It was a chilly day in Vesper. The wind coming up from the ocean made the patchwork island city extra cold and despite it being the early afternoon frost still hung in the shadows. To keep warm a gaggle of children ran back and forth in front of the ornate windows of the city government building. The children laughed and fought and pushed and generally made the right amount of racket. Inside the building the staff tried to keep focused on their scrolls but each secretly wished they could go outside and run around a bit.
The gaggle formed a circle and from opposite ends two children were pushed forward.
“It’s your turn, do it!” cried one little girl.
“I’ll start! Take it easy, take it easy!” the boy across from her replied.
The two children flanked by the circle began to clap individually to a beat and began to recite a song punctuating every rhyme with a clap on the other’s palm. The workers inside the building smiled, remembering the same games they played as children. Their rhyme went something like:
The fool-knight left the town,
Thought he’d save the day,
But was thrown down!
Why did the fool stop to pray?
Didn’t he know he’d have no say?
Fearsome beast and undead scream!
Big bright comet from a Gazer seen!
Who was the dolt who found his death?
Blew himself up, that fool Jepeth!
“Oi!” yelled a man from within the building.
The ornate window flew open and a tall man with a bushy brown head of hair leaned out. His face was angry and shocked.
“Vas Flam!” he cried and a firebolt shot from his hand scattering the children who screamed and laughed and ran away.
“They’re just kids, sire,” said a surprised voice from inside.
“Brats.”
The man leaned back in and closed the window with a grunt. Tejnik the Mage was tired. He had been leaned over a short table examining maps all day and his back was beginning to ache.
After a moment Tejnik sighed. He felt embarrassed for his reaction just then. He usually tries to be a better representative of mages than that. He made a mental note to conjure some food and maybe a few exciting fireworks if he saw those same children later.
“We should stop for the day,” said Tejnik.
“As you wish, sire!” replied the clerk excitedly. He looked forward to getting to the tavern early.
“I’ll leave you to sort the maps, then. Thank you for your hospitality as always.”
“The Government of Vesper remains at your disposal as long as you need.”
Tejnik bowed, turned, and left the clerk behind.
“... for all the good it’ll do,” said the clerk under his breath as the door clicked shut.
***
Tejnik weaved his way through the maze of bridges towards the mainland edge of town. He had taken to casting his recall spell away from the city. Vesper wasn’t Trinsic or Minoc where the open use of magic tended to draw unwanted attention but he had been trying to keep his profile low. An effort he had ruined minutes ago with that fireball.
It had been a frustrating six months. An entire half year since his former employer and (Tejnik thought anyway) friend had disappeared. From two dozen feet away he saw what Jepeth had done. He thought of it often. At the moment of triumph instead of striking the final blow he saw Jepeth sheath his sword. He saw him lay a hand across his foe’s twisted, horrible face. He saw Jepeth say something but could not hear it over the noise of the battle. A light and a sound and then nothing. Jepeth left behind no body, only a mystery.
Six months of investigating this mystery had left Tejnik frustrated.
“He’s dead,” Jepeth’s cousin Threepwood had told him months ago.
“Accept it,” said Jaanin, the head of Tejnik’s order of mages.
“Would you want this much fuss?” asked Harbottle, the healer who served with Jepeth during the Ilshenar Wars.
And yet the mystery persisted for Tejnik. As a mage Tejnik knew that things don’t just “blow apart” and vanish. There should have been remains. The only thing they ever found of him was his helmet.
Regretfully the mystery only became muddied with many false leads. A Jepeth pretender had presented himself to a lost party of adventurers in Deceit. That man turned out to be a very cursed and confused bard. A conspiracy theorist gave a speech in Skara Brae claiming Jepeth was both alive and had gone underground to overthrow the King. The crowd ignored him, though, because he was a goblin and was clearly trying to cause strife. Finally, a con artist thief attempted to pass off some bones and a sword to the Royal Council as being Jepeth’s remains. After an analysis those bones turned out to have passed through the stomach of a Destard dragon. The con man found himself in the dungeon at King Blackthorn’s order for that insult.
But, shockingly, the bones were fake but the sword was Jepeth’s. The one he had sheathed right before disappearing. After some coaxing the Council learned the thief found the sword in Ilshenar. He tried to pass it off with the bones to increase his bounty reward. This new clue had deepened the mystery and provided plenty of entertainment for people around the realm who delighted hearing of the gory end of others. To Tejnik’s horror Jepeth’s name had begun to be associated with a violent end. The children’s song was just the latest example.
Tejnik fished a rune out from his satchel, held hit in his hands and whispered a spell of recall. His penchant for loud bangs and light to announce his magical coming and going had dulled in the last six months. Silently he appeared in front of a modest stone tower set in the deep woods. He had lived there since first taking his now former Skara Brae administrator’s job a few years ago. It was small and constructed from weathered stone and Tejnik liked that from its roof you could just about see Relvinian’s Hedge Maze over the trees.
He entered, sat at his desk, and sighed. For the sixth time since Jepeth’s disappearance he had to send this dreadful note. A monthly reminder of his failure.
No progress since my last.
-T, mage.”
Tejnik rolled the parchment into a neat scroll and sealed with some magically heated wax.
He opened his desk drawer and drew out an oddly colored rune stone. Tejnik closed his eyes and whispered.
“Vas Rel Por.”
A shimmering blue moongate sprung to life in his drawing room. Tejnik stood, looked down at the parchment scroll, and tossed it gently through the gate.
As the light of the blue moongate extinguished Tejnik was left in darkness.
***
Worlds away the moongate opened and a scroll fell out of it. Jepeth’s cousin Threepwood bent over and snatched it from the ground.
“It’s amazing how his spells can always find ye,” said a voice behind Threepwood.
“Aye,” said Threepwood grimly as he looked at the parchment.
Threepwood unrolled it and scanned the parchment’s three lines.
“This be cruel,” said Threepwood. “He does not deserve this.”
“I know,” replied Jepeth.

