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The boys turned to find a
young man at the door of their compartment, looking in. He was an adult, but
not much taller than Tam, and carrying only a single worn satchel. He had calm
eyes, an awkward smile, and long blond hair pulled back in a tail. His clothes
were somewhat old fashioned and showed signs of wear at the cuffs and hem. He
wore tall leather travel boots, like the northern clans in Shandor did, but also
a hat of an Arienish fashion. Most peculiar of all, the man’s young face, and
his hands and neck as well, were webbed over with a faint tracery of old scars.
Jon wondered what had happened to him. Without the scars, the man would have
been considered handsome. The man smiled at them, a little nervously, and took
off his hat. “I’m Eabrey Sheridan. That is, Professor Sheridan, if you like.
You are the Gardners?”
“We are, sir, and
it’s good to see you, sir.” Tam rose and shook the Professor’s hand heartily.
Jon shook the scarred hand next, suddenly speechless in the presence of the man
who had been his idol for some years. Jon was very surprised to find the
Professor so young. For a man with five doctorates, who had written over nine
volumes and hundreds of essays, he was not at all what Jon had expected.
The Professor
seated himself on the cushions Tam hurriedly cleared of stray luggage, and Jon
continued to stare at the famous scholar, unable to help himself. The
Professor’s ears, revealed now that his hat was at his side, were a curious
shape, like leaves, and came up through his long hair. There was scarring there
too, but like the rest, old. Jon tried to ignore all the spidery light lines of
scars and focus on the man’s blue eyes. “It’s an honor to finally meet you,
sir,” he said. “I’ve read all your books.”
The Professor
raised his eyebrows and smiled again, mildly. “I hope they didn’t bore you. My
students tell me I have a long winded and old-fashioned way of rambling when I
get too involved in a topic.”
“I liked your
books, sir. I especially liked what you had to say about the inscriptions
discovered under the castle in Shandor, and your translations of the Ancients’
text there. I believe you are right in thinking that the wing rune describes an
entity rather than an action.”
The Professor
looked surprised and pleased. “I look forward to hearing what you think of the
text found in the ruins at Alarna then. I’m eager to see it myself.”
“Has Doctor
Blackfeather offered a translation?” Jon asked.
“He is waiting
for us, and for some papers I’ve brought with me,” the Professor said, gesturing
toward his satchel. “I have been studying the legends and the history of the
site to try and get some idea of what we might find at the dig. Most scholars
agree that Alarna was once the center of a great civilization. They used bronze
weapons and had superior skills in masonry, which they used to build great
cities and temples. Certain texts mention that Alarna was ruled by an immortal
god-king who conquered many neighboring lands. He was a harsh, cruel ruler who
demanded many sacrifices. One day a great warrior from an unknown land slew him
and brought his temple crashing to destruction with all his wealth and glory in
it.”
“So we might be
digging for buried treasure?” Tam asked.
“Likely not.”
The Professor smiled apologetically. “The tomb robbers of Alarna are famous for
their exploits. Any treasure will be long gone, but we hope to find clues to
what really happened between the warrior and the god-king. If we can discern
the events of that encounter, it may have some bearing on other, er, historical
encounters with which Doctor Blackfeather and I are concerned. In studying.”
The Professor brushed some unseen dust from his worn trouser knees, looked up,
and smiled at Jon. “What I find most fascinating is that Doctor
Blackfeather’s expedition has found writing of the Ancients on a tablet at the
Alarna site.”
The Ancients, Jon knew, had
lived in Shandor long ago. They were the people who built the foundations of
the castle and had left artifacts, stories, and traces of their bloodlines and
culture to Shandor’s people.
“As you likely know,” the
Professor said, “it is rare indeed to find their written language anywhere
outside of Shandor.”
“Uh,” said Tam.
“Right. Old writing.”
Jon smiled at his
brother’s bewildered look, and then at the peculiar Professor Sheridan. It was
wonderful to finally meet someone who could speak the same language of old
civilizations, ruins, and stories. Tam was a good brother, but his interests
were all in horses, farming, and the soil of Shandor: not for its history but
for its everyday present. “Professor Sheridan, can you tell us more about the
ruins at Alarna? Is it true there are underground rivers, and that they found a
gallery of tombs with the people encased all in painted clay?”
Tam was asleep
before an hour had passed. The conversation paused only long enough for the
three to have dinner from the supper cart, hours later.
“How long will it
be until we reach Alarna?” Tam asked that evening.
“Two days,” the
Professor replied. “Tomorrow we switch trains at the grand terminal in Merigvon
and take the southern line down overnight to an outpost station in Alarna.
We’ll travel by carriage from there, out to the dig.”
Tam sighed.
“We’ve already been on the train four days. I didn’t know you could be
so far from home. How many days would it take to walk back, do you think?”
Jon thought.
“Over a year, probably, unless you had wings.”
© 2007 Ruth Lampi |