenched.</p>
<p><i>Be the chain</i>. That's what they'd sworn, watching the Iridian Fold men in the darkness. To be one mind, one spirit. Without Bors, Roshad might as well be dead.</p>
<p>Slowly, damp cheeks twisted into a smile. </p>
<p>If he was already dead, then what did he have to lose?</p>
<p align="center">∗ ∗ ∗</p>
<p>The sun was still below the horizon, but already the grasses of the steppe were lightening, waving in the breeze. Ahead, the nomad camp was just beginning to stir, the silence of sleep broken by the snort of horses, the flap of canvas, and the small sounds of cookfires being kindled. </p>
<p>There was little cover out here, save for the long grass. Roshad crouched low and moved as quickly as he could. Once in the shadows of the first few tents, he straightened and began walking normally. A half-repaired saddle sitting unattended near one of the tents caught his eye, and he hoisted it onto his shoulder. Better and better.</p>
<p>He felt naked, walking with his face exposed like this, but the veil and grays would have been an instant giveaway. Instead, he wore one of the long caftans the nomads called <i>deels</i>, a patchy fur jacket, and a small satchel—all dull, threadbare, and purchased for three times their value from an ex-nomad back in the city. Roshad's blue eyes might still give him away if anyone looked closely—such things were rare among the horse tribes—but he hoped the predawn shadows would hide them for now.</p>
<p>Long before Roshad had begun to discover sorcery, life on the streets had taught him an even more fundamental magic trick: walk with purpose—preferably with a uniform or artisan's tools—and you can go anywhere. A tradesman at work is invisible, beneath the notice of all but children.</p>
<p>So he walked, carrying his broken saddle, past old women boiling water and the tent-muffled sounds of waking. In moments, he was standing before the curtain wall ringing the Trade Palace.</p>
<p>Here the easy part ended. At the break in the wall stood an armed guard. Beyond him, the grounds were busier than the rest of the camp, with workers passing to and fro. On the right side of the palace, Roshad could see people constructing a large tent over a raised platform and altar.</p>
<p><i>The wedding pavilion</i>. Roshad ground his teeth, but there was no time to think about that now. He could haul himself up and over the wall in an eyeblink—no doubt the horse tribes considered any wall tall enough to stop cavalry sufficient defense—but that would attract too much attention. Instead, he approached the guard. "You! Can you return this saddle for me?"</p>
<p>The guard eyed him suspiciously. "What?"</p>
<p>"This saddle." Roshad tossed the thing on the ground at the man's feet. As the guard's gaze followed it, Roshad quickly twisted his hand into the correct gesture and coughed to cover the final words of the incantation.</p>
<p>The man's face changed. Suspicion drained away like water, replaced by a round-cheeked smile. "I know you, don't I?"</p>
<p>Roshad smiled back. "Of course you do. We rode down those horse thieves two years back." He took in the bags under the man's eyes, the flushed skin. "Don't tell me you drank so much at the celebration that you forgot me?"</p>
<p>"Me? Drink too much? You sound like my wife!" The man laughed, then looked down at the saddle. His smile turned to a look of genuine apology. "I'm sorry, though—I can't leave my post."</p>
<p>"Still as lazy as ever, I see. Fair enough—just let me past, then, hey?"</p>
<p>The guard looked uncertain. "I don't know if—"</p>
<p>"Damn it, man!" Roshad jabbed a finger at the saddle. "If I don't return this to the prince before the wedding, who knows when he'll find time to pay me? I'll be eating grass with the horses."</p>
<p>"Well..."</p>
<p>"Besides, we're all going to be in here once the sun rises anyway. The only difference is that other people will have had time to dress properly, while I'll look like a half-plucked chicken."</p>
<p>The guard made up his mind. "Fine, but be quick about it. And you owe me a drink." </p>
<p>"Done." Roshad picked up the saddle and slapped the man on the back. "Where are the prince's quarters?"</p>
<p>The guard pointed to the side of the palace opposite the wedding construction. "Around the back there. Second story, I think."</p>
<p>Roshad grunted appreciatively and took up the saddle again, then walked quickly through the bustle.</p>
<p>No point trying for the main doors—inside the fortress there'd be too many people for a simple charm spell to be effective, and the servants in charge of the wedding preparations would be too likely to know who was supposed to be where. That left the direct approach.</p>
<p>Roshad reached the indicated spot. Here on the western side of the palace, the shadows were still long. </p>
<p>Perfect. Roshad dropped the saddle, glanced around to make sure no one was watching, then cast the spell. There was no outward effect, but as he touched the stone he felt the effortless security of his hold. Reaching up, he began to climb.</p>
<p>This part of the palace was fully stone, with no canvas anywhere. At the first set of windows, arched and glassless, Roshad paused and peeked through, moving his head slowly so as not to attract attention. Below him, men and women bustled about kneading dough and using paddles to move pastries in and out of a great stone oven. Roshad's spirits rose—royal quarters would of course be near the kitchen chimneys for easy heating on cold nights.</p>
<p>He kept climbing. The second set of windows was almost at the top of the wall. Once more, he peeked through.</p>
<p>Bors stood in an opulent bedchamber, its stone hung with tapestries depicting herds of horses and branching royal lineages. He was dressed in his usual armor, but it had been polished to a mirror shine and augmented with a bright red sash. A brilliant yellow armband embroidered with a horse sigil wrapped around his right bicep, and his huge two-handed sword stood scabbarded against the wall, a smaller but intricately carved wooden practice sword thrust through his sash instead. His helmet was off, and he was leaning on a table with both hands, staring into a large oval mirror.</p>
<p>Roshad slipped silently through the window, then stopped, uncertain. Up until this moment, he'd been filled with purpose, but now, seeing Bors...</p>
<p>Bors turned slowly, casually, and gave Roshad a sad smile.</p>
<p>"What took you so long?"</p>
<p align="center"><b>Want more Bors and Roshad?</b></p>
<p align="center">Read the first two chapters of "Boar and Rabbit" <a href="http://paizo.com/paizo/blog/v5748dyo5lg30?Boar-and-Rabbit">here</a> and <a href="http://paizo.com/paizo/blog/v5748dyo5lg3o?Boar-and-Rabbit">here</a>, or check out their further adventures in the new novel <a href="http://paizo.com/products/btpy94r3?Pathfinder-Tales-The-Redemption-Engine"><i>The Redemption Engine</i></a>!</p>
<p align="center"><b>Coming Next Week</b>: A wedding in blood in Chapter Four of James L. Sutter's "Boar and Rabbit"!</p>
<p><i>James L. Sutter is the Managing Editor for Paizo Publishing and a co-creator of the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game. He is the author of the Pathfinder Tales novels Death's Heretic and The Redemption Engine, the former of which was #3 on Barnes & Noble's list of the Best Fantasy Releases of 2011 and a finalist for the Compton Crook Award for Best First Novel. He's written short stories for such publications as </i>Escape Pod, Apex Magazine, Beneath Ceaseless Skies<i>, and the #1 Amazon best-seller </i>Machine of Death<i>. His anthology </i>Before They Were Giants<i> pairs the first published short stories of science fiction luminaries with new interviews and writing advice from the authors themselves. In addition, he's published a wealth of gaming material for both Dungeons & Dragons and the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game, including such fan-favorite Pathfinder Campaign Setting books as </i>Distant Worlds<i> and </i>City of Strangers<i>. For more information, check out <a href="http://jameslsutter.com" target="_blank">jameslsutter.com</a> or follow him on Twitter at <a href="http://twitter.com/#!/jameslsutter" target="_blank">@jameslsutter</a>.</i></p>
<p>Illustration by Eric Belisle</p>
</div>
</blockquote>
<!— tags: Eric Belisle, James L. Sutter, Pathfinder Tales —>
<p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/artists/ericBelisle">Eric Belisle</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales">Pathfinder Tales</a></p>2014-05-14T17:00:00ZIn Seattle? Come to The Redemption Engine Signing!https://paizo.com/community/blog/v5748dyo5lg3t?In-Seattle-Come-to-The-Redemption-Engine-Signing2014-05-08T17:00:00Z<blockquote>
<br />
<div class="blurbCenter"><a href="https://paizo.com/pathfindersociety"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/Logos/PathfinderSocietyLogo_360.jpeg" border="0"></a></div>
<h1 itemprop="headline">In Seattle? Come to The Redemption Engine Signing!</h1>
<p class="date">Thursday, May 8, 2014</p>
<div itemprop="articleBody">
<div class="blurbCenter"><a href="https://paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/8520-RedemptionEngine.jpg"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/8520-RedemptionEngine_360.jpeg" border="0"></a><br />Illustration by Craig J Spearing</div>
<p><span itemprop="description">Will you be in Seattle on Friday, May 9th? If so, come by the University of Washington Bookstore and help us celebrate the release of <a href="https://paizo.com/products/btpy94r3">The Redemption Engine</a>, the new Pathfinder Tales novel by Paizo Managing Editor James L. Sutter! Things will start at 7:00pm sharp with a short reading, followed by a question and answer session and the signing of books (or whatever else you want to put in front of Sutter—he'd probably sign your burrito if you asked him to).</span></p>
<p>There's no cover charge or need to buy a book, so stop by and say hello, or stay for the whole thing!</p>
<ul>
<li><b>Where</b>: <a href="http://www2.bookstore.washington.edu/_events/events_cal.taf?evmonth=05&evyear=2014&eventid=2014010813260600">The University of Washington Bookstore</a> (<a href="https://www.google.com/maps/preview?q=4326+University+Way,+Seattle&oe=utf-8&client=firefox-a&channel=sb&ie=UTF-8&ei=kO1rU97YA4_8oASWyYDIDA&ved=0CAgQ_AUoAQ&source=newuser-ws">4326 University Way, Seattle</a>)</li>
<li><b>When</b>: 7:00pm on Friday, May 9th</li>
<li><b>Why</b>: Because we'd love to see you there!</li>
</div>
</blockquote>
<!— tags: Craig J Spearing, James L. Sutter, Pathfinder Tales —><p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/artists/craigJSpearing">Craig J Spearing</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a></p><blockquote>
<br />
<div class="blurbCenter"><a href="https://paizo.com/pathfindersociety"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/Logos/PathfinderSocietyLogo_360.jpeg" border="0"></a></div>
<h1 itemprop="headline">In Seattle? Come to The Redemption Engine Signing!</h1>
<p class="date">Thursday, May 8, 2014</p>
<div itemprop="articleBody">
<div class="blurbCenter"><a href="https://paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/8520-RedemptionEngine.jpg"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/8520-RedemptionEngine_360.jpeg" border="0"></a><br />Illustration by Craig J Spearing</div>
<p><span itemprop="description">Will you be in Seattle on Friday, May 9th? If so, come by the University of Washington Bookstore and help us celebrate the release of <a href="https://paizo.com/products/btpy94r3">The Redemption Engine</a>, the new Pathfinder Tales novel by Paizo Managing Editor James L. Sutter! Things will start at 7:00pm sharp with a short reading, followed by a question and answer session and the signing of books (or whatever else you want to put in front of Sutter—he'd probably sign your burrito if you asked him to).</span></p>
<p>There's no cover charge or need to buy a book, so stop by and say hello, or stay for the whole thing!</p>
<ul>
<li><b>Where</b>: <a href="http://www2.bookstore.washington.edu/_events/events_cal.taf?evmonth=05&evyear=2014&eventid=2014010813260600">The University of Washington Bookstore</a> (<a href="https://www.google.com/maps/preview?q=4326+University+Way,+Seattle&oe=utf-8&client=firefox-a&channel=sb&ie=UTF-8&ei=kO1rU97YA4_8oASWyYDIDA&ved=0CAgQ_AUoAQ&source=newuser-ws">4326 University Way, Seattle</a>)</li>
<li><b>When</b>: 7:00pm on Friday, May 9th</li>
<li><b>Why</b>: Because we'd love to see you there!</li>
</div>
</blockquote>
<!— tags: Craig J Spearing, James L. Sutter, Pathfinder Tales —><p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/artists/craigJSpearing">Craig J Spearing</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a></p>2014-05-08T17:00:00ZBoar and Rabbithttps://paizo.com/community/blog/v5748dyo5lg3o?Boar-and-Rabbit2014-05-07T17:00:00Z<blockquote>
<br />
<div class="blurbCenter"><a href="https://paizo.com/pathfindertales"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/Logos/PathfinderTales_360.jpeg" border="0"></a></div>
<h1 itemprop="headline">Boar and Rabbit</h1>
<p class="date">by James L. Sutter</p>
<h2>Chapter Two: Child of the Horse King</h2>
<div itemprop="articleBody">
<p><span itemprop="description">Bors stepped between Roshad and the warriors. "This man is no thief, Erzhan. I go with him of my own free will."</span></p>
<p>The captain—Erzhan, presumably—chuckled without humor. "This sorcerer has cast a spell on you, my prince. Your father warned us of as much."</p>
<p>Bors glared. "Do I look enchanted to you?"</p>
<p>"Running off with some street thief? Abandoning your tribe?" Erzhan snorted. Roshad got the feeling the man did that a lot. "But it doesn't matter what I think. Your father tasked us with bringing you back, and that's what we're doing."</p>
<p>"Not while I live!" Roshad stepped out from behind Bors's armored bulk. </p>
<p>Erzhan shrugged. "That was always an option." He turned to his archers.</p>
<p>Metal sang as Bors's sword flew free from its sheath. In three steps he was across the intervening distance, the long, straight blade hovering still and horizontal an inch from Erzhan's throat. The captain blanched.</p>
<p>Bors's voice was the rumble of a distant storm. "You overreach yourself, Captain." He lifted his gaze to the other warriors. "If any of you touch this man behind me, you die. Either here, by my blade, or dragged by your heels across the stones of the steppes until your own mothers won't recognize you. I will not repeat myself."</p>
<p>There was a tense pause, and then bows lowered and hands moved from hilts. Heads bowed. </p>
<p>"Good." Bors looked down at the captain. "And you, Erzhan?"</p>
<p>Erzhan was sweating from more than just heat now, but he managed to keep his voice from cracking. "All respect, my prince, but you're not hakan yet. Your father still holds the Horse Throne. And it's from his lips that this order came. We must bring you back or die in the attempt."</p>
<p>"I know which option I prefer," Roshad suggested.</p>
<p>Bors didn't answer, just stared expressionlessly down at the soldier. At last he stepped back and sheathed his sword. </p>
<p>"Then you'll bring us back," he said. "Both of us."</p>
<p align="center">∗ ∗ ∗</p>
<p>They rode north from the Gate of Winds, the red sandstone walls of Karazh's capital shrinking rapidly behind them. Ahead, the steppe rolled off into eternity, the bunching hills like waves, giving the Grass Sea its name. It was still early summer, and everywhere was a carpet of green.</p>
<p>They road in silence, Bors and Roshad riding double on a mare commandeered from one of the warriors. Beneath his veils, Roshad did his best to match Bors's calm, to give nothing away to their captors, but inside his emotions roiled. All he'd ever wanted was to ride away from the city with Bors's arms locked tight around him, but not like this. Never like this.</p>
<p>The road curved around a low hill, and the camp came into view. Hundreds of tents and round-walled gers spread back through the shallow valley, their white felt walls gleaming. Long streams of colorful pennants flapped from every roof's apex like helmet plumes. </p>
<p>Between them moved horses—whole herds of them, of every color and description. Many were in use by the tribespeople, being groomed or trained or used to haul goods, but still more wandered seemingly unattended. Several came to investigate the new arrivals, and Roshad watched in fascination as the soldiers nodded to the animals as if they were sentries.</p>
<p>No one dismounted as they rode through the settlement. Several curious onlookers—humans, this time—stopped what they were doing to watch the procession, and Roshad felt their eyes on him. Bors's armor was similar enough to the soldiers' that he likely wouldn't have attracted attention even if these hadn't been his people, but Roshad's face-veil and wrappings were unmistakable. Even backwater nomads knew about the Iridian Fold. He searched the watching eyes for judgment, but found only that expressionless regard that so infuriated him on Bors.</p>
<p>In the center of the encampment, a small stone curtain wall six feet high marked the edge of the smaller tents and the beginning of a large ring of open space, bare save for the ubiquitous wandering horses. In its center stood a structure that Roshad couldn't properly call a tent, or even a pavilion. Walls of stone twenty feet high were capped by conical felt roofs, and smaller fabric outbuildings clustered around its sides in an amorphous explosion of canvas. </p>
<p>Erzhan must have caught his widened eyes, because he snickered. "Like that, city man? A gift from your Water Lords, who know how to pay proper respect to the horse tribes." He dismounted.</p>
<p>Bors and Roshad followed suit. Several of the soldiers looked like they might take hold of the prisoners, but Bors's glare drove them back, and they settled for spreading out ahead of and behind them. Erzhan took the lead, speaking to the two guards at the front door, who saluted with fists to chests and stood aside.</p>
<p>Inside, Roshad couldn't help but rubberneck. The hall they walked through might have been in any conventional castle or fortress, yet while some arches led off to similar corridors, others led into canvas tent-rooms, or simply out onto open grass, without so much as an awning. </p>
<p>"The Trade Palace is shared by all the horse tribes," Bors murmured. "The stone foundation came from the city, but your lords knew better than to presume what the tribes desire, or to build to any single han's specifications—even my father's. Whichever tribe resides here completes it as it sees fit, then breaks it down when they move on."</p>
<p>Roshad only nodded. </p>
<p>The corridor ended in a set of bronze doors, each embossed with a rearing stallion. Two more guards stood at attention there, but before Erzhan could speak, they caught sight of Bors and swung the doors wide.</p>
<p>Roshad expected a great hall, tall and dourly majestic, or perhaps a cushioned seraglio. Instead, he found himself in a tent—a stone-floored one, to be sure, but still little more than a larger version of the gers they'd passed on the way in. One wall was open, its canvas drawn back like curtains to reveal the sunlit grass of a parade ground where several people were at work training horses.</p>
<p>A wooden throne stood on a raised platform against the far wall, its arms and back carved into the shapes of horses. A man sat on that chair, facing out at the training yard. As the warriors entered, he turned.</p>
<p>Roshad froze, and might have taken a step back if not for Bors's hand on his arm. </p>
<p>The man on the chair was tall, his armor like Bors's but richer, the lacquered scales a deep burgundy. Stylized horseheads adorned the steel bracers on his forearms and the clasp that held the long fur mantle over his shoulders. Twin axes lay crossed in his lap, yet none of these were what took Roshad aback.</p>
<p>The face he turned to them was steel, molded into the long moustaches and beard of a patriarch. It extended from his conical helm down to his chin, where it met the chain coif around his neck. It was polished mirror-bright, turning the holes for his eyes into darkened pits.</p>
<p>A litchina. Gods above. Bors had shown Roshad his own war mask once, the smooth lines modeled on his own expressionless face. He carried it everywhere, but Roshad had never seen him wear it, as a Horse King wearing his litchina meant one thing, and one thing only.</p>
<p>He was ready to kill.</p>
<p>Hakan Temir Kaskyrbai stood, taking an axe in each hand. The steel-encased head nodded minutely, and the soldiers who had surrounded Bors and Roshad stepped back.</p>
<div class="blurb360">
<a href="https://paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8500_BoarAndRabbit-Temir.jpg">
<img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8500_BoarAndRabbit-Temir_360.jpeg" border="0"></a>
<br />The hakan knows the price of the throne.</div>
<p>"So," the hakan said. "This is the man who would steal my kingdom."</p>
<p>Roshad groped frantically for a response, but Bors squeezed his arm warningly and spoke instead. "He steals nothing, Father."</p>
<p>"Doesn't he?" One axe rose to point at them. "I see a thief who would break my line, who would see the greatest of the tribes fall to internal bickering, and let some lesser han take the Horse Throne. And you, my only son," the axe head drew a line between them, "you chain yourself to him like a dog on a leash."</p>
<p>"Watch your words." Bors's tone was suddenly as hard as the hakan's, his face a mask of its own. "You are my lord and father, and I honor you with every breath, but you will not insult me again, nor the man that I've chosen."</p>
<p>A laugh, ringing behind steel. "Or what? You'll draw your sword and strike me down, here in the heart of the Trade Palace?" The hakan laughed again, but this time it sounded to Roshad like the mockery was turned inward. "Split hooves, boy, isn't that all I've ever asked?"</p>
<p>The hakan seated himself once more on the wooden throne. He waved one of the axes dismissively. "Leave us. And send in Ulzhan." Roshad started to turn, and the axe shot forward. "Not you."</p>
<p>A moment later, the three of them were alone, save for the trainers continuing unperturbed on the far grass. The metal face regarded Bors and Roshad silently for a long moment, and Roshad suddenly understood at a visceral level why the Horse Kings wore the litchinas. That blank, expressionless stare was more terrifying than any grimace or battle cry.</p>
<p>"The Iridian Fold," the hakan said at last. </p>
<p>"It's a noble calling," Bors said. "You've said so yourself, when Koshkin left to join them."</p>
<p>The hakan nodded. "So it is. And you think that matters?"</p>
<p>The question caught Bors short. "But—"</p>
<p>"How many great tribes are there, Bors?"</p>
<p>"Thirteen."</p>
<p>"And which is the greatest?"</p>
<p>"Kaskyrbai. The wolves of the steppe."</p>
<p>The hakan nodded. "You've known that all your life, haven't you?"</p>
<p>"Of course."</p>
<p>"And that's the problem." The hakan took both axes and set them down on the arm of the throne. "You're young, Bors. You've been raised as heir to the greatest of the tribes, but you didn't watch what your grandfather—my father—had to do to take the Horse Throne. I grew up in the middle of it, the blood and shit that coated the steppes. The hans of the other great tribe are as proud as us, boy. They cede us respect because they have to. Because I've kept us strong. But if we show any weakness, they'll slaughter us. And then they'll slaughter each other, until the last one to fall from his saddle and land on this wooden chair can call himself hakan."</p>
<p>Someone pounded once on the bronze doors, and the hakan looked up. "Enter."</p>
<p>The doors opened, and a woman stepped through. She was big—only a few inches shorter than Bors himself—and wore armor of brown and gray, topped by a fur-lined helm. A huge sheath on her back held a recurve bow, and a longsword swung at her waist. She spared Bors and Roshad only the briefest of glances as she stalked past and knelt at the foot of the platform. "Hakan."</p>
<p>"Rise, Ulzhan." The hakan gestured for her to ascend and take up a position next to the throne, and now Roshad felt the frank appraisal in her gaze. He was momentarily glad for his veil—he could never have matched the expressionlessness of these damned nomads.</p>
<p>The hakan spoke. "What's your name, city-man?"</p>
<p>"Roshad, lord."</p>
<p>"Roshad what?"</p>
<p>"Just Roshad."</p>
<p>The steel face bobbed agreeably.</p>
<p>"And are you perhaps the son of a Water Lord, Roshad? Or maybe a prince of the East with a thousand camels in your caravan? No, wait—you're the sixth reincarnation of Sogys Taramai, here to lead us all off the steppe and into the Land of No Winters."</p>
<p>Roshad felt his face burn, and only Bors's grip on his arm and the knowledge of a thousand horse warriors in the surrounding camp kept him from spreading his fingers and letting the fire flow, torching the old man with the metal face and the stupid, flammable throne.</p>
<p>Bors's voice was quiet. "I love him, Father. And he loves me."</p>
<p>"And I love you, boy." The hakan shook his head. "Which is why I'm giving you the chance to save his life."</p>
<p>"What?" Roshad and Bors spoke in unison. Even as the shock coursed through him, some small part of Roshad smiled to see how quickly he and his szerik were growing together.</p>
<p>The hakan waved at the warrior next to him. "You've known Ulzhan since you were a child, Bors. Her father was the greatest captain I ever had, and already she's nearly matched him—with the horses, with the bow, and as a combat leader." </p>
<p>The woman inclined her head slightly at the praise.</p>
<p>No wonder she's good with horses, Roshad thought, she's got the face of one. But of course that was just his anger speaking. In truth, the woman was unremarkable, save for her size and the way she stood like a crouching lion, ready to pounce.</p>
<p>"Tomorrow at dawn, you will slit palms and marry Ulzhan, binding your blood with hers. Then you'll take up the Succession Sword and strike me down. Together, with me to advise you, you and she will lead our tribe to greatness."</p>
<p>"And if I refuse?"</p>
<p>The hakan picked up one of his axes and pounded twice on the platform with its haft. Suddenly the doors were open, and the room was full of dark-eyed steppe warriors.</p>
<p>"Then your city-man dies, and you marry her anyway."</p>
<p>"Bors!" Roshad grabbed tight to the man's arm, but his szerik paid him no attention. The bigger man's gaze was fixed on the hakan. </p>
<p>"I was born to be hakan," Bors said. "And you would make me a slave."</p>
<p>"All kings are slaves." The hakan sighed, then reached up and pulled off his litchina. The man beneath it was surprisingly young—no more than twenty years older than Bors, with plenty of black still in his long mustaches. He had the face of a hard man, yet the gaze that met Bors's was strangely soft.</p>
<p>"We both knew this was coming, Bors. I'm glad you found love, and I let you play as long as I could. But it's time to grow up."</p>
<p>Bors said nothing. The silence carried. </p>
<p>Roshad ran frantically through escape scenarios. Fire, that was good—fire scared people, called out to the animal instincts in them. He'd flame the old bastard—or better yet, the tent canopy above them, set the whole palace on fire. While the soldiers scrambled to put it out, he and Bors would race out the open side-wall, leap onto the horses that were being trained, then gallop through the camp and back to the city before anyone could stop them. Once there, they could hole up until a suitably large caravan was leaving the city, then—</p>
<p>Bors reached up to his chest and disconnected the chain, handing the end back to Roshad.</p>
<p>Roshad did his best not to grin beneath his veil. He and Bors only removed their chain when they were about to pull a particularly tricky stunt. He readied the spell.</p>
<p>"It's over, Roshad."</p>
<p>Roshad looked up at Bors. The man wasn't reaching for his sword. He wasn't tensing to move. Just looking down at him, mouth drawn tight. "What?"</p>
<p>"He's right. This time that we've had... I would have loved to be your szerik. But I have to do this."</p>
<p>"Right. Of course." Roshad searched Bors's face, looking for something—anything. This had to be a diversion, to catch the soldiers off guard. Later, Bors would kiss his brow and apologize for having said such a thing, even as a front.</p>
<p>But Bors was shaking his head. "No tricks, Roshad. Not this time. The city is your world, and I love you for showing it to me. But this is mine."</p>
<p>Gods, could he actually mean it? Roshad's stomach lurched. "I won't leave you." Smoke began to rise from his clenched fists. "I'm not scared of them."</p>
<p>"This isn't about fear." Bors's face was the same mask as the others, but now his eyes, always so full of emotion and expression for Roshad, held something indecipherable. "If you ever loved me, you won't make anyone hurt you." He took Roshad's head in his hands, and leaned down, pulling their foreheads together. </p>
<p>"Go now, Rabbit. Please. For me."</p>
<p>Then he let go and stepped backward, becoming one with the mass of soldiers. A sea of blank faces stared back at Roshad.</p>
<p>"If he's still here in three breaths," the hakan said to his soldiers, "shoot him."</p>
<p>Then tears blurred the scene, and Roshad turned and fled.</p>
<p align="center"><b>Coming Next Week</b>: Desperate measures in Chapter Three of James L. Sutter's "Boar and Rabbit"!</p>
<p><i>James L. Sutter is the Managing Editor for Paizo Publishing and a co-creator of the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game. He is the author of the Pathfinder Tales novels Death's Heretic and The Redemption Engine, the former of which was #3 on Barnes & Noble's list of the Best Fantasy Releases of 2011 and a finalist for the Compton Crook Award for Best First Novel. He's written short stories for such publications as </i>Escape Pod, Apex Magazine, Beneath Ceaseless Skies<i>, and the #1 Amazon best-seller </i>Machine of Death<i>. His anthology </i>Before They Were Giants<i> pairs the first published short stories of science fiction luminaries with new interviews and writing advice from the authors themselves. In addition, he's published a wealth of gaming material for both Dungeons & Dragons and the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game, including such fan-favorite Pathfinder Campaign Setting books as </i>Distant Worlds<i> and </i>City of Strangers<i>. For more information, check out <a href="http://jameslsutter.com" target="_blank">jameslsutter.com</a> or follow him on Twitter at <a href="http://twitter.com/#!/jameslsutter" target="_blank">@jameslsutter</a>.</i></p>
<p>Illustration by Eric Belisle</p>
</div>
</blockquote>
<!— tags: Eric Belisle, James L. Sutter, Pathfinder Tales —>
<p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/artists/ericBelisle">Eric Belisle</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales">Pathfinder Tales</a></p><blockquote>
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<h1 itemprop="headline">Boar and Rabbit</h1>
<p class="date">by James L. Sutter</p>
<h2>Chapter Two: Child of the Horse King</h2>
<div itemprop="articleBody">
<p><span itemprop="description">Bors stepped between Roshad and the warriors. "This man is no thief, Erzhan. I go with him of my own free will."</span></p>
<p>The captain—Erzhan, presumably—chuckled without humor. "This sorcerer has cast a spell on you, my prince. Your father warned us of as much."</p>
<p>Bors glared. "Do I look enchanted to you?"</p>
<p>"Running off with some street thief? Abandoning your tribe?" Erzhan snorted. Roshad got the feeling the man did that a lot. "But it doesn't matter what I think. Your father tasked us with bringing you back, and that's what we're doing."</p>
<p>"Not while I live!" Roshad stepped out from behind Bors's armored bulk. </p>
<p>Erzhan shrugged. "That was always an option." He turned to his archers.</p>
<p>Metal sang as Bors's sword flew free from its sheath. In three steps he was across the intervening distance, the long, straight blade hovering still and horizontal an inch from Erzhan's throat. The captain blanched.</p>
<p>Bors's voice was the rumble of a distant storm. "You overreach yourself, Captain." He lifted his gaze to the other warriors. "If any of you touch this man behind me, you die. Either here, by my blade, or dragged by your heels across the stones of the steppes until your own mothers won't recognize you. I will not repeat myself."</p>
<p>There was a tense pause, and then bows lowered and hands moved from hilts. Heads bowed. </p>
<p>"Good." Bors looked down at the captain. "And you, Erzhan?"</p>
<p>Erzhan was sweating from more than just heat now, but he managed to keep his voice from cracking. "All respect, my prince, but you're not hakan yet. Your father still holds the Horse Throne. And it's from his lips that this order came. We must bring you back or die in the attempt."</p>
<p>"I know which option I prefer," Roshad suggested.</p>
<p>Bors didn't answer, just stared expressionlessly down at the soldier. At last he stepped back and sheathed his sword. </p>
<p>"Then you'll bring us back," he said. "Both of us."</p>
<p align="center">∗ ∗ ∗</p>
<p>They rode north from the Gate of Winds, the red sandstone walls of Karazh's capital shrinking rapidly behind them. Ahead, the steppe rolled off into eternity, the bunching hills like waves, giving the Grass Sea its name. It was still early summer, and everywhere was a carpet of green.</p>
<p>They road in silence, Bors and Roshad riding double on a mare commandeered from one of the warriors. Beneath his veils, Roshad did his best to match Bors's calm, to give nothing away to their captors, but inside his emotions roiled. All he'd ever wanted was to ride away from the city with Bors's arms locked tight around him, but not like this. Never like this.</p>
<p>The road curved around a low hill, and the camp came into view. Hundreds of tents and round-walled gers spread back through the shallow valley, their white felt walls gleaming. Long streams of colorful pennants flapped from every roof's apex like helmet plumes. </p>
<p>Between them moved horses—whole herds of them, of every color and description. Many were in use by the tribespeople, being groomed or trained or used to haul goods, but still more wandered seemingly unattended. Several came to investigate the new arrivals, and Roshad watched in fascination as the soldiers nodded to the animals as if they were sentries.</p>
<p>No one dismounted as they rode through the settlement. Several curious onlookers—humans, this time—stopped what they were doing to watch the procession, and Roshad felt their eyes on him. Bors's armor was similar enough to the soldiers' that he likely wouldn't have attracted attention even if these hadn't been his people, but Roshad's face-veil and wrappings were unmistakable. Even backwater nomads knew about the Iridian Fold. He searched the watching eyes for judgment, but found only that expressionless regard that so infuriated him on Bors.</p>
<p>In the center of the encampment, a small stone curtain wall six feet high marked the edge of the smaller tents and the beginning of a large ring of open space, bare save for the ubiquitous wandering horses. In its center stood a structure that Roshad couldn't properly call a tent, or even a pavilion. Walls of stone twenty feet high were capped by conical felt roofs, and smaller fabric outbuildings clustered around its sides in an amorphous explosion of canvas. </p>
<p>Erzhan must have caught his widened eyes, because he snickered. "Like that, city man? A gift from your Water Lords, who know how to pay proper respect to the horse tribes." He dismounted.</p>
<p>Bors and Roshad followed suit. Several of the soldiers looked like they might take hold of the prisoners, but Bors's glare drove them back, and they settled for spreading out ahead of and behind them. Erzhan took the lead, speaking to the two guards at the front door, who saluted with fists to chests and stood aside.</p>
<p>Inside, Roshad couldn't help but rubberneck. The hall they walked through might have been in any conventional castle or fortress, yet while some arches led off to similar corridors, others led into canvas tent-rooms, or simply out onto open grass, without so much as an awning. </p>
<p>"The Trade Palace is shared by all the horse tribes," Bors murmured. "The stone foundation came from the city, but your lords knew better than to presume what the tribes desire, or to build to any single han's specifications—even my father's. Whichever tribe resides here completes it as it sees fit, then breaks it down when they move on."</p>
<p>Roshad only nodded. </p>
<p>The corridor ended in a set of bronze doors, each embossed with a rearing stallion. Two more guards stood at attention there, but before Erzhan could speak, they caught sight of Bors and swung the doors wide.</p>
<p>Roshad expected a great hall, tall and dourly majestic, or perhaps a cushioned seraglio. Instead, he found himself in a tent—a stone-floored one, to be sure, but still little more than a larger version of the gers they'd passed on the way in. One wall was open, its canvas drawn back like curtains to reveal the sunlit grass of a parade ground where several people were at work training horses.</p>
<p>A wooden throne stood on a raised platform against the far wall, its arms and back carved into the shapes of horses. A man sat on that chair, facing out at the training yard. As the warriors entered, he turned.</p>
<p>Roshad froze, and might have taken a step back if not for Bors's hand on his arm. </p>
<p>The man on the chair was tall, his armor like Bors's but richer, the lacquered scales a deep burgundy. Stylized horseheads adorned the steel bracers on his forearms and the clasp that held the long fur mantle over his shoulders. Twin axes lay crossed in his lap, yet none of these were what took Roshad aback.</p>
<p>The face he turned to them was steel, molded into the long moustaches and beard of a patriarch. It extended from his conical helm down to his chin, where it met the chain coif around his neck. It was polished mirror-bright, turning the holes for his eyes into darkened pits.</p>
<p>A litchina. Gods above. Bors had shown Roshad his own war mask once, the smooth lines modeled on his own expressionless face. He carried it everywhere, but Roshad had never seen him wear it, as a Horse King wearing his litchina meant one thing, and one thing only.</p>
<p>He was ready to kill.</p>
<p>Hakan Temir Kaskyrbai stood, taking an axe in each hand. The steel-encased head nodded minutely, and the soldiers who had surrounded Bors and Roshad stepped back.</p>
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<a href="https://paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8500_BoarAndRabbit-Temir.jpg">
<img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8500_BoarAndRabbit-Temir_360.jpeg" border="0"></a>
<br />The hakan knows the price of the throne.</div>
<p>"So," the hakan said. "This is the man who would steal my kingdom."</p>
<p>Roshad groped frantically for a response, but Bors squeezed his arm warningly and spoke instead. "He steals nothing, Father."</p>
<p>"Doesn't he?" One axe rose to point at them. "I see a thief who would break my line, who would see the greatest of the tribes fall to internal bickering, and let some lesser han take the Horse Throne. And you, my only son," the axe head drew a line between them, "you chain yourself to him like a dog on a leash."</p>
<p>"Watch your words." Bors's tone was suddenly as hard as the hakan's, his face a mask of its own. "You are my lord and father, and I honor you with every breath, but you will not insult me again, nor the man that I've chosen."</p>
<p>A laugh, ringing behind steel. "Or what? You'll draw your sword and strike me down, here in the heart of the Trade Palace?" The hakan laughed again, but this time it sounded to Roshad like the mockery was turned inward. "Split hooves, boy, isn't that all I've ever asked?"</p>
<p>The hakan seated himself once more on the wooden throne. He waved one of the axes dismissively. "Leave us. And send in Ulzhan." Roshad started to turn, and the axe shot forward. "Not you."</p>
<p>A moment later, the three of them were alone, save for the trainers continuing unperturbed on the far grass. The metal face regarded Bors and Roshad silently for a long moment, and Roshad suddenly understood at a visceral level why the Horse Kings wore the litchinas. That blank, expressionless stare was more terrifying than any grimace or battle cry.</p>
<p>"The Iridian Fold," the hakan said at last. </p>
<p>"It's a noble calling," Bors said. "You've said so yourself, when Koshkin left to join them."</p>
<p>The hakan nodded. "So it is. And you think that matters?"</p>
<p>The question caught Bors short. "But—"</p>
<p>"How many great tribes are there, Bors?"</p>
<p>"Thirteen."</p>
<p>"And which is the greatest?"</p>
<p>"Kaskyrbai. The wolves of the steppe."</p>
<p>The hakan nodded. "You've known that all your life, haven't you?"</p>
<p>"Of course."</p>
<p>"And that's the problem." The hakan took both axes and set them down on the arm of the throne. "You're young, Bors. You've been raised as heir to the greatest of the tribes, but you didn't watch what your grandfather—my father—had to do to take the Horse Throne. I grew up in the middle of it, the blood and shit that coated the steppes. The hans of the other great tribe are as proud as us, boy. They cede us respect because they have to. Because I've kept us strong. But if we show any weakness, they'll slaughter us. And then they'll slaughter each other, until the last one to fall from his saddle and land on this wooden chair can call himself hakan."</p>
<p>Someone pounded once on the bronze doors, and the hakan looked up. "Enter."</p>
<p>The doors opened, and a woman stepped through. She was big—only a few inches shorter than Bors himself—and wore armor of brown and gray, topped by a fur-lined helm. A huge sheath on her back held a recurve bow, and a longsword swung at her waist. She spared Bors and Roshad only the briefest of glances as she stalked past and knelt at the foot of the platform. "Hakan."</p>
<p>"Rise, Ulzhan." The hakan gestured for her to ascend and take up a position next to the throne, and now Roshad felt the frank appraisal in her gaze. He was momentarily glad for his veil—he could never have matched the expressionlessness of these damned nomads.</p>
<p>The hakan spoke. "What's your name, city-man?"</p>
<p>"Roshad, lord."</p>
<p>"Roshad what?"</p>
<p>"Just Roshad."</p>
<p>The steel face bobbed agreeably.</p>
<p>"And are you perhaps the son of a Water Lord, Roshad? Or maybe a prince of the East with a thousand camels in your caravan? No, wait—you're the sixth reincarnation of Sogys Taramai, here to lead us all off the steppe and into the Land of No Winters."</p>
<p>Roshad felt his face burn, and only Bors's grip on his arm and the knowledge of a thousand horse warriors in the surrounding camp kept him from spreading his fingers and letting the fire flow, torching the old man with the metal face and the stupid, flammable throne.</p>
<p>Bors's voice was quiet. "I love him, Father. And he loves me."</p>
<p>"And I love you, boy." The hakan shook his head. "Which is why I'm giving you the chance to save his life."</p>
<p>"What?" Roshad and Bors spoke in unison. Even as the shock coursed through him, some small part of Roshad smiled to see how quickly he and his szerik were growing together.</p>
<p>The hakan waved at the warrior next to him. "You've known Ulzhan since you were a child, Bors. Her father was the greatest captain I ever had, and already she's nearly matched him—with the horses, with the bow, and as a combat leader." </p>
<p>The woman inclined her head slightly at the praise.</p>
<p>No wonder she's good with horses, Roshad thought, she's got the face of one. But of course that was just his anger speaking. In truth, the woman was unremarkable, save for her size and the way she stood like a crouching lion, ready to pounce.</p>
<p>"Tomorrow at dawn, you will slit palms and marry Ulzhan, binding your blood with hers. Then you'll take up the Succession Sword and strike me down. Together, with me to advise you, you and she will lead our tribe to greatness."</p>
<p>"And if I refuse?"</p>
<p>The hakan picked up one of his axes and pounded twice on the platform with its haft. Suddenly the doors were open, and the room was full of dark-eyed steppe warriors.</p>
<p>"Then your city-man dies, and you marry her anyway."</p>
<p>"Bors!" Roshad grabbed tight to the man's arm, but his szerik paid him no attention. The bigger man's gaze was fixed on the hakan. </p>
<p>"I was born to be hakan," Bors said. "And you would make me a slave."</p>
<p>"All kings are slaves." The hakan sighed, then reached up and pulled off his litchina. The man beneath it was surprisingly young—no more than twenty years older than Bors, with plenty of black still in his long mustaches. He had the face of a hard man, yet the gaze that met Bors's was strangely soft.</p>
<p>"We both knew this was coming, Bors. I'm glad you found love, and I let you play as long as I could. But it's time to grow up."</p>
<p>Bors said nothing. The silence carried. </p>
<p>Roshad ran frantically through escape scenarios. Fire, that was good—fire scared people, called out to the animal instincts in them. He'd flame the old bastard—or better yet, the tent canopy above them, set the whole palace on fire. While the soldiers scrambled to put it out, he and Bors would race out the open side-wall, leap onto the horses that were being trained, then gallop through the camp and back to the city before anyone could stop them. Once there, they could hole up until a suitably large caravan was leaving the city, then—</p>
<p>Bors reached up to his chest and disconnected the chain, handing the end back to Roshad.</p>
<p>Roshad did his best not to grin beneath his veil. He and Bors only removed their chain when they were about to pull a particularly tricky stunt. He readied the spell.</p>
<p>"It's over, Roshad."</p>
<p>Roshad looked up at Bors. The man wasn't reaching for his sword. He wasn't tensing to move. Just looking down at him, mouth drawn tight. "What?"</p>
<p>"He's right. This time that we've had... I would have loved to be your szerik. But I have to do this."</p>
<p>"Right. Of course." Roshad searched Bors's face, looking for something—anything. This had to be a diversion, to catch the soldiers off guard. Later, Bors would kiss his brow and apologize for having said such a thing, even as a front.</p>
<p>But Bors was shaking his head. "No tricks, Roshad. Not this time. The city is your world, and I love you for showing it to me. But this is mine."</p>
<p>Gods, could he actually mean it? Roshad's stomach lurched. "I won't leave you." Smoke began to rise from his clenched fists. "I'm not scared of them."</p>
<p>"This isn't about fear." Bors's face was the same mask as the others, but now his eyes, always so full of emotion and expression for Roshad, held something indecipherable. "If you ever loved me, you won't make anyone hurt you." He took Roshad's head in his hands, and leaned down, pulling their foreheads together. </p>
<p>"Go now, Rabbit. Please. For me."</p>
<p>Then he let go and stepped backward, becoming one with the mass of soldiers. A sea of blank faces stared back at Roshad.</p>
<p>"If he's still here in three breaths," the hakan said to his soldiers, "shoot him."</p>
<p>Then tears blurred the scene, and Roshad turned and fled.</p>
<p align="center"><b>Coming Next Week</b>: Desperate measures in Chapter Three of James L. Sutter's "Boar and Rabbit"!</p>
<p><i>James L. Sutter is the Managing Editor for Paizo Publishing and a co-creator of the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game. He is the author of the Pathfinder Tales novels Death's Heretic and The Redemption Engine, the former of which was #3 on Barnes & Noble's list of the Best Fantasy Releases of 2011 and a finalist for the Compton Crook Award for Best First Novel. He's written short stories for such publications as </i>Escape Pod, Apex Magazine, Beneath Ceaseless Skies<i>, and the #1 Amazon best-seller </i>Machine of Death<i>. His anthology </i>Before They Were Giants<i> pairs the first published short stories of science fiction luminaries with new interviews and writing advice from the authors themselves. In addition, he's published a wealth of gaming material for both Dungeons & Dragons and the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game, including such fan-favorite Pathfinder Campaign Setting books as </i>Distant Worlds<i> and </i>City of Strangers<i>. For more information, check out <a href="http://jameslsutter.com" target="_blank">jameslsutter.com</a> or follow him on Twitter at <a href="http://twitter.com/#!/jameslsutter" target="_blank">@jameslsutter</a>.</i></p>
<p>Illustration by Eric Belisle</p>
</div>
</blockquote>
<!— tags: Eric Belisle, James L. Sutter, Pathfinder Tales —>
<p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/artists/ericBelisle">Eric Belisle</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales">Pathfinder Tales</a></p>2014-05-07T17:00:00ZBoar and Rabbithttps://paizo.com/community/blog/v5748dyo5lg30?Boar-and-Rabbit2014-04-30T17:00:00Z<blockquote>
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<div class="blurbCenter"><a href="https://paizo.com/pathfindertales"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/Logos/PathfinderTales_360.jpeg" border="0"></a></div>
<h1 itemprop="headline">Boar and Rabbit</h1>
<p class="date">by James L. Sutter</p>
<h2>Chapter One: Catch the Wind</h2>
<div itemprop="articleBody">
<p><span itemprop="description">Two men knelt at the foot of the dais. One wore thick-plated lamellar armor, the other snug gray wrappings that hid all but his eyes. Similarly dressed pairs made a half-circle around the kneelers, each individual set connected by a short iron chain.</span></p>
<p>On the dais, two more men stepped forward. Though they were dressed no differently from anyone else in the great cathedral, no one could have mistaken them for the others. They stepped forward in perfect unison, as though each were a mismatched reflection of the other, stretched and warped by a carnival mirror. Between them, they carried a chain like the others, holding it reverently in all four hands.</p>
<p>"This chain does not bind." The leaders' voice—for there was only one voice, spoken with two mouths—was smooth and reverent, rising up to ring off the cathedral's high dome. "Today, you cease to be two men, and instead become <i>szerik</i>—shared mind, shared heart. This chain will be your symbol, announcing your bond to the world. Yet the Iridian Fold is not a guild, with a chain of office. It is no religion, with a chain for a holy symbol. It is greater than these. For with love, with discipline, the lines between you will blur and fade. You will be as one soul in two bodies. This is the great mystery of the Iridian Fold: to let the bond between you grow until the union eclipses the self. And in that moment, you will no longer need the reminder of the chain." Two sets of eyes crinkled into a smile. "You will be the chain."</p>
<p>"<i>Be the chain!</i>" the congregation chorused.</p>
<p>Fifty feet above, Roshad glanced over at Bors and squeezed his hand. The pair crouched on the narrow gallery running the circumference of the cathedral's dome, Bors's bulky lamellar forcing him to contort himself like a dying insect in order to stay hidden behind the low balustrade. Despite the obvious discomfort, the bigger man's stone-slab face broke into a smile as he met Roshad's eyes, and he tugged lightly on the stolen chain running from his chest to the collar around Roshad's neck.</p>
<div class="blurb360"><a href="https://paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8500_BoarAndRabbit-Roshad.jpg"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8500_BoarAndRabbit-Roshad_360.jpeg" border="0"></a><br />Roshad prefers the direct approach.</div>
<p>Roshad smiled back, knowing that no veil could hide the expression from his partner. His <i>szerik</i>.</p>
<p>My Boar, Roshad thought, and the words came bittersweet. This is no place for him, lurking in the darkness like a beggar. If only we could be down there with the others. We—</p>
<p>The cathedral's doors banged open, replacing the soft glow of stained glass with the flare of noonday sun. As quickly as it appeared, the light was blocked by half a dozen figures, men and women in the furs and leathers of the horse tribes. </p>
<p>"Where are they?" </p>
<p>The leader of the troop, a bull-faced man with a long horsehair plume atop his conical helmet, shoved his way through the assembly until he stood at the foot of the dais, looking up at the congregation's leader. Around him, the gathered men of the Iridian Fold hissed at the affront, hands going to blades. The other invaders looked less comfortable, yet dutifully spread out behind their captain.</p>
<p>The men on the dais raised their hands in a calming gesture. "You do us a disservice, stranger."</p>
<p>The captain snorted. "I figure you get serviced plenty." Behind him, several of his own people frowned. "But what you Iridian Fold do is no business of mine. Now where are they?"</p>
<p>"Where are who?" the Iridian Fold men asked.</p>
<p>"I don't have time for games, holy man. One of the street kids saw them slip in here not half an hour ago." He looked back at one of his warriors. "Dosk?"</p>
<p>"They're not in the group, Captain. Unless they're disguised."</p>
<p>The captain grimaced, then looked around at the cathedral's many shadowed corners. "Fine. Aizha, light this place up."</p>
<p>A woman in a thick-furred hat stepped forward and raised her hands, grasping the air as if kneading dough. Four globes of golden light blazed into existence around them, each the size of a juggling ball. She gestured, and they shot outward, making a circuit of the vast chamber at head height, then rose higher to light the gallery.</p>
<p>Roshad searched frantically for somewhere else to hide as the globes floated closer, but without the shadows, the posts of the stone balustrade did little to obscure the two men. He met Bors's eyes.</p>
<p>"There!" Down below, one of the horse warriors pointed. The captain gave a command, and the company ran for the narrow spiral staircase leading up to Bors and Roshad's perch.</p>
<p>They were trapped. The stairway was the only way down to the cathedral floor—as usual, Roshad and Bors had crept up it shortly before the Iridian Fold men arrived for their ceremony. </p>
<p>A narrow ladder on the opposite side of the cathedral's dome caught his eye, its rungs disappearing up into the shaft of the cathedral's windcatcher.</p>
<p>Well, if they couldn't go down...</p>
<p>Roshad yanked Bors to his feet and jerked his chin toward the ladder. Bors nodded once and ran, his armored bulk threatening to overflow the narrow catwalk. If he tripped, the thigh-high balustrade would do little to save him, but the man moved with the grace of a desert wolf. Roshad's heart swelled as he followed, the chain swinging lightly between them. Below, the whole congregation now pointed and shouted, shocked to see two men dressed as their own racing around the inside of the dome.</p>
<p>They reached the ladder and began to climb. The shaft was blessedly wide, and broken at intervals by smaller horizontal tubes that led back to the dome, the better to let the rising hot air escape and draw up cooler air from the cathedral's catacombs. Roshad could feel the breeze as he hauled himself quickly upward.</p>
<p>The shaft ended abruptly in a covered ledge, barely wide enough for Roshad and Bors to stand together. Beyond a row of narrow pillars, the grand city of Ular Kel spread out before them, beckoning with a thousand places to hide, to lose themselves in the market crowds like loose stones on the steppes.</p>
<p>If only they could reach it. Roshad stuck his head out past the pillars and looked down. The drop was at least eighty feet, and the outer face of the windcatcher tower had no access ladder. Nothing but smooth stone until it met the blue-tiled plaza below. He grimaced and pulled back inside.</p>
<p>"Nothing?" Bors rumbled.</p>
<p>"Not that way." Roshad clasped Bors's armored forearm. "Hold tight."</p>
<p>"When haven't I?"</p>
<p>"Yeah, well..." Taking a deep breath, Roshad planted one foot firmly on the edge of the ledge, then swung out into space. He let the momentum pivot him around, doing his best to ignore the dizzying expanse of air below him as he reached out and caught the outer edge of the tower's wall. He hugged the corner as if it were Bors himself, pressing into it, and looked around.</p>
<p><i>Damn</i>. He'd hoped for some sort of access ledge on this side, but instead the tower was one long fin of stone extending back to the dome's apex. Even if they could get on top of it, there'd still be no good way down.</p>
<p>"Rabbit." Bors's voice was calm but urgent. "Time to go."</p>
<p>Roshad swung back onto the safety of the ledge. Below them, the horse warriors were in the shaft now, their curses rising up ahead of them. "Just had to check." He let go of Bors's arm and unclipped the chain from his collar, then stepped close to the larger man, his back against Bors's armored chest. He quickly looped the chain around both of them, under their arms, then handed the loose end to Bors. "Ready?"</p>
<p>Bors wrapped huge arms tight around Roshad's shoulders. "Always."</p>
<p>Roshad kissed the man's bracered wrist, then fixed the image of a small brown house spider in his mind, his hands twisting in the motions that had come to feel so natural. He knelt, Bors wrapped around him like a shell, and whispered the words.</p>
<p>Then he rolled off the ledge.</p>
<p>There was a moment of disorientation, his stomach rebelling at the shifting horizon. Then his hands found the sheer stone of the tower wall, and suddenly it was as if the world had turned ninety degrees, and he was crawling along a flat plane leading to the vertical blue wall of the plaza. His hands and feet moved effortlessly, sticking and releasing at will as he crawled, hindered only by Bors, who did his best to lock his legs around Roshad's middle. The warrior's weight on Roshad's back pulled steadily forward, urging them on. </p>
<p>And then they were down. The world twisted again as the two men untangled themselves and stood. Bors's expression was as stoic as any war mask, but his breathing was quick and his tan skin paler than normal. Roshad smiled up at him and refastened his chain.</p>
<p>A shout from the tower drew their attention. High above, the soldiers were peering down at them from between the pillars.</p>
<p>Bors tugged at Roshad's arm, leading him away across the plaza, but Roshad couldn't resist shooting their pursuers a rude gesture. "Better luck next time, geldings!"</p>
<p>Except that there wouldn't <i>be</i> a next time. At long last, he and Bors were finally leaving the city, heading out to—</p>
<p>The woman in the furry hat appeared between the pillars. She shouted something, then began shoving warriors off the ledge. One by one, they fell, unable to keep from pinwheeling their arms, faces contorted with fear—and yet moving nowhere near as quickly as they should have. In a heartbeat, the first had touched down, as lightly as a falling leaf. He smiled at and drew his sword.</p>
<p>"Right. Wizard." Roshad turned back to Bors. "Okay, <i>now</i> we go."</p>
<p>They ran, cutting across the plaza and through the crowd of onlookers that had gathered. Beyond it, the street was packed with merchants, travelers, and locals out for a walk in the city's picturesque temple district. Barrow runners pushed their one-wheeled carts to and fro, working on commission to spread caravan goods from the city's central market out to the rest of the populace.</p>
<p>Roshad grabbed the edge of one such barrow and pulled, dumping a load of ornamented baskets into the street. The runner screeched in protest and dove to recover her goods before they got trampled or stolen by the swarming street kids who knew an opportunity when they saw one. The pursuing horse warriors cursed, bogged down in the morass, and Bors and Roshad turned a corner and kept running, staying close together to keep their chain from clotheslining bystanders.</p>
<p>Someone shouted, and Roshad looked back to see that several horse warriors had broken through and were still on their trail. This part of the street was less densely packed, and the pursuers were gaining.</p>
<p>"The hell with this!" Roshad careened around the edge of a coffeehouse and ducked into an alley, pulling Bors along with him. He pressed the big man back into the shadows against the wall, then held his hands out toward the alley's mouth, fingers spread.</p>
<p>A gauntleted hand grabbed his shoulder. "Rabbit, no!"</p>
<p>Roshad grimaced and shot Bors a look. "They're not going to stop, Bors."</p>
<p>Bors simply stared at him, mouth set in a disapproving line. </p>
<p>"Piss and hell!" Roshad grabbed Bors's shoulder and shoved him back into a run. "If they catch us, it's your fault!"</p>
<p>They sprinted through a maze of alleys and access ways, past middens and watering troughs, their footfalls echoing off the mud-brick walls. Their pursuers weren't even bothering to yell anymore, just focusing all their efforts on closing the gap between them and their quarry. Roshad yanked Bors around another corner—</p>
<p>And stopped. The alley dead-ended in a small courtyard, kept shaded and cool by the many-storied buildings on three sides. Every door was shut tight. </p>
<p>Roshad grabbed the latch on the nearest door, but to no avail. Bors gave it a tentative slam with his shoulder, but the ironbound wood didn't even groan. They spun around just in time to see the first of the horse warriors appear.</p>
<p>"Now?" Roshad asked Bors, raising a hand.</p>
<p>Bors only shook his head. His fingers were tight on the hilt of the huge sword slung across his back, but Roshad knew it was a bluff. Bors would never hurt these people.</p>
<p>Fine—there were other spells. The climbing again. Roshad began the incantation—</p>
<p>"I wouldn't." The voice was the captain's, albeit strained. The man emerged from between his troops, sweating but exultant. To either side of him, warriors stood with bows drawn, arrows pointed straight at Roshad's chest. The captain grinned and moved forward.</p>
<p>"Now, thief," he said, "you'll give us back our prince."</p>
<p align="center"><b>Coming Next Week</b>: An audience with the lord of the Horse Throne in Chapter Two of James L. Sutter's "Boar and Rabbit"!</p>
<p><i>James L. Sutter is the Managing Editor for Paizo Publishing and a co-creator of the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game. He is the author of the Pathfinder Tales novels Death's Heretic and The Redemption Engine, the former of which was #3 on Barnes & Noble's list of the Best Fantasy Releases of 2011 and a finalist for the Compton Crook Award for Best First Novel. He's written short stories for such publications as </i>Escape Pod, Apex Magazine, Beneath Ceaseless Skies<i>, and the #1 Amazon best-seller </i>Machine of Death<i>. His anthology </i>Before They Were Giants<i> pairs the first published short stories of science fiction luminaries with new interviews and writing advice from the authors themselves. In addition, he's published a wealth of gaming material for both Dungeons & Dragons and the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game, including such fan-favorite Pathfinder Campaign Setting books as </i>Distant Worlds<i> and </i>City of Strangers<i>. For more information, check out <a href="http://jameslsutter.com" target="_blank">jameslsutter.com</a> or follow him on Twitter at <a href="http://twitter.com/#!/jameslsutter" target="_blank">@jameslsutter</a>.</i></p>
<p>Illustration by Eric Belisle</p>
</div>
</blockquote>
<!— tags: Eric Belisle, James L. Sutter, Pathfinder Tales —>
<p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/artists/ericBelisle">Eric Belisle</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales">Pathfinder Tales</a></p><blockquote>
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<div class="blurbCenter"><a href="https://paizo.com/pathfindertales"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/Logos/PathfinderTales_360.jpeg" border="0"></a></div>
<h1 itemprop="headline">Boar and Rabbit</h1>
<p class="date">by James L. Sutter</p>
<h2>Chapter One: Catch the Wind</h2>
<div itemprop="articleBody">
<p><span itemprop="description">Two men knelt at the foot of the dais. One wore thick-plated lamellar armor, the other snug gray wrappings that hid all but his eyes. Similarly dressed pairs made a half-circle around the kneelers, each individual set connected by a short iron chain.</span></p>
<p>On the dais, two more men stepped forward. Though they were dressed no differently from anyone else in the great cathedral, no one could have mistaken them for the others. They stepped forward in perfect unison, as though each were a mismatched reflection of the other, stretched and warped by a carnival mirror. Between them, they carried a chain like the others, holding it reverently in all four hands.</p>
<p>"This chain does not bind." The leaders' voice—for there was only one voice, spoken with two mouths—was smooth and reverent, rising up to ring off the cathedral's high dome. "Today, you cease to be two men, and instead become <i>szerik</i>—shared mind, shared heart. This chain will be your symbol, announcing your bond to the world. Yet the Iridian Fold is not a guild, with a chain of office. It is no religion, with a chain for a holy symbol. It is greater than these. For with love, with discipline, the lines between you will blur and fade. You will be as one soul in two bodies. This is the great mystery of the Iridian Fold: to let the bond between you grow until the union eclipses the self. And in that moment, you will no longer need the reminder of the chain." Two sets of eyes crinkled into a smile. "You will be the chain."</p>
<p>"<i>Be the chain!</i>" the congregation chorused.</p>
<p>Fifty feet above, Roshad glanced over at Bors and squeezed his hand. The pair crouched on the narrow gallery running the circumference of the cathedral's dome, Bors's bulky lamellar forcing him to contort himself like a dying insect in order to stay hidden behind the low balustrade. Despite the obvious discomfort, the bigger man's stone-slab face broke into a smile as he met Roshad's eyes, and he tugged lightly on the stolen chain running from his chest to the collar around Roshad's neck.</p>
<div class="blurb360"><a href="https://paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8500_BoarAndRabbit-Roshad.jpg"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8500_BoarAndRabbit-Roshad_360.jpeg" border="0"></a><br />Roshad prefers the direct approach.</div>
<p>Roshad smiled back, knowing that no veil could hide the expression from his partner. His <i>szerik</i>.</p>
<p>My Boar, Roshad thought, and the words came bittersweet. This is no place for him, lurking in the darkness like a beggar. If only we could be down there with the others. We—</p>
<p>The cathedral's doors banged open, replacing the soft glow of stained glass with the flare of noonday sun. As quickly as it appeared, the light was blocked by half a dozen figures, men and women in the furs and leathers of the horse tribes. </p>
<p>"Where are they?" </p>
<p>The leader of the troop, a bull-faced man with a long horsehair plume atop his conical helmet, shoved his way through the assembly until he stood at the foot of the dais, looking up at the congregation's leader. Around him, the gathered men of the Iridian Fold hissed at the affront, hands going to blades. The other invaders looked less comfortable, yet dutifully spread out behind their captain.</p>
<p>The men on the dais raised their hands in a calming gesture. "You do us a disservice, stranger."</p>
<p>The captain snorted. "I figure you get serviced plenty." Behind him, several of his own people frowned. "But what you Iridian Fold do is no business of mine. Now where are they?"</p>
<p>"Where are who?" the Iridian Fold men asked.</p>
<p>"I don't have time for games, holy man. One of the street kids saw them slip in here not half an hour ago." He looked back at one of his warriors. "Dosk?"</p>
<p>"They're not in the group, Captain. Unless they're disguised."</p>
<p>The captain grimaced, then looked around at the cathedral's many shadowed corners. "Fine. Aizha, light this place up."</p>
<p>A woman in a thick-furred hat stepped forward and raised her hands, grasping the air as if kneading dough. Four globes of golden light blazed into existence around them, each the size of a juggling ball. She gestured, and they shot outward, making a circuit of the vast chamber at head height, then rose higher to light the gallery.</p>
<p>Roshad searched frantically for somewhere else to hide as the globes floated closer, but without the shadows, the posts of the stone balustrade did little to obscure the two men. He met Bors's eyes.</p>
<p>"There!" Down below, one of the horse warriors pointed. The captain gave a command, and the company ran for the narrow spiral staircase leading up to Bors and Roshad's perch.</p>
<p>They were trapped. The stairway was the only way down to the cathedral floor—as usual, Roshad and Bors had crept up it shortly before the Iridian Fold men arrived for their ceremony. </p>
<p>A narrow ladder on the opposite side of the cathedral's dome caught his eye, its rungs disappearing up into the shaft of the cathedral's windcatcher.</p>
<p>Well, if they couldn't go down...</p>
<p>Roshad yanked Bors to his feet and jerked his chin toward the ladder. Bors nodded once and ran, his armored bulk threatening to overflow the narrow catwalk. If he tripped, the thigh-high balustrade would do little to save him, but the man moved with the grace of a desert wolf. Roshad's heart swelled as he followed, the chain swinging lightly between them. Below, the whole congregation now pointed and shouted, shocked to see two men dressed as their own racing around the inside of the dome.</p>
<p>They reached the ladder and began to climb. The shaft was blessedly wide, and broken at intervals by smaller horizontal tubes that led back to the dome, the better to let the rising hot air escape and draw up cooler air from the cathedral's catacombs. Roshad could feel the breeze as he hauled himself quickly upward.</p>
<p>The shaft ended abruptly in a covered ledge, barely wide enough for Roshad and Bors to stand together. Beyond a row of narrow pillars, the grand city of Ular Kel spread out before them, beckoning with a thousand places to hide, to lose themselves in the market crowds like loose stones on the steppes.</p>
<p>If only they could reach it. Roshad stuck his head out past the pillars and looked down. The drop was at least eighty feet, and the outer face of the windcatcher tower had no access ladder. Nothing but smooth stone until it met the blue-tiled plaza below. He grimaced and pulled back inside.</p>
<p>"Nothing?" Bors rumbled.</p>
<p>"Not that way." Roshad clasped Bors's armored forearm. "Hold tight."</p>
<p>"When haven't I?"</p>
<p>"Yeah, well..." Taking a deep breath, Roshad planted one foot firmly on the edge of the ledge, then swung out into space. He let the momentum pivot him around, doing his best to ignore the dizzying expanse of air below him as he reached out and caught the outer edge of the tower's wall. He hugged the corner as if it were Bors himself, pressing into it, and looked around.</p>
<p><i>Damn</i>. He'd hoped for some sort of access ledge on this side, but instead the tower was one long fin of stone extending back to the dome's apex. Even if they could get on top of it, there'd still be no good way down.</p>
<p>"Rabbit." Bors's voice was calm but urgent. "Time to go."</p>
<p>Roshad swung back onto the safety of the ledge. Below them, the horse warriors were in the shaft now, their curses rising up ahead of them. "Just had to check." He let go of Bors's arm and unclipped the chain from his collar, then stepped close to the larger man, his back against Bors's armored chest. He quickly looped the chain around both of them, under their arms, then handed the loose end to Bors. "Ready?"</p>
<p>Bors wrapped huge arms tight around Roshad's shoulders. "Always."</p>
<p>Roshad kissed the man's bracered wrist, then fixed the image of a small brown house spider in his mind, his hands twisting in the motions that had come to feel so natural. He knelt, Bors wrapped around him like a shell, and whispered the words.</p>
<p>Then he rolled off the ledge.</p>
<p>There was a moment of disorientation, his stomach rebelling at the shifting horizon. Then his hands found the sheer stone of the tower wall, and suddenly it was as if the world had turned ninety degrees, and he was crawling along a flat plane leading to the vertical blue wall of the plaza. His hands and feet moved effortlessly, sticking and releasing at will as he crawled, hindered only by Bors, who did his best to lock his legs around Roshad's middle. The warrior's weight on Roshad's back pulled steadily forward, urging them on. </p>
<p>And then they were down. The world twisted again as the two men untangled themselves and stood. Bors's expression was as stoic as any war mask, but his breathing was quick and his tan skin paler than normal. Roshad smiled up at him and refastened his chain.</p>
<p>A shout from the tower drew their attention. High above, the soldiers were peering down at them from between the pillars.</p>
<p>Bors tugged at Roshad's arm, leading him away across the plaza, but Roshad couldn't resist shooting their pursuers a rude gesture. "Better luck next time, geldings!"</p>
<p>Except that there wouldn't <i>be</i> a next time. At long last, he and Bors were finally leaving the city, heading out to—</p>
<p>The woman in the furry hat appeared between the pillars. She shouted something, then began shoving warriors off the ledge. One by one, they fell, unable to keep from pinwheeling their arms, faces contorted with fear—and yet moving nowhere near as quickly as they should have. In a heartbeat, the first had touched down, as lightly as a falling leaf. He smiled at and drew his sword.</p>
<p>"Right. Wizard." Roshad turned back to Bors. "Okay, <i>now</i> we go."</p>
<p>They ran, cutting across the plaza and through the crowd of onlookers that had gathered. Beyond it, the street was packed with merchants, travelers, and locals out for a walk in the city's picturesque temple district. Barrow runners pushed their one-wheeled carts to and fro, working on commission to spread caravan goods from the city's central market out to the rest of the populace.</p>
<p>Roshad grabbed the edge of one such barrow and pulled, dumping a load of ornamented baskets into the street. The runner screeched in protest and dove to recover her goods before they got trampled or stolen by the swarming street kids who knew an opportunity when they saw one. The pursuing horse warriors cursed, bogged down in the morass, and Bors and Roshad turned a corner and kept running, staying close together to keep their chain from clotheslining bystanders.</p>
<p>Someone shouted, and Roshad looked back to see that several horse warriors had broken through and were still on their trail. This part of the street was less densely packed, and the pursuers were gaining.</p>
<p>"The hell with this!" Roshad careened around the edge of a coffeehouse and ducked into an alley, pulling Bors along with him. He pressed the big man back into the shadows against the wall, then held his hands out toward the alley's mouth, fingers spread.</p>
<p>A gauntleted hand grabbed his shoulder. "Rabbit, no!"</p>
<p>Roshad grimaced and shot Bors a look. "They're not going to stop, Bors."</p>
<p>Bors simply stared at him, mouth set in a disapproving line. </p>
<p>"Piss and hell!" Roshad grabbed Bors's shoulder and shoved him back into a run. "If they catch us, it's your fault!"</p>
<p>They sprinted through a maze of alleys and access ways, past middens and watering troughs, their footfalls echoing off the mud-brick walls. Their pursuers weren't even bothering to yell anymore, just focusing all their efforts on closing the gap between them and their quarry. Roshad yanked Bors around another corner—</p>
<p>And stopped. The alley dead-ended in a small courtyard, kept shaded and cool by the many-storied buildings on three sides. Every door was shut tight. </p>
<p>Roshad grabbed the latch on the nearest door, but to no avail. Bors gave it a tentative slam with his shoulder, but the ironbound wood didn't even groan. They spun around just in time to see the first of the horse warriors appear.</p>
<p>"Now?" Roshad asked Bors, raising a hand.</p>
<p>Bors only shook his head. His fingers were tight on the hilt of the huge sword slung across his back, but Roshad knew it was a bluff. Bors would never hurt these people.</p>
<p>Fine—there were other spells. The climbing again. Roshad began the incantation—</p>
<p>"I wouldn't." The voice was the captain's, albeit strained. The man emerged from between his troops, sweating but exultant. To either side of him, warriors stood with bows drawn, arrows pointed straight at Roshad's chest. The captain grinned and moved forward.</p>
<p>"Now, thief," he said, "you'll give us back our prince."</p>
<p align="center"><b>Coming Next Week</b>: An audience with the lord of the Horse Throne in Chapter Two of James L. Sutter's "Boar and Rabbit"!</p>
<p><i>James L. Sutter is the Managing Editor for Paizo Publishing and a co-creator of the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game. He is the author of the Pathfinder Tales novels Death's Heretic and The Redemption Engine, the former of which was #3 on Barnes & Noble's list of the Best Fantasy Releases of 2011 and a finalist for the Compton Crook Award for Best First Novel. He's written short stories for such publications as </i>Escape Pod, Apex Magazine, Beneath Ceaseless Skies<i>, and the #1 Amazon best-seller </i>Machine of Death<i>. His anthology </i>Before They Were Giants<i> pairs the first published short stories of science fiction luminaries with new interviews and writing advice from the authors themselves. In addition, he's published a wealth of gaming material for both Dungeons & Dragons and the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game, including such fan-favorite Pathfinder Campaign Setting books as </i>Distant Worlds<i> and </i>City of Strangers<i>. For more information, check out <a href="http://jameslsutter.com" target="_blank">jameslsutter.com</a> or follow him on Twitter at <a href="http://twitter.com/#!/jameslsutter" target="_blank">@jameslsutter</a>.</i></p>
<p>Illustration by Eric Belisle</p>
</div>
</blockquote>
<!— tags: Eric Belisle, James L. Sutter, Pathfinder Tales —>
<p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/artists/ericBelisle">Eric Belisle</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales">Pathfinder Tales</a></p>2014-04-30T17:00:00ZFaithful Servants--Chapter Four: The Greatest Gifthttps://paizo.com/community/blog/v5748dyo5lcyd?Faithful-ServantsChapter-Four-The-Greatest-Gift2011-12-21T18:00:00Z<blockquote>
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<a href="https://paizo.com/pathfindertales"><div class="PTales"></div></a>
<h1>Faithful Servants</h1>
<p>by James L. Sutter</p>
<h2>Chapter Four: The Greatest Gift</h2>
<p>Salim slipped through the pools of shadow cast by branches and shrubs, trusting to his robes to break up his outline and make him invisible. Around him, the sounds of the night creatures were sporadic and tense. Expectant.</p>
<p>Connell slid along beside him, still wearing his peasant disguise. Salim had to give him credit—the eidolon was surprisingly graceful. Ahead, the manor house stood huge and whitewashed at the end of the drive, its windows cavernous and dark save for three in an upper corner, which glowed with dim red light.</p>
<p>As welcome as the shadows were in hiding their approach, Salim would have preferred to come during daylight. Yet he had wasted too much time trying to convince Father Adibold that Salim and Connell would do better alone than with his assistance.</p>
<p>It was utterly stupid. The priest's little mob of peasants would likely scatter at the first sign of a walking corpse, and those who stayed would be slaughtered. Worse, if this Lord Mirosoy had advanced to making ghouls, then every farmhand who fell would rise again shortly to add to his army.</p>
<p>The old priest and his son might have been more useful—the man claimed to have some magic yet, and the boy's armor was solid. Yet Salim had seen enough in the priest's eyes to know that it wasn't worth it. For all that Adibold talked of the Pharasmin Penitence, that hopeless splinter sect of ascetics and self-deniers, it wasn't religious fervor that made Adibold cut himself, or so eagerly throw himself and his only son into harm's way. It was grief for his dead wife. Perhaps even a desire to join her early.</p>
<p>Salim understood that all too well. But the boy still had plenty of years left, and suicidal warriors were a liability.</p>
<p>In frustration, Salim had even attempted telling the old priest part of the truth: that Lord Mirosoy wasn't acting of his own accord, but rather had been enchanted by a cursed magic item.</p>
<p>The priest would have none of it. "I've seen souls corrupted by a shiny coin, or a bit of bare thigh. The nature of the temptation is unimportant."</p>
<p>At last, once it became clear that even the prospect of killing a potentially innocent man wasn't enough to dissuade the priest—"sorting good from evil is the Lady's job, not ours"—Salim had given in and agreed to join them in their attack at dawn.</p>
<p>Which is why he and Connell were out here in the dark, with the sun still hours below the horizon.</p>
<p>Salim caught the eidolon's eye and nodded. The eidolon had given him the layout of the house, and they'd decided on the servants' entrance around the side rather than the grand double doors that faced the drive. It was time to break with the road and circle left.</p>
<p>Something shot out from the brush near Salim's feet. </p>
<p>Without thinking—because in combat, acting was always faster than thinking—Salim drew his sword and slammed it down, pinning the scurrying shape to the earth. The creature squeaked once and expired.</p>
<p>"Mouse," he whispered, and withdrew his blade, rodent still clinging to its tip. He started to scrape it off against his boot, then stopped.</p>
<p>The thing's ribcage was hollowed out, the flesh rotted away from tiny bones. Salim's sword had spitted it neatly, yet its back legs still kicked feebly. </p>
<p>Another tiny form catapulted itself from the bushes. Before Salim could move, Connell leaped, springing forward with the grace of a cat and coming up an the undead rat in his hands. The eidolon popped it into his mouth, bones crunching, then looked back at Salim and smiled.</p>
<p>Perhaps the eidolon would be more useful than Salim had expected. Connell swallowed and asked, "Scouts?"</p>
<p>Salim nodded. It seemed Mirosoy wasn't totally without defenses. He slipped the twice-expired mouse from his blade and ground it under his boot heel before continuing on.</p>
<p>The servants' entrance was unguarded. From the tree line, it was a solid hundred feet of open lawn to the steps up to the back porch, and then the door. Salim covered it at a run, body bent almost double, sword under his robes to avoid reflecting the moonlight. Connell paced him. At the door, they paused for a moment, listening. When nothing revealed itself, Salim nodded to Connell and thumbed the latch. </p>
<p>Beyond lay a long hall, its wood-paneled walls lit only by the feeble shaft of moonlight from the open door, quickly disappearing into utter black.</p>
<p>Salim smelled it first—the charnel stench of putrefaction. He thrust out an arm to stop Connell, but the eager eidolon had already bounded into the corridor.</p>
<p>A hand reached from the darkness.</p>
<p>Salim moved. There was no time to let his eyes adjust, so he closed them and let his ears and nose guide him past the struggling eidolon, deeper into the dark. </p>
<p>Something rose up in front of him, grave-wet and stinking, and he brought his sword out and down, feeling it cleave through cheese-soft flesh. The thing gave a sigh and fell heavily into him, knocking him back into the wall and what felt like a tall table or stool. His free hand closed on a smooth, heavy object, and he brought it down hard on the thing in front of him, then spun to skewer a new attacker to his right. Back toward the entrance, Connell shouted something.</p>
<p>They were stuck. Salim might be able to keep this up indefinitely, but there was no telling about the eidolon, and they needed to move fast if they wanted to retain the element of surprise. Gritting his teeth, Salim reached out and touched the goddess.</p>
<p>It was only a second, but it was enough. The Lady of Graves flowed through him in a black rush, as grotesque and violating in its own way as the creature putrefying on his feet. The energy passed through him and into the blade of his sword, and cold steel flared with ghostly incandescence, lighting the hallway.</p>
<p>There were only three zombies, all dressed in the rotting finery that had probably once been the best clothes the little town could offer. Two lay at Salim's feet, his sword having severed the fragile magic that kept them animated. Down the hall, Connell struggled with the third. The eidolon had dropped his disguise, and the long neck of his true form snaked around the back of the zombie's futilely chomping head, wrapping it like a boa constrictor. Long jaws locked around the undead creature's skull. There was a twist and a pop, and the last corpse dropped to the floor and lay still.</p>
<p>Salim looked down at his off hand. The object he held was a stone bust of a young man, handsome in a vaguely arrogant and pupilless sort of way. He held it out toward the eidolon. "Your boss?"</p>
<p>Connell nodded.</p>
<p>Salim let the stone drop onto the corpse it had clubbed, then wiped his sword on the tattered linen shirt. He gestured down the hall.</p>
<p>"You know the house," he said, "but don't leave my side unless I tell you to. Are we clear?"</p>
<p>Connell bobbed his head in what appeared to be genuine contrition and led the way deeper into the house.</p>
<p>The manor was a shell. Though the pair passed several well-appointed sitting rooms, with plush armchairs and walls of bookshelves or big bay windows overlooking the moonlit grounds, the layer of dust at the entrance to each argued that no one had bothered with them in some time. Connell avoided the showy front half of the house, with its hangings and sculptures like the one Salim had appreciated, and instead led them through a series of narrow, more utilitarian corridors and staircases. Salim kept the light from the sword carefully banked and focused by a fold in his cloak, yet nothing stirred in the dead house. If it weren't for the slight but ever-present scent of decay, Salim might have thought the place a summer home, packed away for storage while the lord was away. </p>
<p>At last they came to a door whose bottom edge was limned with the same red light they'd seen from the road. The eidolon's barely existent lips moved, and after a second Salim realized Connell was attempting to mouth the word "workshop." Salim nodded, and the eidolon turned the knob. The door swung open.</p>
<p>The room was large, the kind other lords might put to use as a ballroom or formal dining room for parties. The huge set of windows they'd observed earlier cast moonlight on the hardwood floor, yet this illumination was overpowered by red lights that floated like swamp fire at the room's far end. The glow from these flying lanterns was soft, and cast a flattering glow over the guests. No doubt that generous lighting would have kindled more than one midnight romance among the figures standing in a knot on the dance floor. Except that the guests were dead.</p>
<p>As one, the corpses turned to observe the newcomers. These, too, were still dressed in their funeral finery, some in the clothes of peasants and merchants, others in simple shrouds marked with the symbol of Pharasma. There was no pattern to their features—young and old, male and female all stood with the awkward stances or constricted limbs of rigor mortis. A few had clearly been magically preserved for their funerals, and even now were only beginning to show the first signs of decomposition. Others were little more than fleshy skeletons, their bones tied crudely together with twine where tendons had fallen away.</p>
<p>Behind them all, a man stood in the center of the lights, obscured from the chest down by a long dining table repurposed as a workbench. Stacks of books and bubbling alembics cluttered every surface, along with stranger implements and silvery surgical tools with whose use Salim was thankfully unfamiliar. Though the man's face was the same as that on the stone head in the servants' hall, this version was older, and so drawn and haggard as to resemble his zombie subjects. Above the face, a black crown of long thorns and vertical spikes pierced and pricked at his brow, holding back long, dark hair. </p>
<p>Lord Mirosoy looked up from the book he'd been studying, yet his face barely registered the newcomers' presence. With one finger still marking his place in the text, he flicked his hand toward his uninvited guests.</p>
<div class="blurb360"><a href="https://paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8500-Mirosoy.jpg"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8500-Mirosoy_360.jpeg" border="0"></a><br>
"Lord Mirosoy appears to have embarked on some<br> significant life changes of late."</div>
<p>"Kill them," he said, and went back to reading.</p>
<p>The undead convocation shuffled forward.</p>
<p>Connell growled—a deep, resonant rumble in surprising contrast to his usual excited tenor. Three-fingered talons flexed.</p>
<p>"No," Salim said, and put a hand on the eidolon's shoulder. </p>
<p>Connell looked at him in puzzlement, but Salim simply squeezed once and then released him. He stepped forward and drew his sword.</p>
<p>The eidolon might be better in a fight than he let on, but that wasn't the point. Salim had seen enough to tell that these people were no ghouls, no vampire spawn or vengeful wraiths. These were just farmers, their corpses denied the slow transition into the same dirt they worked, forced to walk again at the whim of some spoiled lord. </p>
<p>This wasn't a fight. Nor even an execution.</p>
<p>It was a funeral rite.</p>
<p>The zombies approached, and Salim flowed like a river to meet them. </p>
<p>The undead fought silently, and Salim did the same, the only sounds the swirl of his robes and the wine-glass ring of steel sliding free of flesh, punctuated by the thumps of corpses hitting the floor. They moved to surround him, and he let them, whirling like a dervish, blade kissing them lightly in the only blessing he knew how to give. </p>
<p><i>Rest</i>, he thought as a child's body slid from his sword, crumpling to the fouled floor. <i>Rest</i>.</p>
<p>And then he stood alone. Around him, the hardwood was covered with bodies, splayed once more in the posture of death that, while undignified, was so much more than they'd had a moment before. He looked down at the corpses and wished them well.</p>
<p>At last they had Mirosoy's attention. The lord looked at them as if dazed, struggling to understand the mess of bodies staining his ballroom floor. "Who are you?" he asked.</p>
<p>"It's me, Master!" The eidolon's voice was the whining, eager tone of a dog hoping to regain its master's good graces. "I've come back to help you! Please don't be angry!"</p>
<p>Mirosoy ignored his creation, instead focusing on the dark-eyed man moving toward him, sword drawn. The lord's voice didn't waver. "And you?"</p>
<p>"Just a friend," Salim said. "One who's come to do you a favor."</p>
<p>His sword lashed out.</p>
<p>"<i>No!</i>" Connell's scream was grief bordering on pain. The eidolon leaped for Salim's back, talons outstretched, but it was already too late. Salim's upward slash carved a shining arc toward Mirosoy's face.</p>
<p>The blade missed the man's cheek by inches. With a tiny clink of metal on metal, Salim's sword caught one of the black, curving thorns of the crown and tore it free from the summoner's head. Mirosoy gasped at the sudden absence, or perhaps at the furrows the embedded thorns carved through his scalp. The crown fell to the table, and Salim followed it down, sword hilt gripped in both hands. Blade met crown with Salim's full weight behind it.</p>
<p>There was a flash that wasn't so much light as its absence, and a high, keening wail that might have been a word, or a name. Then there were only two halves of a crown, the metal seeming to shrivel and fold in on itself like burning briars. The newly rusted slag clattered to the floor and lay still.</p>
<p>"Master!" Connell was past Salim and gripping Lord Mirosoy's shoulders. The noble stood with head hung on his chest, looking ready to fall face-first into his workbench. Slowly, he raised his eyes. "Connell?"</p>
<p>"Yes. Yes, Master." The eidolon was weeping in earnest now, huge tears rolling down the reptilian face. Above them, the rune on his forehead glowed brighter than ever. "I'm back now. I knew it was the crown that sent me away, not you. And now you're free!"</p>
<p>Mirosoy straightened, shrugging off the eidolon's steadying hands. "Yes. Well." He looked over to Salim. "You do realize that's a priceless artifact you just destroyed?"</p>
<p>Salim marveled. Even half-dead and surrounded by his own failure, the man exuded entitlement. Salim looked down at the corpses on the floor, then back at the noble.</p>
<p>"I'm sure we can arrange an accounting of debts." His voice was soft.</p>
<p>The summoner followed Salim's gaze down, then swallowed. "No, that won't be necessary. Clearly, the crown needed to be destroyed. You have my thanks."</p>
<p>Salim inclined his head, unconvinced. Perhaps the crown wasn't as responsible for these atrocities as Connell wanted to think. He opened his mouth to say something—then stopped.</p>
<p>There was a new sound. Salim saw the other two pick up on it as well: a low, muttering hum.</p>
<p>Voices.</p>
<p>Salim moved swiftly to the window. Out in the darkness, a line of torches snaked down the manor house's long drive.</p>
<p>"Damn." Apparently Father Adibold was no longer interested in waiting until dawn.</p>
<p>Salim turned back to Mirosoy. "We need to get out of here. In two minutes, their families"—he gestured to the corpses on the floor—"are going to burn this place to the ground. And you're going to let them."</p>
<p>"Oh?" The noble's lip twitched toward a sneer.</p>
<p>Salim raised his sword suggestively.</p>
<p>"Oh," Lord Mirosoy said again, this time with considerably less vigor. "Well, you see, that may be something of a problem." He raised a hand and gestured to his waist.</p>
<p>"Oh, Master!" Connell's voice was horrified. "What have you done?"</p>
<p>And now Salim saw it. The various beakers and sealed containers on the worktable didn't stand alone. Below the rumpled blouse, several thick tubes snaked out of Mirosoy's abdomen and into the vessels and retorts on the table, steady streams of black and red fluids cycling through them.</p>
<p>Once more, the summoner ignored his servant and spoke to Salim. This time he looked almost embarrassed.</p>
<p>"The crown," he said. "It had several suggestions as to how I might...improve my longevity."</p>
<p>"Lichdom." Salim understood now why the man looked so hollow. He almost spat, but stopped himself for fear of hitting one of the corpses. "You were trying to turn yourself undead."</p>
<p>"Not me—the crown!"</p>
<p>Salim didn't care. "Can you stop it? Reverse it?"</p>
<p>"Almost certainly," Mirosoy said. "But it'll take time. Days."</p>
<p>Behind Salim, the villagers were drawing closer. He could hear individual voices in the rumble of the mob. "We don't have days."</p>
<p>Lord Mirosoy ventured a tentative smile, greasy and anxious. "If you'll allow it, my manor has certain defenses which—"</p>
<p>"No. You've done these people enough harm already." Salim thought hard. "Can you teleport? Move this whole setup somewhere else with magic?"</p>
<p>The noble grimaced. "My studies of late have been focused on other matters."</p>
<p>"Clearly." Salim sized up the various tubes that nosed into Mirosoy's clothing like hungry worms. "And I were to just pull those out?"</p>
<p>"Then I would die. Likely in excruciating pain."</p>
<p>Works for me, thought Salim, but he knew the eidolon would never stand for it. Besides, there was no telling what sort of backlash the expiring spell might generate. </p>
<p>Beyond the window, dozens of feet crunched on gravel.</p>
<p>"I have a suggestion."</p>
<p>Both Mirosoy and Salim turned to look at Connell. The eidolon was holding up a hand, as if waiting to be called on. Salim nodded.</p>
<p>"I have a suggestion," the eidolon said again. With one three-fingered hand, he reached up and touched the amulet hanging from his serpentine neck.</p>
<p>And then there was no Connell. Only a second Mirosoy.</p>
<p>Salim understood immediately. "Connell—" he began.</p>
<p>"They're looking for the master," the eidolon said firmly. "If we give them one, maybe they'll go home."</p>
<p>"They're a mob," Salim pressed, throat suddenly tight. "Even if they think Mirosoy's gone, they'll burn this place down anyway."</p>
<p>"Then you'll have to stop them." The eidolon held out a hand. "Goodbye, Salim. Thank you."</p>
<p>The hand hung there, unmoving. After an eternity, Salim stepped forward and took it. They shook.</p>
<p>Connell looked to Mirosoy.</p>
<p>"It's good to have you back, Master."</p>
<p>Then the eidolon walked out of the room and was gone.</p>
<p>Silence reigned as the two men stood looking at the door where the second Mirosoy had disappeared. Finally Salim spoke.</p>
<p>"If you lived a thousand years," he said slowly, "you would still be unworthy of that love."</p>
<p>"What?"</p>
<p>Salim's glance flicked sideways to the noble.</p>
<p>"That sacrifice. For you."</p>
<p>Mirosoy seemed genuinely puzzled. "It's an eidolon," he said. "I made it to protect me. When it's gone, I'll make another."</p>
<p>Salim stared at him.</p>
<p>Outside, the crowd roared.
<p><center>∗∗∗</center></p>
<p>Three empty cups stood at parade rest on the wooden table. A fourth, only halfway drained, stood before them, the officer addressing its troops.</p>
<p>Salim took another drink. Around him, the familiar buzz of the Clever Endeavor continued as usual, a dozen conversations that never happened, between people who were never here and had never met. This time, no one was looking at Salim. That suited him fine.</p>
<p>The wood between his elbows was stained dark with spilled wine. Salim grimaced and set his mug down on top of the splotch, but the cup wasn't quite big enough to hide it from view.</p>
<p>Connell hadn't screamed. He hadn't made a sound at all. By the time Salim reached the front door of the manor house, passing corpses which lay motionless without the crown's animating touch, the worst was over. The bravest of the mob was still hacking away with hoes and scythes, while others shouted encouragement. At some point, someone tore away the amulet to reveal the eidolon's true form, which Father Adibold loudly proclaimed a sign that the noble had been a monster all along. </p>
<p>And then, finally, it was over. With a last gasp from the crowd, the eidolon's body disappeared. Only the bloody stain on the gravel drive remained.</p>
<p>Still giddy with the ease of their victory, the mob might have indeed charged the manor, had Salim not chosen that point to reveal himself. Stepping forth to address Father Adibold by name, Salim announced that the evening's festivities were over, and that he'd dealt with the rest of the lord's creatures himself. </p>
<p>A few of the mob, drunk on blood, had yelled abuse. Salim raised his still-glowing sword, and the newfound bravery dissipated. With Father Adibold at its head, the crowd turned and made its way back toward town. In no time at all, Salim was alone on the driveway. Just him and the stain Connell had left behind.</p>
<p>A single torch, dropped by a villager, still sputtered in the dirt. Salim bent down and picked it up. He looked up toward the manor window, where the red lights still played.</p>
<p>He could finish things. Mirosoy had perverted the corpses of innocents, and attempted to do the same to himself. Salim had executed men for less. He could set the torch against one of the tapestries in the entrance hall and let the whole place disappear.</p>
<p>Instead, he had opened his hand and let the torch drop.</p>
<p>And now he was here. </p>
<p>Salim drank deep, draining the last of the mug. The wine at the bottom had an unpleasant copper taste, and he looked down to see blood pooling there, mixing with the dregs. He put fingers to his nose, and they came away red. He sighed.</p>
<p>"You have a terrible way of announcing yourself, Ceyanan."</p>
<p>The creature across the table was neither male nor female, its pale skin as smooth and inhuman as an alabaster statue. Behind its shoulders, great wings that were half feathers, half shadow flexed once and then furled tightly in the dingy confines of the bar. Gray cloth like funeral shrouds wrapped its waist and chest.</p>
<p>Salim wiped his bloody upper lip with the back of his hand. "You want to tell me why you sent him to me?"</p>
<p>The angel smiled. "What do you mean?"</p>
<p>"Don't play coy." Salim put down his empty mug and leaned back, crossing his arms. "Your boss deals with more complex judgments than Mirosoy's little change of heart on a daily basis. If you hadn't sent me in, the mob would eventually have made it through those zombies and killed him, thus removing any reason for the Lady of Graves to take an interest."</p>
<p>"Many innocents would have died," the angel observed.</p>
<p>"And since when does your mistress give a flying fig about that?" Salim held up two fingers to the barman, who appeared almost immediately with two more mugs.</p>
<p>"Thank you," said Ceyanan, "but I don't drink."</p>
<p>"Who said one of these was for you?" Salim pulled both drinks close.</p>
<p>The angel watched him. "You're an excellent hunter, Salim. Your skill does you credit. But you still have much to learn." White lips twitched higher, the smile becoming almost beatific. "Connell did something very brave today. Out of love and devotion to his friend."</p>
<p>"Who didn't deserve it," Salim growled.</p>
<p>"Does it matter?" The angel's big eyes bored into Salim's. "Is the eidolon's sacrifice any less admirable because of it?"</p>
<p>Salim laughed sharply.</p>
<p>"Is that what this is all about? Teaching me to take pride in my work, even if I don't have any choice in the matter?" He showed his teeth. "Haven't I learned enough about duty? About <i>sacrifice</i>?"</p>
<p>Ceyanan shook its head, half sad, half bemused.</p>
<p>"Maybe not," it said at last. "But don't worry. You will."</p>
<p>"Just what—" Salim began.</p>
<p>But the angel was gone.</p>
<p>Salim stared at the chair where the angel had been. Then down at the stain on the table.</p>
<p>A mug in either hand, he began to drink in earnest.</p>
<p><b>Coming Next Week:</b> A brand new romp exploring the perils of bragging in Lucien Soulban's "Fingers of Death—No, Doom!"</p>
<p><i>James L. Sutter is the Fiction Editor for Paizo Publishing, author of the novel <a href="https://paizo.com/products/btpy8oda?Pathfinder-Tales-Deaths-Heretic"></i>Death's Heretic<i></a> (also starring Salim), and co-creator of the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game campaign setting. His short stories have appeared in such publications as Escape Pod, Starship Sofa, Apex Magazine, and the #1 Amazon bestseller Machine of Death, and his anthology <a href="http://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8b8p"></i>Before They Were Giants<i></a> pairs the first published stories of SF luminaries with new interviews and writing advice from the authors themselves. In addition, James has written numerous Pathfinder supplements, including <a href="http://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8fda"></i>City of Strangers<i></a> and <a href="http://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8mgf"></i>Distant Worlds<i></a>. For more information, check out <a href="http://www.jameslsutter.com" target="_blank">jameslsutter.com</a> or follow him on Twitter at <a href="http://twitter.com/#!/jameslsutter" target="_blank">@jameslsutter</a>.</i></p>
<p>Illustration by Carmen Cianelli.</p>
</blockquote><p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/artists/carmenCianelli">Carmen Cianelli</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales/webFiction/faithfulServants">Faithful Servants</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales">Pathfinder Tales</a></p><blockquote>
<br>
<a href="https://paizo.com/pathfindertales"><div class="PTales"></div></a>
<h1>Faithful Servants</h1>
<p>by James L. Sutter</p>
<h2>Chapter Four: The Greatest Gift</h2>
<p>Salim slipped through the pools of shadow cast by branches and shrubs, trusting to his robes to break up his outline and make him invisible. Around him, the sounds of the night creatures were sporadic and tense. Expectant.</p>
<p>Connell slid along beside him, still wearing his peasant disguise. Salim had to give him credit—the eidolon was surprisingly graceful. Ahead, the manor house stood huge and whitewashed at the end of the drive, its windows cavernous and dark save for three in an upper corner, which glowed with dim red light.</p>
<p>As welcome as the shadows were in hiding their approach, Salim would have preferred to come during daylight. Yet he had wasted too much time trying to convince Father Adibold that Salim and Connell would do better alone than with his assistance.</p>
<p>It was utterly stupid. The priest's little mob of peasants would likely scatter at the first sign of a walking corpse, and those who stayed would be slaughtered. Worse, if this Lord Mirosoy had advanced to making ghouls, then every farmhand who fell would rise again shortly to add to his army.</p>
<p>The old priest and his son might have been more useful—the man claimed to have some magic yet, and the boy's armor was solid. Yet Salim had seen enough in the priest's eyes to know that it wasn't worth it. For all that Adibold talked of the Pharasmin Penitence, that hopeless splinter sect of ascetics and self-deniers, it wasn't religious fervor that made Adibold cut himself, or so eagerly throw himself and his only son into harm's way. It was grief for his dead wife. Perhaps even a desire to join her early.</p>
<p>Salim understood that all too well. But the boy still had plenty of years left, and suicidal warriors were a liability.</p>
<p>In frustration, Salim had even attempted telling the old priest part of the truth: that Lord Mirosoy wasn't acting of his own accord, but rather had been enchanted by a cursed magic item.</p>
<p>The priest would have none of it. "I've seen souls corrupted by a shiny coin, or a bit of bare thigh. The nature of the temptation is unimportant."</p>
<p>At last, once it became clear that even the prospect of killing a potentially innocent man wasn't enough to dissuade the priest—"sorting good from evil is the Lady's job, not ours"—Salim had given in and agreed to join them in their attack at dawn.</p>
<p>Which is why he and Connell were out here in the dark, with the sun still hours below the horizon.</p>
<p>Salim caught the eidolon's eye and nodded. The eidolon had given him the layout of the house, and they'd decided on the servants' entrance around the side rather than the grand double doors that faced the drive. It was time to break with the road and circle left.</p>
<p>Something shot out from the brush near Salim's feet. </p>
<p>Without thinking—because in combat, acting was always faster than thinking—Salim drew his sword and slammed it down, pinning the scurrying shape to the earth. The creature squeaked once and expired.</p>
<p>"Mouse," he whispered, and withdrew his blade, rodent still clinging to its tip. He started to scrape it off against his boot, then stopped.</p>
<p>The thing's ribcage was hollowed out, the flesh rotted away from tiny bones. Salim's sword had spitted it neatly, yet its back legs still kicked feebly. </p>
<p>Another tiny form catapulted itself from the bushes. Before Salim could move, Connell leaped, springing forward with the grace of a cat and coming up an the undead rat in his hands. The eidolon popped it into his mouth, bones crunching, then looked back at Salim and smiled.</p>
<p>Perhaps the eidolon would be more useful than Salim had expected. Connell swallowed and asked, "Scouts?"</p>
<p>Salim nodded. It seemed Mirosoy wasn't totally without defenses. He slipped the twice-expired mouse from his blade and ground it under his boot heel before continuing on.</p>
<p>The servants' entrance was unguarded. From the tree line, it was a solid hundred feet of open lawn to the steps up to the back porch, and then the door. Salim covered it at a run, body bent almost double, sword under his robes to avoid reflecting the moonlight. Connell paced him. At the door, they paused for a moment, listening. When nothing revealed itself, Salim nodded to Connell and thumbed the latch. </p>
<p>Beyond lay a long hall, its wood-paneled walls lit only by the feeble shaft of moonlight from the open door, quickly disappearing into utter black.</p>
<p>Salim smelled it first—the charnel stench of putrefaction. He thrust out an arm to stop Connell, but the eager eidolon had already bounded into the corridor.</p>
<p>A hand reached from the darkness.</p>
<p>Salim moved. There was no time to let his eyes adjust, so he closed them and let his ears and nose guide him past the struggling eidolon, deeper into the dark. </p>
<p>Something rose up in front of him, grave-wet and stinking, and he brought his sword out and down, feeling it cleave through cheese-soft flesh. The thing gave a sigh and fell heavily into him, knocking him back into the wall and what felt like a tall table or stool. His free hand closed on a smooth, heavy object, and he brought it down hard on the thing in front of him, then spun to skewer a new attacker to his right. Back toward the entrance, Connell shouted something.</p>
<p>They were stuck. Salim might be able to keep this up indefinitely, but there was no telling about the eidolon, and they needed to move fast if they wanted to retain the element of surprise. Gritting his teeth, Salim reached out and touched the goddess.</p>
<p>It was only a second, but it was enough. The Lady of Graves flowed through him in a black rush, as grotesque and violating in its own way as the creature putrefying on his feet. The energy passed through him and into the blade of his sword, and cold steel flared with ghostly incandescence, lighting the hallway.</p>
<p>There were only three zombies, all dressed in the rotting finery that had probably once been the best clothes the little town could offer. Two lay at Salim's feet, his sword having severed the fragile magic that kept them animated. Down the hall, Connell struggled with the third. The eidolon had dropped his disguise, and the long neck of his true form snaked around the back of the zombie's futilely chomping head, wrapping it like a boa constrictor. Long jaws locked around the undead creature's skull. There was a twist and a pop, and the last corpse dropped to the floor and lay still.</p>
<p>Salim looked down at his off hand. The object he held was a stone bust of a young man, handsome in a vaguely arrogant and pupilless sort of way. He held it out toward the eidolon. "Your boss?"</p>
<p>Connell nodded.</p>
<p>Salim let the stone drop onto the corpse it had clubbed, then wiped his sword on the tattered linen shirt. He gestured down the hall.</p>
<p>"You know the house," he said, "but don't leave my side unless I tell you to. Are we clear?"</p>
<p>Connell bobbed his head in what appeared to be genuine contrition and led the way deeper into the house.</p>
<p>The manor was a shell. Though the pair passed several well-appointed sitting rooms, with plush armchairs and walls of bookshelves or big bay windows overlooking the moonlit grounds, the layer of dust at the entrance to each argued that no one had bothered with them in some time. Connell avoided the showy front half of the house, with its hangings and sculptures like the one Salim had appreciated, and instead led them through a series of narrow, more utilitarian corridors and staircases. Salim kept the light from the sword carefully banked and focused by a fold in his cloak, yet nothing stirred in the dead house. If it weren't for the slight but ever-present scent of decay, Salim might have thought the place a summer home, packed away for storage while the lord was away. </p>
<p>At last they came to a door whose bottom edge was limned with the same red light they'd seen from the road. The eidolon's barely existent lips moved, and after a second Salim realized Connell was attempting to mouth the word "workshop." Salim nodded, and the eidolon turned the knob. The door swung open.</p>
<p>The room was large, the kind other lords might put to use as a ballroom or formal dining room for parties. The huge set of windows they'd observed earlier cast moonlight on the hardwood floor, yet this illumination was overpowered by red lights that floated like swamp fire at the room's far end. The glow from these flying lanterns was soft, and cast a flattering glow over the guests. No doubt that generous lighting would have kindled more than one midnight romance among the figures standing in a knot on the dance floor. Except that the guests were dead.</p>
<p>As one, the corpses turned to observe the newcomers. These, too, were still dressed in their funeral finery, some in the clothes of peasants and merchants, others in simple shrouds marked with the symbol of Pharasma. There was no pattern to their features—young and old, male and female all stood with the awkward stances or constricted limbs of rigor mortis. A few had clearly been magically preserved for their funerals, and even now were only beginning to show the first signs of decomposition. Others were little more than fleshy skeletons, their bones tied crudely together with twine where tendons had fallen away.</p>
<p>Behind them all, a man stood in the center of the lights, obscured from the chest down by a long dining table repurposed as a workbench. Stacks of books and bubbling alembics cluttered every surface, along with stranger implements and silvery surgical tools with whose use Salim was thankfully unfamiliar. Though the man's face was the same as that on the stone head in the servants' hall, this version was older, and so drawn and haggard as to resemble his zombie subjects. Above the face, a black crown of long thorns and vertical spikes pierced and pricked at his brow, holding back long, dark hair. </p>
<p>Lord Mirosoy looked up from the book he'd been studying, yet his face barely registered the newcomers' presence. With one finger still marking his place in the text, he flicked his hand toward his uninvited guests.</p>
<div class="blurb360"><a href="https://paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8500-Mirosoy.jpg"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8500-Mirosoy_360.jpeg" border="0"></a><br>
"Lord Mirosoy appears to have embarked on some<br> significant life changes of late."</div>
<p>"Kill them," he said, and went back to reading.</p>
<p>The undead convocation shuffled forward.</p>
<p>Connell growled—a deep, resonant rumble in surprising contrast to his usual excited tenor. Three-fingered talons flexed.</p>
<p>"No," Salim said, and put a hand on the eidolon's shoulder. </p>
<p>Connell looked at him in puzzlement, but Salim simply squeezed once and then released him. He stepped forward and drew his sword.</p>
<p>The eidolon might be better in a fight than he let on, but that wasn't the point. Salim had seen enough to tell that these people were no ghouls, no vampire spawn or vengeful wraiths. These were just farmers, their corpses denied the slow transition into the same dirt they worked, forced to walk again at the whim of some spoiled lord. </p>
<p>This wasn't a fight. Nor even an execution.</p>
<p>It was a funeral rite.</p>
<p>The zombies approached, and Salim flowed like a river to meet them. </p>
<p>The undead fought silently, and Salim did the same, the only sounds the swirl of his robes and the wine-glass ring of steel sliding free of flesh, punctuated by the thumps of corpses hitting the floor. They moved to surround him, and he let them, whirling like a dervish, blade kissing them lightly in the only blessing he knew how to give. </p>
<p><i>Rest</i>, he thought as a child's body slid from his sword, crumpling to the fouled floor. <i>Rest</i>.</p>
<p>And then he stood alone. Around him, the hardwood was covered with bodies, splayed once more in the posture of death that, while undignified, was so much more than they'd had a moment before. He looked down at the corpses and wished them well.</p>
<p>At last they had Mirosoy's attention. The lord looked at them as if dazed, struggling to understand the mess of bodies staining his ballroom floor. "Who are you?" he asked.</p>
<p>"It's me, Master!" The eidolon's voice was the whining, eager tone of a dog hoping to regain its master's good graces. "I've come back to help you! Please don't be angry!"</p>
<p>Mirosoy ignored his creation, instead focusing on the dark-eyed man moving toward him, sword drawn. The lord's voice didn't waver. "And you?"</p>
<p>"Just a friend," Salim said. "One who's come to do you a favor."</p>
<p>His sword lashed out.</p>
<p>"<i>No!</i>" Connell's scream was grief bordering on pain. The eidolon leaped for Salim's back, talons outstretched, but it was already too late. Salim's upward slash carved a shining arc toward Mirosoy's face.</p>
<p>The blade missed the man's cheek by inches. With a tiny clink of metal on metal, Salim's sword caught one of the black, curving thorns of the crown and tore it free from the summoner's head. Mirosoy gasped at the sudden absence, or perhaps at the furrows the embedded thorns carved through his scalp. The crown fell to the table, and Salim followed it down, sword hilt gripped in both hands. Blade met crown with Salim's full weight behind it.</p>
<p>There was a flash that wasn't so much light as its absence, and a high, keening wail that might have been a word, or a name. Then there were only two halves of a crown, the metal seeming to shrivel and fold in on itself like burning briars. The newly rusted slag clattered to the floor and lay still.</p>
<p>"Master!" Connell was past Salim and gripping Lord Mirosoy's shoulders. The noble stood with head hung on his chest, looking ready to fall face-first into his workbench. Slowly, he raised his eyes. "Connell?"</p>
<p>"Yes. Yes, Master." The eidolon was weeping in earnest now, huge tears rolling down the reptilian face. Above them, the rune on his forehead glowed brighter than ever. "I'm back now. I knew it was the crown that sent me away, not you. And now you're free!"</p>
<p>Mirosoy straightened, shrugging off the eidolon's steadying hands. "Yes. Well." He looked over to Salim. "You do realize that's a priceless artifact you just destroyed?"</p>
<p>Salim marveled. Even half-dead and surrounded by his own failure, the man exuded entitlement. Salim looked down at the corpses on the floor, then back at the noble.</p>
<p>"I'm sure we can arrange an accounting of debts." His voice was soft.</p>
<p>The summoner followed Salim's gaze down, then swallowed. "No, that won't be necessary. Clearly, the crown needed to be destroyed. You have my thanks."</p>
<p>Salim inclined his head, unconvinced. Perhaps the crown wasn't as responsible for these atrocities as Connell wanted to think. He opened his mouth to say something—then stopped.</p>
<p>There was a new sound. Salim saw the other two pick up on it as well: a low, muttering hum.</p>
<p>Voices.</p>
<p>Salim moved swiftly to the window. Out in the darkness, a line of torches snaked down the manor house's long drive.</p>
<p>"Damn." Apparently Father Adibold was no longer interested in waiting until dawn.</p>
<p>Salim turned back to Mirosoy. "We need to get out of here. In two minutes, their families"—he gestured to the corpses on the floor—"are going to burn this place to the ground. And you're going to let them."</p>
<p>"Oh?" The noble's lip twitched toward a sneer.</p>
<p>Salim raised his sword suggestively.</p>
<p>"Oh," Lord Mirosoy said again, this time with considerably less vigor. "Well, you see, that may be something of a problem." He raised a hand and gestured to his waist.</p>
<p>"Oh, Master!" Connell's voice was horrified. "What have you done?"</p>
<p>And now Salim saw it. The various beakers and sealed containers on the worktable didn't stand alone. Below the rumpled blouse, several thick tubes snaked out of Mirosoy's abdomen and into the vessels and retorts on the table, steady streams of black and red fluids cycling through them.</p>
<p>Once more, the summoner ignored his servant and spoke to Salim. This time he looked almost embarrassed.</p>
<p>"The crown," he said. "It had several suggestions as to how I might...improve my longevity."</p>
<p>"Lichdom." Salim understood now why the man looked so hollow. He almost spat, but stopped himself for fear of hitting one of the corpses. "You were trying to turn yourself undead."</p>
<p>"Not me—the crown!"</p>
<p>Salim didn't care. "Can you stop it? Reverse it?"</p>
<p>"Almost certainly," Mirosoy said. "But it'll take time. Days."</p>
<p>Behind Salim, the villagers were drawing closer. He could hear individual voices in the rumble of the mob. "We don't have days."</p>
<p>Lord Mirosoy ventured a tentative smile, greasy and anxious. "If you'll allow it, my manor has certain defenses which—"</p>
<p>"No. You've done these people enough harm already." Salim thought hard. "Can you teleport? Move this whole setup somewhere else with magic?"</p>
<p>The noble grimaced. "My studies of late have been focused on other matters."</p>
<p>"Clearly." Salim sized up the various tubes that nosed into Mirosoy's clothing like hungry worms. "And I were to just pull those out?"</p>
<p>"Then I would die. Likely in excruciating pain."</p>
<p>Works for me, thought Salim, but he knew the eidolon would never stand for it. Besides, there was no telling what sort of backlash the expiring spell might generate. </p>
<p>Beyond the window, dozens of feet crunched on gravel.</p>
<p>"I have a suggestion."</p>
<p>Both Mirosoy and Salim turned to look at Connell. The eidolon was holding up a hand, as if waiting to be called on. Salim nodded.</p>
<p>"I have a suggestion," the eidolon said again. With one three-fingered hand, he reached up and touched the amulet hanging from his serpentine neck.</p>
<p>And then there was no Connell. Only a second Mirosoy.</p>
<p>Salim understood immediately. "Connell—" he began.</p>
<p>"They're looking for the master," the eidolon said firmly. "If we give them one, maybe they'll go home."</p>
<p>"They're a mob," Salim pressed, throat suddenly tight. "Even if they think Mirosoy's gone, they'll burn this place down anyway."</p>
<p>"Then you'll have to stop them." The eidolon held out a hand. "Goodbye, Salim. Thank you."</p>
<p>The hand hung there, unmoving. After an eternity, Salim stepped forward and took it. They shook.</p>
<p>Connell looked to Mirosoy.</p>
<p>"It's good to have you back, Master."</p>
<p>Then the eidolon walked out of the room and was gone.</p>
<p>Silence reigned as the two men stood looking at the door where the second Mirosoy had disappeared. Finally Salim spoke.</p>
<p>"If you lived a thousand years," he said slowly, "you would still be unworthy of that love."</p>
<p>"What?"</p>
<p>Salim's glance flicked sideways to the noble.</p>
<p>"That sacrifice. For you."</p>
<p>Mirosoy seemed genuinely puzzled. "It's an eidolon," he said. "I made it to protect me. When it's gone, I'll make another."</p>
<p>Salim stared at him.</p>
<p>Outside, the crowd roared.
<p><center>∗∗∗</center></p>
<p>Three empty cups stood at parade rest on the wooden table. A fourth, only halfway drained, stood before them, the officer addressing its troops.</p>
<p>Salim took another drink. Around him, the familiar buzz of the Clever Endeavor continued as usual, a dozen conversations that never happened, between people who were never here and had never met. This time, no one was looking at Salim. That suited him fine.</p>
<p>The wood between his elbows was stained dark with spilled wine. Salim grimaced and set his mug down on top of the splotch, but the cup wasn't quite big enough to hide it from view.</p>
<p>Connell hadn't screamed. He hadn't made a sound at all. By the time Salim reached the front door of the manor house, passing corpses which lay motionless without the crown's animating touch, the worst was over. The bravest of the mob was still hacking away with hoes and scythes, while others shouted encouragement. At some point, someone tore away the amulet to reveal the eidolon's true form, which Father Adibold loudly proclaimed a sign that the noble had been a monster all along. </p>
<p>And then, finally, it was over. With a last gasp from the crowd, the eidolon's body disappeared. Only the bloody stain on the gravel drive remained.</p>
<p>Still giddy with the ease of their victory, the mob might have indeed charged the manor, had Salim not chosen that point to reveal himself. Stepping forth to address Father Adibold by name, Salim announced that the evening's festivities were over, and that he'd dealt with the rest of the lord's creatures himself. </p>
<p>A few of the mob, drunk on blood, had yelled abuse. Salim raised his still-glowing sword, and the newfound bravery dissipated. With Father Adibold at its head, the crowd turned and made its way back toward town. In no time at all, Salim was alone on the driveway. Just him and the stain Connell had left behind.</p>
<p>A single torch, dropped by a villager, still sputtered in the dirt. Salim bent down and picked it up. He looked up toward the manor window, where the red lights still played.</p>
<p>He could finish things. Mirosoy had perverted the corpses of innocents, and attempted to do the same to himself. Salim had executed men for less. He could set the torch against one of the tapestries in the entrance hall and let the whole place disappear.</p>
<p>Instead, he had opened his hand and let the torch drop.</p>
<p>And now he was here. </p>
<p>Salim drank deep, draining the last of the mug. The wine at the bottom had an unpleasant copper taste, and he looked down to see blood pooling there, mixing with the dregs. He put fingers to his nose, and they came away red. He sighed.</p>
<p>"You have a terrible way of announcing yourself, Ceyanan."</p>
<p>The creature across the table was neither male nor female, its pale skin as smooth and inhuman as an alabaster statue. Behind its shoulders, great wings that were half feathers, half shadow flexed once and then furled tightly in the dingy confines of the bar. Gray cloth like funeral shrouds wrapped its waist and chest.</p>
<p>Salim wiped his bloody upper lip with the back of his hand. "You want to tell me why you sent him to me?"</p>
<p>The angel smiled. "What do you mean?"</p>
<p>"Don't play coy." Salim put down his empty mug and leaned back, crossing his arms. "Your boss deals with more complex judgments than Mirosoy's little change of heart on a daily basis. If you hadn't sent me in, the mob would eventually have made it through those zombies and killed him, thus removing any reason for the Lady of Graves to take an interest."</p>
<p>"Many innocents would have died," the angel observed.</p>
<p>"And since when does your mistress give a flying fig about that?" Salim held up two fingers to the barman, who appeared almost immediately with two more mugs.</p>
<p>"Thank you," said Ceyanan, "but I don't drink."</p>
<p>"Who said one of these was for you?" Salim pulled both drinks close.</p>
<p>The angel watched him. "You're an excellent hunter, Salim. Your skill does you credit. But you still have much to learn." White lips twitched higher, the smile becoming almost beatific. "Connell did something very brave today. Out of love and devotion to his friend."</p>
<p>"Who didn't deserve it," Salim growled.</p>
<p>"Does it matter?" The angel's big eyes bored into Salim's. "Is the eidolon's sacrifice any less admirable because of it?"</p>
<p>Salim laughed sharply.</p>
<p>"Is that what this is all about? Teaching me to take pride in my work, even if I don't have any choice in the matter?" He showed his teeth. "Haven't I learned enough about duty? About <i>sacrifice</i>?"</p>
<p>Ceyanan shook its head, half sad, half bemused.</p>
<p>"Maybe not," it said at last. "But don't worry. You will."</p>
<p>"Just what—" Salim began.</p>
<p>But the angel was gone.</p>
<p>Salim stared at the chair where the angel had been. Then down at the stain on the table.</p>
<p>A mug in either hand, he began to drink in earnest.</p>
<p><b>Coming Next Week:</b> A brand new romp exploring the perils of bragging in Lucien Soulban's "Fingers of Death—No, Doom!"</p>
<p><i>James L. Sutter is the Fiction Editor for Paizo Publishing, author of the novel <a href="https://paizo.com/products/btpy8oda?Pathfinder-Tales-Deaths-Heretic"></i>Death's Heretic<i></a> (also starring Salim), and co-creator of the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game campaign setting. His short stories have appeared in such publications as Escape Pod, Starship Sofa, Apex Magazine, and the #1 Amazon bestseller Machine of Death, and his anthology <a href="http://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8b8p"></i>Before They Were Giants<i></a> pairs the first published stories of SF luminaries with new interviews and writing advice from the authors themselves. In addition, James has written numerous Pathfinder supplements, including <a href="http://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8fda"></i>City of Strangers<i></a> and <a href="http://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8mgf"></i>Distant Worlds<i></a>. For more information, check out <a href="http://www.jameslsutter.com" target="_blank">jameslsutter.com</a> or follow him on Twitter at <a href="http://twitter.com/#!/jameslsutter" target="_blank">@jameslsutter</a>.</i></p>
<p>Illustration by Carmen Cianelli.</p>
</blockquote><p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/artists/carmenCianelli">Carmen Cianelli</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales/webFiction/faithfulServants">Faithful Servants</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales">Pathfinder Tales</a></p>2011-12-21T18:00:00ZFaithful Servants--Chapter Three: The Penitent Manhttps://paizo.com/community/blog/v5748dyo5lcxz?Faithful-ServantsChapter-Three-The-Penitent-Man2011-12-14T18:00:00Z<blockquote>
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<a href="https://paizo.com/pathfindertales"><div class="PTales"></div></a>
<h1>Faithful Servants</h1>
<p>by James L. Sutter</p>
<h2>Chapter Three: The Penitent Man</h2>
<p>There was the usual moment of darkness and cold, the terrible feeling of being drawn through space like a fish on a line, and then the light was back and the amulet deposited them safely.</p>
<p>Right in the middle of an angry mob.</p>
<p>Salim looked quickly to Connell, but the eidolon was already holding his own pendant. Before Salim could say anything, the eidolon’s disguise as an axiomite melted into something less suspicious. The pointed ears were still there, but shorter. Gone was the inhumanly perfect skin, replaced by a moonscape of old pockmarks. The cowl of the robe he wore—now old and tattered, stained as much by the road as any dye—came up to cover the glowing forehead rune.</p>
<p>It was a good job. The peasant closest to the new arrivals blinked, peered at the two of them as if he trying to remember something, then visibly gave up and returned his attention to the shouting man at the front.</p>
<p>They were in the central green of a modest town, a ring of shops and public houses encircling a muddy patch of grass long since chewed into submission by the hooves and jaws of livestock. Beyond, Salim recognized the dark and craggy peaks of the Hungry Mountains rising ominously on all sides. Even now, at midday, the fog that shrouded their dark forests was thick, and moved in strange ways just beyond the valley’s last farmsteads.</p>
<p>The mob was barely worthy of the name—perhaps forty men and women in varying states of disrepair—yet Salim had seen such groups before. The deciding factor for mobs wasn’t in their muscles, or their makeshift weapons, but in their eyes. These folk were afraid. And where there was enough fear, something could break, and turn even the most timid housewife into a killer.</p>
<p>The man trying to catalyze that change stood at the focal point of the loose semicircle, perched precariously on an overturned wheelbarrow. He was middle-aged and almost completely bald, with only a few wisps of white hair scrambling to cling to and cover his shining pate. From beneath voluminous black robes similar to Salim’s own poked stick-thin arms, gesticulating wildly. At his throat hung a large silver spiral on a chain—the holy symbol of Pharasma.</p>
<p>"Too long have we suffered the monster to remain in our midst!" the priest cried. "Far too long! You, Silva," he pointed at one of the women near the front, "was not your husband’s grave torn up, just weeks after his passing? And you, Tam"—this time a fat man in a flour-stained apron—"your uncle’s grave as well. No wolf digs so deep, or so thoroughly."</p>
<p>He returned to addressing the whole crowd.</p>
<p>"Suffering is our lot! Yet that doesn’t mean the Goddess desires us to lie down and let monsters roam the night, taking our loved ones. As your priest, I should be leading you—yet I am old, and my hands shake with the palsy." He raised the offending appendages high. "Thus I must pass the burden to my son, Sir Percinov. It is he who will lead you to glory."</p>
<p>The crowd shifted slightly, and Salim glimpsed the figure that stood at the old priest’s knee. The plates of its armor were all in black and silver, the chest embossed with Pharasma’s spiral, and a businesslike bucket of a helm obscured the face. At the figure’s waist rested a long sword in a matching scabbard. All in all, a suitably imposing sight. Yet something about the way the warrior stood gave Salim pause.</p>
<p>"When?" a voice from the crowd cried.</p>
<p>"At dawn," the priest said. "Mirosoy and his creatures are things of darkness. We will bring them the cleansing light."</p>
<p>"That’s my master," Connell hissed, and Salim tapped his arm to quiet him.</p>
<p>The crowd shouted its ragged approval, and then the church bells began chiming. In twos and threes, the people shuffled off to be about their errands, or perhaps just to rest up before the lynching. </p>
<p>The priest had stepped down from his wheelbarrow and was talking with the knight. Salim approached.</p>
<p>"Excuse me, Father. May I have a word?"</p>
<p>The priest turned. Above his beak of a nose, hard little rat eyes crawled up and down Salim’s length, taking in the black robes and sun-darkened skin, the short beard and strangely melted-looking sword hilt. His eyes lit upon the amulet, which Salim had left hanging prominently against his chest, and the hard mouth softened almost imperceptibly.</p>
<p>"A fellow clergyman?"</p>
<p>"Something like that." Salim drew the spiral of Pharasma in the air between them.</p>
<p>"Yet not from around here." Salim’s southern skin, so much darker than the sickly pale Ustalavs, kept the words from being a question.</p>
<p>"No," Salim agreed. "My companion and I have traveled far to offer our assistance. It seems others in the church have learned of your situation."</p>
<p>"Hum," the priest said, a sound that wasn’t altogether pleased. "Very well, then. My name is Father Adibold, and this is Sir Percinov. My rectory is just over here—please, allow me to welcome you properly." Without bothering to wait for a reply, the man turned and began stalking toward a little house attached to the church, the armored warrior just behind him. Salim and Connell followed.</p>
<div class="blurb360"><a href="https://paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8500-Percinov.jpg"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8500-Percinov_360.jpeg" border="0"></a><br>"A child in armor is still a child."</div>
<p>The house might better have been called a cell. Though the walls were still painted white, they’d clearly been neglected for some time. The outlines of less-faded regions suggested that, at one point, there had been more furniture in here—a bureau, a couch—yet now the room contained only a stove, a cupboard, the roughest of wooden tables, and two chairs. Salim accepted the priest’s invitation and sat in the nearer chair, then immediately wished he hadn’t. He’d interrogated men in more comfortable chairs than this.</p>
<p>Father Adibold took the opposite chair. Connell remained standing next to the door, while the armored figure took up a respectful position behind the priest’s left shoulder. For the first time, the metal mountain spoke.</p>
<p>"Da, may I—?"</p>
<p>"Yes, fine!" The priest waved a hand. With an audible sigh of relief, the warrior removed his gauntlets, then reached up and pulled off his helmet.</p>
<p>It was a boy, brown-haired and skinny. His bobbing larynx didn’t even come close to touching the steel gorget meant to protect his throat. Salim bet that if he struck the breastplate, the teenager would rattle around inside the armor like the clapper in a bell.</p>
<p>The old man spoke first. "You’re not a priest," he said bluntly. "The sword tells me that much. So what are you?"</p>
<p>"A hunter," Salim said. "A problem-solver for the church, specializing in the sort of thing you now face. Or have I heard wrong? It’s undead creations that your people fear, is it not?"</p>
<p>The priest grunted. "Indeed." Reluctantly, he got to his feet and went to the cupboard. He returned with two cups of water and a cob of bread, which he set between them. "Please," he said, gesturing. "Eat."</p>
<p>Salim tore off a chunk of bread and bit into it. It was hard, and old, but blessedly weevil-free.</p>
<p>"I’d apologize for not offering better fare," the old man continued, not sounding the least bit apologetic, "but we of the Kavapestan branch don’t believe in southern niceties."</p>
<p>Aha. Suddenly both the ostentatiously poor hospitality and the deliberately uncomfortable furniture made more sense. Salim’s eyes twitched toward the man’s sleeves, which had fallen back when he proffered the food. The priest caught the look and deliberately pulled the cloth back down, but not before Salim caught the telltale lines of dozens of thin white scars on his forearms.</p>
<p>"So you follow the Penitence, then."</p>
<p>The old priest thrust his jaw out pugnaciously. "The Lady of Graves judges us not only on what we do, but what we endure. Those who suffer in this life are rewarded in the next. We Ustalavs have known this for generations."</p>
<p>"Very admirable," Salim said.</p>
<p>The priest searched for any sign that he was being mocked, and upon finding none, slowly nodded. "Yes, well. It’s rare to find a southerner who understands the value of forsaking worldly pleasures."</p>
<p>"Believe me," Salim said, "I’ve forsaken plenty. But I didn’t come here to discuss theology. Tell me of Mirosoy."</p>
<p>"Bah!" the priest said, and spat on his own floor. "A magician and minor noble who lives in a manse at the far end of the valley. He’s been there for years."</p>
<p>"It’s disgusting," the armored boy put in helpfully. "Using magic to avoid honest sweat and labor."</p>
<p>"Shut up, Percy," the priest said, yet he nodded at the sentiment. "It’s true, we have no love of wizards and witches here. Yet it’s still not a crime, and his business helps keep the village alive through hard times. Of late, however, the lord has turned to darker arts. Graves have been disturbed, even within the grounds of the church."</p>
<p>Now it was Salim’s turn to grunt. Grave robbing from a church of Pharasma was bold, if not outright suicidal. "And his creatures. You’ve seen them?"</p>
<p>"Not personally. But the villagers who cart out his provisions or used to work in his house speak of moans, and shambling forms, and the stench of death."</p>
<p>Salim nodded. "And you’d send a mob of villagers to handle things?"</p>
<p>The priest bristled. "Not alone! I would offer what magics I have, and my son would lead them!"</p>
<p>"Ah yes, your son." Salim turned to the would-be warrior. "Show me your hands, boy."</p>
<p>Confused, Percinov did as he was told, holding them palms out. Salim nodded.</p>
<p>"That’s a fine suit of armor, boy. It’ll serve you well one day. But not yet."</p>
<p>"Now wait just a minute—!" the priest began.</p>
<p>Salim silenced him with a raised finger. "Calluses."</p>
<p>"Pardon?"</p>
<p>"You may know penance, Father, but I know war. And the calluses on this boy’s hands are from chopping wood, not a sword hilt. The pattern’s all wrong." He glanced back at Percinov. "You can put your hands down now, boy."</p>
<p>Percinov did. His father glowered. "The boy will be fine," the old priest growled. "Any wounds he suffers, I’ll heal. And his pain will buy credit with the Goddess."</p>
<p>As it happened, Salim knew precisely how little credit such suffering earned. Yet he set that sentiment aside and decided to test out a suspicion that had been building.</p>
<p>"And what would the boy’s mother think if he were killed?" he asked.</p>
<p>"Don’t you talk about his mother!" Tiny drops of spit flew from the priest’s lips to land halfway across the table. "Serafina is with the Lady now, assisting in the judgment of souls. We should all be so fortunate."</p>
<p>"But, Da—" Percinov began.</p>
<p>"Shut up, Percy!" </p>
<p>The priest put his head in hands. For a moment, no one said anything. At last, the priest looked up, his lined face appearing older than ever.</p>
<p>"What do you propose?" he asked.</p>
<p><b>Coming Next Week:</b> Confrontations with a summoner gone bad in the final chapter of "Faithful Servants."</p>
<p><i>James L. Sutter is the Fiction Editor for Paizo Publishing, author of the novel <a href="https://paizo.com/products/btpy8oda?Pathfinder-Tales-Deaths-Heretic"></i>Death's Heretic<i></a> (also starring Salim), and co-creator of the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game campaign setting. His short stories have appeared in such publications as Escape Pod, Starship Sofa, Apex Magazine, and the #1 Amazon bestseller Machine of Death, and his anthology <a href="http://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8b8p"></i>Before They Were Giants<i></a> pairs the first published stories of SF luminaries with new interviews and writing advice from the authors themselves. In addition, James has written numerous Pathfinder supplements, including <a href="http://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8fda"></i>City of Strangers<i></a> and <a href="http://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8mgf"></i>Distant Worlds<i></a>. For more information, check out <a href="http://www.jameslsutter.com" target="_blank">jameslsutter.com</a> or follow him on Twitter at <a href="http://twitter.com/#!/jameslsutter" target="_blank">@jameslsutter</a>.</i></p>
<p>Illustration by Carmen Cianelli</p>
</blockquote>
<!— tags: Carmen Cianelli —><p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/artists/carmenCianelli">Carmen Cianelli</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales/webFiction/faithfulServants">Faithful Servants</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales">Pathfinder Tales</a></p><blockquote>
<br>
<a href="https://paizo.com/pathfindertales"><div class="PTales"></div></a>
<h1>Faithful Servants</h1>
<p>by James L. Sutter</p>
<h2>Chapter Three: The Penitent Man</h2>
<p>There was the usual moment of darkness and cold, the terrible feeling of being drawn through space like a fish on a line, and then the light was back and the amulet deposited them safely.</p>
<p>Right in the middle of an angry mob.</p>
<p>Salim looked quickly to Connell, but the eidolon was already holding his own pendant. Before Salim could say anything, the eidolon’s disguise as an axiomite melted into something less suspicious. The pointed ears were still there, but shorter. Gone was the inhumanly perfect skin, replaced by a moonscape of old pockmarks. The cowl of the robe he wore—now old and tattered, stained as much by the road as any dye—came up to cover the glowing forehead rune.</p>
<p>It was a good job. The peasant closest to the new arrivals blinked, peered at the two of them as if he trying to remember something, then visibly gave up and returned his attention to the shouting man at the front.</p>
<p>They were in the central green of a modest town, a ring of shops and public houses encircling a muddy patch of grass long since chewed into submission by the hooves and jaws of livestock. Beyond, Salim recognized the dark and craggy peaks of the Hungry Mountains rising ominously on all sides. Even now, at midday, the fog that shrouded their dark forests was thick, and moved in strange ways just beyond the valley’s last farmsteads.</p>
<p>The mob was barely worthy of the name—perhaps forty men and women in varying states of disrepair—yet Salim had seen such groups before. The deciding factor for mobs wasn’t in their muscles, or their makeshift weapons, but in their eyes. These folk were afraid. And where there was enough fear, something could break, and turn even the most timid housewife into a killer.</p>
<p>The man trying to catalyze that change stood at the focal point of the loose semicircle, perched precariously on an overturned wheelbarrow. He was middle-aged and almost completely bald, with only a few wisps of white hair scrambling to cling to and cover his shining pate. From beneath voluminous black robes similar to Salim’s own poked stick-thin arms, gesticulating wildly. At his throat hung a large silver spiral on a chain—the holy symbol of Pharasma.</p>
<p>"Too long have we suffered the monster to remain in our midst!" the priest cried. "Far too long! You, Silva," he pointed at one of the women near the front, "was not your husband’s grave torn up, just weeks after his passing? And you, Tam"—this time a fat man in a flour-stained apron—"your uncle’s grave as well. No wolf digs so deep, or so thoroughly."</p>
<p>He returned to addressing the whole crowd.</p>
<p>"Suffering is our lot! Yet that doesn’t mean the Goddess desires us to lie down and let monsters roam the night, taking our loved ones. As your priest, I should be leading you—yet I am old, and my hands shake with the palsy." He raised the offending appendages high. "Thus I must pass the burden to my son, Sir Percinov. It is he who will lead you to glory."</p>
<p>The crowd shifted slightly, and Salim glimpsed the figure that stood at the old priest’s knee. The plates of its armor were all in black and silver, the chest embossed with Pharasma’s spiral, and a businesslike bucket of a helm obscured the face. At the figure’s waist rested a long sword in a matching scabbard. All in all, a suitably imposing sight. Yet something about the way the warrior stood gave Salim pause.</p>
<p>"When?" a voice from the crowd cried.</p>
<p>"At dawn," the priest said. "Mirosoy and his creatures are things of darkness. We will bring them the cleansing light."</p>
<p>"That’s my master," Connell hissed, and Salim tapped his arm to quiet him.</p>
<p>The crowd shouted its ragged approval, and then the church bells began chiming. In twos and threes, the people shuffled off to be about their errands, or perhaps just to rest up before the lynching. </p>
<p>The priest had stepped down from his wheelbarrow and was talking with the knight. Salim approached.</p>
<p>"Excuse me, Father. May I have a word?"</p>
<p>The priest turned. Above his beak of a nose, hard little rat eyes crawled up and down Salim’s length, taking in the black robes and sun-darkened skin, the short beard and strangely melted-looking sword hilt. His eyes lit upon the amulet, which Salim had left hanging prominently against his chest, and the hard mouth softened almost imperceptibly.</p>
<p>"A fellow clergyman?"</p>
<p>"Something like that." Salim drew the spiral of Pharasma in the air between them.</p>
<p>"Yet not from around here." Salim’s southern skin, so much darker than the sickly pale Ustalavs, kept the words from being a question.</p>
<p>"No," Salim agreed. "My companion and I have traveled far to offer our assistance. It seems others in the church have learned of your situation."</p>
<p>"Hum," the priest said, a sound that wasn’t altogether pleased. "Very well, then. My name is Father Adibold, and this is Sir Percinov. My rectory is just over here—please, allow me to welcome you properly." Without bothering to wait for a reply, the man turned and began stalking toward a little house attached to the church, the armored warrior just behind him. Salim and Connell followed.</p>
<div class="blurb360"><a href="https://paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8500-Percinov.jpg"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8500-Percinov_360.jpeg" border="0"></a><br>"A child in armor is still a child."</div>
<p>The house might better have been called a cell. Though the walls were still painted white, they’d clearly been neglected for some time. The outlines of less-faded regions suggested that, at one point, there had been more furniture in here—a bureau, a couch—yet now the room contained only a stove, a cupboard, the roughest of wooden tables, and two chairs. Salim accepted the priest’s invitation and sat in the nearer chair, then immediately wished he hadn’t. He’d interrogated men in more comfortable chairs than this.</p>
<p>Father Adibold took the opposite chair. Connell remained standing next to the door, while the armored figure took up a respectful position behind the priest’s left shoulder. For the first time, the metal mountain spoke.</p>
<p>"Da, may I—?"</p>
<p>"Yes, fine!" The priest waved a hand. With an audible sigh of relief, the warrior removed his gauntlets, then reached up and pulled off his helmet.</p>
<p>It was a boy, brown-haired and skinny. His bobbing larynx didn’t even come close to touching the steel gorget meant to protect his throat. Salim bet that if he struck the breastplate, the teenager would rattle around inside the armor like the clapper in a bell.</p>
<p>The old man spoke first. "You’re not a priest," he said bluntly. "The sword tells me that much. So what are you?"</p>
<p>"A hunter," Salim said. "A problem-solver for the church, specializing in the sort of thing you now face. Or have I heard wrong? It’s undead creations that your people fear, is it not?"</p>
<p>The priest grunted. "Indeed." Reluctantly, he got to his feet and went to the cupboard. He returned with two cups of water and a cob of bread, which he set between them. "Please," he said, gesturing. "Eat."</p>
<p>Salim tore off a chunk of bread and bit into it. It was hard, and old, but blessedly weevil-free.</p>
<p>"I’d apologize for not offering better fare," the old man continued, not sounding the least bit apologetic, "but we of the Kavapestan branch don’t believe in southern niceties."</p>
<p>Aha. Suddenly both the ostentatiously poor hospitality and the deliberately uncomfortable furniture made more sense. Salim’s eyes twitched toward the man’s sleeves, which had fallen back when he proffered the food. The priest caught the look and deliberately pulled the cloth back down, but not before Salim caught the telltale lines of dozens of thin white scars on his forearms.</p>
<p>"So you follow the Penitence, then."</p>
<p>The old priest thrust his jaw out pugnaciously. "The Lady of Graves judges us not only on what we do, but what we endure. Those who suffer in this life are rewarded in the next. We Ustalavs have known this for generations."</p>
<p>"Very admirable," Salim said.</p>
<p>The priest searched for any sign that he was being mocked, and upon finding none, slowly nodded. "Yes, well. It’s rare to find a southerner who understands the value of forsaking worldly pleasures."</p>
<p>"Believe me," Salim said, "I’ve forsaken plenty. But I didn’t come here to discuss theology. Tell me of Mirosoy."</p>
<p>"Bah!" the priest said, and spat on his own floor. "A magician and minor noble who lives in a manse at the far end of the valley. He’s been there for years."</p>
<p>"It’s disgusting," the armored boy put in helpfully. "Using magic to avoid honest sweat and labor."</p>
<p>"Shut up, Percy," the priest said, yet he nodded at the sentiment. "It’s true, we have no love of wizards and witches here. Yet it’s still not a crime, and his business helps keep the village alive through hard times. Of late, however, the lord has turned to darker arts. Graves have been disturbed, even within the grounds of the church."</p>
<p>Now it was Salim’s turn to grunt. Grave robbing from a church of Pharasma was bold, if not outright suicidal. "And his creatures. You’ve seen them?"</p>
<p>"Not personally. But the villagers who cart out his provisions or used to work in his house speak of moans, and shambling forms, and the stench of death."</p>
<p>Salim nodded. "And you’d send a mob of villagers to handle things?"</p>
<p>The priest bristled. "Not alone! I would offer what magics I have, and my son would lead them!"</p>
<p>"Ah yes, your son." Salim turned to the would-be warrior. "Show me your hands, boy."</p>
<p>Confused, Percinov did as he was told, holding them palms out. Salim nodded.</p>
<p>"That’s a fine suit of armor, boy. It’ll serve you well one day. But not yet."</p>
<p>"Now wait just a minute—!" the priest began.</p>
<p>Salim silenced him with a raised finger. "Calluses."</p>
<p>"Pardon?"</p>
<p>"You may know penance, Father, but I know war. And the calluses on this boy’s hands are from chopping wood, not a sword hilt. The pattern’s all wrong." He glanced back at Percinov. "You can put your hands down now, boy."</p>
<p>Percinov did. His father glowered. "The boy will be fine," the old priest growled. "Any wounds he suffers, I’ll heal. And his pain will buy credit with the Goddess."</p>
<p>As it happened, Salim knew precisely how little credit such suffering earned. Yet he set that sentiment aside and decided to test out a suspicion that had been building.</p>
<p>"And what would the boy’s mother think if he were killed?" he asked.</p>
<p>"Don’t you talk about his mother!" Tiny drops of spit flew from the priest’s lips to land halfway across the table. "Serafina is with the Lady now, assisting in the judgment of souls. We should all be so fortunate."</p>
<p>"But, Da—" Percinov began.</p>
<p>"Shut up, Percy!" </p>
<p>The priest put his head in hands. For a moment, no one said anything. At last, the priest looked up, his lined face appearing older than ever.</p>
<p>"What do you propose?" he asked.</p>
<p><b>Coming Next Week:</b> Confrontations with a summoner gone bad in the final chapter of "Faithful Servants."</p>
<p><i>James L. Sutter is the Fiction Editor for Paizo Publishing, author of the novel <a href="https://paizo.com/products/btpy8oda?Pathfinder-Tales-Deaths-Heretic"></i>Death's Heretic<i></a> (also starring Salim), and co-creator of the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game campaign setting. His short stories have appeared in such publications as Escape Pod, Starship Sofa, Apex Magazine, and the #1 Amazon bestseller Machine of Death, and his anthology <a href="http://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8b8p"></i>Before They Were Giants<i></a> pairs the first published stories of SF luminaries with new interviews and writing advice from the authors themselves. In addition, James has written numerous Pathfinder supplements, including <a href="http://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8fda"></i>City of Strangers<i></a> and <a href="http://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8mgf"></i>Distant Worlds<i></a>. For more information, check out <a href="http://www.jameslsutter.com" target="_blank">jameslsutter.com</a> or follow him on Twitter at <a href="http://twitter.com/#!/jameslsutter" target="_blank">@jameslsutter</a>.</i></p>
<p>Illustration by Carmen Cianelli</p>
</blockquote>
<!— tags: Carmen Cianelli —><p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/artists/carmenCianelli">Carmen Cianelli</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales/webFiction/faithfulServants">Faithful Servants</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales">Pathfinder Tales</a></p>2011-12-14T18:00:00ZFaithful Servants--Chapter Two: A Walk in the Parkhttps://paizo.com/community/blog/v5748dyo5lcx4?Faithful-ServantsChapter-Two-A-Walk-in-the-Park2011-12-07T18:00:00Z<blockquote>
<br>
<a href="https://paizo.com/pathfindertales"><div class="PTales"></div></a>
<h1>Faithful Servants</h1>
<p>by James L. Sutter</p>
<h2>Chapter Two: A Walk in the Park</h2>
<p>"So talk."</p>
<p>The two men—for Salim had returned the eidolon's amulet, and the snake-man once more looked like an axiomite—walked shoulder to shoulder through one of Axis's many parks. To either side of the cobblestone path, trees and bushes of a hundred different varieties stood in a riot of color, each with a neat little placard giving its name and world of origin. Several were surrounded by decorative fences, and one of these quarantined plants shook and hooted as the pair passed by, its spherical fruit opening to reveal sucking lamprey mouths.</p>
<p>"My name is Connell," the eidolon said. "My master is Gatis Mirosoy, of the nation of Ustalav. More than thirty years ago, he called me forth from the aether of the Cerulean Void and gave me form, shaping me into his constant companion."</p>
<p>Salim nodded. He didn't know much about the practices of the so-called summoners, but he knew that the spirits they used in their magical creations were drawn from the Outer Planes. They weren't true souls—otherwise his own master, Pharasma the death goddess, would have something to say about the poaching—but they were close enough to provide the necessary animus. If Connell were a product of the chaotic Maelstrom, then it explained his appearance—and the disguising amulet. The serpentine proteans native to that plane were despised everywhere, but Axis had been at war with them since the universe began.</p>
<p>All of these thoughts passed by in the time it took Connell to draw breath and continue.</p>
<p>"For three decades, I served my master faithfully, protecting him from enemies, researching incantations, and managing his household affairs. He made this amulet specifically for me, so that I might treat with the local villagers on his behalf without unduly alarming them." One slender axiomite hand came up to caress the object, where it hung on its repaired leather thong. </p>
<p>"Sometimes, perhaps once every few years, his research would take us beyond the manor, to some forgotten library or dusty tomb where valuable knowledge lay languishing, waiting for the master to rescue it. It was on one of these excursions that he found the—the crown." The eidolon's voice caught, and for a moment he was silent.</p>
<p>"Crown?" Salim prompted.</p>
<p>"It's terrible!" the eidolon wailed, then reined himself back to a more reasonable volume. "We found it in the burial chamber of Arachyx the Ghoul-Handed. The master had brought us there in search of an ancient tapestry, but as soon as he saw the crown, all thought of the original mission went out the window, and he had to have it. It's a sick thing, an evil thing—a twisted band of iron with thorns that jut out in all directions, even back into the wearer's scalp. The whole thing has a weird, slick feeling to it, not like iron at all, but like oiled or decomposing flesh. And when the thorns prick you, the blood never drips—the thorns suck it up. I <i>hate</i> it." With this last pronouncement, a single tear welled up and rolled down the eidolon's disguised nose, dropping to the dirt.</p>
<div class="blurb360"><a href="https://paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8500-Salim.jpg"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8500-Salim_360.jpeg" border="0"></a><br>
<span class="blurbi">"Missionary work is hardly Salim's forte."</span></div>
<p>"After the master put it on, he...changed. Before, he'd been a quiet man, and stern as any good master, but not without a sense of humor. After that, he became something else. He lost all interest in summoning lesser servants from the distant planes, which before had been his greatest joy, and even quit experimenting with my form. Instead, all he wanted to do was research death. He became obsessed with creating undead things, from rat skeletons and dog zombies to more... substantial works." Connell paused, embarrassed. "I dug up graves and brought him the remains of the townsfolk. He said we were just borrowing them."</p>
<p>"Right."</p>
<p>Connell shrugged, helpless. "He was my master. If he wanted to study necromancy, that was his prerogative. An eidolon doesn't question."</p>
<p>Salim nodded, but trained ears had caught the verb tense. "Was?"</p>
<p>All at once, the eidolon's composure broke, and the face he turned to Salim was a caricature of anguish.</p>
<p>"He sent me <i>away</i>," Connell whispered. His tone made it sound like a death sentence. "In all my life, I had never been more than a mile from his side. But he had changed so much. He had never been over fond of travel, but now he never left the manor. He quit eating hardly at all, and would go for days without sleep. He ignored the clean clothes I left out for him. He tore down the shrine to the magic god Nethys, and built a new one to Urgathoa, the Pallid Princess. The old one was wood and paper, beautifully made. This one was made of parts from his—experiments."</p>
<p>Salim had seen plenty of such shrines, and could well imagine the decomposing limbs and reanimating scramblings it entailed. The Pallid Princess was a sick bitch, and made Salim's own goddess look downright warm in comparison. Where Pharasma was, for all her faults, at least even-handed and devoted to perpetuating natural cycles, Urgathoa was devoted to undeath and gluttony, her necromancers filling the world with perverse beings that refused to die. Needless to say, the two ladies didn't get along.</p>
<p>"You said he sent you away."</p>
<p>Connell wrapped thin arms around himself. "It was that stupid crown—I know it was. After a while, he didn't even take it off to sleep, and didn't notice when the wounds from the thorns got infected. I tried to take it off him once—just for a minute, to clean them out!—and he threw me halfway across the room. And that was when he said he didn't need me anymore." Another slow tear. "That—that he had plenty of new servants. Better ones. And then he cast a spell, and I was somewhere else."</p>
<p>The eidolon went silent, and Salim gave him his space, recognizing in the set of his shoulders how hard this must be for him. After a moment, Connell continued.</p>
<p>"He'd sent me back to the Maelstrom, the chaos plane he'd drawn me from. Except it didn't feel like home anymore. I was awkward, and lonely, and everything I met was either terrified of me or trying to eat me. But worse—I could still feel him. My master. The thread was faint—so faint—but I could still feel him." The eidolon pointed to the rune on his forehead. "I'm still my master's creature."</p>
<p>"That's when I realized how much danger he was in. He had his undead things, but they were still weak, and sooner or later someone was going to get fed up with the grave robbing and try to do something about it. And I wouldn't be there to protect him."</p>
<p>Salim was starting to get tired of the eidolon's puppylike devotion. He attempted to hurry the story along. "And so?"</p>
<p>"So I went to see Pharasma."</p>
<p>Salim stopped walking so abruptly that Connell almost tripped and fell over onto a flower whose blossoms were shaped like tethered hummingbirds, petal-wings buzzing frantically to pull them away from the clumsy eidolon.</p>
<p>"You went to the Boneyard?" Perhaps Salim had underestimated the creature. Though the goddess of death wasn't the sort to slay anyone out of hand—quite the opposite, in fact—there were plenty of other beings around the Gray Lady's realm who were less discriminating, and the journey there was hardly easy.</p>
<p>"It took a while," the eidolon agreed, "but I got there eventually. Some nice crow-vulture-things in masks led me in and showed me to one of her servants, a black-winged angel called Ceyanan. I think you know him?"</p>
<p>"You could say that," Salim said wryly. In the same sense that you know your master, he thought, just without the hopeless love. But he didn't bother confusing the eidolon with his own problems.</p>
<p>"He was very nice," Connell said. "I simply explained the situation as best I could, and he agreed that it would be in Pharasma's interest to help me." Here the eidolon grinned, and despite the amulet's illusion, Salim could easily imagine the serpentine smile beneath it. "See, it's not just the necromancy—I know the goddess hates undead, but that problem will take care of itself when someone eventually comes along and kills him. The real issue is the crown. It's what's changed him and made him do all these evil things—I'm positive. And if it's the crown, that means it's not his fault. And if it's not his <i>fault</i>"—here the eidolon raised a triumphant finger—"then it shouldn't affect the final judgment of his soul. It's a tricky situation. If my master dies while the crown's magic is making him do bad things, does that count against him? Does his soul go to Urgathoa, or to Nethys? At the very least, it seems like a long and complicated judgment is in order."</p>
<p>Now Salim understood. "And Ceyanan sent you to me."</p>
<p>Connell nodded enthusiastically. "He agreed that such a judgment would be needlessly complicated and take up the goddess's valuable time, and that the best thing to do was remove the cursed crown and let my master's soul cleanse itself. Then he gave me your description, and the name of a bar, and transported me to Axis."</p>
<p>"Of course he did." Salim had to admit, the eidolon's logic was sound. And it would be just like Ceyanan to send Salim on a job that was, in essence, missionary work. Soul saving. That would tickle the angel's sense of irony.</p>
<p>"So will you do it?" the eidolon asked eagerly. "Will you help me help my master?"</p>
<p>As if he had a choice. "Ustalav, you said?"</p>
<p>"Aton's Field, a village near Kavapesta."</p>
<p>Salim reached into his robes and produced an amulet of his own. The size of his thumb, the stone was a perfect, lightless black, save for an iridescent spiral that seemed to shimmer and move of its own accord. Cupping the stone in one hand, he offered the other to Connell. "Let's go, then."</p>
<p>The eidolon took it.</p>
<p>The world twisted.</p>
<p><b>Note:</b> This story is also available in <a href="http://www.starshipsofa.com/blog/2011/12/07/starshipsofa-no-215-james-l-sutter/" target="_blank">free audio podcast form</a> at StarShipSofa!
<p><b>Coming Next Week:</b> Angry mobs and broken men in Chapter Three of "Faithful Servants."</p>
<p><i>James L. Sutter is the Fiction Editor for Paizo Publishing, author of the novel <a href="https://paizo.com/products/btpy8oda?Pathfinder-Tales-Deaths-Heretic"></i>Death's Heretic<i></a> (also starring Salim), and co-creator of the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game campaign setting. His short stories have appeared in such publications as Escape Pod, Starship Sofa, Apex Magazine, and the #1 Amazon bestseller Machine of Death, and his anthology <a href="http://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8b8p"></i>Before They Were Giants<i></a> pairs the first published stories of SF luminaries with new interviews and writing advice from the authors themselves. In addition, James has written numerous Pathfinder supplements, including <a href="http://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8fda"></i>City of Strangers<i></a> and <a href="http://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8mgf"></i>Distant Worlds<i></a>. For more information, check out <a href="http://www.jameslsutter.com" target="_blank">jameslsutter.com</a> or follow him on Twitter at <a href="http://twitter.com/#!/jameslsutter" target="_blank">@jameslsutter</a>.</i></p>
<p>Illustration by Eric Belisle.</p>
</blockquote>
<!— tags: Eric Belisle —><p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/artists/ericBelisle">Eric Belisle</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales/webFiction/faithfulServants">Faithful Servants</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales">Pathfinder Tales</a></p><blockquote>
<br>
<a href="https://paizo.com/pathfindertales"><div class="PTales"></div></a>
<h1>Faithful Servants</h1>
<p>by James L. Sutter</p>
<h2>Chapter Two: A Walk in the Park</h2>
<p>"So talk."</p>
<p>The two men—for Salim had returned the eidolon's amulet, and the snake-man once more looked like an axiomite—walked shoulder to shoulder through one of Axis's many parks. To either side of the cobblestone path, trees and bushes of a hundred different varieties stood in a riot of color, each with a neat little placard giving its name and world of origin. Several were surrounded by decorative fences, and one of these quarantined plants shook and hooted as the pair passed by, its spherical fruit opening to reveal sucking lamprey mouths.</p>
<p>"My name is Connell," the eidolon said. "My master is Gatis Mirosoy, of the nation of Ustalav. More than thirty years ago, he called me forth from the aether of the Cerulean Void and gave me form, shaping me into his constant companion."</p>
<p>Salim nodded. He didn't know much about the practices of the so-called summoners, but he knew that the spirits they used in their magical creations were drawn from the Outer Planes. They weren't true souls—otherwise his own master, Pharasma the death goddess, would have something to say about the poaching—but they were close enough to provide the necessary animus. If Connell were a product of the chaotic Maelstrom, then it explained his appearance—and the disguising amulet. The serpentine proteans native to that plane were despised everywhere, but Axis had been at war with them since the universe began.</p>
<p>All of these thoughts passed by in the time it took Connell to draw breath and continue.</p>
<p>"For three decades, I served my master faithfully, protecting him from enemies, researching incantations, and managing his household affairs. He made this amulet specifically for me, so that I might treat with the local villagers on his behalf without unduly alarming them." One slender axiomite hand came up to caress the object, where it hung on its repaired leather thong. </p>
<p>"Sometimes, perhaps once every few years, his research would take us beyond the manor, to some forgotten library or dusty tomb where valuable knowledge lay languishing, waiting for the master to rescue it. It was on one of these excursions that he found the—the crown." The eidolon's voice caught, and for a moment he was silent.</p>
<p>"Crown?" Salim prompted.</p>
<p>"It's terrible!" the eidolon wailed, then reined himself back to a more reasonable volume. "We found it in the burial chamber of Arachyx the Ghoul-Handed. The master had brought us there in search of an ancient tapestry, but as soon as he saw the crown, all thought of the original mission went out the window, and he had to have it. It's a sick thing, an evil thing—a twisted band of iron with thorns that jut out in all directions, even back into the wearer's scalp. The whole thing has a weird, slick feeling to it, not like iron at all, but like oiled or decomposing flesh. And when the thorns prick you, the blood never drips—the thorns suck it up. I <i>hate</i> it." With this last pronouncement, a single tear welled up and rolled down the eidolon's disguised nose, dropping to the dirt.</p>
<div class="blurb360"><a href="https://paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8500-Salim.jpg"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8500-Salim_360.jpeg" border="0"></a><br>
<span class="blurbi">"Missionary work is hardly Salim's forte."</span></div>
<p>"After the master put it on, he...changed. Before, he'd been a quiet man, and stern as any good master, but not without a sense of humor. After that, he became something else. He lost all interest in summoning lesser servants from the distant planes, which before had been his greatest joy, and even quit experimenting with my form. Instead, all he wanted to do was research death. He became obsessed with creating undead things, from rat skeletons and dog zombies to more... substantial works." Connell paused, embarrassed. "I dug up graves and brought him the remains of the townsfolk. He said we were just borrowing them."</p>
<p>"Right."</p>
<p>Connell shrugged, helpless. "He was my master. If he wanted to study necromancy, that was his prerogative. An eidolon doesn't question."</p>
<p>Salim nodded, but trained ears had caught the verb tense. "Was?"</p>
<p>All at once, the eidolon's composure broke, and the face he turned to Salim was a caricature of anguish.</p>
<p>"He sent me <i>away</i>," Connell whispered. His tone made it sound like a death sentence. "In all my life, I had never been more than a mile from his side. But he had changed so much. He had never been over fond of travel, but now he never left the manor. He quit eating hardly at all, and would go for days without sleep. He ignored the clean clothes I left out for him. He tore down the shrine to the magic god Nethys, and built a new one to Urgathoa, the Pallid Princess. The old one was wood and paper, beautifully made. This one was made of parts from his—experiments."</p>
<p>Salim had seen plenty of such shrines, and could well imagine the decomposing limbs and reanimating scramblings it entailed. The Pallid Princess was a sick bitch, and made Salim's own goddess look downright warm in comparison. Where Pharasma was, for all her faults, at least even-handed and devoted to perpetuating natural cycles, Urgathoa was devoted to undeath and gluttony, her necromancers filling the world with perverse beings that refused to die. Needless to say, the two ladies didn't get along.</p>
<p>"You said he sent you away."</p>
<p>Connell wrapped thin arms around himself. "It was that stupid crown—I know it was. After a while, he didn't even take it off to sleep, and didn't notice when the wounds from the thorns got infected. I tried to take it off him once—just for a minute, to clean them out!—and he threw me halfway across the room. And that was when he said he didn't need me anymore." Another slow tear. "That—that he had plenty of new servants. Better ones. And then he cast a spell, and I was somewhere else."</p>
<p>The eidolon went silent, and Salim gave him his space, recognizing in the set of his shoulders how hard this must be for him. After a moment, Connell continued.</p>
<p>"He'd sent me back to the Maelstrom, the chaos plane he'd drawn me from. Except it didn't feel like home anymore. I was awkward, and lonely, and everything I met was either terrified of me or trying to eat me. But worse—I could still feel him. My master. The thread was faint—so faint—but I could still feel him." The eidolon pointed to the rune on his forehead. "I'm still my master's creature."</p>
<p>"That's when I realized how much danger he was in. He had his undead things, but they were still weak, and sooner or later someone was going to get fed up with the grave robbing and try to do something about it. And I wouldn't be there to protect him."</p>
<p>Salim was starting to get tired of the eidolon's puppylike devotion. He attempted to hurry the story along. "And so?"</p>
<p>"So I went to see Pharasma."</p>
<p>Salim stopped walking so abruptly that Connell almost tripped and fell over onto a flower whose blossoms were shaped like tethered hummingbirds, petal-wings buzzing frantically to pull them away from the clumsy eidolon.</p>
<p>"You went to the Boneyard?" Perhaps Salim had underestimated the creature. Though the goddess of death wasn't the sort to slay anyone out of hand—quite the opposite, in fact—there were plenty of other beings around the Gray Lady's realm who were less discriminating, and the journey there was hardly easy.</p>
<p>"It took a while," the eidolon agreed, "but I got there eventually. Some nice crow-vulture-things in masks led me in and showed me to one of her servants, a black-winged angel called Ceyanan. I think you know him?"</p>
<p>"You could say that," Salim said wryly. In the same sense that you know your master, he thought, just without the hopeless love. But he didn't bother confusing the eidolon with his own problems.</p>
<p>"He was very nice," Connell said. "I simply explained the situation as best I could, and he agreed that it would be in Pharasma's interest to help me." Here the eidolon grinned, and despite the amulet's illusion, Salim could easily imagine the serpentine smile beneath it. "See, it's not just the necromancy—I know the goddess hates undead, but that problem will take care of itself when someone eventually comes along and kills him. The real issue is the crown. It's what's changed him and made him do all these evil things—I'm positive. And if it's the crown, that means it's not his fault. And if it's not his <i>fault</i>"—here the eidolon raised a triumphant finger—"then it shouldn't affect the final judgment of his soul. It's a tricky situation. If my master dies while the crown's magic is making him do bad things, does that count against him? Does his soul go to Urgathoa, or to Nethys? At the very least, it seems like a long and complicated judgment is in order."</p>
<p>Now Salim understood. "And Ceyanan sent you to me."</p>
<p>Connell nodded enthusiastically. "He agreed that such a judgment would be needlessly complicated and take up the goddess's valuable time, and that the best thing to do was remove the cursed crown and let my master's soul cleanse itself. Then he gave me your description, and the name of a bar, and transported me to Axis."</p>
<p>"Of course he did." Salim had to admit, the eidolon's logic was sound. And it would be just like Ceyanan to send Salim on a job that was, in essence, missionary work. Soul saving. That would tickle the angel's sense of irony.</p>
<p>"So will you do it?" the eidolon asked eagerly. "Will you help me help my master?"</p>
<p>As if he had a choice. "Ustalav, you said?"</p>
<p>"Aton's Field, a village near Kavapesta."</p>
<p>Salim reached into his robes and produced an amulet of his own. The size of his thumb, the stone was a perfect, lightless black, save for an iridescent spiral that seemed to shimmer and move of its own accord. Cupping the stone in one hand, he offered the other to Connell. "Let's go, then."</p>
<p>The eidolon took it.</p>
<p>The world twisted.</p>
<p><b>Note:</b> This story is also available in <a href="http://www.starshipsofa.com/blog/2011/12/07/starshipsofa-no-215-james-l-sutter/" target="_blank">free audio podcast form</a> at StarShipSofa!
<p><b>Coming Next Week:</b> Angry mobs and broken men in Chapter Three of "Faithful Servants."</p>
<p><i>James L. Sutter is the Fiction Editor for Paizo Publishing, author of the novel <a href="https://paizo.com/products/btpy8oda?Pathfinder-Tales-Deaths-Heretic"></i>Death's Heretic<i></a> (also starring Salim), and co-creator of the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game campaign setting. His short stories have appeared in such publications as Escape Pod, Starship Sofa, Apex Magazine, and the #1 Amazon bestseller Machine of Death, and his anthology <a href="http://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8b8p"></i>Before They Were Giants<i></a> pairs the first published stories of SF luminaries with new interviews and writing advice from the authors themselves. In addition, James has written numerous Pathfinder supplements, including <a href="http://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8fda"></i>City of Strangers<i></a> and <a href="http://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8mgf"></i>Distant Worlds<i></a>. For more information, check out <a href="http://www.jameslsutter.com" target="_blank">jameslsutter.com</a> or follow him on Twitter at <a href="http://twitter.com/#!/jameslsutter" target="_blank">@jameslsutter</a>.</i></p>
<p>Illustration by Eric Belisle.</p>
</blockquote>
<!— tags: Eric Belisle —><p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/artists/ericBelisle">Eric Belisle</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales/webFiction/faithfulServants">Faithful Servants</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales">Pathfinder Tales</a></p>2011-12-07T18:00:00ZFaithful Servants--Chapter One: Down at the Clever Endeavorhttps://paizo.com/community/blog/v5748dyo5lcvn?Faithful-ServantsChapter-One-Down-at-the2011-11-30T19:00:00Z<blockquote>
<br>
<a href="https://paizo.com/pathfindertales"><div class="PTales"></div></a>
<h1>Faithful Servants</h1>
<p>by James L. Sutter</p>
<h2>Chapter One: Down at the Clever Endeavor</h2>
<p>The Clever Endeavor wasn't the best bar on Axis. Nor was it the cleanest, or the cheapest—and definitely not the friendliest. It was a bar you went to when you didn't want to be seen.</p>
<p>Not that there weren't always customers. The place had a pretty decent crowd of regulars, and new folks stumbled in from time to time as situations warranted. But everyone there knew the first rule of the Clever Endeavor: even if you saw someone you recognized—you didn't see them.</p>
<p>Which is why it was so immediately obvious that Salim was being followed.</p>
<p>The bar was roughly half full, which meant that it was as full as it ever got. Wrought-iron lanterns filled not with flickering flame but with smooth phosphorescence glowed softly between tables, casting enough light to see by but not so much as to make anyone feel exposed. The bar's shape was different than most, with a wide-open center and tables positioned around the twisting outer wall, each set in its own scalloped hollow. It was hardly the best use of space, but the sort of folk that frequented the Clever Endeavor appreciated the fact that the odd layout gave every table a wall to put one's back to, plus a clear view of the entrance and the stairs leading up to the street. Directly across from the doorway stood a long wooden bar without any stools, and behind it lurked a rack of hundreds of bottles of all shapes and sizes—some clear, some opaque, and some jumping and jittering of their own accord.</p>
<p>The bar's unusual shape, however, was nothing compared to its clientele. As far as Salim could tell—and such things weren't always obvious—he was the only human present. To his right, a cluster of hive people—this particular group composed almost entirely of the flying variety, which resembled seven-foot-tall, black-shelled wasps—used deft proboscises to scrape thick red fluid from long, fluted glasses. Thanks to their telepathy, the only sound from their alcove was the steady brush of feathery appendages on crystal, yet the way they occasionally whirred their wings or crooked their limbs suggested an argument. Or as close to an argument as creatures with a hive mind ever got.</p>
<p>To Salim's left, several of the plane's native axiomites were going over documents with a winged, green-skinned man that Salim had pegged as an angel, hammering out some sort of agreement. Each time one of the elflike axiomites moved to point out a particular clause, the illusion of its flesh broke and scattered, revealing the cloud of glowing symbols that was its true form.</p>
<p>Across the room, another axiomite pulled her companion, one of the fox-headed vulpinals, as deep into the shadows of her alcove as she could. Salim couldn't say whether the gesture was one of modesty or fear of judgment by her fellows, but it had little effect either way. Each time the fox-man touched the flawless skin of her thigh, a blaze of runes drifted up from the caress like golden dust, broadcasting her excitement to the room. The axiomites were living mathematical abstractions, but apparently even abstractions had needs.</p>
<p>And those were just the groups. Far more common in the Clever Endeavor were the singletons—folks who didn't care to bring companions, and were even less interested in making new ones. These solitary drinkers were scattered around the place, each lost in his or her own thoughts. A flame-haired ifrit, the half-breed offspring of some genie and a mortal, sat nursing a brass goblet at one of the flame-retardant tables. Beyond him, a contract devil with a pointed beard and wire-rimmed spectacles which were almost certainly just for show sorted through a pile of scrolls. Closest to the bar was a blurry, vaguely humanoid distortion in the air which Salim took to be one of the shae, the aristocratic residents of the Shadow Plane. The shadow people had long ago traded physical forms for regions of coherent probability, and had been insufferably smug about it ever since. </p>
<p>In other words, nothing out of the ordinary.</p>
<p>Salim shifted so that his back was to his uninvited guest. He leaned over the table, propping his head on his hand and looking down as if staring into his drink. In reality, it was the glass that concerned him. In its warped reflection, the rest of the room behind him was clearly visible.</p>
<p>The solitary axiomite two tables down was staring at him. Not the careful, peripheral-vision study of someone used to the Clever Endeavor's rules. The eyes fixed on Salim's back were blatant in their gaze. Though the man's nondescript robes, pointed ears, and inhumanly perfect features were no different from any of a thousand other axiomites, a large rune that glimmered with its own light sat between his eyebrows. </p>
<p>A glowing forehead tattoo was an interesting choice for someone trying to pass unnoticed. But then, this was Axis. As it was, the rune told Salim nothing except that he'd never seen the man before.</p>
<p>Salim set down his glass and looked to the bartender. Lahan was standing in his usual place behind the counter, a rag over one narrow shoulder and a vacant expression on his face as he stared off into the distance. As Salim's hand twitched up in the three-fingered signal, however, the barman's eyes snapped into focus. He met Salim's gaze and nodded slightly.</p>
<p>Good. Placing one hand on the battered surface of the table, Salim shoved himself to his feet. He stood there for a moment, wobbling slightly as if from too much drink, then began weaving his way toward the back of the establishment. Past the bar, he turned left and staggered into the hallway leading to the jakes.</p>
<p>As soon as he was around the corner and out of sight of the rest of the bar, Salim flattened himself against the near wall, willing his black robes to blend into the shadows. His right hand crept to the twisted hilt of his sword, then moved away. Lahan wouldn't want any blood if he could help it. Salim waited.</p>
<p>The axiomite came around the corner. Salim sprang. One hand wrapping around the man's neck, the other forearm hitting sideways across his chest, Salim slammed into his follower, jamming him up against the far wall of the hallway.</p>
<p>Instead of flying apart into a cloud of symbols, the man hit the bricks with a meaty slap. Not a true axiomite, then—a disguise. The fake axiomite's mouth opened, and Salim squeezed his windpipe shut before he could make a sound. </p>
<p>A hand came up, crabbing toward the man's chest, and Salim batted it away easily. Searching within his opponent's tunic, he found the hard knot of the pendant the man had been reaching for. Salim closed his hand around it and pulled, snapping the thong easily.</p>
<p>The man shifted. Where one moment Salim had been holding an axiomite, now he was holding something else entirely. Gone were the axiomite's lithe limbs, replaced by green scales and clawed, three-fingered hands. A pair of stumpy wings, ludicrously small for such a large creature, fluttered ineffectually from slits in the shirt's shoulders. The biggest difference, however, was the head: a cross between a dinosaur and the long, toothy grin of a dolphin. The creature's new face rose on a serpentine neck that was suddenly several feet longer than it had been. The glowing rune that had emblazoned the man's forehead was still there, but now it sat between two eyebrow ridges of thick horn.</p>
<div class="blurb360"><a href="https://paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8500-Eidolon.jpg"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8500-Eidolon_360.jpeg" border="0"></a><br>
"Whoever made this particular eidolon had a weird sense of humor."</div>
<p>A nice trick, but it made little difference. Salim choked up on the ludicrous neck until his fist rested just beneath the overlong snout, then pulled the head back down to eye level.</p>
<p>"What are you?" he asked, loosening his hold on the creature's windpipe.</p>
<p>The creature coughed and sputtered. "I...I don—"</p>
<p>Salim squeezed a warning. "You don't know? I find that unlikely."</p>
<p>The creature shook its head, gasping, and tried again. This time it managed to rasp out a single word. </p>
<p>"Eidolon."</p>
<p>An eidolon. Interesting. That explained the glowing tattoo—eidolons were created creatures, and the rune would undoubtedly be a sign of its master. The thought of a third party made Salim suddenly aware that his back was exposed, and he dragged the creature farther down the hall toward the privies. He trusted Lahan to give him a signal if someone else came their direction, but there was no guarantee that the eidolon's summoner couldn't turn invisible.</p>
<p>"Who do you work for?" Salim demanded. "And why is he looking for me?"</p>
<p>The creature shook its head again. Though Salim still had it pressed up against the wall, he could feel its body relax.</p>
<p>"He's not. I came on my own."</p>
<p>That didn't make sense—eidolons didn't do anything without their masters' consent—but Salim left it alone for the time being. He was starting to get irritated. Before he could ask another question, the eidolon answered it.</p>
<p>"Ceyanan told me you could help me."</p>
<p>Ceyanan. The name was like magic—as soon as Salim heard it, everything became clear. He sighed and released the creature, stepping back as it stretched out its serpentine neck, curling and corkscrewing it to work out kinks.</p>
<p>"So the angel sent you."</p>
<p>The creature nodded, a more expressive move than any human could hope to make. "He told me how to find you."</p>
<p>"Of course he did." Salim's black-winged chaperone was fond of jokes. Never mind that the angel's sense of humor had nearly gotten this particular emissary killed. What did a single life matter to a herald of the death goddess?</p>
<p>Salim turned back toward the bar, motioning for the snake-man to follow. "Come on."</p>
<p>"So you'll help me?" the eidolon asked. Its muzzle was still frozen in the idiot smile that seemed more appropriate now than when it was a just a breath away from being choked to death.</p>
<p>"I didn't say that," Salim said. "First we'll talk. But not here." He glanced back over his shoulder.</p>
<p>"Now are you coming, or aren't you?"</p>
<p><b>Coming Next Week:</b> The lamentations of a servant betrayed in Chapter Two of “Faithful Servants.”</p>
<p><i>James L. Sutter is the Fiction Editor for Paizo Publishing, author of the novel <a href="https://paizo.com/products/btpy8oda?Pathfinder-Tales-Deaths-Heretic"></i>Death's Heretic<i></a> (also starring Salim), and co-creator of the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game campaign setting. His short stories have appeared in such publications as Escape Pod, Starship Sofa, Apex Magazine, and the #1 Amazon bestseller Machine of Death, and his anthology <a href="http://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8b8p"></i>Before They Were Giants<i></a> pairs the first published stories of SF luminaries with new interviews and writing advice from the authors themselves. In addition, James has written numerous Pathfinder supplements, including <a href="http://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8fda"></i>City of Strangers<i></a> and <a href="http://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8mgf"></i>Distant Worlds<i></a>. For more information, check out <a href="http://www.jameslsutter.com" target="_blank">jameslsutter.com</a> or follow him on Twitter at <a href="http://twitter.com/#!/jameslsutter" target="_blank">@jameslsutter</a>.</i></p>
<p>Illustration by Carmen Cianelli.<p>
</blockquote>
<!— tags: Pathfinder Tales, Carmen Cianelli, James L. Sutter, Faithful Servants —><p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/artists/carmenCianelli">Carmen Cianelli</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales/webFiction/faithfulServants">Faithful Servants</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales">Pathfinder Tales</a></p><blockquote>
<br>
<a href="https://paizo.com/pathfindertales"><div class="PTales"></div></a>
<h1>Faithful Servants</h1>
<p>by James L. Sutter</p>
<h2>Chapter One: Down at the Clever Endeavor</h2>
<p>The Clever Endeavor wasn't the best bar on Axis. Nor was it the cleanest, or the cheapest—and definitely not the friendliest. It was a bar you went to when you didn't want to be seen.</p>
<p>Not that there weren't always customers. The place had a pretty decent crowd of regulars, and new folks stumbled in from time to time as situations warranted. But everyone there knew the first rule of the Clever Endeavor: even if you saw someone you recognized—you didn't see them.</p>
<p>Which is why it was so immediately obvious that Salim was being followed.</p>
<p>The bar was roughly half full, which meant that it was as full as it ever got. Wrought-iron lanterns filled not with flickering flame but with smooth phosphorescence glowed softly between tables, casting enough light to see by but not so much as to make anyone feel exposed. The bar's shape was different than most, with a wide-open center and tables positioned around the twisting outer wall, each set in its own scalloped hollow. It was hardly the best use of space, but the sort of folk that frequented the Clever Endeavor appreciated the fact that the odd layout gave every table a wall to put one's back to, plus a clear view of the entrance and the stairs leading up to the street. Directly across from the doorway stood a long wooden bar without any stools, and behind it lurked a rack of hundreds of bottles of all shapes and sizes—some clear, some opaque, and some jumping and jittering of their own accord.</p>
<p>The bar's unusual shape, however, was nothing compared to its clientele. As far as Salim could tell—and such things weren't always obvious—he was the only human present. To his right, a cluster of hive people—this particular group composed almost entirely of the flying variety, which resembled seven-foot-tall, black-shelled wasps—used deft proboscises to scrape thick red fluid from long, fluted glasses. Thanks to their telepathy, the only sound from their alcove was the steady brush of feathery appendages on crystal, yet the way they occasionally whirred their wings or crooked their limbs suggested an argument. Or as close to an argument as creatures with a hive mind ever got.</p>
<p>To Salim's left, several of the plane's native axiomites were going over documents with a winged, green-skinned man that Salim had pegged as an angel, hammering out some sort of agreement. Each time one of the elflike axiomites moved to point out a particular clause, the illusion of its flesh broke and scattered, revealing the cloud of glowing symbols that was its true form.</p>
<p>Across the room, another axiomite pulled her companion, one of the fox-headed vulpinals, as deep into the shadows of her alcove as she could. Salim couldn't say whether the gesture was one of modesty or fear of judgment by her fellows, but it had little effect either way. Each time the fox-man touched the flawless skin of her thigh, a blaze of runes drifted up from the caress like golden dust, broadcasting her excitement to the room. The axiomites were living mathematical abstractions, but apparently even abstractions had needs.</p>
<p>And those were just the groups. Far more common in the Clever Endeavor were the singletons—folks who didn't care to bring companions, and were even less interested in making new ones. These solitary drinkers were scattered around the place, each lost in his or her own thoughts. A flame-haired ifrit, the half-breed offspring of some genie and a mortal, sat nursing a brass goblet at one of the flame-retardant tables. Beyond him, a contract devil with a pointed beard and wire-rimmed spectacles which were almost certainly just for show sorted through a pile of scrolls. Closest to the bar was a blurry, vaguely humanoid distortion in the air which Salim took to be one of the shae, the aristocratic residents of the Shadow Plane. The shadow people had long ago traded physical forms for regions of coherent probability, and had been insufferably smug about it ever since. </p>
<p>In other words, nothing out of the ordinary.</p>
<p>Salim shifted so that his back was to his uninvited guest. He leaned over the table, propping his head on his hand and looking down as if staring into his drink. In reality, it was the glass that concerned him. In its warped reflection, the rest of the room behind him was clearly visible.</p>
<p>The solitary axiomite two tables down was staring at him. Not the careful, peripheral-vision study of someone used to the Clever Endeavor's rules. The eyes fixed on Salim's back were blatant in their gaze. Though the man's nondescript robes, pointed ears, and inhumanly perfect features were no different from any of a thousand other axiomites, a large rune that glimmered with its own light sat between his eyebrows. </p>
<p>A glowing forehead tattoo was an interesting choice for someone trying to pass unnoticed. But then, this was Axis. As it was, the rune told Salim nothing except that he'd never seen the man before.</p>
<p>Salim set down his glass and looked to the bartender. Lahan was standing in his usual place behind the counter, a rag over one narrow shoulder and a vacant expression on his face as he stared off into the distance. As Salim's hand twitched up in the three-fingered signal, however, the barman's eyes snapped into focus. He met Salim's gaze and nodded slightly.</p>
<p>Good. Placing one hand on the battered surface of the table, Salim shoved himself to his feet. He stood there for a moment, wobbling slightly as if from too much drink, then began weaving his way toward the back of the establishment. Past the bar, he turned left and staggered into the hallway leading to the jakes.</p>
<p>As soon as he was around the corner and out of sight of the rest of the bar, Salim flattened himself against the near wall, willing his black robes to blend into the shadows. His right hand crept to the twisted hilt of his sword, then moved away. Lahan wouldn't want any blood if he could help it. Salim waited.</p>
<p>The axiomite came around the corner. Salim sprang. One hand wrapping around the man's neck, the other forearm hitting sideways across his chest, Salim slammed into his follower, jamming him up against the far wall of the hallway.</p>
<p>Instead of flying apart into a cloud of symbols, the man hit the bricks with a meaty slap. Not a true axiomite, then—a disguise. The fake axiomite's mouth opened, and Salim squeezed his windpipe shut before he could make a sound. </p>
<p>A hand came up, crabbing toward the man's chest, and Salim batted it away easily. Searching within his opponent's tunic, he found the hard knot of the pendant the man had been reaching for. Salim closed his hand around it and pulled, snapping the thong easily.</p>
<p>The man shifted. Where one moment Salim had been holding an axiomite, now he was holding something else entirely. Gone were the axiomite's lithe limbs, replaced by green scales and clawed, three-fingered hands. A pair of stumpy wings, ludicrously small for such a large creature, fluttered ineffectually from slits in the shirt's shoulders. The biggest difference, however, was the head: a cross between a dinosaur and the long, toothy grin of a dolphin. The creature's new face rose on a serpentine neck that was suddenly several feet longer than it had been. The glowing rune that had emblazoned the man's forehead was still there, but now it sat between two eyebrow ridges of thick horn.</p>
<div class="blurb360"><a href="https://paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8500-Eidolon.jpg"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8500-Eidolon_360.jpeg" border="0"></a><br>
"Whoever made this particular eidolon had a weird sense of humor."</div>
<p>A nice trick, but it made little difference. Salim choked up on the ludicrous neck until his fist rested just beneath the overlong snout, then pulled the head back down to eye level.</p>
<p>"What are you?" he asked, loosening his hold on the creature's windpipe.</p>
<p>The creature coughed and sputtered. "I...I don—"</p>
<p>Salim squeezed a warning. "You don't know? I find that unlikely."</p>
<p>The creature shook its head, gasping, and tried again. This time it managed to rasp out a single word. </p>
<p>"Eidolon."</p>
<p>An eidolon. Interesting. That explained the glowing tattoo—eidolons were created creatures, and the rune would undoubtedly be a sign of its master. The thought of a third party made Salim suddenly aware that his back was exposed, and he dragged the creature farther down the hall toward the privies. He trusted Lahan to give him a signal if someone else came their direction, but there was no guarantee that the eidolon's summoner couldn't turn invisible.</p>
<p>"Who do you work for?" Salim demanded. "And why is he looking for me?"</p>
<p>The creature shook its head again. Though Salim still had it pressed up against the wall, he could feel its body relax.</p>
<p>"He's not. I came on my own."</p>
<p>That didn't make sense—eidolons didn't do anything without their masters' consent—but Salim left it alone for the time being. He was starting to get irritated. Before he could ask another question, the eidolon answered it.</p>
<p>"Ceyanan told me you could help me."</p>
<p>Ceyanan. The name was like magic—as soon as Salim heard it, everything became clear. He sighed and released the creature, stepping back as it stretched out its serpentine neck, curling and corkscrewing it to work out kinks.</p>
<p>"So the angel sent you."</p>
<p>The creature nodded, a more expressive move than any human could hope to make. "He told me how to find you."</p>
<p>"Of course he did." Salim's black-winged chaperone was fond of jokes. Never mind that the angel's sense of humor had nearly gotten this particular emissary killed. What did a single life matter to a herald of the death goddess?</p>
<p>Salim turned back toward the bar, motioning for the snake-man to follow. "Come on."</p>
<p>"So you'll help me?" the eidolon asked. Its muzzle was still frozen in the idiot smile that seemed more appropriate now than when it was a just a breath away from being choked to death.</p>
<p>"I didn't say that," Salim said. "First we'll talk. But not here." He glanced back over his shoulder.</p>
<p>"Now are you coming, or aren't you?"</p>
<p><b>Coming Next Week:</b> The lamentations of a servant betrayed in Chapter Two of “Faithful Servants.”</p>
<p><i>James L. Sutter is the Fiction Editor for Paizo Publishing, author of the novel <a href="https://paizo.com/products/btpy8oda?Pathfinder-Tales-Deaths-Heretic"></i>Death's Heretic<i></a> (also starring Salim), and co-creator of the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game campaign setting. His short stories have appeared in such publications as Escape Pod, Starship Sofa, Apex Magazine, and the #1 Amazon bestseller Machine of Death, and his anthology <a href="http://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8b8p"></i>Before They Were Giants<i></a> pairs the first published stories of SF luminaries with new interviews and writing advice from the authors themselves. In addition, James has written numerous Pathfinder supplements, including <a href="http://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8fda"></i>City of Strangers<i></a> and <a href="http://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8mgf"></i>Distant Worlds<i></a>. For more information, check out <a href="http://www.jameslsutter.com" target="_blank">jameslsutter.com</a> or follow him on Twitter at <a href="http://twitter.com/#!/jameslsutter" target="_blank">@jameslsutter</a>.</i></p>
<p>Illustration by Carmen Cianelli.<p>
</blockquote>
<!— tags: Pathfinder Tales, Carmen Cianelli, James L. Sutter, Faithful Servants —><p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/artists/carmenCianelli">Carmen Cianelli</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales/webFiction/faithfulServants">Faithful Servants</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales">Pathfinder Tales</a></p>2011-11-30T19:00:00ZDeath's Heretic Sample Chapterhttps://paizo.com/community/blog/v5748dyo5lcuv?Deaths-Heretic-Sample-Chapter2011-11-23T18:00:00Z<blockquote>
<br>
<a href="https://paizo.com/pathfindertales"><div class="PTales"></div></a>
<h1>Death's Heretic Sample Chapter</h1>
<p class="date">Wednesday, November 23, 2011</p>
<p>by James L. Sutter</p>
<p><i>In</i> <a href="http://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8oda">Death's Heretic</a><i>, Salim Ghadafar is a problem-solver for a church he hates, bound by the death goddess to hunt down those who would rob her of her due. Presented below is the first chapter of the new Pathfinder Tales novel by Paizo Fiction Editor James L. Sutter!</i></p>
<p>Death always smelled the same.</p>
<p>After all this time, it wasn’t the stink that got to him—the reek of excrement, of putrefying flesh and organs never meant to see daylight. That was expected, easily imaginable by even the greenest killer. No, what stuck with Salim was the insufferable <i>sweetness</i> of it, the fact that behind the stomach-churning stench was the saccharine ghost of fermentation, cloying and coating the insides of his nostrils. It was impossible not to respond to it. Somewhere in the back of his brain, the part that was little more than animal, he knew that smell meant a kill, and that a kill meant success. That part of him wanted to crow, to roll in the filth until it covered him like a badge. On its own, the stink was tolerable. Combined with that sweetness, it made him want to vomit.</p>
<p>The undead had that smell, too. With some it was musty and old, others mixed with the heavy scent of wet earth, and still others—those that walked among the living without notice—so faint that the lightest perfume could cover it. Yet it was always there.</p>
<p>The ghouls had it in abundance, their dry, stretched flesh never quite sure if it wanted to heal or slough off completely. Without looking down, Salim stepped carefully over the nearest corpse and pressed up against the wall, studying the doorway.</p>
<p>He’d killed most of the pack, though not before they’d glutted themselves on the parishioners. It hadn’t been difficult. These weren’t civilized horrors like the monstrous citizens of Nemret Noktoria, but rather the newly risen dead, as naive in their own way as the rural farmers they fed upon. They were strong, and hungry, but knew nothing else. They’d never been hunted. Fear was something they inspired in others, and by the time Salim taught them otherwise, it was too late.</p>
<p>Still, it was the easy prey that surprised you, and there was no point in taking chances. There were still three of them beyond the door, waiting like cornered rats to rend and tear. It would only take one scratch from a poisoned finger-turned-claw to stiffen his limbs and leave him paralyzed, helpless while they fed—or, worse yet, let the infection in their bite spread through his veins like wildfire, burning out his flesh until he became one of them. No, this was no time to get cocky. Taking the ghouls might be easy, but there was no room for error. The execution had to be flawless.</p>
<p>The glow of his torch was barely enough to light the antechamber in which he stood, its flickers seemingly swallowed up by the black void beyond the archway. Fixing that was the first order of business. If they went for his light—and they certainly would—the burns they’d get trying to take it would be nothing compared to the disadvantage his human eyes would be in the tomb’s darkness.</p>
<p>Salim glanced around the crypt, silent save for the crackling of burning pitch. It was humble, little more than a brick-walled pit with steps leading up to the church, but it was this village’s holy of holies. Each of a dozen narrow wall niches held a cloth-wrapped form, most still thick with dust—the ghouls hadn’t bothered feeding on these mummified husks when the church graveyard bore riper, more putrescent fruit. Hands folded, covered with the withered threads of what were once flowers, the honored dead might have continued their dreamless sleep undisturbed, were it not for the two ghoul corpses that fouled the gray stone floor.</p>
<p>They were exactly what he needed. Without a second thought, Salim moved to the nearest niche and took hold of the corpse’s homespun burial shroud. A single pull sent its contents spinning to the floor, leaving Salim holding several yards of cloth, which he promptly put to the torch. </p>
<p>Flame caught the simple embroidery and raced up its edges. As he let the flickering tongues writhe over the sheet, Salim glanced down at its former occupant. A young man, and not recently dead by the look of him—tendons showed through withered flesh, but they still held the sack of bones in the rough shape of a man. The body’s relative cohesion gave Salim an idea, and he set down the torch, wrapped the now merrily blazing cloth around the blade of his sword, then leaned down to scoop up the corpse with his other arm. With the grisly parcel clutched to his chest like a lover, he moved along the wall toward the doorway.</p>
<p>No time like the present. With a flick of his sword, Salim sent the burning shroud sailing into the room, the fabric flapping open to light the sepulcher. Something hissed in the darkness, and he followed the light with his other prize, swinging the corpse around the corner and into the room at shoulder height.</p>
<p>The ruse worked. Thinking Salim had charged in after the blazing blanket, two of the ghouls pounced, dropping from the walls and ceiling to rend the corpse’s brittle flesh. In the second it took them to realize their mistake, the real Salim was among them, sword flashing.</p>
<p>The ghouls’ leathery hide was stronger than human skin, but it still parted easily under the edge of his blade. Salim’s initial thrust caught the first one in the center of its back and slid in smoothly, the flat of the blade kept parallel to the ground to avoid getting stuck between the creature’s ribs. His recovery gave the second ghoul time to face him, but not enough to get its glistening claws up. Salim’s swing didn’t take its head clean off—his sword was light, and that sort of thing was more for storybooks and campfire tales than real battles—but it did the job, sending the creature slumping backward, head lolling to one side on a thin strand of flesh. Salim ignored it, withdrawing to a defensive posture with his back to the wall next to the archway, waiting for the third ghoul’s attack.</p>
<p>It didn’t come. Heartbeat after heartbeat went by as Salim’s eyes darted back and forth, but the expected attack failed to manifest. The room was silent, save for his own heavy breathing. Then the blood pounding in his ears calmed, and he heard a new sound—a low, dry whimpering. Sword at the ready, he stepped forward and kicked the crackling shroud farther into the room.</p>
<p>The third ghoul was curled up in the back of the burial chamber, hunched over into a fetal position in order to pull itself as far as it could into an empty wall niche. It clutched its knees and moaned again as Salim advanced.</p>
<p>“Please,” it whined. Coming from the twisted form, the voice was shockingly human. It strained to shape the words with its grotesquely overlong tongue. “Please don’t kill. I’ll go. No more hunting. No more brothers. Just graves. Please.”</p>
<p>In its fear, the ghoul came closest to resembling the man it had once been. Had the creature’s previous incarnation made a similar plea, as farmer to ghoul? Salim said nothing, but the ghoul nodded anyway. Chin to knee, it curled tighter and closed its eyes.</p>
<p>“Hungry,” it whispered. From behind bruised-black eyelids, a tear welled and slid down the creature’s face. “So hungry.”</p>
<p>This time Salim did respond.</p>
<p>“I understand,” he said.</p>
<p>Then, with both hands, he lifted his sword and brought it down.</p>
<p>In the aftermath, Salim recovered his torch and let the light of it and the blackened, sputtering shroud show him the room in all its meager glory. It was as humble as the outer chamber, but it was clear that the room had been both crypt and funereal preparation chamber. A long stone slab that was almost an altar sat to one end, surrounded by the mundane implements of embalming, while the walls held more spaces for bodies, unlit lanterns, and fine tapestries showing the glory of various gods, from stag-headed Erastil to the Lady of Graves herself. Clearly, these villagers worshiped an array of divine beings, pooling their resources into a single church.</p>
<p>And hedging their bets, Salim thought.</p>
<p>Setting his torch down on the altar, Salim moved over to the baptismal font in the corner and looked down into its shallow basin. The holy water was still clear and unsullied—either the ghouls hadn’t had time to soil it properly, or one of them had accidentally been splashed and the rest had learned to keep their distance. Salim’s eyes, hooded and tired, stared back at him from the water’s reflection. The rest of his face—dark hair, dark skin, and thin, dark beard—all blended together into the chamber’s gloom. The splashes of black ghoul blood didn’t help, either. Balancing his sword along the stone where the font emerged from the wall, he leaned over and splashed his face, then began scrubbing his hands vigorously, setting clouds of black filth blooming like ink through the water.</p>
<p>And not just black, he realized. There was red in the water as well. He glanced quickly down at his robes. Had one of the ghouls managed a lucky scratch without him realizing it? If so, he needed to move quickly to avoid sharing their fate. </p>
<p>But no—he was unharmed. Looking down at the basin, he realized that the blood was welling up from beneath his fingernails, his hands slowly weeping red into the baptismal font. The realization was followed immediately by a telltale tickle on his upper lip.</p>
<p>Oh. Of course. Salim dipped his hands back into the icy water. From behind him came the soft flutter of wings, as of a flock of doves suddenly startled into flight.</p>
<p>“Hello, Salim.”</p>
<div class="blurb360"><a href="https://paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8506-Ceyanan.jpg"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8506-Ceyanan_360.jpeg" border="0"></a><br>
"Ceyanan has an interesting way of announcing itself."</div>
<p>“Ceyanan.” Salim waited a moment, hands gripping the font’s stone lip, then collected himself and turned.</p>
<p>The angel was floating in the chamber’s center, its toes pointed like a dancer two feet above the floor. The robes that flowed around it in an undetectable breeze were gray against worm-pale skin, and combined with the black hair they made the figure look like a charcoal sketch. Its features were too perfect to be truly beautiful, like a marble statue, and androgynous enough that not even the sheer fabric revealed a gender.</p>
<p>More arresting than all of these were the black-feathered wings that sprang from its back. Even half-folded, they were clearly not normal appendages. More shadow than form, they gave the impression that if they spread, they would not so much unfurl as bloom, the way the ghoul’s filth had expanded in the water of the font. Yet the angel’s floating seemed to have little to do with them, and they remained still, the individual feathers flickering in and out of visibility. It looked around the room.</p>
<p>“I love what you’ve done with the place,” Ceyanan said.</p>
<p>Salim ignored the apparition and instead located a clean patch of sleeve, which he used to wipe his nose, succeeding only in smearing the blood around.</p>
<p>“Is this really necessary?” he asked, gesturing at bloody lips. “Every time?”</p>
<p>The angel laughed, as innocent as a child, and spread its hands.</p>
<p>“Consider it a gift, Salim. What better way to know that you’re still alive?”</p>
<p>Salim let that one pass, but the angel wasn’t finished.</p>
<p>“Besides,” it said, motioning toward the floor, “was <i>that</i> necessary?”</p>
<p>Salim looked down. He was almost standing on the corpse that had acted as his decoy. The young man’s arms and legs, once locked tight in the stately constriction of the dead, were now sacks of shattered bone, flesh tattered by ghoul claws and the rough landing. Salim shrugged.</p>
<p>“He didn’t object,” he said, but he was still careful not to kick the corpse as he stepped over to one of the ornate tapestries and began systematically cleaning his sword. Ghoul blood had already dried along its length, crusting both the shining blade and the twisted, melted-looking hilt with filth. </p>
<p>“They rarely do,” the angel acknowledged. “But that’s neither here nor there. You know that I come bearing tidings.”</p>
<p>“And here I thought this was a purely social visit.” Salim sheathed the blade. “But please, Ceyanan, don’t keep me in suspense—pray tell me what the bitch-goddess wants from me now.” He turned to lock eyes with the angel. “Is there a vampiric orgy in Caliphas that I’m to break up? A mummy that needs unwrapping? Or did someone forget to dig a grave deep enough, and a coyote ran away with some bones?”</p>
<p>The angel frowned.</p>
<p>“You should learn to show proper respect,” it said.</p>
<p>“And you should know by now that I only give it where it’s due.” The mocking politesse was gone now, replaced by a cool, smooth anger. “If your lady wants to win my love, she’s got a long road ahead of her.”</p>
<p>The angel waved its hand as if shooing a fly, refusing to be baited. It was an old game.</p>
<p>“Have it your way,” it said. “You have the opportunity to work great justice in this world, but you’re welcome to see it as an order if it pleases you.”</p>
<p>Salim waited. </p>
<p>Ceyanan sighed. “No undead this time. Rather the opposite, actually—something uniquely suited to your skills. A kidnapping.”</p>
<p>“Kidnapping?” Despite his resentment, Salim couldn’t quite keep the curiosity out of his voice. “That’s hardly my usual fare. Or yours, for that matter. How do I factor in?”</p>
<p>“In this case, the victim is already dead.”</p>
<p>The angel paused a moment to see if Salim would say anything. He didn’t.</p>
<p>“The merchant in question,” Ceyanan continued, “was the target of a routine assassination—nothing special there. But after his death, his soul was stolen from the Boneyard before it could pass on to its final reward. Not destroyed—stolen. The local clerics have been unable to raise the body, and now the kidnappers are offering to sell back the man’s spirit. Naturally, the church is more than a little upset. We’ve already got the local clergy working on the problem, but we’d like you to step in and handle things. You might consider it a nice change of pace.” The angel’s hand swung to encompass the crypt and the already decaying ghouls.</p>
<p>“Makes sense,” Salim said. “Letting a soul go missing hardly reflects well on the church. But why me? And why don’t they just pay the ransom and be done?”</p>
<p>“The situation is in Thuvia.”</p>
<p>Thuvia. The name hit Salim like a blow. That was too close. Far too close. But if the kidnapping were in Thuvia—</p>
<p>“The sun orchid elixir,” he said.</p>
<p>“Precisely.” The angel looked pleased.</p>
<p>“Stealing a soul and selling it back for a shot at immortality. No wonder the Gray Lady’s pissed.”</p>
<p> “Now you understand,” Ceyanan said. “You’ll depart immediately.”</p>
<p>Salim gritted his teeth. “You know I don’t like being that close.”</p>
<p>“As you so eloquently pointed out, winning your affection is not my first priority. Your familiarity with the region and its customs will make you that much more efficient. And you might even enjoy your time there.”</p>
<p>“Not that I have a choice.”</p>
<p>The angel smiled down at him again.</p>
<p>“You did, once.”</p>
<p>Salim opened his mouth to respond, but the angel had already grown transparent, its voice a whisper that receded into the distance.</p>
<p>“Enjoy the desert, Salim.”</p>
<p><a href="https://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8oda"><b>Purchase the whole novel here.</b></a></p>
<p><b>Coming Next Week:</b> A brand new, standalone adventure featuring Salim, Ceyanan, and even stranger characters!</p>
<p><i>James L. Sutter is the Fiction Editor for Paizo Publishing, author of the novel <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Pathfinder-Tales-James-L-Sutter/dp/1601253699/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1309145749&sr=8-1" target="_blank"></i>Death's Heretic<i></a>, and co-creator of the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game campaign setting. His short stories have appeared in such publications as Escape Pod, Starship Sofa, Apex Magazine, and the #1 Amazon bestseller Machine of Death, and his anthology <a href="https://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8b8p"></i>Before They Were Giants<i></a> pairs the first published stories of SF luminaries with new interviews and writing advice from the authors themselves. In addition, James has written numerous Pathfinder supplements and <a href="https://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8fda"></i>City of Strangers<i></a> and <a href="https://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8mgf"></i>Distant Worlds<i></a>. For more information, check out <a href="http://www.jameslsutter.com" target="_blank">jameslsutter.com</a> or follow him on Twitter at <a href="http://twitter.com/#!/jameslsutter">@jameslsutter</a>.</i></p>
<p>Illustration by Eric Belisle.</p>
</blockquote>
<!— tags: Eric Belisle, James L. Sutter, Pathfinder Tales —><p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/artists/ericBelisle">Eric Belisle</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales">Pathfinder Tales</a></p><blockquote>
<br>
<a href="https://paizo.com/pathfindertales"><div class="PTales"></div></a>
<h1>Death's Heretic Sample Chapter</h1>
<p class="date">Wednesday, November 23, 2011</p>
<p>by James L. Sutter</p>
<p><i>In</i> <a href="http://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8oda">Death's Heretic</a><i>, Salim Ghadafar is a problem-solver for a church he hates, bound by the death goddess to hunt down those who would rob her of her due. Presented below is the first chapter of the new Pathfinder Tales novel by Paizo Fiction Editor James L. Sutter!</i></p>
<p>Death always smelled the same.</p>
<p>After all this time, it wasn’t the stink that got to him—the reek of excrement, of putrefying flesh and organs never meant to see daylight. That was expected, easily imaginable by even the greenest killer. No, what stuck with Salim was the insufferable <i>sweetness</i> of it, the fact that behind the stomach-churning stench was the saccharine ghost of fermentation, cloying and coating the insides of his nostrils. It was impossible not to respond to it. Somewhere in the back of his brain, the part that was little more than animal, he knew that smell meant a kill, and that a kill meant success. That part of him wanted to crow, to roll in the filth until it covered him like a badge. On its own, the stink was tolerable. Combined with that sweetness, it made him want to vomit.</p>
<p>The undead had that smell, too. With some it was musty and old, others mixed with the heavy scent of wet earth, and still others—those that walked among the living without notice—so faint that the lightest perfume could cover it. Yet it was always there.</p>
<p>The ghouls had it in abundance, their dry, stretched flesh never quite sure if it wanted to heal or slough off completely. Without looking down, Salim stepped carefully over the nearest corpse and pressed up against the wall, studying the doorway.</p>
<p>He’d killed most of the pack, though not before they’d glutted themselves on the parishioners. It hadn’t been difficult. These weren’t civilized horrors like the monstrous citizens of Nemret Noktoria, but rather the newly risen dead, as naive in their own way as the rural farmers they fed upon. They were strong, and hungry, but knew nothing else. They’d never been hunted. Fear was something they inspired in others, and by the time Salim taught them otherwise, it was too late.</p>
<p>Still, it was the easy prey that surprised you, and there was no point in taking chances. There were still three of them beyond the door, waiting like cornered rats to rend and tear. It would only take one scratch from a poisoned finger-turned-claw to stiffen his limbs and leave him paralyzed, helpless while they fed—or, worse yet, let the infection in their bite spread through his veins like wildfire, burning out his flesh until he became one of them. No, this was no time to get cocky. Taking the ghouls might be easy, but there was no room for error. The execution had to be flawless.</p>
<p>The glow of his torch was barely enough to light the antechamber in which he stood, its flickers seemingly swallowed up by the black void beyond the archway. Fixing that was the first order of business. If they went for his light—and they certainly would—the burns they’d get trying to take it would be nothing compared to the disadvantage his human eyes would be in the tomb’s darkness.</p>
<p>Salim glanced around the crypt, silent save for the crackling of burning pitch. It was humble, little more than a brick-walled pit with steps leading up to the church, but it was this village’s holy of holies. Each of a dozen narrow wall niches held a cloth-wrapped form, most still thick with dust—the ghouls hadn’t bothered feeding on these mummified husks when the church graveyard bore riper, more putrescent fruit. Hands folded, covered with the withered threads of what were once flowers, the honored dead might have continued their dreamless sleep undisturbed, were it not for the two ghoul corpses that fouled the gray stone floor.</p>
<p>They were exactly what he needed. Without a second thought, Salim moved to the nearest niche and took hold of the corpse’s homespun burial shroud. A single pull sent its contents spinning to the floor, leaving Salim holding several yards of cloth, which he promptly put to the torch. </p>
<p>Flame caught the simple embroidery and raced up its edges. As he let the flickering tongues writhe over the sheet, Salim glanced down at its former occupant. A young man, and not recently dead by the look of him—tendons showed through withered flesh, but they still held the sack of bones in the rough shape of a man. The body’s relative cohesion gave Salim an idea, and he set down the torch, wrapped the now merrily blazing cloth around the blade of his sword, then leaned down to scoop up the corpse with his other arm. With the grisly parcel clutched to his chest like a lover, he moved along the wall toward the doorway.</p>
<p>No time like the present. With a flick of his sword, Salim sent the burning shroud sailing into the room, the fabric flapping open to light the sepulcher. Something hissed in the darkness, and he followed the light with his other prize, swinging the corpse around the corner and into the room at shoulder height.</p>
<p>The ruse worked. Thinking Salim had charged in after the blazing blanket, two of the ghouls pounced, dropping from the walls and ceiling to rend the corpse’s brittle flesh. In the second it took them to realize their mistake, the real Salim was among them, sword flashing.</p>
<p>The ghouls’ leathery hide was stronger than human skin, but it still parted easily under the edge of his blade. Salim’s initial thrust caught the first one in the center of its back and slid in smoothly, the flat of the blade kept parallel to the ground to avoid getting stuck between the creature’s ribs. His recovery gave the second ghoul time to face him, but not enough to get its glistening claws up. Salim’s swing didn’t take its head clean off—his sword was light, and that sort of thing was more for storybooks and campfire tales than real battles—but it did the job, sending the creature slumping backward, head lolling to one side on a thin strand of flesh. Salim ignored it, withdrawing to a defensive posture with his back to the wall next to the archway, waiting for the third ghoul’s attack.</p>
<p>It didn’t come. Heartbeat after heartbeat went by as Salim’s eyes darted back and forth, but the expected attack failed to manifest. The room was silent, save for his own heavy breathing. Then the blood pounding in his ears calmed, and he heard a new sound—a low, dry whimpering. Sword at the ready, he stepped forward and kicked the crackling shroud farther into the room.</p>
<p>The third ghoul was curled up in the back of the burial chamber, hunched over into a fetal position in order to pull itself as far as it could into an empty wall niche. It clutched its knees and moaned again as Salim advanced.</p>
<p>“Please,” it whined. Coming from the twisted form, the voice was shockingly human. It strained to shape the words with its grotesquely overlong tongue. “Please don’t kill. I’ll go. No more hunting. No more brothers. Just graves. Please.”</p>
<p>In its fear, the ghoul came closest to resembling the man it had once been. Had the creature’s previous incarnation made a similar plea, as farmer to ghoul? Salim said nothing, but the ghoul nodded anyway. Chin to knee, it curled tighter and closed its eyes.</p>
<p>“Hungry,” it whispered. From behind bruised-black eyelids, a tear welled and slid down the creature’s face. “So hungry.”</p>
<p>This time Salim did respond.</p>
<p>“I understand,” he said.</p>
<p>Then, with both hands, he lifted his sword and brought it down.</p>
<p>In the aftermath, Salim recovered his torch and let the light of it and the blackened, sputtering shroud show him the room in all its meager glory. It was as humble as the outer chamber, but it was clear that the room had been both crypt and funereal preparation chamber. A long stone slab that was almost an altar sat to one end, surrounded by the mundane implements of embalming, while the walls held more spaces for bodies, unlit lanterns, and fine tapestries showing the glory of various gods, from stag-headed Erastil to the Lady of Graves herself. Clearly, these villagers worshiped an array of divine beings, pooling their resources into a single church.</p>
<p>And hedging their bets, Salim thought.</p>
<p>Setting his torch down on the altar, Salim moved over to the baptismal font in the corner and looked down into its shallow basin. The holy water was still clear and unsullied—either the ghouls hadn’t had time to soil it properly, or one of them had accidentally been splashed and the rest had learned to keep their distance. Salim’s eyes, hooded and tired, stared back at him from the water’s reflection. The rest of his face—dark hair, dark skin, and thin, dark beard—all blended together into the chamber’s gloom. The splashes of black ghoul blood didn’t help, either. Balancing his sword along the stone where the font emerged from the wall, he leaned over and splashed his face, then began scrubbing his hands vigorously, setting clouds of black filth blooming like ink through the water.</p>
<p>And not just black, he realized. There was red in the water as well. He glanced quickly down at his robes. Had one of the ghouls managed a lucky scratch without him realizing it? If so, he needed to move quickly to avoid sharing their fate. </p>
<p>But no—he was unharmed. Looking down at the basin, he realized that the blood was welling up from beneath his fingernails, his hands slowly weeping red into the baptismal font. The realization was followed immediately by a telltale tickle on his upper lip.</p>
<p>Oh. Of course. Salim dipped his hands back into the icy water. From behind him came the soft flutter of wings, as of a flock of doves suddenly startled into flight.</p>
<p>“Hello, Salim.”</p>
<div class="blurb360"><a href="https://paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8506-Ceyanan.jpg"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8506-Ceyanan_360.jpeg" border="0"></a><br>
"Ceyanan has an interesting way of announcing itself."</div>
<p>“Ceyanan.” Salim waited a moment, hands gripping the font’s stone lip, then collected himself and turned.</p>
<p>The angel was floating in the chamber’s center, its toes pointed like a dancer two feet above the floor. The robes that flowed around it in an undetectable breeze were gray against worm-pale skin, and combined with the black hair they made the figure look like a charcoal sketch. Its features were too perfect to be truly beautiful, like a marble statue, and androgynous enough that not even the sheer fabric revealed a gender.</p>
<p>More arresting than all of these were the black-feathered wings that sprang from its back. Even half-folded, they were clearly not normal appendages. More shadow than form, they gave the impression that if they spread, they would not so much unfurl as bloom, the way the ghoul’s filth had expanded in the water of the font. Yet the angel’s floating seemed to have little to do with them, and they remained still, the individual feathers flickering in and out of visibility. It looked around the room.</p>
<p>“I love what you’ve done with the place,” Ceyanan said.</p>
<p>Salim ignored the apparition and instead located a clean patch of sleeve, which he used to wipe his nose, succeeding only in smearing the blood around.</p>
<p>“Is this really necessary?” he asked, gesturing at bloody lips. “Every time?”</p>
<p>The angel laughed, as innocent as a child, and spread its hands.</p>
<p>“Consider it a gift, Salim. What better way to know that you’re still alive?”</p>
<p>Salim let that one pass, but the angel wasn’t finished.</p>
<p>“Besides,” it said, motioning toward the floor, “was <i>that</i> necessary?”</p>
<p>Salim looked down. He was almost standing on the corpse that had acted as his decoy. The young man’s arms and legs, once locked tight in the stately constriction of the dead, were now sacks of shattered bone, flesh tattered by ghoul claws and the rough landing. Salim shrugged.</p>
<p>“He didn’t object,” he said, but he was still careful not to kick the corpse as he stepped over to one of the ornate tapestries and began systematically cleaning his sword. Ghoul blood had already dried along its length, crusting both the shining blade and the twisted, melted-looking hilt with filth. </p>
<p>“They rarely do,” the angel acknowledged. “But that’s neither here nor there. You know that I come bearing tidings.”</p>
<p>“And here I thought this was a purely social visit.” Salim sheathed the blade. “But please, Ceyanan, don’t keep me in suspense—pray tell me what the bitch-goddess wants from me now.” He turned to lock eyes with the angel. “Is there a vampiric orgy in Caliphas that I’m to break up? A mummy that needs unwrapping? Or did someone forget to dig a grave deep enough, and a coyote ran away with some bones?”</p>
<p>The angel frowned.</p>
<p>“You should learn to show proper respect,” it said.</p>
<p>“And you should know by now that I only give it where it’s due.” The mocking politesse was gone now, replaced by a cool, smooth anger. “If your lady wants to win my love, she’s got a long road ahead of her.”</p>
<p>The angel waved its hand as if shooing a fly, refusing to be baited. It was an old game.</p>
<p>“Have it your way,” it said. “You have the opportunity to work great justice in this world, but you’re welcome to see it as an order if it pleases you.”</p>
<p>Salim waited. </p>
<p>Ceyanan sighed. “No undead this time. Rather the opposite, actually—something uniquely suited to your skills. A kidnapping.”</p>
<p>“Kidnapping?” Despite his resentment, Salim couldn’t quite keep the curiosity out of his voice. “That’s hardly my usual fare. Or yours, for that matter. How do I factor in?”</p>
<p>“In this case, the victim is already dead.”</p>
<p>The angel paused a moment to see if Salim would say anything. He didn’t.</p>
<p>“The merchant in question,” Ceyanan continued, “was the target of a routine assassination—nothing special there. But after his death, his soul was stolen from the Boneyard before it could pass on to its final reward. Not destroyed—stolen. The local clerics have been unable to raise the body, and now the kidnappers are offering to sell back the man’s spirit. Naturally, the church is more than a little upset. We’ve already got the local clergy working on the problem, but we’d like you to step in and handle things. You might consider it a nice change of pace.” The angel’s hand swung to encompass the crypt and the already decaying ghouls.</p>
<p>“Makes sense,” Salim said. “Letting a soul go missing hardly reflects well on the church. But why me? And why don’t they just pay the ransom and be done?”</p>
<p>“The situation is in Thuvia.”</p>
<p>Thuvia. The name hit Salim like a blow. That was too close. Far too close. But if the kidnapping were in Thuvia—</p>
<p>“The sun orchid elixir,” he said.</p>
<p>“Precisely.” The angel looked pleased.</p>
<p>“Stealing a soul and selling it back for a shot at immortality. No wonder the Gray Lady’s pissed.”</p>
<p> “Now you understand,” Ceyanan said. “You’ll depart immediately.”</p>
<p>Salim gritted his teeth. “You know I don’t like being that close.”</p>
<p>“As you so eloquently pointed out, winning your affection is not my first priority. Your familiarity with the region and its customs will make you that much more efficient. And you might even enjoy your time there.”</p>
<p>“Not that I have a choice.”</p>
<p>The angel smiled down at him again.</p>
<p>“You did, once.”</p>
<p>Salim opened his mouth to respond, but the angel had already grown transparent, its voice a whisper that receded into the distance.</p>
<p>“Enjoy the desert, Salim.”</p>
<p><a href="https://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8oda"><b>Purchase the whole novel here.</b></a></p>
<p><b>Coming Next Week:</b> A brand new, standalone adventure featuring Salim, Ceyanan, and even stranger characters!</p>
<p><i>James L. Sutter is the Fiction Editor for Paizo Publishing, author of the novel <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Pathfinder-Tales-James-L-Sutter/dp/1601253699/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1309145749&sr=8-1" target="_blank"></i>Death's Heretic<i></a>, and co-creator of the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game campaign setting. His short stories have appeared in such publications as Escape Pod, Starship Sofa, Apex Magazine, and the #1 Amazon bestseller Machine of Death, and his anthology <a href="https://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8b8p"></i>Before They Were Giants<i></a> pairs the first published stories of SF luminaries with new interviews and writing advice from the authors themselves. In addition, James has written numerous Pathfinder supplements and <a href="https://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8fda"></i>City of Strangers<i></a> and <a href="https://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8mgf"></i>Distant Worlds<i></a>. For more information, check out <a href="http://www.jameslsutter.com" target="_blank">jameslsutter.com</a> or follow him on Twitter at <a href="http://twitter.com/#!/jameslsutter">@jameslsutter</a>.</i></p>
<p>Illustration by Eric Belisle.</p>
</blockquote>
<!— tags: Eric Belisle, James L. Sutter, Pathfinder Tales —><p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/artists/ericBelisle">Eric Belisle</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales">Pathfinder Tales</a></p>2011-11-23T18:00:00ZDeath's Heretic Wallpapers!https://paizo.com/community/blog/v5748dyo5lcsn?Deaths-Heretic-Wallpapers2011-11-03T17:00:00Z<blockquote>
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<div class="blurbCenter"><a href="https://paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8506-Wall.jpg"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8506-Wall_500.jpeg" border="0"></a><br>
Illustration by Kekai Kotaki. Widescreen version <a href="https://paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8506-WallWide.jpg">here</a>.</div>
<h1>Death's Heretic Wallpapers!</h1>
<p class="date">Thursday, November 3rd, 2011</p>
<p><a href="https://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8oda"><i>Death’s Heretic</i></a>, the planes-hopping, soul-stealing new book in the Pathfinder Tales line (and the only one written by yours truly), releases in just three weeks. To help celebrate, Crystal’s used Kekai Kotaki’s awesome cover art to make <i>Death’s Heretic</i> wallpapers.</p>
<p>As I’m sure you can imagine, these will shortly be the backgrounds on every computer I own, and maybe some that I don’t. Wes is currently out of town—perhaps his monitor could use a little sprucing up? Or better yet—he’s always complaining about the glare from his big office windows, so I’m sure he’d prefer to have all that glass covered up by some nice color printouts...</p>
<p>James Sutter<br>
<i>Fiction Editor</i></p>
<!— tags: Kekai Kotaki, Pathfinder Tales, James L. Sutter, Wallpapers —>
</blockquote><p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/artists/kekaiKotaki">Kekai Kotaki</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales">Pathfinder Tales</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/wallpapers">Wallpapers</a></p><blockquote>
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<div class="blurbCenter"><a href="https://paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8506-Wall.jpg"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8506-Wall_500.jpeg" border="0"></a><br>
Illustration by Kekai Kotaki. Widescreen version <a href="https://paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderTales/PZO8506-WallWide.jpg">here</a>.</div>
<h1>Death's Heretic Wallpapers!</h1>
<p class="date">Thursday, November 3rd, 2011</p>
<p><a href="https://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8oda"><i>Death’s Heretic</i></a>, the planes-hopping, soul-stealing new book in the Pathfinder Tales line (and the only one written by yours truly), releases in just three weeks. To help celebrate, Crystal’s used Kekai Kotaki’s awesome cover art to make <i>Death’s Heretic</i> wallpapers.</p>
<p>As I’m sure you can imagine, these will shortly be the backgrounds on every computer I own, and maybe some that I don’t. Wes is currently out of town—perhaps his monitor could use a little sprucing up? Or better yet—he’s always complaining about the glare from his big office windows, so I’m sure he’d prefer to have all that glass covered up by some nice color printouts...</p>
<p>James Sutter<br>
<i>Fiction Editor</i></p>
<!— tags: Kekai Kotaki, Pathfinder Tales, James L. Sutter, Wallpapers —>
</blockquote><p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/artists/kekaiKotaki">Kekai Kotaki</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales">Pathfinder Tales</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/wallpapers">Wallpapers</a></p>2011-11-03T17:00:00ZPathfinder Author Chat Next Monday!https://paizo.com/community/blog/v5748dyo5lcoa?Pathfinder-Author-Chat-Next-Monday2011-09-22T17:30:00Z<blockquote>
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<a href="https://paizo.com/pathfindertales"><div class="PTales"></div></a>
<h1>Pathfinder Author Chat Next Monday!</h1>
<p class="date">Thursday, September 21st, 2011</p>
<div class="blurb360"><a href="https://paizo.com/store/byCompany/p/paizoPublishingLLC/pathfinder/tales/novels/v5748btpy8iqp"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/product/catalog/PZO/PZO8503_90.jpeg" height="145px" border="0"></a><a href="https://paizo.com/store/byCompany/p/paizoPublishingLLC/pathfinder/tales/novels/v5748btpy8kc4"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/product/catalog/PZO/PZO8504_90.jpeg" height="145px" border="0"></a><a href="https://paizo.com/store/byCompany/p/paizoPublishingLLC/pathfinder/tales/novels/v5748btpy8mfm"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/product/catalog/PZO/PZO8505_90.jpeg" height="145px" border="0"></a><a href="https://paizo.com/store/byCompany/p/paizoPublishingLLC/pathfinder/tales/novels/v5748btpy8kqc"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/product/catalog/PZO/PZO8506_90.jpeg" height="145px" border="0"></a></div>
<p>Hey there, fiction fans! This coming Monday, September 26th, Pathfinder Tales author Dave Gross has set up an awesome Pathfinder Tales round table discussion in the <a href="http://chat.dmtools.org/" target="_blank">Paizo chat room</a>. Starting at 6:00pm PST, this is your chance to catch all of the current Pathfinder Tales novelists in one place, to offer your opinions and ask your burning questions (such as the all-important “Who would win, Elyana or Ellasif?”). The floor will be entirely open, and your questions will determine what we talk about, so drop by <a href="http://chat.dmtools.org/" target="_blank">http://chat.dmtools.org/</a> on Monday night to chat with Dave Gross (<i>Prince of Wolves, Master of Devils, Winter Witch</i>), Elaine Cunningham (<i>Winter Witch</i>), Howard Andrew Jones (<i>Plague of Shadows</i>), Robin D. Laws (<i>The Worldwound Gambit</i>), and yours truly (<i>Death’s Heretic</i>, Fiction Editor). (Once you get there, be sure to type /join PFTales to enter the side room hosting the discussion.) It’s guaranteed to be a riotous, educational, and undeniably literary affair.</p>
<p>I’ll be there—will you?</p>
<p>James Sutter<br>
<i>Fiction Editor</i></p>
</blockquote>
<!— tags: Chat, Dave Gross, Death’s Heretic, Elaine Cunningham, Howard Andrew Jones, James L. Sutter, Master of Devils, Pathfinder Tales, Plague of Shadows, Prince of Wolves, Robin D. Laws, Winter Witch, The Worldwound Gambit —><p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/daveGross">Dave Gross</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales/novels/deathSHeretic5a80x">Death’s Heretic</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/elaineCunningham">Elaine Cunningham</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/howardAndrewJones">Howard Andrew Jones</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales/novels/masterOfDevils">Master of Devils</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales">Pathfinder Tales</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales/novels/plagueOfShadows">Plague of Shadows</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales/novels/princeOfWolves">Prince of Wolves</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/robinDLaws">Robin D. Laws</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales/novels/winterWitch">Winter Witch</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales/novels/theWorldwoundGambit">The Worldwound Gambit</a></p><blockquote>
<br>
<a href="https://paizo.com/pathfindertales"><div class="PTales"></div></a>
<h1>Pathfinder Author Chat Next Monday!</h1>
<p class="date">Thursday, September 21st, 2011</p>
<div class="blurb360"><a href="https://paizo.com/store/byCompany/p/paizoPublishingLLC/pathfinder/tales/novels/v5748btpy8iqp"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/product/catalog/PZO/PZO8503_90.jpeg" height="145px" border="0"></a><a href="https://paizo.com/store/byCompany/p/paizoPublishingLLC/pathfinder/tales/novels/v5748btpy8kc4"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/product/catalog/PZO/PZO8504_90.jpeg" height="145px" border="0"></a><a href="https://paizo.com/store/byCompany/p/paizoPublishingLLC/pathfinder/tales/novels/v5748btpy8mfm"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/product/catalog/PZO/PZO8505_90.jpeg" height="145px" border="0"></a><a href="https://paizo.com/store/byCompany/p/paizoPublishingLLC/pathfinder/tales/novels/v5748btpy8kqc"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/product/catalog/PZO/PZO8506_90.jpeg" height="145px" border="0"></a></div>
<p>Hey there, fiction fans! This coming Monday, September 26th, Pathfinder Tales author Dave Gross has set up an awesome Pathfinder Tales round table discussion in the <a href="http://chat.dmtools.org/" target="_blank">Paizo chat room</a>. Starting at 6:00pm PST, this is your chance to catch all of the current Pathfinder Tales novelists in one place, to offer your opinions and ask your burning questions (such as the all-important “Who would win, Elyana or Ellasif?”). The floor will be entirely open, and your questions will determine what we talk about, so drop by <a href="http://chat.dmtools.org/" target="_blank">http://chat.dmtools.org/</a> on Monday night to chat with Dave Gross (<i>Prince of Wolves, Master of Devils, Winter Witch</i>), Elaine Cunningham (<i>Winter Witch</i>), Howard Andrew Jones (<i>Plague of Shadows</i>), Robin D. Laws (<i>The Worldwound Gambit</i>), and yours truly (<i>Death’s Heretic</i>, Fiction Editor). (Once you get there, be sure to type /join PFTales to enter the side room hosting the discussion.) It’s guaranteed to be a riotous, educational, and undeniably literary affair.</p>
<p>I’ll be there—will you?</p>
<p>James Sutter<br>
<i>Fiction Editor</i></p>
</blockquote>
<!— tags: Chat, Dave Gross, Death’s Heretic, Elaine Cunningham, Howard Andrew Jones, James L. Sutter, Master of Devils, Pathfinder Tales, Plague of Shadows, Prince of Wolves, Robin D. Laws, Winter Witch, The Worldwound Gambit —><p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/daveGross">Dave Gross</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales/novels/deathSHeretic5a80x">Death’s Heretic</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/elaineCunningham">Elaine Cunningham</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/howardAndrewJones">Howard Andrew Jones</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales/novels/masterOfDevils">Master of Devils</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales">Pathfinder Tales</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales/novels/plagueOfShadows">Plague of Shadows</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales/novels/princeOfWolves">Prince of Wolves</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/robinDLaws">Robin D. Laws</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales/novels/winterWitch">Winter Witch</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales/novels/theWorldwoundGambit">The Worldwound Gambit</a></p>2011-09-22T17:30:00ZPathfinder Fiction News and Podcast!https://paizo.com/community/blog/v5748dyo5lc7s?Pathfinder-Fiction-News-and-Podcast2011-05-26T17:00:00Z<table align=right border=0>
<tr>
<td width=9 nowrap></td>
<td valign=top align=center><a href="https://paizo.com/pathfindertales/v5748btpy8kqc"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/product/catalog/PZO/PZO8506_180.jpeg" border=0 alt="Death's Heretic" hspace="9"></a><br>
<span class=tiny>Illustration by Kekai Kotaki</span></td></tr></table><blockquote>
<h1>Pathfinder Fiction News and Podcast!</h1>
<p class=date>Thursday, May 26, 2011</p>
<p>It's always a good day when we get to announce the next Pathfinder Tales novel, but today is especially important for me, as today I get to announce the November release of <a href="https://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8kqc"><i>Death's Heretic</i></a>, the new Pathfinder Tales novel by—well, me!</p>
<p><a href="https://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8kqc"><i>Death's Heretic</i></a> is the story of Salim Ghadafar, a desert warrior forced against his will to work as an agent of Pharasma. When a powerful merchant in Thuvia is assassinated on the eve of receiving the sun orchid elixir, an elixir capable of reversing aging, few people are surprised—after all, immortality is a risky business. Yet when the merchant's soul goes missing from Pharasma's Boneyard and a mysterious note offers to ransom the man's spirit back to his family in exchange for the elixir, it's time for the church of the death goddess to step in and find out who would dare steal from the Lady of Graves herself. With his unique skill set, Salim should be perfectly suited to the mission. There's only one problem: The investigation is being financed by the murdered aristocrat's daughter. And she wants to go with him.</p>
</blockquote><table align=right border=0 style="clear:right;">
<tr>
<td width=9 nowrap></td>
<td valign=top align=center><a href="https://paizo.com/pathfindertales/v5748btpy8j36"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/product/catalog/PZO/PZO8505_180.jpeg" border=0 alt="Master of Devils" hspace="9"></a><br>
<span class=tiny>Illustration by Lucas Graciano</span></td></tr></table><blockquote>
<p>Along with his uninvited passenger, Salim must unravel a web of intrigue that will lead them far from the blistering sands of Thuvia on a grand tour of the Outer Planes, where devils and angels rub shoulders with fey lords and mechanical men, and nothing is as it seems...</p>
<p>This book has been a long time in coming, and I'm obviously pretty excited to finally be able to talk about it. Yet rather than ramble on the blog (there'll be time for that closer to the release date), I'd like to direct you over to the <a href="http://atomicarray.com/pathfinder-tales-aase003" target="nofollow">brand new, all-Pathfinder-Tales episode of the Atomic Array podcast</a>! In addition to talking with me about <i>Death's Heretic</i> and the line as a whole, Ed and Rone also interview Pathfinder Tales authors Dave Gross, Robin D. Laws, and Howard Andrew Jones. It's nearly two-hours of hard-hitting fiction questions and anecdotes regarding Pathfinder Tales, so check it out, and feel free to ask your own questions in the comments thread below!
<p>Last but not least, we've also unveiled the final cover art for <a href="https://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8j36"><i>Master of Devils</i></a> and <i>Death's Heretic</i>, painted by Lucas Graciano and Kekai Kotaki, respectively. That's all from the Pathfinder Tales front for now, but stay tuned next week for the beginning of an all-new story from Robin D. Laws as part of our free weekly web fiction!</p>
<p style="clear:right;">James Sutter
<br>Fiction Editor</p>
</blockquote>
<!— tags: Atomic Array, Dave Gross, Death’s Heretic, Howard Andrew Jones, James L. Sutter, Kekai Kotaki, Lucas Graciano, Master of Devils, Pathfinder Tales, Plague of Shadows, Prince of Wolves, Robin D. Laws, Worldwound Gambit, Community —>
<p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/community">Community</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/daveGross">Dave Gross</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales/novels/deathsHeretic">Death's Heretic</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/howardAndrewJones">Howard Andrew Jones</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/artists/kekaiKotaki">Kekai Kotaki</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/artists/lucasGraciano">Lucas Graciano</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales/novels/masterOfDevils">Master of Devils</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales">Pathfinder Tales</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/robinDLaws">Robin D. Laws</a></p><table align=right border=0>
<tr>
<td width=9 nowrap></td>
<td valign=top align=center><a href="https://paizo.com/pathfindertales/v5748btpy8kqc"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/product/catalog/PZO/PZO8506_180.jpeg" border=0 alt="Death's Heretic" hspace="9"></a><br>
<span class=tiny>Illustration by Kekai Kotaki</span></td></tr></table><blockquote>
<h1>Pathfinder Fiction News and Podcast!</h1>
<p class=date>Thursday, May 26, 2011</p>
<p>It's always a good day when we get to announce the next Pathfinder Tales novel, but today is especially important for me, as today I get to announce the November release of <a href="https://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8kqc"><i>Death's Heretic</i></a>, the new Pathfinder Tales novel by—well, me!</p>
<p><a href="https://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8kqc"><i>Death's Heretic</i></a> is the story of Salim Ghadafar, a desert warrior forced against his will to work as an agent of Pharasma. When a powerful merchant in Thuvia is assassinated on the eve of receiving the sun orchid elixir, an elixir capable of reversing aging, few people are surprised—after all, immortality is a risky business. Yet when the merchant's soul goes missing from Pharasma's Boneyard and a mysterious note offers to ransom the man's spirit back to his family in exchange for the elixir, it's time for the church of the death goddess to step in and find out who would dare steal from the Lady of Graves herself. With his unique skill set, Salim should be perfectly suited to the mission. There's only one problem: The investigation is being financed by the murdered aristocrat's daughter. And she wants to go with him.</p>
</blockquote><table align=right border=0 style="clear:right;">
<tr>
<td width=9 nowrap></td>
<td valign=top align=center><a href="https://paizo.com/pathfindertales/v5748btpy8j36"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/product/catalog/PZO/PZO8505_180.jpeg" border=0 alt="Master of Devils" hspace="9"></a><br>
<span class=tiny>Illustration by Lucas Graciano</span></td></tr></table><blockquote>
<p>Along with his uninvited passenger, Salim must unravel a web of intrigue that will lead them far from the blistering sands of Thuvia on a grand tour of the Outer Planes, where devils and angels rub shoulders with fey lords and mechanical men, and nothing is as it seems...</p>
<p>This book has been a long time in coming, and I'm obviously pretty excited to finally be able to talk about it. Yet rather than ramble on the blog (there'll be time for that closer to the release date), I'd like to direct you over to the <a href="http://atomicarray.com/pathfinder-tales-aase003" target="nofollow">brand new, all-Pathfinder-Tales episode of the Atomic Array podcast</a>! In addition to talking with me about <i>Death's Heretic</i> and the line as a whole, Ed and Rone also interview Pathfinder Tales authors Dave Gross, Robin D. Laws, and Howard Andrew Jones. It's nearly two-hours of hard-hitting fiction questions and anecdotes regarding Pathfinder Tales, so check it out, and feel free to ask your own questions in the comments thread below!
<p>Last but not least, we've also unveiled the final cover art for <a href="https://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8j36"><i>Master of Devils</i></a> and <i>Death's Heretic</i>, painted by Lucas Graciano and Kekai Kotaki, respectively. That's all from the Pathfinder Tales front for now, but stay tuned next week for the beginning of an all-new story from Robin D. Laws as part of our free weekly web fiction!</p>
<p style="clear:right;">James Sutter
<br>Fiction Editor</p>
</blockquote>
<!— tags: Atomic Array, Dave Gross, Death’s Heretic, Howard Andrew Jones, James L. Sutter, Kekai Kotaki, Lucas Graciano, Master of Devils, Pathfinder Tales, Plague of Shadows, Prince of Wolves, Robin D. Laws, Worldwound Gambit, Community —>
<p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/community">Community</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/daveGross">Dave Gross</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales/novels/deathsHeretic">Death's Heretic</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/howardAndrewJones">Howard Andrew Jones</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/artists/kekaiKotaki">Kekai Kotaki</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/artists/lucasGraciano">Lucas Graciano</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales/novels/masterOfDevils">Master of Devils</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderTales">Pathfinder Tales</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/robinDLaws">Robin D. Laws</a></p>2011-05-26T17:00:00ZMisfit Monsters Podcasthttps://paizo.com/community/blog/v5748dyo5lbp8?Misfit-Monsters-Podcast2010-12-13T08:00:00Z<blockquote>
<h1>Misfit Monsters Podcast</h1>
<p class=date>Monday, December 13, 2010</p>
</blockquote>
<table align=right border=0>
<tr>
<td width=9 nowrap></td>
<td valign=top align=center><a href="https://paizo.com/pathfinder/campaignSetting/v5748btpy8gnj"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/product/catalog/PZO/PZO9227_180.jpeg" border=0 alt="Misfit Monsters Redeemed" hspace="9"></a></td></tr></table>
<blockquote>
<p>A few weeks ago, I got the chance to speak with the folks at <a href="http://35privatesanctuary.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=280:017-knowdirection&catid=35:the-tome-know-direction&Itemid=34" target="nofollow">Know Direction</a>, a monthly podcast devoted entirely to all things Pathfinder, brought to you by the folks from 3.5 Private Sanctuary and the Tome Show. We talked at great length about <i><a href="https://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8gnj">Misfit Monsters Redeemed</a></i> (which I had the privilege of developing), as well as the Pathfinder Chronicler fanfiction contest and Paizo's recent hires from the Pathfinder community. If you're curious about what exactly went into Misfit Monsters, head on over to <a href="http://35privatesanctuary.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=280:017-knowdirection&catid=35:the-tome-know-direction&Itemid=34" target="nofollow">the episode's webpage</a> to listen. (The interview takes up approximately the last quarter of the show.)</p>
<p>For the record: That high, goofy quality to my voice is just my cell phone. I sound <i>way</i> manlier in person, kind of like a young James Earl Jones. Just ask Wes! (On second thought, don't ask Wes.)</p>
<p style="clear:both;">James Sutter
<br>Fiction Editor</p>
</blockquote>
<!— tags: James L. Sutter, Paizo, Pathfinder Campaign Setting, COmmuity —>
<p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/community">Community</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/paizo">Paizo</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderCampaignSetting">Pathfinder Campaign Setting</a></p><blockquote>
<h1>Misfit Monsters Podcast</h1>
<p class=date>Monday, December 13, 2010</p>
</blockquote>
<table align=right border=0>
<tr>
<td width=9 nowrap></td>
<td valign=top align=center><a href="https://paizo.com/pathfinder/campaignSetting/v5748btpy8gnj"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/product/catalog/PZO/PZO9227_180.jpeg" border=0 alt="Misfit Monsters Redeemed" hspace="9"></a></td></tr></table>
<blockquote>
<p>A few weeks ago, I got the chance to speak with the folks at <a href="http://35privatesanctuary.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=280:017-knowdirection&catid=35:the-tome-know-direction&Itemid=34" target="nofollow">Know Direction</a>, a monthly podcast devoted entirely to all things Pathfinder, brought to you by the folks from 3.5 Private Sanctuary and the Tome Show. We talked at great length about <i><a href="https://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy8gnj">Misfit Monsters Redeemed</a></i> (which I had the privilege of developing), as well as the Pathfinder Chronicler fanfiction contest and Paizo's recent hires from the Pathfinder community. If you're curious about what exactly went into Misfit Monsters, head on over to <a href="http://35privatesanctuary.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=280:017-knowdirection&catid=35:the-tome-know-direction&Itemid=34" target="nofollow">the episode's webpage</a> to listen. (The interview takes up approximately the last quarter of the show.)</p>
<p>For the record: That high, goofy quality to my voice is just my cell phone. I sound <i>way</i> manlier in person, kind of like a young James Earl Jones. Just ask Wes! (On second thought, don't ask Wes.)</p>
<p style="clear:both;">James Sutter
<br>Fiction Editor</p>
</blockquote>
<!— tags: James L. Sutter, Paizo, Pathfinder Campaign Setting, COmmuity —>
<p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/community">Community</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/paizo">Paizo</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/pathfinderCampaignSetting">Pathfinder Campaign Setting</a></p>2010-12-13T08:00:00ZPaizo Fight Songhttps://paizo.com/community/blog/v5748dyo5lbdq?Paizo-Fight-Song2010-08-17T07:00:00Z<div align="center">
<table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" >
<tr>
<td><a href="https://paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderRPG/PZO1115-SickeningSong.jpg" target="_blank"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderRPG/PZO1115-SickeningSong_360.jpeg" border="0" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td align="center" class="tiny">Illustration by Tyler Walpole</td></tr>
</table>
</div>
<blockquote>
<h1>Paizo Fight Song</h1>
<p class=date>Tuesday, August 17, 2010</p>
<p>If you know anything about me (and I'm not saying you should), you probably know that I'm Paizo's fiction editor as well as one of the developers. What you may not know is that, in addition to working on the campaign setting and making sure authors like Dave Gross are fed and walked regularly, I'm also a musician involved in <a href="http://www.myspace.com/shadowatmorning" target="nofollow">various</a> <a href="http://www.myspace.com/jamessutter" target="nofollow">extracurricular</a> bands and projects. Usually that doesn't affect my job at Paizo much, save for that one time when Jacobs and I, in the first and only performance of Operation Banjo Thug, ambushed Wes with some impromptu talkin' blues. (An experience from which he's never entirely recovered and which, without witnesses, he can't verify as having actually happened.)</p>
<p>A while back, however, Jacobs and I were sitting around after work talking about what a Paizo theme song would sound like. We decided that it would really need to have two distinct elements: a big industrial section like Nine Inch Nails' "Just Like You Imagined" (<i>300</i> had just come out), and a classic, Conan-style orchestral piece. And of course, no soundtrack would be complete without an homage to <i>The Omen</i>'s big choral theme, which we in the office will forever refer to as "Sawhorse Middle School," for reasons I won't go into here.</p>
<p>The idea never quite left my head, and a few months ago I sat down on a Saturday and decided to do something about it. The resulting track was received with much hilarity at the office—which was really what I was going for—and people ended up liking it so much that they voted to use it as the theme song for Paizo at the ENnies this year.</p>
<p>While it's hard not to be proud of the awards we won—Best Publisher? Best Game? It literally <i>does not</i> get better than that—in my secret heart, my favorite part of Gen Con this year was hearing the fight song blasted over the PA every time someone from Paizo went up to accept an award.</p>
<p>Now that we're home, it occurs to me: why stop there? Hopefully some of you reading this blog would be equally amused by the track. As such, I give you my attempt at a Paizo fight song, <a href="https://paizo.com/download/PathfinderEstDomine.mp3">"Pathfinder Est Domine."</a></p>
<p>James L. Sutter
<br>Fiction Editor</p>
</blockquote>
<!— tags: wallpapers, Gen Con, James L. Sutter, Paizo, iconics, lem, halflings, bards, Tyler Walpole —>
<p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/classes/bards">Bards</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/conventions/genCon">Gen Con</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/races/halflings">Halflings</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/iconics">Iconics</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/iconics/lem">Lem</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/paizo">Paizo</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/artists/tylerWalpole">Tyler Walpole</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/wallpapers">Wallpapers</a></p><div align="center">
<table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" >
<tr>
<td><a href="https://paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderRPG/PZO1115-SickeningSong.jpg" target="_blank"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderRPG/PZO1115-SickeningSong_360.jpeg" border="0" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td align="center" class="tiny">Illustration by Tyler Walpole</td></tr>
</table>
</div>
<blockquote>
<h1>Paizo Fight Song</h1>
<p class=date>Tuesday, August 17, 2010</p>
<p>If you know anything about me (and I'm not saying you should), you probably know that I'm Paizo's fiction editor as well as one of the developers. What you may not know is that, in addition to working on the campaign setting and making sure authors like Dave Gross are fed and walked regularly, I'm also a musician involved in <a href="http://www.myspace.com/shadowatmorning" target="nofollow">various</a> <a href="http://www.myspace.com/jamessutter" target="nofollow">extracurricular</a> bands and projects. Usually that doesn't affect my job at Paizo much, save for that one time when Jacobs and I, in the first and only performance of Operation Banjo Thug, ambushed Wes with some impromptu talkin' blues. (An experience from which he's never entirely recovered and which, without witnesses, he can't verify as having actually happened.)</p>
<p>A while back, however, Jacobs and I were sitting around after work talking about what a Paizo theme song would sound like. We decided that it would really need to have two distinct elements: a big industrial section like Nine Inch Nails' "Just Like You Imagined" (<i>300</i> had just come out), and a classic, Conan-style orchestral piece. And of course, no soundtrack would be complete without an homage to <i>The Omen</i>'s big choral theme, which we in the office will forever refer to as "Sawhorse Middle School," for reasons I won't go into here.</p>
<p>The idea never quite left my head, and a few months ago I sat down on a Saturday and decided to do something about it. The resulting track was received with much hilarity at the office—which was really what I was going for—and people ended up liking it so much that they voted to use it as the theme song for Paizo at the ENnies this year.</p>
<p>While it's hard not to be proud of the awards we won—Best Publisher? Best Game? It literally <i>does not</i> get better than that—in my secret heart, my favorite part of Gen Con this year was hearing the fight song blasted over the PA every time someone from Paizo went up to accept an award.</p>
<p>Now that we're home, it occurs to me: why stop there? Hopefully some of you reading this blog would be equally amused by the track. As such, I give you my attempt at a Paizo fight song, <a href="https://paizo.com/download/PathfinderEstDomine.mp3">"Pathfinder Est Domine."</a></p>
<p>James L. Sutter
<br>Fiction Editor</p>
</blockquote>
<!— tags: wallpapers, Gen Con, James L. Sutter, Paizo, iconics, lem, halflings, bards, Tyler Walpole —>
<p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/classes/bards">Bards</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/conventions/genCon">Gen Con</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/races/halflings">Halflings</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/iconics">Iconics</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/iconics/lem">Lem</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/paizo">Paizo</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/artists/tylerWalpole">Tyler Walpole</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/wallpapers">Wallpapers</a></p>2010-08-17T07:00:00ZBefore They Were Giants Now Shipping!https://paizo.com/community/blog/v5748dyo5lb9p?Before-They-Were-Giants-Now-Shipping2010-07-28T07:00:00Z<blockquote>
<h1>Before They Were Giants Now Shipping!</h1>
<p class=date>Wednesday, July 28, 2010</p>
<p>They say you always hurt the ones you love, and now that <a href="https://paizo.com/planetStories/v5748btpy8b8p"><i>Before They Were Giants</i></a> is shipping from the warehouse to subscribers and bookstores everywhere, I've looked back over the last few months of the blog and realized that I've only blogged about it <i>once</i>. Which is astonishing when you consider that this might just be the coolest product I've ever worked on in my life.</p>
</blockquote>
<table align=right border=0>
<tr>
<td width=9 nowrap></td>
<td valign=top align=center><a href="https://paizo.com/planetStories/v5748btpy8b8p"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/product/catalog/PZO/PZO8028_180.jpeg" border=0 alt="Before They Were Giants" hspace="9"></a><br>
<span class=tiny>Illustration by Kieran Yanner</span></td></tr></table>
<blockquote>
<p>Allow me to elaborate: With Planet Stories, we've published a lot of science fiction and fantasy that we felt was both fun <i>and</i> significant to the history of the genre. Which is why, about two years ago, I went to Erik with a proposal: what if we got together 15 of the coolest, most important SF authors alive—with an admitted bias toward the folks at the top of my own bookshelf—and convinced them to let us publish their first-ever SF short stories. In addition, we'd get new interviews from all the authors in which they would critique their own work, explaining what they know now that they wish they'd known then about writing, and giving advice for aspiring authors. It would be both an insightful look at the origins of my favorite authors (appealing to the fanboy in me) and a treasure trove of invaluable authorial advice (for which I remain a total sucker). Without question, it would be a lot of fun to put together. The real question was whether or not it was possible.</p>
<p>As it turns out, it <i>was</i> possible. Within a few weeks of beginning my quest, the anthology had expanded into an absolute powerhouse roster. While we already had good relationships with a few folks—preexisting friends of Paizo like China Miéville, Ben Bova, Nicola Griffith, and Piers Anthony—I was amazed to find just how generous and enthusiastic many of my favorite authors are. Cory Doctorow? Larry Niven? Mr. William "Invented-Internet-Culture" Gibson? Just seeing their names in my inbox was a childhood dream come true. </p>
<p>And now here's the result: an anthology full of advice and encouragement for writers, as well as rare early stories from your favorite authors—many that you may never have seen before, as they've lain fallow in out-of-print magazines. (For instance, when I first asked China to join the anthology, he sent me back not "Looking For Jake," which I had expected, but a bizarre post-apocalyptic short story that had been published when he was still just a kid, and which as far as my Internet research was concerned <i>did not exist</i>. That's the sort of discovery that can really make an editor's day.) </p>
<p>But I've rambled long enough. Below is the full table of contents, and I couldn't be prouder of it. If you decide to pick up a copy, be sure to head on over to the <a href="https://paizo.com/planetStories/v5748btpy8b8p/discuss#tabs">product discussion</a> and post about it—I can't wait to hear which stories (and interviews!) are people's favorites!</p>
<ul>
<li>Piers Anthony: "Possible to Rue"</li>
<li>Greg Bear: "Destroyers"</li>
<li>Ben Bova: "A Long Way Back"</li>
<li>David Brin: "Just a Hint"</li>
<li>Cory Doctorow: "Craphound"</li>
<li>William Gibson: "Fragments of a Hologram Rose"</li>
<li>Nicola Griffith: "Mirrors and Burnstone"</li>
<li>Joe Haldeman: "Out of Phase"</li>
<li>China Miéville: "Highway 61 Revisited"</li>
<li>Larry Niven: "The Coldest Place"</li>
<li>Kim Stanley Robinson: "In Pierson’s Orchestra"</li>
<li>Spider Robinson: "The Guy with the Eyes"</li>
<li>R. A. Salvatore: "A Sparkle for Homer"</li>
<li>Charles Stross: "The Boys"</li>
<li>Michael Swanwick: "Ginungagap"</li>
</ul>
<p>James L. Sutter
<br>Fiction Editor</p>
</blockquote>
<!— tags: Piers Anthony, Before They Were Giants, Ben Bova, Charles Stross, China Miéville, Cory Doctorow, David Brin, Greg Bear, James L. Sutter, Joe Haldeman, Kim Stanley Robinson, Larry Niven, Michael Swanwick, Nicola Griffith, Planet Stories, R. A. Salvatore, Spider Robinson, William Gibson —>
<p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/planetStories/beforeTheyWereGiants">Before They Were Giants</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/benBova">Ben Bova</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/charlesStross">Charles Stross</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/chinaMieville">China Mieville</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/coryDoctorow">Cory Doctorow</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/davidBrin">David Brin</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/gregBear">Greg Bear</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/joeHaldeman">Joe Haldeman</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/kimStanleyRobinson">Kim Stanley Robinson</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/larryNiven">Larry Niven</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/michaelSwanwick">Michael Swanwick</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/nicolaGriffith">Nicola Griffith</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/piersAnthony">Piers Anthony</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/planetStories">Planet Stories</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/rASalvatore">R. A. Salvatore</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/spiderRobinson">Spider Robinson</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/williamGibson">William Gibson</a></p><blockquote>
<h1>Before They Were Giants Now Shipping!</h1>
<p class=date>Wednesday, July 28, 2010</p>
<p>They say you always hurt the ones you love, and now that <a href="https://paizo.com/planetStories/v5748btpy8b8p"><i>Before They Were Giants</i></a> is shipping from the warehouse to subscribers and bookstores everywhere, I've looked back over the last few months of the blog and realized that I've only blogged about it <i>once</i>. Which is astonishing when you consider that this might just be the coolest product I've ever worked on in my life.</p>
</blockquote>
<table align=right border=0>
<tr>
<td width=9 nowrap></td>
<td valign=top align=center><a href="https://paizo.com/planetStories/v5748btpy8b8p"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/product/catalog/PZO/PZO8028_180.jpeg" border=0 alt="Before They Were Giants" hspace="9"></a><br>
<span class=tiny>Illustration by Kieran Yanner</span></td></tr></table>
<blockquote>
<p>Allow me to elaborate: With Planet Stories, we've published a lot of science fiction and fantasy that we felt was both fun <i>and</i> significant to the history of the genre. Which is why, about two years ago, I went to Erik with a proposal: what if we got together 15 of the coolest, most important SF authors alive—with an admitted bias toward the folks at the top of my own bookshelf—and convinced them to let us publish their first-ever SF short stories. In addition, we'd get new interviews from all the authors in which they would critique their own work, explaining what they know now that they wish they'd known then about writing, and giving advice for aspiring authors. It would be both an insightful look at the origins of my favorite authors (appealing to the fanboy in me) and a treasure trove of invaluable authorial advice (for which I remain a total sucker). Without question, it would be a lot of fun to put together. The real question was whether or not it was possible.</p>
<p>As it turns out, it <i>was</i> possible. Within a few weeks of beginning my quest, the anthology had expanded into an absolute powerhouse roster. While we already had good relationships with a few folks—preexisting friends of Paizo like China Miéville, Ben Bova, Nicola Griffith, and Piers Anthony—I was amazed to find just how generous and enthusiastic many of my favorite authors are. Cory Doctorow? Larry Niven? Mr. William "Invented-Internet-Culture" Gibson? Just seeing their names in my inbox was a childhood dream come true. </p>
<p>And now here's the result: an anthology full of advice and encouragement for writers, as well as rare early stories from your favorite authors—many that you may never have seen before, as they've lain fallow in out-of-print magazines. (For instance, when I first asked China to join the anthology, he sent me back not "Looking For Jake," which I had expected, but a bizarre post-apocalyptic short story that had been published when he was still just a kid, and which as far as my Internet research was concerned <i>did not exist</i>. That's the sort of discovery that can really make an editor's day.) </p>
<p>But I've rambled long enough. Below is the full table of contents, and I couldn't be prouder of it. If you decide to pick up a copy, be sure to head on over to the <a href="https://paizo.com/planetStories/v5748btpy8b8p/discuss#tabs">product discussion</a> and post about it—I can't wait to hear which stories (and interviews!) are people's favorites!</p>
<ul>
<li>Piers Anthony: "Possible to Rue"</li>
<li>Greg Bear: "Destroyers"</li>
<li>Ben Bova: "A Long Way Back"</li>
<li>David Brin: "Just a Hint"</li>
<li>Cory Doctorow: "Craphound"</li>
<li>William Gibson: "Fragments of a Hologram Rose"</li>
<li>Nicola Griffith: "Mirrors and Burnstone"</li>
<li>Joe Haldeman: "Out of Phase"</li>
<li>China Miéville: "Highway 61 Revisited"</li>
<li>Larry Niven: "The Coldest Place"</li>
<li>Kim Stanley Robinson: "In Pierson’s Orchestra"</li>
<li>Spider Robinson: "The Guy with the Eyes"</li>
<li>R. A. Salvatore: "A Sparkle for Homer"</li>
<li>Charles Stross: "The Boys"</li>
<li>Michael Swanwick: "Ginungagap"</li>
</ul>
<p>James L. Sutter
<br>Fiction Editor</p>
</blockquote>
<!— tags: Piers Anthony, Before They Were Giants, Ben Bova, Charles Stross, China Miéville, Cory Doctorow, David Brin, Greg Bear, James L. Sutter, Joe Haldeman, Kim Stanley Robinson, Larry Niven, Michael Swanwick, Nicola Griffith, Planet Stories, R. A. Salvatore, Spider Robinson, William Gibson —>
<p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/planetStories/beforeTheyWereGiants">Before They Were Giants</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/benBova">Ben Bova</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/charlesStross">Charles Stross</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/chinaMieville">China Mieville</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/coryDoctorow">Cory Doctorow</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/davidBrin">David Brin</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/gregBear">Greg Bear</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/joeHaldeman">Joe Haldeman</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/kimStanleyRobinson">Kim Stanley Robinson</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/larryNiven">Larry Niven</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/michaelSwanwick">Michael Swanwick</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/nicolaGriffith">Nicola Griffith</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/piersAnthony">Piers Anthony</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/planetStories">Planet Stories</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/rASalvatore">R. A. Salvatore</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/spiderRobinson">Spider Robinson</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/williamGibson">William Gibson</a></p>2010-07-28T07:00:00ZThe Fabled Appendix - James L. Sutter (Part 2)https://paizo.com/community/blog/v5748dyo5laba?The-Fabled-Appendix-James-L-Sutter2009-05-19T07:00:00Z<div align=center><a href="https://paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderChronicles/PZO1111-Hermea.jpg" target="_blank"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderChronicles/PZO1111-Hermea_360.jpeg" border=0></a></div>
<blockquote>
<h1>The Fabled Appendix – James L. Sutter (Part 2)</h1>
<p class=date>Tuesday, May 19, 2009</p>
<p>Here follows Part 2 of my interview with Editor James L. Sutter, in which he discusses his influences for Golarion's solar system, monster ecologies, and the island nation of Hermea.</p>
<p><b>James</b>: For <a href="https://paizo.com/pathfinder/v5748btpy85ed">Golarion's solar system</a>, I wanted to include elements of real science, because there are so many phenomena in different scientific fields, such as astronomy, that are already so bizarre as to seem magical. Erik and his love of the pulps made it a given that we'd include classic versions of the Red and Green Planets as homages to sword & planet fantasy, but for the rest of the solar system I was given more or less free reign to introduce more science fiction elements. My goal was to create a wide enough variety of worlds that you could have wildly differing SF-feeling settings without ever leaving Golarion's system. Some of them were inspired primarily by setting concepts (Liches in space suits? Try Eox. Lovecraft-esque planet of mystery? Aucturn, baby!), but others came straight out of Astronomy 101—what kind of society would evolve on a planet that's tidally locked (meaning one side always faces the sun), or one that's tidally heated? What about a planet with an eccentric orbit—could an ecology or society grow up around seasons that last not months, but years? For me, the conditions that create a crazy setting are often as interesting as the setting itself.</p>
<p>Similarly, when writing monster ecologies, I like to figure out how a monster could have evolved into its ecological niche in a realistic fashion. The explanation that "this monster was created by a wizard's experiment gone wrong" is fine for classics like the bulette, but it's been done way too often. When writing the entries for lizardfolk in <a href="https://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy82r5"><i>Classic Monsters Revisited</i></a> and the rust monster in <a href="https://paizo.com/pathfinder/pathfinderChronicles/v5748btpy87v1"><i>Dungeon Denizens Revisited</i></a>, for instance, I tried to make their ecologies as plausible as possible. There are good reasons why rust monsters don't <i>actually</i> exist, of course, and I'm not averse to a little magic here and there, but it's easy to let magic be a crutch if you're not careful. (I should also stress that I'm not a scientist, by any means—I just know a lot of them, and enjoy listening to them explain how my proposed ecologies butcher biological and physical laws.)</p>
<p>Another big influence for me is the concept of moral ambiguity—to me, the best villains are always the ones who passionately believe they're doing the right thing. The island nation of Hermea, for instance, was born out of my desire to see how a fantasy society would tackle the dicey question of eugenics. One of my roommates is a geneticist, and eugenics is a real topic of concern for him. It seems like every week or so we end up in complicated debates and thought experiments with friends about the morality and wisdom of actively seeking to "improve" humanity through science. It's an extremely touchy subject, because the word "eugenics" reminds a lot of people of the atrocities of the Holocaust, in which the concept was thinly draped over hatred and genocide. Yet at its base definition, eugenics is happening every day in commonplace medical practices like amniocentesis. So where are the lines drawn?</p>
<p>The question of whether or not eugenics can be used for the greater good became the core concept behind Hermea, and led to some heated inter-office debates and jokes (at some point in the campaign setting outline, someone penciled it in as "Codename: Dragon Hitler"). But in the end, the idea saw light: in Hermea, a nominally good gold dragon, in all of its wisdom, is trying to guide humanity to perfection by selectively breeding the best and brightest volunteers for their desirable traits. Whether or not this goes against his alignment is up to each individual GM to decide. Personally, I believe that eugenics happens every day, as we continue to wipe out diseases and detect genetic disorders early on. Evolution and natural selection didn't stop with the rise of civilization; the only difference is that we're now beginning to put ourselves in the driver's seat. It's an exciting time to be a human.</p>
<p>All in all, my inspiration comes from a little bit of fantasy, a lot of science fiction, and a <i>lot</i> of hard science.</p>
<br>
<p>Thanks for reading, Paizonians! Stay tuned for more of Paizo's Appendix N in the near future!</p>
<p>David Eitelbach<br>
Editorial Intern</p>
</blockquote>
<!— tags: Appendix N, Interviews, James L. Sutter —>
<p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/appendixN">Appendix N</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/paizo/interviews">Interviews</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a></p><div align=center><a href="https://paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderChronicles/PZO1111-Hermea.jpg" target="_blank"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/PathfinderChronicles/PZO1111-Hermea_360.jpeg" border=0></a></div>
<blockquote>
<h1>The Fabled Appendix – James L. Sutter (Part 2)</h1>
<p class=date>Tuesday, May 19, 2009</p>
<p>Here follows Part 2 of my interview with Editor James L. Sutter, in which he discusses his influences for Golarion's solar system, monster ecologies, and the island nation of Hermea.</p>
<p><b>James</b>: For <a href="https://paizo.com/pathfinder/v5748btpy85ed">Golarion's solar system</a>, I wanted to include elements of real science, because there are so many phenomena in different scientific fields, such as astronomy, that are already so bizarre as to seem magical. Erik and his love of the pulps made it a given that we'd include classic versions of the Red and Green Planets as homages to sword & planet fantasy, but for the rest of the solar system I was given more or less free reign to introduce more science fiction elements. My goal was to create a wide enough variety of worlds that you could have wildly differing SF-feeling settings without ever leaving Golarion's system. Some of them were inspired primarily by setting concepts (Liches in space suits? Try Eox. Lovecraft-esque planet of mystery? Aucturn, baby!), but others came straight out of Astronomy 101—what kind of society would evolve on a planet that's tidally locked (meaning one side always faces the sun), or one that's tidally heated? What about a planet with an eccentric orbit—could an ecology or society grow up around seasons that last not months, but years? For me, the conditions that create a crazy setting are often as interesting as the setting itself.</p>
<p>Similarly, when writing monster ecologies, I like to figure out how a monster could have evolved into its ecological niche in a realistic fashion. The explanation that "this monster was created by a wizard's experiment gone wrong" is fine for classics like the bulette, but it's been done way too often. When writing the entries for lizardfolk in <a href="https://paizo.com/store/v5748btpy82r5"><i>Classic Monsters Revisited</i></a> and the rust monster in <a href="https://paizo.com/pathfinder/pathfinderChronicles/v5748btpy87v1"><i>Dungeon Denizens Revisited</i></a>, for instance, I tried to make their ecologies as plausible as possible. There are good reasons why rust monsters don't <i>actually</i> exist, of course, and I'm not averse to a little magic here and there, but it's easy to let magic be a crutch if you're not careful. (I should also stress that I'm not a scientist, by any means—I just know a lot of them, and enjoy listening to them explain how my proposed ecologies butcher biological and physical laws.)</p>
<p>Another big influence for me is the concept of moral ambiguity—to me, the best villains are always the ones who passionately believe they're doing the right thing. The island nation of Hermea, for instance, was born out of my desire to see how a fantasy society would tackle the dicey question of eugenics. One of my roommates is a geneticist, and eugenics is a real topic of concern for him. It seems like every week or so we end up in complicated debates and thought experiments with friends about the morality and wisdom of actively seeking to "improve" humanity through science. It's an extremely touchy subject, because the word "eugenics" reminds a lot of people of the atrocities of the Holocaust, in which the concept was thinly draped over hatred and genocide. Yet at its base definition, eugenics is happening every day in commonplace medical practices like amniocentesis. So where are the lines drawn?</p>
<p>The question of whether or not eugenics can be used for the greater good became the core concept behind Hermea, and led to some heated inter-office debates and jokes (at some point in the campaign setting outline, someone penciled it in as "Codename: Dragon Hitler"). But in the end, the idea saw light: in Hermea, a nominally good gold dragon, in all of its wisdom, is trying to guide humanity to perfection by selectively breeding the best and brightest volunteers for their desirable traits. Whether or not this goes against his alignment is up to each individual GM to decide. Personally, I believe that eugenics happens every day, as we continue to wipe out diseases and detect genetic disorders early on. Evolution and natural selection didn't stop with the rise of civilization; the only difference is that we're now beginning to put ourselves in the driver's seat. It's an exciting time to be a human.</p>
<p>All in all, my inspiration comes from a little bit of fantasy, a lot of science fiction, and a <i>lot</i> of hard science.</p>
<br>
<p>Thanks for reading, Paizonians! Stay tuned for more of Paizo's Appendix N in the near future!</p>
<p>David Eitelbach<br>
Editorial Intern</p>
</blockquote>
<!— tags: Appendix N, Interviews, James L. Sutter —>
<p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/appendixN">Appendix N</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/paizo/interviews">Interviews</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a></p>2009-05-19T07:00:00ZThe Fabled Appendix - James L. Sutter (Part 1)https://paizo.com/community/blog/v5748dyo5lab7?The-Fabled-Appendix-James-L-Sutter2009-05-18T07:00:00Z<a href="https://paizo.com/image/content/Portraits/JamesLSutter.jpg" target="_blank"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/Portraits/JamesLSutter_180.jpeg" border=0 hspace=9 align=left></a>
<blockquote>
<h1><br>The Fabled Appendix – James L. Sutter (Part 1)</h1>
<p class=date>Monday, May 18, 2009</p>
<p>Paizo's Appendix N returns! Now that the <a href="https://paizo.com/pathfinderRPG/v5748btpy8255"><i>Pathfinder RPG Core Rulebook</i></a> is out the door, things at the Paizo office have become just a little bit less hectic. Seizing the lull in the workload, Editor James L. Sutter generously took the time Friday morning to speak with me about his most important sources of inspiration. Just as James Jacobs's love of horror in literature and film differed greatly from Erik Mona's unquenchable thirst for pulp novels, Mr. Sutter's influences are unique within the office. Read on to find out the fantasy authors that most influenced James's game design, and learn why he enjoys mixing the peanut butter of science fiction with the chocolate of fantasy.</p>
<p><b>David</b>: As the creator of Kaer-Maga, the notorious den of thieves, and the person most responsible for envisioning Golarion's solar system, it is clear that your influences are pretty diverse. What are your biggest sources of inspiration when creating the world of Pathfinder?</p>
<p><b>James</b>: As far as fantasy authors go, I'd have to say that my biggest influences are China Miéville, Joel Rosenberg, and Richard Knaak. I really enjoyed Miéville's vision of a fantasy world—it's not steampunk, but more like industrial revolution fantasy. I was particularly inspired by <i>Perdido Street Station</i>, and how he seamlessly blended a mishmash of cultures and created a believable and vibrant city. In fact, New Crobuzon served as the primary influence for Kaer-Maga, the city I created for the module <a href="https://paizo.com/pathfinder/pathfinderModules/v5748btpy7zke">Seven Swords of Sin</a>; it's a city of outcasts that have come together, a place where a lot of different cultures all intermingle but still manage to work.</p>
<p>Among other books, Joel Rosenberg wrote the "Guardians of the Flame" series, in which the main characters are literally pulled into the game world of the RPG they're playing. Those books were my first introduction to the concept of roleplaying, and as a result the world created by Rosenberg is pretty much the archetypal setting I envision for fantasy roleplaying games. Richard Knaak's "Dragonrealms" series was also very inspirational for me early on, as <i>The Crystal Dragon</i> was the first adult fantasy I picked up (mainly because it had a shiny holographic dragon on the cover).</p>
<p>More than fantasy, though, I'm primarily influenced by science and science fiction—possibly more so than anyone else at the Paizo. I think I've learned more about world building from Dan Simmons than any other author. I especially like blending magic and science, the line where one transitions into the other. When we were first creating Pathfinder, James Jacobs handed me a mostly blank outline for Varisia and told me to run with it. At first I included a lot more science fiction elements; Crystilian was originally the magical equivalent of a particle accelerator, Spindlehorn an ancient space elevator used by long-lost astronauts, and Mundatei was basically a forest of Tesla coils. We ended up working together to change most of that, which was of course the right decision, but some science fiction elements were still retained—Ember Lake, for instance, essentially functions as the place in Varisia where UFO sightings occur, with its phosphorescent, underwater bugs that form strange patterns which can only be seen from the sky.</p>
<br>
<p>This concludes Part 1 or my interview with James Sutter about the sources of inspiration he would include in Paizo's own Appendix N. Stay tuned for Part 2, where he discusses how hard science and science fiction continue to influence his fantasy game design, and explains how the nation code-named "Dragon Hitler" would eventually become the island of Hermea.</p>
<p>David Eitelbach<br>
Editorial Intern</p>
<!— tags: Appendix N, interviews, James L. Sutter —>
<p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/appendixN">Appendix N</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/paizo/interviews">Interviews</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a></p><a href="https://paizo.com/image/content/Portraits/JamesLSutter.jpg" target="_blank"><img src="https//paizo.com/image/content/Portraits/JamesLSutter_180.jpeg" border=0 hspace=9 align=left></a>
<blockquote>
<h1><br>The Fabled Appendix – James L. Sutter (Part 1)</h1>
<p class=date>Monday, May 18, 2009</p>
<p>Paizo's Appendix N returns! Now that the <a href="https://paizo.com/pathfinderRPG/v5748btpy8255"><i>Pathfinder RPG Core Rulebook</i></a> is out the door, things at the Paizo office have become just a little bit less hectic. Seizing the lull in the workload, Editor James L. Sutter generously took the time Friday morning to speak with me about his most important sources of inspiration. Just as James Jacobs's love of horror in literature and film differed greatly from Erik Mona's unquenchable thirst for pulp novels, Mr. Sutter's influences are unique within the office. Read on to find out the fantasy authors that most influenced James's game design, and learn why he enjoys mixing the peanut butter of science fiction with the chocolate of fantasy.</p>
<p><b>David</b>: As the creator of Kaer-Maga, the notorious den of thieves, and the person most responsible for envisioning Golarion's solar system, it is clear that your influences are pretty diverse. What are your biggest sources of inspiration when creating the world of Pathfinder?</p>
<p><b>James</b>: As far as fantasy authors go, I'd have to say that my biggest influences are China Miéville, Joel Rosenberg, and Richard Knaak. I really enjoyed Miéville's vision of a fantasy world—it's not steampunk, but more like industrial revolution fantasy. I was particularly inspired by <i>Perdido Street Station</i>, and how he seamlessly blended a mishmash of cultures and created a believable and vibrant city. In fact, New Crobuzon served as the primary influence for Kaer-Maga, the city I created for the module <a href="https://paizo.com/pathfinder/pathfinderModules/v5748btpy7zke">Seven Swords of Sin</a>; it's a city of outcasts that have come together, a place where a lot of different cultures all intermingle but still manage to work.</p>
<p>Among other books, Joel Rosenberg wrote the "Guardians of the Flame" series, in which the main characters are literally pulled into the game world of the RPG they're playing. Those books were my first introduction to the concept of roleplaying, and as a result the world created by Rosenberg is pretty much the archetypal setting I envision for fantasy roleplaying games. Richard Knaak's "Dragonrealms" series was also very inspirational for me early on, as <i>The Crystal Dragon</i> was the first adult fantasy I picked up (mainly because it had a shiny holographic dragon on the cover).</p>
<p>More than fantasy, though, I'm primarily influenced by science and science fiction—possibly more so than anyone else at the Paizo. I think I've learned more about world building from Dan Simmons than any other author. I especially like blending magic and science, the line where one transitions into the other. When we were first creating Pathfinder, James Jacobs handed me a mostly blank outline for Varisia and told me to run with it. At first I included a lot more science fiction elements; Crystilian was originally the magical equivalent of a particle accelerator, Spindlehorn an ancient space elevator used by long-lost astronauts, and Mundatei was basically a forest of Tesla coils. We ended up working together to change most of that, which was of course the right decision, but some science fiction elements were still retained—Ember Lake, for instance, essentially functions as the place in Varisia where UFO sightings occur, with its phosphorescent, underwater bugs that form strange patterns which can only be seen from the sky.</p>
<br>
<p>This concludes Part 1 or my interview with James Sutter about the sources of inspiration he would include in Paizo's own Appendix N. Stay tuned for Part 2, where he discusses how hard science and science fiction continue to influence his fantasy game design, and explains how the nation code-named "Dragon Hitler" would eventually become the island of Hermea.</p>
<p>David Eitelbach<br>
Editorial Intern</p>
<!— tags: Appendix N, interviews, James L. Sutter —>
<p><a href="https://paizo.comcommunity/blog/tags">Tags</a>: <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/appendixN">Appendix N</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/paizo/interviews">Interviews</a>, <a href="https://paizo.com/community/blog/tags/people/authors/jamesLSutter">James L. Sutter</a></p>2009-05-18T07:00:00Z