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9780765312983

Return to Quag Keep

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780765312983

  • ISBN10:

    0765312980

  • Format: Trade Book
  • Copyright: 2006-01-10
  • Publisher: Tor Books
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List Price: $24.95

Summary

In 1976 Andre Norton was invited up to Lake Geneva to play a new sort of adventure game by its creator, Gary Gygax. That game, Dungeons Dragons, launched the role-playing game industry. Norton took part in an imaginative session of world-building, role-playing, and fantasy-adventuring. When she returned home she wrote the novel Quag Keep, a tale of six adventurers from our world who journey to the city of Greyhawk. Thirty years later, with the help of Jean Rabe, author of numerous TSR books and former head of the RPGA (Roleplaying Gamers Association), Norton returned to these bold adventurers for another questand perhaps a chance to return home to the world from whence they came: ours.

Author Biography

Andre Norton was the grand dame of  Science Fiction and Fantasy whose creations included Witch World, and Beastmaster.  She passed away in 2005.
Jean Rabe is the author of the Finest trilogy and numerous books for TSR/WOTC. She lives in Kenosha, WI.
 

Supplemental Materials

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The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

Excerpts

Chapter One

Separate Ways
 
Gulth poked his snout out of the alley, quickly looked down the street, then snarled and drew back into the shadows.
 
“The sun has set, priest, and there’s no sign of them.” He hissed and dug the ball of a clawed foot into the ground. “The light is leaving, and I should be leaving with it. I’ll not wait much longer.” Much softer: “I can’t afford to.”
 
The early autumn wind that whipped down the street and found its way into the alley was chill and carried with it the promise that the coming winter would be harsh. It spun the dust around Gulth’s feet and nudged the debris discarded at the back door of an inn halfway down the alley, stirring up the scents of rotten cabbage, spoiled curds, and strong, bitter ale. He made a gagging sound when the wind gusted more strongly and uncomfortably settled all those scents on his tongue. He spat, which did nothing to help matters, and wrapped his cloak tightly about his bulky frame.
 
“I do not like this city, priest. Any city. The growing darkness makes this place slightly more palatable. But the dark only hides the sins and ugliness. It can do nothing about the stench of men and their greed and—”
 
“Patience, Gulth, I’m certain our friends will be here soon. Let’s give them a little more time.” The speaker stood near the inn’s back door, illuminated by a lantern that hung from the jamb swinging slightly in the wind, causing the shadows to dance as if they were living things. He was a tall man, dressed in white, though the dust had turned his robes the color of sand and streaked his long face. “An hour, perhaps two if need be, Gulth, and—”
 
“One hour. Two. Three. Time. You know I don’t have a lot of that, priest . . . Deav Dyne.”
 
The man nodded. “I know, Gulth.”
 
Gulth shuffled away from the street and toward the priest, the cloak billowing behind him flapping loudly. The lantern light showed him to be a lizardman, covered with coin-shaped scales so dense they looked like armor. Once, in the recent past, the scales had been as vibrant green as forest moss, supple and snake-smooth. Now they were drab and tinged with gray, cracked and curled in places like thick, chipped paint. He had the shape of a man, but his hands ended in talons, and his limbs were muscular, as was his tail, which twitched nervously, tracing and erasing patterns in the dirt. Though his shoulders were broad, they were hunched, a neardefeated posture.
 
“Deav Dyne, we’ve seen nothing of them since we came to this wretched, hell-darkened place a week past.”
 
“And promptly went our separate ways.”
 
“Yes.”
 
“You’ve not seen them because you’ve kept to the alleys, Gulth.”
 
“Necessary, priest, especially now. Look at me! I don’t understand why they wanted to come here.”
 
“It’s the largest city around, Gulth, so it makes a certain amount of sense to—”
 
“Cities make no sense to me, priest . . . Deav Dyne. Too many people. All the crowds with their schemes, blood, filth.” Again he dug at the ground with his foot. “Easy to get lost in a city this big.”
 
Deav Dyne shrugged. “I found Yevele easily enough to arrange this meeting.”
 
“But will they find us in this alley easily enough?”
 
“Patience,” Deav Dyne repeated. “Patience, Gulth. They will come.”
 
The lizardman cocked his head quizzically. “Will they? Or perhaps they’ve forgotten about this meeting and found some grand adventure to pursue instead. Certainly something more interesting than talking with us.” A pause. “With me. You call them friends, Deav Dyne. I doubt any of them would call me that.”
 
“Patience,” Deav Dyne suggested once more. This time the word was a drawn out purr that made the lizardman relax slightly. “They’ll come, Gulth, that I promise you.”
 
The priest stepped away from the lantern’s glare so he couldn’t be seen by anyone who might open the inn’s back door. Gulth stamped through the dirt to hunch at the mouth of the alley, occasionally poking his snout out for a quick glance at the street beyond. “Patience. Patience. Patience,” he hissed.
 
 
Night had thoroughly claimed the city by the time three figures did close on the alley. The tallest was a woman, nearly six feet and clad in a worn leather surcoat. The crude and battered armor was too big for her frame, but not too bulky to conceal all of her curves. A long sword in a battered scabbard hung from her waist, and a sheathed dagger was strapped to her right leg. Thick auburn curls spilled out from beneath a bowl-like metal helmet and were harshly teased by the chill wind. She blinked when an errant strand whipped at her eyes.
 
“Yevele,” the lizardman growled at her.
 
She stepped past him and into the alley, nodded, and offered him a weak smile. Her gaze met his for a brief moment, then wandered over him and narrowed when she picked through the shadows and noted his condition.
 
“Gulth, when we parted a week ago you did not look quite so . . .” Yevele left the thought unfinished.
 
Behind her were two young men, one an elf in dark green leggings and a tunic, the clothes so soiled from the road and time that they looked nearly black. The elf glided gracefully and silently past Yevele and the lizardman and headed toward the inn’s back door and Deav Dyne.
 
Her other companion was colorfully dressed in far better clothes. (Gulth suspected he stole the outfit.) His face and hands were as dirty as his fellows’ and he looked every bit as tired. He adjusted a lute slung over his back and reached out, trying to shake Gulth’s hand. Instead, the lizardman turned and withdrew farther down the alley to join the elf and the priest.
 
“We’re late, I know,” Yevele said as she followed the lizardman. “I offer no apology for that, Gulth, as we’ve been looking for work these past few days. That’s why all of us came here, you know.”
 
“And we finally have a line on something.” This from the elf.
 
“Ingrge,” the lizardman said in acknowledgment. The elf’s name sounded like a growl. “Ingrge, you are—”
 
“Filthy. Aye, the lot of us are as dirty as any urchin. It hasn’t rained in all these days, and our surroundings have been. . . . Well, let’s just say a good downpour would make us all a little more presentable and less . . . pungent.”
 
Gulth wrinkled his nose in agreement and looked over his shoulder at the colorfully dressed man. “Wymarc. Good of you to come, even if you are late.”
 
The light spilling from the lantern confirmed Gulth’s suspicion about the bard’s clothes. The leggings were too short and tight, not something the man would have purchased by choice. And the tunic was tight across the shoulders, seams threatening to give at the next movement. Perhaps a tall boy’s outfit that had been washed, hung out to dry, and subsequently “borrowed” by Wymarc. Gulth remembered that the bard’s previous change of clothes fit better, but had more holes than fabric.
 
A door slammed somewhere out on the street, and two men laughed. One of them was stomping across a wooden walkway that connected the businesses in this part of the city and kept the citizens from slogging through mud when it rained. The other man shuffled, sounding as if he dragged one foot. From their irregular steps and loud guffaws, it was likely that they’d come from one of the many taverns in this neighborhood and were drunk. They paused at the end of the alley, staring at the gathering, then after a few moments they laughed again and moved along.
 
“Milo and Naile . . . where are they?” The lizardman directed this to the elf. “They were to meet us here, too.”
 
“That line on employment I mentioned,” Ingrge began. “They’re following it as we speak. We’ve learned of a place where mercenaries are hired. Not just anyone would hire the lot of us, you know. Not so many of us all in one place. And working in a stables or smithy won’t pay enough to suit us.”
 
“And isn’t at all challenging,” Yevele added softly. “That kind of work is beneath us, Gulth.”
 
“Boring, she means,” Wymarc said. “And none of us know how to do it.”
 
“Mercenaries,” Gulth said. “So you’re mercenaries now.”
 
“We’re mercenaries, Gulth. You’re one of us.” Ingrge pointed to a bracelet on the lizardman’s wrist. It was copper, and gems of varying cuts and colors dangled from it. The lizardman’s bracelet matched Ingrge’s, matched Yevele’s, matched. . . . They each had one. “We’ll all be mercenaries, Gulth, if that’s what it takes . . .”
 
“. . . to get a decent amount of money,” Yevele finished. “Our last coin was spent two days ago. We don’t have a single copper for a kettle of soup, never mind coins for a room or decent boots or . . .” She tucked her chin into her neck and sniffed, wrinkling her nose. “. . . a hot bath, something new to wear.” She met the lizardman’s gaze again. “But you know all of that, Gulth. As Ingrge said, you’re one of us. You’re in the same sorry boat we’re—”
 
“A worse boat, I’m afraid.” All heads turned to the priest. “Gulth is dying, Yevele.”
 
“Dying? I’ll admit he looks rough, worsened a bit during this week. But you’re a healer, can’t you—”
 
“Yes, I’m a healer, but I haven’t a clue to his malady. Nothing I’ve tried has worked. The shops I’ve visited, the other healers I’ve talked to, they have nothing to help. I spent all of my coins trying. I don’t know what’s—”
 
“It’s this city,” the lizardman cut in. “It’s this man’s hole. That’s what’s killing me. The crowds and noise and filth. So dry. Too cold. No rain and . . .” His voice trailed off to a rasping whisper, and he looked past the assembly and to the dark street beyond the alley, watching another drunken man stumble along. “I need to go home, Yevele, Ingrge. Wymarc, you understand.”
 
The bard’s face grew pale. “Dying? Gulth? You’re truly dying?” Wymarc tentatively touched one of the lizardman’s larger scales, scowling when an edge broke off. “You did not look so bad a week ago. We shouldn’t have tugged you here with us. We should have left you out in the woods, came to get you after we’d found work and got some money, and—”
 
“Home,” Yevele interrupted. “That would be Toledo, right Gulth? Ohio?”
 
The lizardman stared at a ceramic shard embedded in the alley dirt. “Used to be,” he said after a moment. “In another lifetime. When we played the game around my Aunt Beth’s dining room table. But that was before we were spirited away here for some unknown reason. We thought there was some grand purpose to our coming here. We fought our way across a desert, lived through meeting a dragon, made our way to Quag Keep. But we still have these bracelets, and we still have these forms. And we’re still here. And if there was a grand purpose to it all, we missed finding it somewhere along the way.”
 
“You can’t give up,” Yevele stressed. “We’ll all get home. Somehow.”
 
“But Toledo’s not home now. And I’m no longer that person who played the game at Aunt Beth’s.”
 
The priest cleared his throat. “We’re going south to the swamp, Yevele. His people . . . other lizardmen . . . are there. I pray they can help him. Maybe just being in the swamp will help. Gulth seems to think that’s the key. Being away from the city. Being someplace warm and humid and thoroughly sodden.”
 
“And you’re going with him?” Yevele gave the priest a disapproving glare. “We need you, Deav Dyne.”
 
“For what? Why do you possibly need me?”
 
The priest’s question was met with silence and blank faces.
 
“None of us know how to get home . . . to our real homes,” Deav Dyne finally said. “We’re stuck in this place, as far as I’m concerned. You see that, too, Yevele. Otherwise, you wouldn’t be looking for mercenary work. And so Gulth and I are simply marking time here.”
 
She shook her head, her eyes flashing angrily. “We’ll find a way home, Deav Dyne. Maybe find a clue in this very city. But first we need work so we can get some money and . . .”
 
“And those things will not help Gulth.” Deav Dyne cupped her chin with his hands. “Yevele, you don’t need me. None of you need me, at least not at the moment. But Gulth needs someone with him. So I’m going with him to the swamp. Then, when I know he’s safe and healing, I’ll come back here and look for you.”
 
She shook off his hands and sucked in a deep breath. “We might not be here when you get back. Who knows where the fates will take us! Maybe home . . . to our real homes. Maybe we’ll find the way home while you’re trudging through the swamp.”
 
“Maybe,” the priest returned. His tone sounded skeptical. “I hope you do. And so, if you’re not here when I return, I will look for my own way home. Or I will make my own way in this backward, medieval world.” He nodded to Yevele, Ingrge, and Wymarc. “Tell Milo and Naile we wish them well. And we hope they find a good mercenary contract for the lot of you.”
 
“Priest . . . Deav Dyne.” Gulth gestured to the opposite end of the alley, where a road led to the edge of town. “Time to leave.”
 
“Then there is no more to say, save good-bye.” Yevele made a fist and brought it forward, meeting Gulth’s fist. “Good luck to you.” She turned and retraced her steps, the wind whipping her hair and fluttering her threadbare cloak. She waited at the end of the alley.
 
Ingrge took one of Gulth’s hands in both of his and bowed. “May you find what you need in the swamp.” Tare kind, may we meet again in this city.” Then he headed toward Yevele.
 
Wymarc was the last to leave. He shifted his weight from one foot to the other. “I don’t like this, splitting the company. Not a good idea.”
 
“Company?” Gulth raised what amounted to an eyebrow. “You accepted me, bard, but you never considered me a . . .”
 
“. . . friend? Probably not,” he admitted. “Prejudice is thick even in this world.” He thrust his fingers into a narrow pocket and pulled out two copper coins. He cupped them close to his chest. “Look, be quiet about this, ’kay?” He pushed the coins at Deav Dyne, careful to keep his body turned so his fellows couldn’t see the glint of the money. “It’s all I have. Came with the outfit. Maybe you can buy something to eat along the way.” Then Wymarc turned and bounded toward his companions. He looked once over his shoulder before he reached the end of the alley.
 
Gulth and Deav Dyne were already gone.
 
“Let’s go tell Milo and Naile that we’re down two,” Wymarc said.
 
Yevele brushed the hair away from her eyes. “And let’s hope they’ve found a way to earn some money or we’ll be down more. Starved to death, all of us. We haven’t a single coin for a loaf of stale bread.”
 
Copyright © 2006 by The Estate of Andre Norton and by Jean Rabe

Excerpted from Return to Quag Keep by Andre Norton, Jean Rabe
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

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