Thursday, December 27, 2007

Keeping up with the Starch

So, the Ides of Starch is being resurrected. If one is new to the Starch, one ought to check out the following link to see where we're at on the ongoing project. Feel free to join, as well. It always needs some new quirkiness. Especially if your name is Fran.

The new installment will be a faux-romance. Part IV. That's why all fantasy epics come in threes. They know where to stop. Heheheh.

http://com1.runboard.com/bintrospect.f3.t48363

And for past Starch installments, the following, Part I and most of Part II:

The Ides of Starch: An Epic Saga of Good Versus Nasty

AnimaMage
This is satirical fantasy--let's get this straight right away, okay? Yes, satirical. If you can't play along, then don't go complaining or anything, alright? okay. But please, by all means, continue the story, if you can keep the tone. I shall shortly begin with my first post.

AnimaMage
Our story begins in the small rural town of Fifril. Yes, fifril. If you wanted to know anything about this town and were to ask any passersby you would not get very pleasant answers, for Fifril is the name of an Orcish wench in the dialects of the north. The peoples of fifril, mainly orcish salesmen and corn-row junkies from the south who couldn’t get respectable jobs from their racial counterparts (or wives for that matter), kept to themselves. Merfil was the name of their crop (though we might call them rutabagas) and they were stern of speech and of mind, for theirs was a hard life of working hard in the field, resting for hours on end, milking the cows, working the fields, milking the bar, and generally ploughing around.

Their days were numbered mainly in multiples of four and five, and seagulls were the choice harvest foul (though many said they tasted like chicken). However since seagulls were often in short supply (this was probably because Fifril was at least 500 miles from any coast) the townsfolk were quite used to grumbling about it and going on about their business as they pleased. This usually meant scrounging up enough plough-kill shrews to last the feast night and most Fifrillians were accustomed to just grumbling ‘bout “the boss” and “’e who made me bite the shrew”.

As often becomes pathetic fantasy diversions such as this one, a great thing was to arise out of the pool of excrement that was Fifril. His name was Berbil, and he was a rutabaga farmhand. He was not, like many of his fellow peers, a half-doped Rastifarian or snot-nosed Orc. He was, instead, the son of a prince. Or rather, he was the son of the former-prince-now-a-king-who-is-sadly-corrupt-and-evil. Yet this he did not know, for he had been dropped as a child on the front step of a certain Mr. and Mrs. Dwerange Berbillious. Yes, they were the town’s “garbage-pail-takers” otherwise known as custodians. But they took in poor Berbil, named him, fed him, taught him all the grand and beautiful practices of their Orcish ancestors like pillaging, raping, rousingly feasting, raping, pillaging, and raping. But since he was actually a human, he wasn’t terribly good at any of these things like his friends in Orc-school; on the whole he was rather skinny and flabby. But this did not hamper his orc-tendencies in the least, for he was always the first of his group to volunteer (like standing as bait for the annual hog-hunt or jumping into pools of manure for the occasional distraction. Yes, even the most spirited orc-child could not outdo him in cleverness, for he was known to disguise himself as a stuck pig in front of an entire mass of feverishly-feasting orc-men in heroic efforts to gain the wishbone. He did, in fact, get the wishbone in one such attempt. Half-bludgeoned and dazed from his excursion, he reeled out of the mass holding the wishbone in a greasy hand, all dignity (whatever there was of it) gone. That day he did not make a wish, but kept the wishbone in a hidden cigar box under his mat of hay he had by way of luxurious bed.

Then one day, for no reason at all, something incredible happened. Something that would make old women sit up in their knickers for years to come. Something that would alter the course of the future of the world for all of time. This happening would shape the fates of not just the revenant souls of Fifril, but the children of their grandchildren’s children. The very course of the winds would reverse because of its results. The towering pinnacle of the heavens would topple to the base of the world in its glory!

…and Berbil was constipated.

Trae
But that, I'm afraid, was only the beginning.

Berbil needed help. He needed it badly. He tried to scream, but the pain was too intense. Every breath multiplied the agony, every movement heightened the sheer torture. At last, he blacked out.

"Berbil!" the voice shouted to him. Berbil looked around. He was standing in a wide field of daisies. Berbil wasn't sure how he felt about the daisies. He bent over and tore one from the ground, pondering the smell.

"Berbil!" shouted the voice, again, only louder this time. Berbil dropped the flower and looked up.
"Uh...Me?" he asked timidly. There was a momentary silence, and then the booming voice resounded again.
"This is Berbil, adoptive son of Mr. and Mrs. Dwerange Berbillious and the Fifrilian people, resident of Pigsty Alley, Fifril, Province of Orcana, and heir to the former-prince-now-a-king-who-is-sadly-corrupt-and-evil, right?"
Berbil blinked.
"Right?" asked the voice again.
"Oh. Uh. Yeah. That's me," Berbil replied. There was another silence.
"Good..."
Yet another silence.
"Berbil!" The voice shook the field of daisies.
"Uh. Yeah?" replied Berbil.
"Berbil. I am your great-grandfather on your father's mother's side! It was prophesied to me a century ago that after my death I would have a descendent who was evil, but another descendent would overcome that evil. You are that descendent, Berbil. You!"
"The evil one?" Berbil asked.
"No! The other one."
"Did there have to be daisies?"
Yet another silence.
"No. I guess not."
Suddenly, all the daisies dissapeared.
"Thanks," said Berbil.
"No problem." A silence. "You are destined to overcome the evil king, your father who..." Berbil interrupted his great-gramps.
"Wait...How are you talking to me?"
"It's a pain induced hallucination," said his great-grandfather's voice.
"But you're dead."
"That is altogether beside the point. This is a destined message from the past. Don't question these things."
"Okay."
"Berbil!" boomed the voice.
"Yeah?"
"You must leave your comfortable home. You must give up your peaceful and luxurious settings as a sacrifice for the good of the people, and..."
"They beat me here..." Berbil interrupted.
"They do?"
"Yeah."
"Oh..."
Another silence. Berbil blinked.
"As a sacrifice for the good of the people, and you must seek out the king and kill him, free the kingdom from his evil tyrrany! You must leave today. Go Berbil! Now is your time..." The voice faded away, and soon after it, the vision.

Later that day, Berbil returned to consciousness.

AnimaMage
Knowing hardly what to do and where he was, Berbil stumbled about noisily for the better part of a half hour. He had fallen asleep in the scullery of the town’s prestigious inn, “The Leaky Dragon”. Cooks ranted while worthless assistants bustled to and fro, pretending to be busy. The day’s veal was slavering in the corner, quivering slightly. Or at least, he mightn’t have been the day’s veal till the cook accidentally trampled him in his drunken stupor.

A fly buzzing past one unattentive ear, Berbil collapsed in the corner next to his dog. This happened to also be the same dog who was the day’s veal. But Berbil didn’t notice. No, he was too busy looking at the sweet puckered-green skin of the barmaid across the scullery floor. Her name . . . was Gwano . . . so pretty . . . so beautiful . . . with that tint of red in the hair and those delicately rounded nostrils that almost eclipsed her eyes . . .
“BERBIL!!!” shouted the voice of his boss.
“Yes Mr. Gremble?” he said, eyes fixated on that lovely ringlet that was dancing down past an unshaven chin.
“C’mon. We gotta lot to do b’fore happy hour. I need you to shuck the pigs, kay?”
Gwano moved past the wrought iron cupboard, revealing two voluptuous green legs. They looked like unshaven zucchini in the dim light of midday. Berbil gulped and forgot the past day’s events.

All night Berbil just wasn’t in his job. He couldn’t get his eyes off of that brawny barmaid. The way Gwano moved was just like some rabid hog in dire need of—of a friendly mud romp (an expression orcs are quite fond of that equates itself to wearing the perfume “dark delight” in human culture). Gwano dancing for the midnight romp to the slight, lilting melodies of Bongos and the puff of friendly “weed” pipes. Gwano handing out beer to a group of hardy farmers. Gwano slapping the fly on her forehead. Gwano putting on rutabaga-flavored lipstick: Oh! It was tantalizing.

It was no surprise then that Berbil didn’t notice the dark figure dressed in a black cloak sitting in the dark corner smoking a dark and obviously-ominous pipe. He even served him and hardly noticed the dark note that the figure darkly stuffed into his pocket. Even when fire-story time rolled around and the figure stood up and told a grim tale about the evils of the current regime, Berbil’s thoughts were elsewhere. He was in the kitchen gnawing at bits of curds and whey.

It wasn’t until later that the dark man took Berbil aside and began a dialogue with him that Berbil realized what was going on.
“My name,” the black man said, pulling his pitch-colored Steve-Irwin hat over his eyes, “is . . . Marvin.”
“Marvin?”
“Yes, Marvin.” He said, adding a raspy sound at the end for extra effect.
“Uh, Hi Marvin.” The man shuffled in his dark leather boots.
“…Hi.” Silence for several awkward moments as Berbil accidentally wretched the night’s dinner on the floor.
“Sorry, I think I had something bad tonight.”
“It’s okay.”
“Y’sure? That usually makes people get grossed out. Humans, at least.” The black man’s gaze lifted at this, as if a long-awaited opportunity had just rolled around.
“I have seen things that would make the greatest of men tremble, good sir. I have grappled with the darkest depths of despair, mounted the highest challenges and come. I have traveled through snow and over mountains, waded through sloughs and braved vast deserts to come here. In the elder nations I am also known as Guernsely, in the high tongue, Flafallafir, and am known as the Seventh sage, walker of stars, Hunter of the Night, bestowed the blessed blade by a high kin of old times known only as Stomata, the flurry of the dawn!” He then whipped out a short switchblade, and, holding it close to his forehead, proceeded to make a series of tongue-clicks that sounded at best like the calls of herpes-infected crickets on a bad night. Not knowing quite what to say, Berbil rummaged about for conversation.
“So . . . you’re not from around here, then?” Marvin’s antics were beginning to attract the attention of several half-dazed patrons. One came up and began watching Marvin’s movements with an intent expression. Marvin stopped, a sheepish expression on his cowled face.
“Mayhaps we should depart for more private environs?” Berbil opened his mouth wide, not knowing what to say.
“Oh, yes. Whence we finally ascend to a quiet room, I might tell you of your future journey across the 3 and a half seas, the perilous walk across the chasms of doom, and the final climactic journey through the queendom of the cruel Monarch, Gramkrakar. Yes, I may even tell you about the Ides of Star—“ It was at this moment that Berbil, who had enough sense to know when someone is spoiling a fairly decent plotline, put his hands over the loquacious ranger’s mouth and dragged him through the gathering crowd of interested patrons to a discreet room on the upper floor.

Trae
Stomata slammed the room door shut.
"Now, we can get down to business. I wouldn't want anyone to notice anything out of the ordinary, for our mission is one of subterfuge. We must be cunning and secret." Stomata watched Berbil, awaiting a reaction of some kind. When none was forthcoming, he squinted a little and then continued. "If we are to overcome your father and place you on the throne, we need to meet with our co-conspirators. Our meeting place is a cave in the heart of the evil queen Gramm-Krakar's kingdom." Berbil interrupted with a raised hand. "Yes?" asked Stomata, a little annoyed.
"Why couldn't we meet here?" Berbil asked. Stomata grinned deviously.
"Because," he said. "The evil queen will never expect it, right under her nose!"
"Would she expect it here?"
"Well, no, I guess not."
"Oh..."
"Anyway," continued Stomata. "It isn't safe to travel together until after we are met by our companions at the Strutting Salamander in Gramm-Krakar's Kingdom. On our side is Kindul, the master magician. He used to be your father's court mage, but there was an incident with a porcupine that would best be left untold. Also on our side is Frigglefed, an intelligent and agile fighter. I will give you directions to the tavern so that we can meet up again. It isn't safe to travel together. We will have to slip through the borders seperately, like solitary travelers."
"Uh...why?" asked Berbil.
"So they don't catch us! Of course!" shouted Stomata, angrily. "I don't think you're comprehending the import of this mission!"
"Who's trying to catch us?"
"The agents of your father, of course! The dreaded Nashtagawagllegillygues!, who have never failed to destroy those whom they...wanted to destroy."
"Can we call them Tagga-waggles?" asked Berbil.
"Everyone does," Stomata replied quickly.
"How does my father know we're trying to kill him?" asked Berbil. Stomata leaned in close and whispered.
"He has ears..." he began, and, reaching up to the sides of his head, said "right here." After a few moments of silence, Stomata continued. "So, you must cross the 3 and a half seas, make the perilous walk across the chasms of doom, and the final climactic journey through the queendom of the cruel Monarch, Gramkrakar to come at last to the Strutting Salamander tavern. Are you ready to depart at once?"
"Uh. Yeah, I guess," answered Berbil.
"To the road then! Once outside, follow the road west. It will take you all the way there. Pay attention to the signs." Stomata leapt from his chair and rushed to the door, opening it. Three orcs who had been pressing their ears to the outside of the frame fell into the room, and a large crowd of patrons rushed away. The two adventurers hurried from the tavern. Out in front, Stomata leapt upon a long-eared donkey, shouting "Off, Bodo! To the west! To the fall of the king!" Slowly, tiredly, the donkey trotted from the city.

The morning sun was rising as Berbil said a few goodbyes and headed out onto the road. It took him the greater part of the day to cross the 3 and a half seas, make the perilous walk across the chasms of doom, and the final climactic journey through the queendom of the cruel Monarch, Gramkrakar, but by mid-afternoon he had reached the town of M-illk. On the city gate was a large sign reading, "Conspiracy Meeting Tonight, after dark. Be in the back room of the Strutting Salamander if you're interested in overthrowing the evil king!" So, Berbil entered the Strutting Salamander and decided to have a few drinks while waiting for the meeting to begin.

AnimaMage
Erratum: Trae messed up (in his infinite wisdom, of course). It was a misinterpretation of my mortal and infinitely-flawed writing. Rather than go back and be a good person, or effect a change to this mistake, I am telling you about it now before you go on. Stomata, a name which appeared frequently in the above post, describes the ranger. This is NOT his name; his real name IS Marvin. Stomata is the name of the dagger he wields expertly. I would have just changed my post, but see, Stomata is etymologically the name of some Elven gal who died for some prince or another in the southlands. Marvin is not of Elvish descent, and I think it would besmirch the elves to hear us writing about one of their saddest (believe me, it’s sad) poems in their large library of laments. There, now I can post.

Berbil sat down on the dark, gnarled figure lying on the floor that apparently passed for a bench and sipped his malted fairy-cream float thoughtfully. The room was dark and ominous, a lot like most taverns, he decided. Figures flitted to and fro, dashing this way and that on their flaming red roller-skates. Yes, those were the waitresses. Berbil sighed sadly. None of them had legs like Gwano…
The apparent avatar for this fine establishment, a beet red newt with apple cheeks and rosy red lips with a jolly forked tongue slitting in and out, sat in a bench on the far side of the room with a perpetual smile etched on the plastic sheen of its face. It was sitting upright looking relaxed (which is actually a physical impossibility for most salamanders) and held a sign saying, “Take a picture with Sammy the Salamander and tell all your friends!”
Berbil was about to do just that, but as he sat down in the static embrace of Sammy’s cold scaly hand, he caught a brief glimmer out of the corner of one eye. There in the corner, a hooded figure sat with a dark and ominous look on his scruffy unshaven face. Could it be…
But in a brief flash the hood was off and Berbil caught sight of the figure’s eyes. It was a GIRL! And not just any girl, but one with tawny, luscious locks of hair that cascaded down and complemented her goatee quite nicely.
Her goatee?
Her goatee.
Sickened, Berbil turned away to vomit on Sammy’s unmoving lap, but before he could do so three figures had surrounded him and were making various erratic motions with their gauntleted hands. “Halt, wastrel!” came a squeaky voice from beneath a dark hood. It was getting rather stuffy. Time…meaningless…life…strange…Berbil collapsed then and there without ejecting the morning’s meal.

However, he was awakened moments later by a pair of gnarled old hands shaking him incessantly. Berbil opened his eyes to see three odd faces peering down at him. He was on a floor of straw, lying in a manger. The cows were mooing overhead and the flutter of angel wings was out in the failing light of the late evening’s tired dusk.
Seeing him, the oldest of the three faces, white and wrinkled with age, smiled broadly. “Well, that’s good. I thought I was beating a dead horse.” Berbil looked at him blankly. “Well, good things come to those who wait. You almost opened up a can of worms out there.”
“Shut up” said the goateed girl.
“Fine, shoot the messenger,” the old man retorted sharply.
The girl moved closer to Bibril. “My name’s Frigglefed. But you can call me Frig,” she said lightly. “His name—” she jerked her thumb to the old man, “is Kindul.” Kindul bowed respectfully. “Don’t count your chicks before they—” “I said SHUT UP,” Frigglefed yelled in his general direction, a wild look in her eyes.
Berbil swallowed hard.
“Uh, m-miss Frigglefed?” he raised his hand respectfully. She didn’t pay any attention to him.
“His name is Alastor,” she pointed towards the hulking figure who had taken to gnawing on a nearby wooden beam. Frigglefed lowered her voice to a whisper, “He’s not quite right in the head, see. I picked him up in the swamps a while back. Good chap, but being an ogre he’s kinda…” she made a twirling motion with her hands that Berbil interpreted quite correctly as needing severe psychiatric help.
Silence.
“Where’s uh, Marvin?” Berbil piped up. “Oh, he’ll be around soon enough.” Frig replied nonchalantly.
More silence.
Berbil scratched his rear rather uncomfortably, then slid out of the manger. “I’m rather hungry, so uh…you wanna get something to eat?”
EAT!” came a high pitched voice from Alastor.
“I’m positively chomping at the bit” said Kindul.
“Shut up,” said Frig.

About an hour later, they were all seated in one of the smoky little booths out in the main area, each man to his own victuals. There were steaming salted sprigs of asparagus. A large bowl of smoking lard sat in the center of the table which Alastor would ladel into his gaping toothed maw. Berbil himself enjoyed a plate of chicken wings, while Frig helped herself to a hearty course of dust and wind. Kindul ate pastries.
”I like to have my cake and eat it too,” Kindul commented. Frig smacked him one. “If it’s not one thing it’s the other,” he said dazedly.
The door splintered inward and a tall figure silhouetted the frame’s light with fierce ferocity. A tall, strong man walked in, his cropped black hair sticking through the cracks of his helmet. A light was in his eyes and a flame walked within him. He had a proud, noble bearing, and tattoos decorated his proud figure with dragons and unicorns and ogresses. He might have been a horseman of the Apocalypse.
Please, oh please, let him be a good guy, thought Berbil, his heart racing with fear.
The man took out a roll of parchment and, royal eyes scanning it, he proceeded to read out the message in a rich cultured voice.
“By the order of the queen, her ladyship Gramkrakar of the four corners of the kingdom, I am charged to arrest the traitors who have begun seeking to conspire against the formal cordiality and sovereignty of her dearly betrothed kingy-poo Dunsley Hartcroft the Third who rules the distant lands of beyond and happens to have a son even though he doesn’t know it. It is our mission—nay!” he turned to cock one perfectly sculpted eybrow on the crowds who had only now ceased their debauchery to look up. “It is my mission, as the captain of the Nashtagawagllegillygues to work for both my king and future queen in her distant lands. And that work involves exterminating anyone even remotely affiliated with the dissidents who would conspire against our dearest Gram-krakar.” He drew a black-hilted obsidian blade from its sheath.
“Who wants a go?”
Berbil felt like he had swallowed a huge hunk of ice. Oh, wait, that was the lump in his throat that had swelled to the size of a football.
“He’s gonna bite the dust.” said Kindul.

AnimaMage
"What do we do?" Berbil shouted frantically amidst the growing chaos that had ensued. How the chaos had ensued he had no clue.
Kindul sat down and put his staff across his two gnarled legs. "Whistle a happy tune. Two heads are better than one. A teaspoon of gold is worth an ounce of barley."
Frig hit him on the head with the flat edge of her blade. "We fight, stupid! Have you got a sword?"
Berbil grasped for words for a moment.
Instead he grasped the wooden ladel from Astaroth's soupy dinner. "I think so," he said with a slightly bewildered smile.

Trae
For a few horrible moments, all was held in suspesion. The dread captain stood, his blade at the ready, waiting for any dissidents to show a neck that he could sever.
Kindul sat, muttering to himself. Berbil hoped it was an incantation of power. Sadly, it was just the dribble of a half-insane old man. Frigglefed, however, had much more spirit. Brandishing her blade wildly, she charged the captain of the horrid near-dead Nashtagawagllegillygues. He saw her coming, of course, because she started her battle cry half way across the room. She leap over a table. "Um, excuse me. Can I get through here?" she asked politely to a thickly packed crowd of onlookers. They pressed back in an attempt to give her room, but she still had to elbow her way through much of the tavern before she finally appeared, frenzied and ready, standing before the captain.

"Ah, I see I have an opponent," said the captain. "Bring it, girly!"

The enraged Frigglefed spun around in a circle, revealing all of her back to an enemy blow, though the captain didn't take advantage of it, but waited with his own sword ready to block the semi-fast chop of Frigglefed's blade. Clash! The battle was on. Really, there was little deft footwork or stunning swordsman ship. Mostly, they tapped their swords together, every once in a while, one of them making a jab at the other.

"You will never endanger my king and queen!" shouted the captain. "I am Mecronicon! I am your death!"

"You wish!" shouted Figglefed, her dirty hair flying out in all directions as she made a lunging thrust at Mecronicon.

"No! I demand!" shouted Mecronicon, parrying somewhat clumsily. "Haha!"

The battle raged. Many people in the tavern returned to their meals, stories, and the pigs tournament in the corner. Berbil stood horrified, still wielding the wooden ladel. Figglefed leapt onto a table, disrupting a small gremlin who'd been eating there. She kicked the creatures bowl of scalding hot morning-breath soup (the specialty of the house) at Mecronicon.

"Argh!" he shouted, but an experienced fighter like he was quick on the return. With a spinning sweep kick, he bruised his shin badly on one of the table legs, but still managed to send it toppling to the ground, Figglefed with it. There was a resounding thud as her head met the floor. In an instant, the limping Mecronicon had his blade at her throat, laughing fiendishly.

"See! You cannot overcome the dread captain of the Nashtagawagllegillygues!"

"You will be overcome," Figglefed said, spitting up at his face (she missed, not having that kind of vertical range, and it came back down and landed on her).

"Never spit into the wind," said Kindul from where he still sat. Mecronicon raised an eyebrow at him, but then turned back to his prey.

"I will now allow you to ask any revealing question you wish, before I kill you."

"How did you find us?" Figglefed asked. "We were so careful!"

Mecronicon raised his voice in a devious laugh. "Something you never expected! Heheh. You're gonna love this." He raised his hand, chuckling and emphasizing each word. "Marvin is actually a Nashtagawagllegillygue. My right hand man!"

"NOOOOO!" screamed Figglefed. "The traitor!"

"I know! Isn't that great!" shouted Mecronicon. "Although I'm not sure he'd be termed a traitor, since he was never on your side in the first place."

Berbil's head spun as the deception was revealed. They'd all been lured there into a trap. Now, he saw everything clearly. The sudden appearance of Marvin in the tavern back home, the poster on the town gates, the readily accessible crummy tavern. The faded pink blouse worn by the barmaid... The flaming red rollerskates... Everything fit. He was a fool not to see it in the first place.

Then, it started to happen. The battle frenzy began to take him. A millenia of warlord blood began to boil in his veins. Was this not his moment? His ancestry and his orcish upbringing began to overflow. His left eye twitched. His thoughts swirled.

"AHHHHHHH!" He screamed, leaping at Mecronicon before his enemy could even lift his blade. THWACK! The ladel smashed into his nose. Tears sprung to Mecronicon's eyes, and he reeled backwards, dazed. More thwacks followed as the wrath of Berbil directed his ladel-arm. Welts erupted all across Mecronicon's body. He dropped his sword, trying to fend off the attack, but soon, he was on the ground, pleading for mercy. Berbil put the ladel to his throat and stared with flaming eyes at his enemy.

"Where can I find the king?!" he shouted, his voice squeaking a tiny bit.

"I'll never tell you!" wimpered Mecronicon.

"Tell me or taste the ladel!"

"Never!'

Berbil shoved the ladel into Mecronicon's mouth. He screamed and writhed in agony.

"That's right, Mecronicon. Morning-breath soup. Enough to turn a man's stomach into a small green triangular lump of earthworm-ridden dairy sod." Berbil pulled the ladel from Mecronicon's mouth.

"Okay! I'll tell you whatever you want to know!"

"Where's the king?!" shouted Berbil, raising the ladel towards his captives mouth.

"On the other side of the city. A small chapel called "The Hitchin' Post". He and Gram-Krakar are eloping. They'll be there in about ten minutes. No troops, no guards. She wanted a private wedding, without any reporters."

Berbil smiled. The ladel flashed before Mecronicon's eyes, and then he lay still, ladeled unconscious.

AnimaMage
“Why do we have to wait out here?” asked Frig angrily. It was ten minutes later, on the other side of town.
“WAIT!” mused Alastor.
“I do so hate to be the blind man out,” Kindul sobbed.
“And why did you dress us up in these RIDICULOUS costumes?” Frig asked.
Berbil looked sheepishly at his companions. They were all dressed in the finest sackcloth from head to toe with large hoods to cover their eyes. “We’re dressed up as marriage mourners, guys! It’s the perfect plan! They’ll never suspect us, I promise!”
“Yeah, but that doesn’t explain why we have to wait out here while you go in and exact your revenge on your Father Dunsley Hartcroft the third!” Frig put her hands on her shapely hips in a huff.
Something came over Berbil at that moment. Call it fate, if you will, or mere whim of divine plan, but he was overcome. His eyes cast to Frig’s face for a moment. “Y’know, I kinda like your goatee, Frig.” Frig stopped as if caught in a two-ton orc wrestling match. A slow smile spread across her face.
“This is gonna hurt me more than it hurts you, lover-boy,” she cooed. Berbil goggled at her a moment before she gave him a quick one-two and he was dazed.
“Hmph. When life gives you lemons, make lemonade,” said Kindul, who did not quite grasp the situation.
“What’d you do that for???” Berbil reeled.
“Sorry, you were supposed to fall over in a dead fate.”
“Don’t you mean FAINT?”
“Er, yes.”
Totally turned off, Berbil cast his gaze over to The Hitchin’ Post. “Well, isn’t she getting the red carpet treatment!” commented Kindul. Berbil had to agree. The fountain had been garlanded a hundred times over to make something that resembled a silver Christmas tree after a bad season. Small cupids and seraphim were flying overhead; birds chirped incessantly from little ivory cages that had been hung from a thousand golden lightposts. Legions of effigies stood at the ready, each one at attention on the tops of the five hundred wedding-cakes resting atop the many white tables. Venus and Adonis were loping about in the clouds above the chapel. Oh, and yes, the whole courtyard was covered in red carpet.
“This is supposed to be an elope?” queried Berbil.
“LOPE!!!” screamed Alastor, who seemed to have gotten away from the group in the midst of the description and was feeding on the caged birds.
“There they are now!!!” commented Frig, pointing to a small carriage that had parked just in the midst of the crowded courtyard. They ran, ducking behind large mountains of strawberries and cream, to rest behind the silver fountain.
Out of the rose-red carriage stepped a woman of enormous girth and size. In her hands were red satin cloths, and a wreath was in her hair. She wore all red.
“Gram-krakar…” spoke Kindul reverently.
From the other side stepped a kindly man with a trimmed beard and a noble face, gentle with the passage of years. He wore a monocle and stepped with a stoop, but his posture had once been proud and great, Berbil could see.
“Is that—is that my father???” asked Berbil.
“Just a decoy,” spoke Frig. “Probably some shoeshiner or somethin’.
From the other side again loped a tall thin man of horse-like proportions, his long nose curving downward to rest somewhere on his adam’s apple. He wore spider-grey threads and sported some heavy bling around his neck.
“Is THAT my father?” breathed Berbil.
“Father of the bride.” Said Kindul offhandedly.
Again, from the carriage stepped a dark tall shadow. In one hand he held a ring of skulls, and a scythe long and dark from the weeks of endless battle was in his other. He was tall and shadowy, and spikes protruded from a dark hat that rested on his head. Glowing red eyes smouldered in black sockets beneath his hood. The earth chilled where he walked and plants died on all sides whenever he spoke his dark black words.
“Is…is th-that m-my father?” chattered Berbil, his heart in his throat.
“Justice of the Peace,” said Frig.
“Then WHO is my FATHER????” whispered Berbil.
“Wake up and smell the coffee,” said Kindul, pointing to the final figure to emerge from the coach. It was a small, scrawny little man who would’ve looked like Berbil were it not for the traces of dirty grey beard that clung to his weak chin. In his hands he held a bundle of parchment and a dirty old scepter.
“Wedding documents,” spoke Frig.

The procession hustled into the building. Berbil and the others ran up to the door, Alastor lagging behind with a sore, bird-filled belly. They knocked, and a pair of beady blue eyes with a large red nose peered out from a hole in the door.
“Who goes there?” came a whiny voice.
“Uh, erm, we are but poor, heartsick peasants who wish to have entry for ah, um, sanctuary.” Berbil scratched like a dog at the base of the door for added effect. “We wish only the joy of seeing the blessed union of the King and Queen, and would beg your mercy!”
“Nope.”
“What?”
“I said, nope!” came the voice. The wooden slat closed with sickening fluidity.
Berbil was speechless. Frig rapped tightly upon the door.
“What d’you want???” came the voice.
“If you do not grant us passage, good sir, I shall call upon a force greater than either of us could possibly comprehend.”
“What would that be?”
Frig smiled impishly. “I shall ask the help of that unstoppable force, the sheer power of which is unknown. It comes swiftly without warning, and eats alive those who resist. It pummels, dices, slices, thrashes and bashes, it—”
“Wait, did you say it ‘thrashes and bashes?’” asked the doorkeep.
“Aye.”
“What is this force you threaten to use against me, o wanderer who thinks so much of himself?” Frig looked sick at this last comment but answered. “I shall call, O insolent ward, upon the POPARAZZI!”
The doorkeep was taken aback for a moment, then closed the slat. Moments later, the door was open with the cowering old man inside it. “Please, go through kind masters!!” he fell at their feet in awe.
Berbil and company walked, and as they walked, he pondered the journey thus far. They were close to something big—he could feel it! But was it the end?
“Nothing ventured nothing gained!” quipped Kindul brightly from the back of the procession.

Trae
The service was to be held quickly, just in case any news got out about the elopement. The Hitchin' Post was gaudy beyond belief. Gilded fake gold covered all the pews and walls. Frescoes of poorly executed classical art spread across the ceiling, horribly complementing the jaunty red and gold chandelier. At the front of the chapel stood the king and queen. The other members of the party sat in the front pews. Just in front of the altar stood a small, quiet, serene looking priest. Suddenly, an usher walked up to the group of adventurers.

"Excuse me, the service is starting. Please take your seats," he said. The group obeyed, sitting down towards the back-middle of the chapel.

"I thought the Justice of the Peace was directing the ceremony?" said Gram-Krakar, angrily, towering over the pious little man at the front, draped in long flowing robes that merely emphasized his almost emaciated form. From his pew, the Justic of the Peace shrugged. Plans hadn't been well communicated. Gram-Krakar put her hands on her hips and stared at the king hard.

"Uh, it doesn't matter, really, does it dearest?" said Berbil's father. "Let's just get it over with."

The priest, his face peaceful as if not noticing the confusion of the bride and groom, humbly spread out his hands towards the couple. Then began a long, dull, terribly heart-felt, but unsufferably monotonous speech about the virtues of marriage and the qualities of true commitment. Slowly, throughout the speech, Berbil, who was nodding off, heard thuds as various guards around the chapel fell to the ground, asleep. He, himself, was about to fall asleep, when he noticed a spider on a web in the corner. He began to daydream about the spider. Who were its parents? Another thud. It was the father of the bride's head whacking the front of the pew as he fell over asleep. How old was it? Had it caught any flies there? Another thud. The Justice of the Peace was out. Berbil wanted to eat the spider.

"Do you, Dunsley Hartcroft the third, king of the realm, take Gram-Krakar the forty-eight to be your lawfully wedded wife?"

"I do," said the king, nervously.

The words shook Berbil from his reverie. He looked around. Everyone in the chapel, including his companions, were asleep. Only he, the priest, the bride, and the groom remained awake. Panic struck Berbil. If knew that if the king and queen were pronounced man and wife, his mission would be a failure. He wansn't exactly sure why it would be a failure, but it was a gut instinct he couldn't deny. Either it was intuition or the morning breath soup working its wonders, but he didn't have time to debate. Fear began to fill him. What could he do? How could he stop the wedding and oust his father?

Berbil's destiny come upon him in force. Once again, the royal blood and the orcish upbringing surged forth in his veins. He sprung from his seat. He didn't have a weapon, but there was not time to get one. He'd have to do it with his bare hands.

"Gram-Krakar the fourty-eigth, queen of the realm, do you take Dunsley Hartcroft the third, king of the other realm, to be your lawfully wedded husband?" asked the priest, solemnly.

Berbil was running down the aisle, his eyes wide with rage, his hands outstretched towards his enemies. This was his time. This was the moment. This aisleway was a lot longer than he thought it was. Suddenly, a was thrown to the ground.

"Stop right there!" a familiar voice shouted. It was Marvin, wielding Stomata furiously. He put the blade to Berbil's neck. "There's no escape for you now!" Marvin cackled. "Now you get to watch the king and queen be married, and all your hopes fall to dust!"

The king and queen, who had turned to look at the commotion, smiled. At last, the elusive resistence movement leader was caught. Now, they could never fail in their goals, which were undoubtedly very twisted and cruel, and of a domineering nature. The priest didn't seem to notice the confusion. Everyone else remained asleep.

"Well! Get one with it. Pronounce us man and wife!" shouted Gram-Krakar at the little man in the robes. The sharpness of the tone seemed to hurt the priest's feelings. His eyes got very big and very round, like he was about to cry.

"I now pronounce you...." he began, his voice cracking... Berbil awaited the dreaded word, knowing all his hopes and dreams were crushed.

"I now pronounce you..." A slow, cruel smile played across the priest's lips. "Dead!" As if out of no where, there was a loud, horrendous shriek, and suddenly, the music of electric guitars and full orchestra broke out in a nearly deafening speed metal version of "In the Hall of the Mountain King" from the Pyr Gynte sweet. Doing a back flip, the priest landed on the organ, his robes flying off, revealing a full black suit strapped with more weapons that could be imagined. He stood, basking in his theme music, slowly pulling various bladed weapons from their sheaths. He was giving the guards time to wake up from the spell he had cast on them. Why? He wanted to extend his scene. The first guard charged him. With a spinning side kick, he sent the fool sprawling to the floor. Two more thrust their spears at him, but with a flip, he was behind, and they fell, pierced in the throat by double throwing knives. More guards came, and more guards fell, the priest leaping onto the walls, jumping from one guard to the other, barely touching the floor, all the time in perfect rhythm to the mysterious theme music, which was totally awesome.

Terrified, the king and queen stood clinging to eachother in the aisle, not knowing where to run, though outside might have been a good idea, as that's where everyone else was running, including the Justice of the Peace, who hitched up his black robes and ran for it, screaming in a high falcetto, wilting the red carpet as he passed.

Marvin ran, too, leaving Berbil alone on the floor. When all the guards were dead or gone, the priest slowly walked up to the trembling king and queen.

"It is time for you to die!" he said, and then killed them. He picked up his robes from off of the ground and slipped them on, turning to face Berbil, who stood, wide eyed.

"Who are you?" Berbil asked.

"What?" shouted the priest.

"Who are you?" shouted Berbil, trying to be heard over the music.

"Hold on a second, I can't hear you!" The priest clapped twice, and the music turned off. 'What's that again?" he said.

"Who are you?" asked Berbil. "How'd you know of our mission?"

"I didn't kid," the priest said, striking a cool pose. "It's just what I do."

"But I thought it was my destiny to kill the king?"

"Well, kid, you'll just have to be quicker about it next time. Sorry." With that, the priest clapped again, and the screaming metal totally sweet theme song burst back again. Quickly, the priest ran down the aisle. Berbil turned to watch him go. He was still running down the aisle. The aisle was a lot longer than the priest had expected. At last, he came to the back window of the Hitchin' Post and in a large puff of smoke, with a single leap, was gone. The music stopped. Berbil wondered why he hadn't used the door.

Berbil's companions had fled during the fighting, and so Berbil journeyed home again, as one of his father's captains had already declared himself king. He couldn't get back his old job at the pig farm. His rival, Thumbdrum, had applied and gotten it in his absence. Berbil had to beg for food from his old adoptive parents, but they were angry at him for running off, and wouldn't take him in. He slept outside in the alley of the tavern, doing odd jobs for anyone that needed help. About a month later, the pigs that Berbil used to keep randomly dug up a large stockpile of gold coins. Thumbdrum became a rich man in the town and married Gwano. They lived happily all their days. As for Berbil, he started drinking a lot, trying to forget his sorrows. One night, as he lay in an alley, he called out angrily to his great great grandfather.

"I thought you said it was my destiny! I thought you told me I'd kill the king!"


Amazingly, his great great grandfather answered.

"Sorry, you've got the wrong one. You're after your great grandfather on your father's mother's side. "

"Oh, sorry." Berbil waited a few seconds, and then called out to his great grandfather on his father's mother's side.

"I thought you said it was my destiny! I thought you told me I'd kill the king!"

Amazingly, his great grandfather on his father's mother's side answered him.

"Yeah, well, it was a pain induced hallucination. It isn't something to stake your life on."

"What about now?" Berbil asked. "How are you speaking to me, now?"

"You're drunk."

After a long time, Berbil decided to make a life of wandering, and struck off for far and distant lands.

The End.

AnimaMage
As if!

I just received news that New Line Cinema's gotten wind of the book and it's raving success and has put Peter Jackson in the works of making The Ides of Starch a major motion picture. I've also heard that Leonardo Dicrappio has applied for the role of Berbil, with Angelina Jolie as Frig and Sean Connery as Kindul.

Seeing as how this is obviously *yeah right...* a great avenue for making some money, I've set to work on the sequel. But check out my post on the General Discussion section!!! We need feedback to make these better, if you will.

Thanks for reading,
Joe














AnimaMage

If you have no moral bone in your body whatsoever, please skip this introduction. Please, by all means. Be my guest!
I just want to make it known to you that we wish to keep the vein of the story similar (if not identical to) the first part of the Ides of Starch. If you got a character to introduce, great. But don’t expect the character to be all cool and radical, as the whims of satire shall distort whatever we put on the page. This goes for me and Trae too *sob* poor Marvin…
If you can keep with the tone of the first hound, then by all means contribute. If you have good things to say, share them! But know that the world of Berbil will, like a shattered mirror, distort whatever you put into it. Mahah. Mwahah! Mwhahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahah!!!! *evil laugh*

And I think we owe it to poor Berbil to see him through to a good ending, don’t you? Well that is, if the contractor I’ve sold everything to thinks we shouldn’t make another sequel… CHA CHING!!!

I'll have the story posted in a few hours. Gotta conjure up some lame dialogue

AnimaMage
The commercial starts up with cool music. We see Berbil, dressed in monk’s robes. A guy we don’t know. Another guy. An evil looking girl. A large pan of a vast wilderness involving trees and mountains. A cute squirrel. A fight scene in the middle of a town. Large pots of boiling heads. Disturbing violence. An old man says something unintelligible—is it Kindul? Frig appears, but we can only see her outline. Has she shaved her beard? More violence. Cinematic Dialogue

THE IDES OF STARCH PART II—Don’t miss it! Keep posted for updates!

AnimaMage
Berbil stuttered. It was a cold, windy night in the small town of Kuristrudel and all the lights were dim. It was like everyone was asleep except for the drunks. And considering the fact that it was three in the morning and Berbil was mad drunk, such an assessment was probably not too far from the truth.
And actually, Berbil didn’t really stutter. He vomited, thinking he was stuttering. That sort of thing happens when you’re drunk from Fairy-water like Berbil was. What he vomited was something like the town’s main dish, the Curry Strudel of national fame. For that’s all the townsfolk made.

And yet, though it had been four years since the toppling of his pathetic father, Berbil wasn’t entirely helpless. He had a beard now, for one thing. If one has facial hair he is almost guaranteed a place at the bar, because in Berbil’s day you didn’t have cards to get carded. You also didn’t have drinking ages either, which is why Berbil was only twenty and lying so stone drunk in a ditch that “stuttering” meant ejecting the contents of one’s meal all over oneself.

Berbil could also read minds.
Though he didn’t know it, of course. Intoxication seems to have that effect on people. Even great wizards like that idiot Merlin have their sad weaknesses. For Merlin it was lechery. For Berbil it was ale. Well, fairy water to be exact. As in, stuff brewed by fairies: sticky sweet and super strong it is. Many a sad loser has found himself rather happy in its sway.
And ‘twas a pity that Berbil was a sad loser himself, for he had inherited magical powers from his aunt’s mother’s sister’s grandddaughter’s cousin’s uncle’s stepwife that would have once allowed him to become a powerful conjurer.
Yet every time his mind began to stray from the incessant buzzing of alcohol, it turned to the incessant buzzing of magical forces. Neh, he would think, then take another sip of ale.

Yet lying in a ditch on the side of the road has a unique effect on people. I’ve been told that Leonardo Da Vinci envisioned The Last Supper while drunk in a trough at the “Milking Grape” Tavern in Italy.
For Berbil, lying in a ditch meant that he couldn’t get up. It also meant that he couldn’t get any more to drink from the bar. What a strange quandary… he said to himself. Instead it emerged more as “Blata stragggee kwonneBLAH!!!” With the blah meaning that he vomited some more curry.

Meanwhile the moon was off with the dish and spoon doing something promiscuous or the other. A cow came to the ditch and started licking Berbil’s face. Perhaps cows like curry, I dunno, but it woke poor Berbil up. Ah, magic should be my life’s pursuit might have been a thought that crossed his mind, but sadly it wasn’t. He first thought about hairy zucchini’s and tortellini and curry and then got sick all over again.

It began to rain, and the cow started to walk away. But before it could, a thought (cows have so few) sprang into its head. Berbil heard the thought briefly between wretchings, then went back to his business.


The next morning, though, he remembered. He remembered how grass was so much sweeter than curry and that it was just so fresh and sweet, and that fairy water didn’t taste so hot and made him sick and yucky all over. So two things happened. First, Berbil ordered a plate of alfalfa. Second, he laid off drinking.
And that’s when it began. A figure walked into the tavern that had become Berbil’s halfway house between the Ditch and the pigsty. The figure, tall and straight and gangly as a spring feather, strode through and ordered a drink.

And the thought of a drink made Berbil wretch all over his plate of steamed alfalfa.

Trae
The strang tall figure, drink in hand, notice poor Berbil where he sat at the table. Quietly, he approached him and sat in the remaining clean seat. He sat quietly, examining the wretched figure before him. Berbil tried to examine the strange man, but he was sitting in front of a window, and the light killed his perpetual hangover. At last, the man spoke.

"Could it be that you are a drunkard in need of reform, written with a strange penchant for regurgitation, but who posseses rare talents? Might you be waiting for the skilled but unfortunately over-the-hill master to save you from your despondency and give you purpose in life by setting you up as the heir to his legacy?" The man looked the poor drunkard dead in the eyes. Berbil noticed that one of his eyes was blue, and the other was also blue. They might have reminded him of an ocean swell, but it didn't.

"Uh, no?" Berbil managed to say.

"Oh..." said the strange, feathery tall figure. For a while, they were silent. The man sipped his drink, A Fairy Water and Troll Sweat mix -- not something the average pub-goer can handle early in the morning... Berbil chewed on his alfalfa.

"Suppose," began the man, "That I recognized in you a great talent. A talent worth refining. A talent, I dare say, that could be fashioned into such a power as to bring order to the shattered kingsdoms which, in case you didn't know, have been engulfed in civil war since the death of the king. Just suppose." Berbil stared blankly at the wall. "Would you come with me and let me train you?" Berbil finally turned to look at the man sitting across from him. The blue eyes shone out under the short, white, spiky hair.

"You know, I think this plot is going in an entirely different direction. I'm pretty much, uh, cursed. I can't do anything right in life."

"Ah! But you don't understand! With my help, you can change all that! You can change your destiny, Berbil." The stranger reached out his hand. "Come, let me, the Peppermint Avenger, show you what you could become."

It was like a light turned on inside Berbil's mind. For a moment, he saw his whole life stretched out behind him, leading up to this moment, and before him was the great unknown of the future, just waiting to be taken in stride. It was true. He could change his destiny! This was the moment of choice. He wouldn't be Berbil the drunk any longer. It was time. There was hope. There was a future. There was promise. There was a face staring at him out of his alfalfa. No, really, that one piece of alfalfa looked exactly like a nose, and there were the eyes, and, with a quick flick of his fork, there was a mouth. Berbil forgot everything he'd been thinking.







AnimaMage
The face which had just appeared to him through the mangles of alfalfa stared blankly up at Berbil for a moment. That wasn’t what blanked his mind, however. The face, woven from green leafy sprigs, began to move. And when it began to talk, Berbil had very little question that he had drunk too much the night before.

“Berbil” said the face.
“Urp” replied Berbil, feeling sick.
“Berbil, it’s me again! Your great-grandfather on your father's mother's side!” began the face, but the last part was rather garbled and came out more like a drunken troll’s sonnet. That was because Berbil had ejected the last of his stomach fluid into the face’s “mouth.”
“This has to stop!” broke in the stranger, who took out a large bag from a hidden pocket. From the bag, which had been drawn with red and white sugarlace, the stranger withdrew a single round candy and stuffed it into Berbil’s maw.

After the stranger placed the candy into his mouth, Berbil decided he might be sick again. When a sugary lightness replaced the sharp taste of half-digested curry and alfalfa in his mouth, Berbil decided he might get very sick because fairy water was rather sweet and the bile on the plate in front of him smelled something horrible. And then, just as he was about to open his mouth to wretch again, a sharp pang enveloped his internal organs. A faint sound of the Messiah chorus rang in his ears.

And Berbil felt better, for the first time in several years.

He turned to face the alfalfa again, but the grass was scattered and the vision had passed. The strange wanderer leaned over and tapped him on the shoulder. “I think I know what he would have told you anyways,” a single sharp arched eyebrow framed a cool blue eye. “I think he would have told you to seize this one where it counts. You should come with me.”

Berbil looked around, confused. “I guess it couldn’t be much worse than here,” he said, a hint of orcish temerity in his no-longer glazed eyes.

“Excellent!” started the traveler, standing straight and tall like a scarecrow before him. He bowed low, spilling a few candies on the floor before his high boots. “My name is Quemmerillious, or Quem the Avenger for short. I hail from the far-flung land of Gratillion across the ocean and serve the high Magus Peevicsh.” A few rabbits magically materialized when he said this name and began dancing the Can Can across the floor. Quem swatted them away and slicked his short hair back.

“The Magus has given me three tasks to fulfill before I can take you back to him, as part of your training and my own graduation requirement. We must first travel to the desert-land of Chimikunga!” he swept his cloak out behind him in a high salute.

Berbil sighed. There were so many Type-A personalities in the world, he decided. It was hardly worth keeping up.


SisterGrimm
A squat cloaked woman sprang, or rather flopped, across the room. "The forces that be have told me you are going to Chimikunga." She sang. Her breathe smelled of Fairy water mixed with Elderberry. Berbil felt queesy for a moment, before the smell and taste of peppermint filled his sinuses.

"Oh no, not you.I already told you Demvi, I don't want to marry and settle down in your stupid swamp and have wonderful little children to eat when they try and nibble away at your blasted house." Quem moaned covering his face with a hand like a worn out parent tired of telling a disruly child what to do.

"No you blasted old fool, it is I." The old woman said spinning in a great circle, her cloak mflying in all directions. "Moldivianna the Great Sorceress from the waste of Palmarry which boder the Great Desert of Slubiwitzs." The same haggar face stared out from under the greying hood. "But you, young adventurer, may call me Moldi." She said with a large crooked, yellow smile.

Quem rolled his eyes. "I thought I told you not to follow me."

"Just because your spells didnt work correctly and you made me into this horrific thing does not mean I'm going to disappear. Honestly, asking me to change to a man so you could grauduate from Magus Peevicsh school for the learned was bad enough, then your stupid spells fail, and now you expect me to disappear like a plate of curry." She glowered at Quem as she flicked away the can-canning rabbits. "I hardly think that's far at all." She pointed a long crooked, warty finger at Quem. "In fact I'd say your being down right nasty, and you shouldnt be nasty.." She smirked at him cruely.

"No, not that, not the cinnamin." He cowered as red dust exploded from Moldi's finger covering Quem in a light film of red dust.

Quem coughed and shook the cinnamin powder off his robe as he sneezed horribly. "Now look *achooh* what you've *achooch* done. I'll be *achooh* sneezing for a *achooh* month."

"I guess you should be more wise about who you tell of your weaknesses." Moldi smiled, making her face look like a cracked bit of discolored clay that someone had stepped on.

"Now Berbil." She said turning away from Quem. "You really shouldn't travel with that one to Chimikunga, you should come with me to Albataradisumoto and help me graduate and I'l train you." She smiled again and the smell of Fairy water almost overpowered Berbil even though the smell of pepperment still hovered somewhere in his head. "Well?" Moldi asked looking straight into Berbil's eyes and moving her horrible face within a few inches of his.

Trae
Like much of the readership, Berbil had been caught off guard by the sudden introduction of a new character right when he thought the scene was going to change. Even more confusing was the offer of training by this sorceress. Something smelled fishy to Berbil, and it wasn't him this time.

"Uh, no?" Berbil said. Suddenly the ugly woman vanished into thin air. Quem slowly clapped his hands.

"Well done... You have passed the first test," he said. "Loyalty! Loyalty is what it will take to study under me. And dedication. But this unmasking of the false teacher has proven that you posess other important abilities. Was it the reference to Magus Peevicsh as a school instead of a person that tipped you off? Or perhaps the use cinnamon as my weakness, when all the world knows that the Peppermint Avenger has only one weakness! And...it isn't cinammon."

"Uh, I just...uh..."

"Well," said Quem, "We can speak of this at a later time. As for now, we really must travel to the desert-land of Chikimunga!" He swept his cloak out behind him in a high salute. Then, the wizard swept his hands across part of the room, and a glimmering wall formed, "like liquid ice," Berbil thought... Suddenly, across the wall flashed a vision of the desert-land of Chikimunga. It was an absolute desert -- hence the name. Tall sand dunes rose up high into the air under a beating sun. A long line caravan of camels were cinematically silhouetted against the horizon.

"Wow," said Berbil. "Is this a travel portal?"

"No, no," said Quem. "This is just a picture. I'm reminding myself what it looks like so I don't pass it by on the way." Quem studied the picture for a while and then waved his hands in front of it. The wall of magic dissapeared instantly. "Righty-o, then, let's be on our way."

AnimaMage
In the spirit of departing from the main story, something very important was going on elsewhere in the far east. It was in the land of Hararmpit, a blighted place pockmarked with volcanoes and lava flows and had all the charm and appeal of a hall monitor stuck in the full squalor of adolescence. It was peopled by the most undesirable sorts, like ogresses and succubi, with not a few republicans amongst them.

But of course, the main action was going on not in some dark tower of inky blackness, no dungeon of despair. Not even, perhaps, an official headquarters of the black police. Nay, it was in the basement of the Academy of Necromancy, room D005. The halomancy classroom. For those of you who don’t know what that means, it was a room where only the nerds go.
Of course, every dark lord and summoned revenant has to start somewhere, doesn’t he?

And the stooped figure bending over small rings of salt on the threshing floor was prime potential. A sniveling little runt, he was. Black oily hair and cracked glasses, scuffmarks on the elbows and knees, cracked and gnarled hands from hours of toil: these were his trademarks. His name was Eliot.
Oh, and even though he was the last year student who still got picked on by the new freshies, he was indeed the top of his class.

Eliot had a master plan. He was going to take over the world.

….well, eventually at least. Not any time soon, he was sure of that. He would have to find a suitable second-in-command, of course. And there was the whole issue of toppling the current dark lord and so forth. The job market these days was packed with positions and opportunities just waiting to be filled by some fell-handed acolyte. Just hold on to what matters and you’ll be fine, his grandpa had said. The old canker had lost several limbs and an ear, but he still had what mattered. That’s what Eliot figured, really.

Sprinkling more salt on the image before him, Eliot saw the scruffy young man in his vision. He saw him look in bewilderment at the strange old woman—and yes! There was that brief flash in his eyes that said a thousand words’ worth. He was ripe for the taking…and yet, Eliot wanted nothing to do with him.
That idiot had tried to kill his father!

For goodness’ sakes…

And he didn’t like peppermint. Ugh, he detested it.

------------------------------------

Berbil decided that, all in all, he liked Quem. The man had a fast horse, at any rate. “On, my darling Exchequer!!!” he screamed gaily into the wind.

The horse needed a new name. But in the hours that they traveled, Exchequer had pulled them through some tough spots. They had crossed the Codon Mountains, swept through the Basidia Forest, and had just begun the long stretch across the Blastophian Wastelands. Chikimunga was three days’ ride away, though, and there was nothing Berbil could do but sigh and wait.

But as they began riding, Berbil felt small tendrils of thought creeping up into his mind from God-knows-where with nasty little whispers. They told him things that he must do, places he must go. To get a hold on some more fairy-water.

Berbil was addicted—and he had no clue. He began to pick out things—small things—against the sky. In the clouds. In the rocks. They looked like huge kegs of ale, brimming over with musty foam. The waters in the occasional oasis lapped languidly at their shores like huge tubs flowing with fairy-drink. Even Quem started to look brown and wooden, with a head of hair that was the foam and—

He had started to drool on Quem’s neck.

------------------------------------

They soon after stopped at an oasis. Quem looked sternly at Berbil, the consternation in his face quite apparent in the foamy yellow sudsy light. Berbil started to drool more—then stopped. Quem didn’t look very happy, did he?
“Nope” said Quem. Woah, how did he—
“Know that?” his teacher asked. Wow, this was getting really—
“Scary?” Quem crossed his arms. Berbil nodded.
“I’ve been watching your thoughts, Berbil. I think this needs to stop.” Quem opened up his red pouch and withdrew a brown toffee. “In an effort to make your character somewhat less repetitive and annoying, I’m going to give you this.”
“What is it?”
“It’ll teach you a lesson. I expect it to last for a week or two, and at the end you’ll be able to control yourself, I hope. Enough of the alcohol, Berbil.”
Ah, a cure-all. Just the thing we need for a poorly-wrought—
“Narrative? Yes, but what do you expect when the management keeps getting changed on us all the time, Berbil?” Quem raised his hands up to the air and addressed the heavens. “WHAT DO YOU THINK YOU WERE DOING WHEN YOU SENT ME TH—” Berbil ate the toffee and decided he didn’t really care what Quem had to say.
He didn’t quite understand what anyone was saying anymore.
For all in the course of about five seconds, Berbil had gone from being a scraggly half-wit human to a mouse. Well, a gerbil to be precise. Berbil the Gerbil.

Quem finished his rant and picked Berbil up. “Why, oh why did I have to mix up the de-humanizer with the panacea candy?” he asked. But it was something of a fitting punishment, he supposed. Berbil pooped on his hand in sympathy.

The wizard began walking away. In the far distance, had he looked, he would have seen two figures riding a pair of buffalo outlined against the setting sun.

Trae
Not only would the wizard have seen two buffalo riding figures had he looked, he also would have known that they were heading to the desert trade city of Merch-Andise if he would have bothered to wave them down and ask. But, it was too late. They were out of sight of the wizard now, having just crested the sand dune and begun the long descent down into the Mat-Er-Ialist valley -- a place inhabited by horrid wraiths, traders, and plebians collectively known as Am-Erikanz. But enough of the over-used naming convention.

The two bison-masters were known as Al'Khalamin and Bert. They were brothers, these two. Al'Khalamin was the oldest, and had the perfect personality for trading. People flocked to him, ready to do business. Sibling affinity had led him to join economic forces with his brother, and since then, they had become rather successful. They traded in bison -- a rare beast, and hardly ever seen in the desert regions. In fact, their slogan was "Buy a bison, pretend to be where the grass grows green!" It worked like Bob the snake charmer, only with people. The brothers hoped to one day have a bison pasture at every oasis. Of course, the bison didn't really have much practical value. Most people just ate theirs, eventually, but that was good; they'd need another. They weren't even very good mounts, as Al'Khalamin and Bert were discovering. It was a very bumpy ride. And yet, despite the drawbacks of owning a bison, their business ventures had grossed fifty chickens, five mules, eight dromedaries, and a couple bags of salt.

Yet, despite Al'Khalamin's impeccable people skills, everyone knew that Bert was the brains of the operation. Bert focused his brother's abilities, and their dramatic rise in the business world of Merch-Andise was due primarily to his mental prowess...and the work of a few well-used goons -- threat of death, the only way to create bison demand.

And so they were riding long and hard, hoping to reach Merch-Andise by morning, so they could celebrate the grand opening of their third bison pasture. It was a big event, and some of their rivals might want to interfere, but fortunately, Bert knew how to handle that.

All this and more the wizard would have learned had he inquired of the sunset-framed figures (using force when necessary), but he didn't.

And because he didn't, Al'Khalamin and Bert never did and never will have any import whatsoever to the plot of this story.

AnimaMage
Instead, Quem continued on in silence for many days, letting Berbil see the natural grandeur of the wilderness. The sun set and rose for many mornings and evenings (not respectively) and the creatures of the desert watched in silence as mouse and man trekked onwards. If only Exchequer hadn’t croaked… thought Quem to himself. Seedeatdrinkhavefunnibbleurinatedefecate came to Berbil’s mind.

Indeed, mid-planar horses are much more liable to die than the high or low-planar horses. See, it’s the makeup of the bone structure that determines whether a horse can survive without a constant source of water in relative distance at a minimum angle of 50 degrees. But this is entirely irrelevant to the story. The point was that by the 6th day of pointless wandering, Quem was beginning to see double no matter if it was at a 50 degree angle or a 48.56 degree angle. His flask of elf-juice was dry. His tongue was stuck to his tonsils. He dared not try his peppermints, for he knew what they could do. And Berbil was starting to look reeeeal tasty.

And Berbil sensed all this, even though he was a full-fledged rodent. His powers had sharpened through the desert heat, and he was fully aware of his master’s hunger. So that night, while Quem slept in a useless slump, Berbil crept out into the desert sands, his paws shivering slightly.

The next morning, at Quem’s feet, there lay a pile of seeds and a small brown root, which he devoured promptly.

The same thing happened the next morning. And the next. And the next. But there was a problem, see. Quem was going in circles. So one night, about a week and a half after his transformation, Berbil set out to gather some information from the desert creatures.

He happened upon a scorpion first. “Uh, excuse me?” he asked in animal talk.
“What???” answered the scorpion. “You got a prob wit’ me?”
Summoning up his courage, Berbil asked, “do you know the way to Chikimunga?”
The scorpion scrunched up its mandibles in a way that could either be interpreted as amused or violently ill and replied, “Go ask da boss.” He beckoned with a pincer to a large gaping hole in the ground just a few feet away.

Slightly worried at the Scorpion’s expression still, Berbil crept past the scorpion and stood at the black abyss’s lower lip. He didn’t like the feelings he was sensing from the scorpion, but he needed to know the way to Chikimunga…

nnarrill
Berbil stood quivering at the edge of the darkness that was ... the abyss. The small tremors created by his trembling body shook grains of sand loose from their moorings and sent them tumbling down, down, down...until they were lost to sight deep within ... the abyss.

He glanced behind him, wanting to make sure that the scorpion had not decided that a Berbil for breakfast was a good way to keep the doctor away. It hadn't, much to Berbil's delight. But it stood aloof, (not a very easy thing to do when one has one's tail arching high over ones' own head) watching the events unfold on the edge of ... the abyss.

Now what? Berbil did not wish to go any further into ... the abyss, but he desparately needed directions! What to do?!? Oh, what to do?!?

Then, from somewhere within ... the abyss, Berbil thought he heard a sort of sound. A sigh, almost, but with words surrounding it. He listened harder. He knelt down on the burning hot sand. He placed his tiny little paws on the sand, very close to ... the abyss. He brought one scraggly little ear close to the ground. And he listened. It was faint, the sound that came out of the ground, but he blocked all other thoughts from his mind and concentrated on that sound.

(All right. It's not like it's very difficult to block all other thoughts from your mind if you have no thoughts there to begin with, but let's give the poor chappy some dignity. Really!)

So, there was Berbil, all hunched down and listening. What did he hear? What did he hear?

Trae
Drums... He heard drums... And a rockin' surf organ like none he'd ever heard before. Falling into a sort of trance, Berbil entered the blackness of the cave without even realizing it. Onward he pressed, onward he trode, into the dark abyss. And nothing else did he hear, except a sinister hiss... The organs and drums, their sound did enchant. And Berbil walked on, no time to recant.
Down a long tunnel of darkness and fear, clearer and cooler the music to hear,
The surf organ rocked and the drums beat with style,
As into the earth traveled Berbil a mile.
Then opening onto a cavernous cave,
Everything completely decked out for a rave,
The tunnel did end and Berbil did step,
Into a party of dubious rep.
Strobe lights, disco-balls, and black lights galore
Berbil couldn't conceive how to possibly fit more,
And up on a daise on the far wall was seen,
A rocking band of cobras decked out in green sheen,
And writhin' and groovin' across the shiny dance floor --
Obsidian polished to black glittering decore --
Were cobras all breakdancing and spinning their coils,
A mass of serpentine looping and roils.
Had Berbil the gerbil not been spell-bound already,
Cast deep he'd have been in Enchantment's swift eddy.
For time out of mind he stood there and gazed,
As cobras danced and the organ amazed,
But suddenly a snake at the edge raised its head,
And Berbil thought he would surely be dead,
For with a hiss resounding off stone and off scales,
He brought the whole cavern to the tips of their tales.
The music stopped and Berbil did quaver,
To see if the snakes would an audience favor,
Or if in a stomach he soon would reside.
It was for the Boss his doom to decide.
Parting the center the snakes all moved back,
As down from the organ stepped serpent sheer black,
But for a white spot standing out on his hood
That in the black lights glowing formidably stood.
Slowly and surely from the band he did slide,
Approaching the gerbil with nowhere to hide,
And coming to tower a short way away,
In the center of the dance floor decided to stay,
And spreading his hood and flicking his tongue,
Berbil feared he had slipped from dear life's last rung,
But then the snake with hissing and pride,
Did speak out with venom, pompous and snide,
"What brings you here, gerbil? For well you should know,
Without fitting reason, we'll not let you go."

AnimaMage

“Uh…” squeaked Berbil, unsure as to what to say. He couldn’t handle speaking in rhyme.
“That’sssss not a good enough reason!” hissed the Boss.
“Er,” began Berbil.
“Sstill not good enough!”
“Well, y-you see…”
NOW we’re getting ssomewhere!”
“I’m lost.”
The snake dropped his jaw, dislocating it. “Obvioussly. Most of us here are losssst. I jussst ssso happen to know where you are going to be in a few momentssss.”
“You do?”
“Yessss. In my belly, you ssseee. That isss, if you can’t come up with ssssufficient reason to turn my pity.”
“Well, how ‘bout uh, a riddle game?”
“I think that’ss been used before.”
“Uh, a contest of strength?”
“Too easssy.” Berbil thought long and hard about what he could do.
“Ah, I have an idea. What if…I guessed your name?”
“You’re not sssscoring points for originality here.”
“I know! What if you think of something, and if I can guess what it is, you’ll tell me what I want to know!”
“I sssuppose. Not as though you’re any better off than the test of sstrength.” The snake closed his eyes in concentration. “What am I thinking of right now?”
Berbil put his right paw out on the ground and squeezed his eyes shut. He cleared his mind of all thoughts and concentrated hard on the Boss. He could picture Quem standing behind him, saying something…but he couldn’t make it out because he was so focused.
An image was coming…
It was approaching…
Almost there…
Getting…
Close…
Till…
It…

..
.
..

Was…
Getting…
Ever closer…
And it was…a caramel?
Quem whispered something in his ear, but Berbil couldn’t understand it.
“Well, what isss it???” asked the Boss impatiently. Berbil opened his eyes and smiled.
“A caramel.”
“What????” Berbil cringed.
“Did I—”
“You bet you did! How did you do that????” the Boss’s nostril’s flared.
“Now…uh, can you tell me how to get to Chikimunga?” the Boss looked confused for a moment.
“Wha-yeah, uh, well, jusssst sstay here tonight and we’ll show you tomorrow. I wanna talk about potential bussssinesss…” Berbil sighed.

The next morning, after a long night of business proposals and countless offers from hopeful snakes, Berbil sauntered back to Quem’s sleeping form, a party of groupie snakes in tow. The groupies parted ways and slithered in the direction of Chikimunga, leaving a trail of smooth footprints. Quem woke, nodded, and followed without a word.

They made good time, hoping that the story would finally move forward and, in two days’ time, they reached Chikimunga in the middle of the day.

nnarrill
Quem had not been wasting time during the arduous journey. They had crammed 48 hours of travel into two days, and he had been thinking hard for that entire time. Except for the times that he was hungry, which was about 47.95 hours, but the point is that he had been thinking hard thoughts.

It all started as they all started to get ready to start on the journey to Chikimunga after that interlude with the snakes. Something was amiss. Somehow, the picture that presented itself to Quem as he mounted his trusty steed was not right. 48 hours (and two saddle sores) later, it hit him!

"I've got it" he shouted to everyones astonishment. They were, at that very moment in time, going through the required detoxification station that rid all visitors to Chikimunga of the deadly and rather embarassing parasititic disease called Navel Lintitus.

Berbil tried to look inconspicuous as all attention turned towards Quem. The situation didn't improve when Quem ran toward Berbil and shouted "They left footprints!" This utterance cleared the deck for several blocks as the inhabitants of Chikimunga moved away from the individual they thought was infected with a strange variation of Navel Lintitus...the kind that left footprints. Yuck!

Berbil wasn't sure what to say, so he said "Tunafish do that, on occasion." Which totally confounded Quem.

"No, no, no. The snakes! The snakes! They slithered toward Chikimunga ahead of us."

"You are exceptionally perceptive today, Quem." Berbil managed.

"They are snakes!" Quem yelled. This last pronouncement caused the last of the technicians operating the detox unit to spill the remaining contents of his breakfast from his stomach onto the parched, dusty ground.

'Hmmm' thought Berbil. 'That looks tasty.'

Quem interrupted that icky thought by hopping up and down. First on one foot, and then on the other. "Don't you see?? They were snakes, and they left footprints! There's an opportunity to make some money with that kind of thing! Just think of it...crowds will be lined up for miles to see snakes with feet. We'll get endorsements from shoe companies, from athletes foot medications ... from toenail clipper companies! We'll be rich, rich, rich beyond our wildest dreams!"

Quem stopped himself and looked at Berbil. "Wait a minute. Why am I saying 'We'll be rich.' I'll be rich. You will just be Berbil."

Trae
At that moment, Berbil lost it. He'd been keeping that fool of a mage alive for days in the desert, risking his life amongst cobras and scorpions and all sorts of horrid creatures. He'd had enough.

With terrible speed, Berbil drew his cutlass. Leaping from his wooden leg, he sped through the air toward Quem, his tri-cornered hat falling off to reveal a bloodied bandana underneath. The cutlass raised, preparing to slash the mage's throat, when suddenly...


Suddenly, the story dissapeared, and an eerie voice, accompanied by the sound of typing, filters through.

"On the behalf of all the writers, I would like to formally say that I am sincerely sorry. An attempt will be made at salvaging the story from the damages of the last five posts. Thank you for your patience."

Just as suddenly, the story reappeared.

Berbil and Quem stood on the very edge of the desert sands. Before them rose the rocky crags of Chikimunga. A harsh wind howled.
"What happened?" moaned Berbil, put his human hand to his human head. "I dreamed I was a gerbil."
"And I," said Quem, "dreamed snakes were leaving footprints."
"I'm so confused." Berbil shook his head thuroughly.
"That wouldn't be anything unusual," said Quem under his breath, but before the comment could sink into Berbil's brain, the mage continued. "No, my novice. That was the Hallu Ci'Nogen desert, a place of powerful visions and occaisional euphoric highs. Only those with strong wills or type "O" blood can pass through safely. It was another test for you, before I allow you to study the magic arts. But worry not, you have passed, and now we must enter Chikimunga."

Quem took a step forward, but Berbil noticed a dust devil form nearby, swirling around in circles. At first, it looked like any other dust devil, but then it began to grow.
"Um, uh," Berbil said, confused at the strange occurence, but before Quem noticed it, a sound of thunder erupted, and the dust devil shattered, spewing sand in Berbil's face. When he looked up again, there was a tall, fierce man cowled in black robes, holding a fiercesome gnarled staff, and standing upon a boulder nearby.

"Berbil!" shouted Quem. "Stay back!"
"Is this another test?" Berbil asked.
"No! This is no test." Quem said, brandishing his staff.
"Shutup!" shouted the black-robed wizard. "You have passed the desert, but you cannot enter Chikimunga unless you can defeat me." A cruel laugh emanated from the low hood. "An you, o' Peppermint Avenger, I challenge to a battle of creatures!"

Quem's face hardened, and his knuckles turned white around his staff.

"How do you know my identity?" Quem said between gritted teeth. The other mage laughed again.
"I'm no fool. My masters know more than you could imagine."
"Who are your masters?" Quem asked. The black mage sighed.
"Think I'm going to just tell you this early in the plot?"
"Well, it never hurts asking."
"True. Anyway! Let's get on with it."
"Any time," said Quem.

The black robed magician began to cackle and raised his staff into the air. The wind whipped all around, a miniature sandstorm. Lightning flashed in the sky, and thunder boomed.
"Ahahahah! Fool Peppermint Avenger should be your name, for you have agreed to a challenge you cannot win! My powers are far greater than thine, for I control the serpents, and you only control small furry rodents! Behold! Serpents arise!"
The sand began to shift, and then, from all around, serpents rose up. All sorts of serpents were there -- cobras, diamond backs, rattle snakes, and every other kind imaginable. Berbil almost fainted at the sight. The very ground seemed to slither. And...was that the boss? Berbil looked to Quem, fearing that the end was near, but he was surprised at what he saw instead.

Where Quem had been standing was altogether a new person. He was robed in glowing red, and his face was a fierce black, and his hair brightest white. A light of peppermint hue flowed from him, as did the smell of peppermint. Power seemed to swirl around him. The very sight daunted Berbil, but the black mage was still laughing.

"You've no chance of defeating me! Your command of small, furry rodents stand no chance."

The Peppermint Avenger slowly raised his staff into the air, and the flowing red ether around him intensified.

"You know not the power of the Avenger. Small furry rodents! I call upon you." Quem jutted his staff into the air as the snakes came speeding towards him, and then, in a voice that shook the very ground and knocked the snakes off their feet, the Avenger shouted. "Mongeece! Arise!"











SisterGrimm
((Snakes have feet now do they Trae???? I do believe college is sapping the sanity from you dear cousin.))

nnarrill
The music that had been building toward this very moment in the story suddenly came to a screeching halt. In fact, everything came to a halt.

"Not again!" whined Quem.

"Uh, pardon me." said a voice that seemed to be coming out of a frozen dust devil populated by snakes.

"Who said that?"

"I did." And out stepped a very sharply dressed mongoose. His black pleated pants and dove-gray shoes polished within an inch of their lives were complimented by a soft blue shirt and a darker blue striped 'power tie'. The handkerchief in his breast pocket was of the same material as his tie. Of all the mongeese Quem had seen, this one was by far the best dressed.

"And who are you?" Quem asked.

"I am Mannerificustardschnoz, principal negotiator for the Union of Mongeese and other Furry Creatures. I have come to negotiate a business deal with you."

"You don't happen to have a nickname, do you?"

"No, I do not. You may call me Mannerificustardschnoz, principal negotiator for the Union of Mongeese and other Furry Creatures. I do not much care for nicknames."

"What do you want to negotiate? And what do you have to negotiate with? Do you know who I am? Do you know the power I have at my very finger tips?"

At this point, the music started back up. It was tentative at first, but continued to build during this dialog. In fact, it grew so loud that the next words from Mannerificustardschnoz, principal negotiator for the Union of Mongeese and other Furry Creatures could hardly be heard.

AnimaMage
It was a deep resonant sound of an accordion that called out in the wilderness. The deep baritone of Mannerificustardschnoz was drowned out by the sound of a wild polka dance. From the sands another large rodent emerged in the heat of the negotiation and began to sing a little song:

We've come so far,
Danced so long! Now it's time for the tune of the song!
Let's just dance, let's just play!
We can turn the day away,
and dance, dance, dance, like you've never seen
dance, dance, dance, baby like you've never been!
Dance, dance, d-

As he was about to pronounce another deadly "dance" rhyme, there came a sound of ripping aluminum foil accompanied by the distinct stench of rotting chestnuts. There, in the midst of his army of snakes, the cruel face of the black wizard was contorted in fury. All the snakes around him were writhing in agony, and there was a fire amongst them that has been seen only once in the eyes of tabasco-influenced ogresses.

Mannerificustardschnoz was aghast. Quem shouted in delight: it was lucky chance that this should happen, for the snakes of Hallu Ci'Nogen were known to despise all sorts of folk music--especially that of polka!

After a few more intense moments of dancing (in which they began that ghastly song about chickens and butts and such) the mongeese were exhausted. Snakes lay all about, their jaded eyes closed in exhaspiration, and the black wizard was leaning on his Staff of Darkness (tm), breathing heavily.
"You may have had fortune on your side, Oh pathetic Peppermint Avenger, but mark this!!!" The wizard flailed his arms in some obscure gesture that we might attribute to some modern interpretations of Charles Dicken's Great Expectations. "I shall retire to my vast lands or darkness and gloom in the land of Hararmpit, to await your pathetic attempts to topple me from my self appointed dictatorship!"

At those words, the black wizard snapped two boney fingers and overhead a few meteors fell, a tsunami rose somewhere near the coast, and a farmer's cows nearby were rendered infertile for a period of approximately seven months.

"Darn it!!!!" the wizard squealed, and snapped them again, harder this time. A large black mist enfolded him and the legions of gasping snakes and he was gone in moments.

Quem turned to Berbil (who, for the readers' clarity, became human sometime within the span of the last three or four posts) and put his arm on his shoulder. "Berbil, I cannot believe the maturity you have shown in these past trials. There are two more to go, but we can worry about the cleanup here for now." Berbil smiled, and the world seemed coated in a hazy inspirational fog that sometimes descends in moments of victory. Powerful, evocative music began to play, but was immediately vanquished by the pulsating rhythm of traditional polka melodies. It appeared that the army of Mongeese had arisen once more.

------------------------------------------

Hours later, in the comfortable and stifling inns of Chikimunga, Berbil and Quem held council with Mannerificustardschnoz of the Mongeese.

"I'd like to know how you plan to use this asset of our armies in the future," the rodent began, all business. "We can't have you summoning our power at all hours of the day, you know. We have to have set hours in a daily dispensation plan. Each of us has his own family with unliquidatable assets and interest. What about health insurance? We need to establish a clausal identity. I mean, suddenly we've got a horde of corporate mergers all vying to take us out of the market at once, and we've got nowhere to go! A little health insurance is in order, if you know what I mean."

Berbil stared blankly, trying to figure what Mannerificustardschnoz meant by "unliquidatable".

"Is that even a word?" he asked. The mongoose gave a small snarl of disgust and continued.

After several hours had passed and they had drawn up a viable contract, signed it with witnesses, scrapped it, made a new one, then signed that, then scrapped it again, Quem decided to just give the mongeese all a half-farthing. Unhappy but obviously satisfied, the army of rodents retreated into the night, all the while singing their songs and dancing all the way.

"Now," said Quem, "We shall talk about what to do next."
"Couldn't we just, uh, stay here for a little while?" asked Berbil, the dreams already playing before his eyes.

"NO!" yelled Quem, and at this a few donkeys brayed angrily.
Seeing that he had hurt Berbil's feelings, the tall wizard's tone softened.

"I will tell you then, tomorrow, about the Black salt-marshes of the far south that we must traverse, and of the deadly gem we must procure. Your first test, Berbil, was in the journey. But on this next test we must not fail."

Berbil almost collapsed. "Do I get graded for all of this?"

"Of course. Consider the last bout the first couple of quizzes. This is gonna be hard-core questing, if I ever saw it."

Berbil fainted, his nose twitching slightly.

Trae
Berbil awoke in the night, startled. Cold sweat still clung to him. He had dreamed a most horrible dream all about a research paper and MLA citation. He sighed, relieved that it had been just a dream. But then, he realized he wasn't in the place where he had gone to sleep.

Tendrils of mist rose towards a harvest moon. Dark foreboding clouds flung the ragged edges of their ceremonial shrouds across the orange lunar visage. The ground was damp, and Berbil felt cold mud seeping between his bare toes. A chill wind sent a shiver through his frame. He could not see far in any direction, despite the eerie illumination of the...

What was that?!

Berbil strained to look through the swirling mists. A figure. A figure wearing robes as light as a sea breeze and as pale as moonbeams had fled away from him. Rising to his feet, he pursued. Glimpse after glimpse he caught of the figure, but always it faded into the darkness, or a cloak of fog stole it away. Then, all of a sudden, Berbil sneezed.

But he kept chasing the figure anyway. But after one more glimpse, the figure dissapear -- yes, a woman! he could see now! She cast a furtive glance, and then was gone, again. He chased but grew confused. Thinking he had lost her, he fell to his knees in despair.

Then, there was a gust of wind. A cloud stole across the moon, and all fell dark -- all except the shimmering form of the woman whom the quickly parting mists revealed standing before him, a light pouring from her of no earthly source, firing Berbil's face in its ethereal wash.

Then,

Raising one perfectly formed white hand, fingers beautiful and soft, she touched the vale that covered her face, and lifting it,

"Berbil!"

Berbil gasped and sat upright...

Quem was shaking him.

"Berbil wake up! We have to begin our journey to the black salt-marshes. Your training must continue apace."

Berbil blinked heavily, looking around at the dull red barren sand in all directions -- the desert of Chikimunga. He realized what had happened, and...

Thwack!

AnimaMage
A large oaken stick had managed to find its way to the center of his forehead. Berbil was dazed. His noggin had an egg on it the size of a blister.

"Accursed confounded thing!!!!" a shrill voice screamed shrilly. Berbil turned and saw a tiny bearded man, no more than 3 feet high, with a large matted white beard and shoes that would make a Keebler Elf barf with envy.

The egg rolled harmlessly off his head. "Who are you?" he asked, his mind flitting to and fro. Hopefully nobody had introduced a pathetic new charact--

"I am Twizzle the dwarven magician. I've been asked by your friend Quem to watch over you on the next leg of the journey. I was his teacher when he was a boy like you. He's had many since, but it was I that taught him discipline!" The little man eyed Berbil's markless forehead testily.
"And pain is the best way to teach!" he aimed a blow with his staff at Berbil's groin, but missed miserably. Berbil sighed.

"When can we have real character development? O, the wind, she speaks to the trees. 'Where has my macarena gone?' No one knows. There is much sadness in the land, and the salad forks are buried forever amidst the sea of tears."

"What?" Who had just said that?

"Oh, you'll have to forgive me." Twizzle wiped a bit of cow dung on Berbil's shoes. "I am fond of changing voices and going into a catatonic state known as 'poetic inspiration'. But a poor nitwit like you would hardly know of anything like that." Berbil was halfway tempted to just kick the little sage into some oasis, but he stayed his hatred. It was for the sake of the story.

-------------------------------------------

Meanwhile, as Berbil and Twizzle were becoming fond of one another, Dark things were brewing in the land of Hararmpit.

"It seems, my lord, that you have utterly failed." That was the last thing the Dark Lord's advisor said. The Dark Lord, whose name no one actually knew because they were so scared of uttering it, killed him. One of his minions came forth

"Sir Smash," he began, for lack of a better name to call him.
"What!!!???" The minion, a green pimply fellow whose contemporaries often called Wort, cringed.
"Ah, sir. I see...ah, you've been made short a dark advisor."
"SOOOO.....????" Two red eyes flashed under a dark hood. Somewhere in the palace two young acolytes were accosting the Royal Succubi.
"I uh, I thought, maybe, you could choose a new advisor, seeing as how the last one's ah, well..."
"Dead?"
"Er, he's dead, sir?" The Dark Lord turned his black gaze to the stone floor before him. A green puddle with various little pieces was moving slightly.
"Better he live as a protoplasmoid than as a pathetic advisor...I suppose." The Dark Lord crossed his arms in satisfaction.

Wort had second thoughts

"Er, well, your eminent commander of dark forces (tm) needs someone to call the morning chores, don't you? I'll do it!!!" The Dark Lord shook his head.
"Fine."

The Dark Lord paced back and forth. He could feel something within the kingdom stirring...a blackness that matched his own. And now that he was missing a new advisor, it would be good to shackle this blackness before he lost control.
"So what do we do to conquer slime like this...?" he asked the darkness of his room. He got no answer.

"Propoganda, of course! And a good royal ball to top it off as well!" the Dark Lord snapped his hands. Before he had gotten into this business he had been a top fashion designer/interior decorator...and now was his chance to shine.

Er, blacken, or rather, eclipse. It's just not kosher in that business to use positive or uplifting imagery.

----------------------------------

Days later (this is out of the main sequence of events) Eliot saw a poster on his school's billboard for the ball. He picked it up, looked it over, and dropped it in disgust.

Evil geniuses are too busy for royal balls. And even if they aren't, who'd go with a pimply snot-nosed loser like him?

-------------------------------------

Meanwhile, Berbil (this is in the main sequence of events, so we're back to the part where the Dark Lord plans the ball and such) and Twizzle got off on even terms, and Twizzle explained the dangers awaiting them in the darkness of the salt marshes of the south.

Trae
Berbil and Twizzle had begun their journey in the early hours of the morning, and by mid-day they had left the desert regions behind them and come upon greener lands with rolling grassy hills and tall spires of rocks here and there. The going was slow, though, and so Twizzle decided to make some conversation.

"Quem has told me that he is training you, but he didn't tell me why," Quizzle said.

"Oh." Berbil said. They kept walking.

"Ehem," Twizzle intoned. "What I meant was to ask, 'what are you supposed to do when you've completed your training?'"

"Oh," Berbil said. They kept plodding along. Twizzle started to realize he was dealing with a hard case.

"So, what are you supposed to do when you've completed your training!?" He asked, a little preturbed.

"Um...Don't know." Berbil answered blandly. Twizzle frowned.

"You don't even know?" Twizzle inquired, somewhat surprised.

"I remember Quem saying something about some evil or chaos or something, but it was kind of, um, unclear, and a lot has happened since then, y'know?"

Twizzle hmmed.

"Well, that is the first thing that should be remedied. One must know one's quest, and it just so happens that there is a wise one living nearby who can reveal all these hidden things to us, and so prepare us better for...whatever it is we're supposed to be doing."

Suddenly, Twizzle's face twisted into a horrid grimace, his neck tilted back, and he began screaming at the sky.

"Because all warriors however bold,
To ride forth in stories of old,
New not what way his feet should tread,
At some time or another..."

Gasping for breath, Twizzle returned to his normal self. Berbil was a little concerned but they kept walking. A few minutes later, Twizzl continued speaking in a much more tame manner.

"I will take you to the wise one. It just so happens she lives right up here around the bend. Prepare yourself." Twizzle struck off down the hillslope with renewed vigor, and Berbil trotted to keep up while wondering how he was supposed to prepare to meet the wise one. He settled upon trying to wiggle his ears, which he continued to practice until they turned a sudden bend in their cow-trodden path and found themselves standing before an old, broken down hovel covered in various kinds of filth. Twizzle sighed.

"People of her proffession never have enough self respect."

Suddenly, a voice boomed from inside the cottage.
"ENTER!"
Startled, the two hurried in, stooping underneath the sagging door-frame. When they looked up, they found them standing on the inside of an old, broken down hovel. In front of them, sitting on a high stool in the center of the room, swathed in grey slimy clothes and a horrible, ratty old woman's wig, was a very poorly disguised Quem holding a megaphone. He sat there stooping over pathetically and trying to look old and haggish. Berbil recognized him immediately.

"What are you doing here, Quem?" he asked. For a second, the old hag Quem looked startled, and then he raised the megaphone to his mouth and shouted in his best, feeble old-person voice.
"Silence fool! How dare you profain my presence by such senseless utterings!"
Twizzle fell to his knees.
"Oh, wise one, please inform us of our quest!" he pleaded. For a moment, Quem turned a scorning glance upon him, but then nodded.
"Very well, oh patient seeker of knowledge. I, the sage-ess of all plot-lines already know your trouble, and that you have come here to find out about your quest. Indeed, I foresaw the need, as the story up to this point has been extremely confusing, with a multitude of characters all jumbled up, and so for the clarity of you, and primarily for the reader, I will summarize the plot up to this point and attempt to solidify all into an understandable whole." Quem suddenly sat up taller and raised his hands as if intoning some strange power.

"Casting aside all the irellavencies possible and sticking to the main characters and circumstances of the plot, this is how it stands:

This episode starts off in the aftermath of the assassination of Berbil's father, the last kind of the land. After said king was killed, chaos broke loose and wars have not ceased. Berbil was a slovenly drunk when the Peppermint Avenger, whose real name is Quemmerilius, Quem for short, caught up with him. Quem served the high Magus Peevisch who lived in a distant land. In order for Quem to graduate, Peevisch had given Quem the task of training Berbil. Berbil has the power to read minds, which has been painfully obvious throughout the story, though he, himself, hasn't realized it yet. In order to train Berbil, though, Quem has to help Berbil accomplish three tasks. The first of these tasks was a test of Loyalty. The second was a test of Ingenuity and Endurance as seen in the journey to Chikimunga. The third is apparently going to be a visit to the southern salt marshes. In this way are Quem and Berbil occupied.

However, the chaos that engulfs the sundry lands has given rise to a Nameless Evil Overlord who used to be a fashion designer. He is currently plotting a social event, and a minion of his recently challenged Quem in a battle of wizardry, which Quem won.

But at the same time, lurking in the depths of the Academy of Necromancy lurks Eliot, a geeky necromancy student who is determined to be the Dark Lord and is plotting his overthrow and takeover in empty classrooms when all other students are doing other things, such as partying and sleeping and playing video games.

When Berbil completes his training, he is to be sent to Magus Peevisch, but Quem knows not what Peevisch wants with him.

Such is the story so far."

Quem lowered the megaphone from his lips, raising it up again only to yell,

"Now BEGONE!" as loudly as possible. Still confused and wondering what Quem was doing, Berbil was ushered from the hovel by a trembling Twizzle.

AnimaMage
"It was a shame, really." Eliot stood tall. He was wearing his best black robes, his face was red with tearing, his eyes streaked. Before him stood a multitude of his fellow classmates, each one wearing black robes (which didn't make much of a difference as they were required attire for the school) and bearing a similar teary-eyed expression.

"He really was a good old dark lord, when you looked at him. I don't even need to go over the terrible circumstances again, the tragic manner in which he died..." Eliot gestured to the closed casket, which meausred perhaps just a half of the Dark Lord's former stature.

"I mean, it was dangerous, sleepwalking into a pit of scythe-bearing reapers in the middle of the night. Who could've survived?" Eliot produced from his robes a long sad-looking piece of parchment, which he unravelled.

"As his sole surviving heir, I must proceed in his stead with great courage--" An audience member stood up and shouted, "Who said you were related????!!!!" Eliot looked abashed for a moment. "Why, he was my Mother's sister's grandfather, after all!" He stopped, looking bewildered for a moment, then went on with the reading. It appeared that the troublesome student had suddenly turned into a pillar of horseradish during the conversation.

"Ahem. And now I shall command our dark forces to take the control of the fair lands in every direction. For me!!!" He raised his fist triumphantly, and the rest of the audience mimicked him in time. They had learned quick not to mess with the new headmaster.

----------------------------

Meanwhile, Berbil and Twizzle had made their way to the marshes and were busying themselves with getting out of their third pit of quicksand for that afternoon.

"How much longer do we have to endure this???"Berbil gurgled from under the muck. Twizzle, whose face was covered in bleeding gnats, seemed indisposed. Berbil shrugged, then set about freeing himself from the tarry sand. A man came up to the pond and put one meaty arm into the muck. After freeing both Berbil and Twizzle from the sands, he set about introducing himself.

"My name's Help," he introduced himself. Somewhere in the swamps a man named Christian asphyxiated.

"Thanks, Help." Berbil shuffled.
"Are you sure you're in the right story?" asked Twizzle. Help looked at them, dumbfounded.

"You mean, I'm not?" Berbil shook his head in the negative. Help shrugged. "Well, I'm glad I could save you..." Help shuffled off nervously and fell into a bog. Berbil coughed.

"Maybe we should..." "Don't try to fix somethin' that hadn't been right to begin with." Twizzle carried on ahead and fell into the next pit of quicksand. Berbil sighed.










(UNFINISHED. Like you care.)